“I’ll go to the library.”
“All right—and take Brown, if he’ll go.”
Jack washed up and brushed his uniform, and then made his way to Captain Putnam’s private office. He found that Reff Ritter had hurried and gotten ahead of him, and was telling his story, both to the head of the school and to the first assistant teacher. Ritter’s mouth, nose and one eye were swollen, and he looked anything but happy.
“You may remain in the hallway until I call you, Major Ruddy,” said Captain Putnam, when Jack appeared, and the young major had to go outside, closing the door after him.
The telling of Reff Ritter’s story took some time, and he was asked several questions by Captain Putnam and Josiah Crabtree. He said that he had just been getting ready to take some gymnastic exercise when Jack and some of his chums had come in and begun to talk about his father, saying that they had heard he was dishonest.
“Ruddy said he knew my father was dishonest,” went on Reff Ritter. “That made me mad and I ran out of the dressing-room and told him he ought to be ashamed of himself, that my father was as honest as anybody. Then he got on his high-horse and told me to shut up or he would knock me down. I told him it was a shame for him to speak so of my father. Then he got mad and all of a sudden he jumped at me and hit me in the mouth and the eye and then in the nose. Then I went for him, and we had it hot and heavy, until we bumped into one of the wooden horses and I went down. He tried to hit me after I was down, but Coulter and Paxton hauled him back. Then Mr. Crabtree came in.”
“A most disgraceful proceeding!” cried Josiah Crabtree. “And evidently Major Ruddy’s fault entirely.”
“You are quite sure Ruddy started the quarrel?” questioned Captain Putnam, gravely.
“Yes, sir.”
“And he told the other cadets that your father was dishonest?”
“Yes, sir. That is what made me so mad. But I didn’t hit him until he attacked me,” added Ritter, hastily.
“Who was present at the time?”
“Pepper Ditmore and Fred Century were with Ruddy, and Gus Coulter and Nick Paxton were With me.”
“Anybody else?”
“I didn’t see anybody.”
“You got the worst of the fight.”
“Yes, sir. You see, he took me unawares. I guess I could whip him if we were to meet on equal terms,” added Ritter.
“You may retire to the next room, Ritter, while I question Major Ruddy.”
“Don’t you believe me?” cried the bully, in alarm.
“One side of a story is only one side,” answered Captain Putnam, non-committally.
“I believe Ritter tells the truth,” put in Josiah Crabtree. “When I appeared Ruddy was very insolent and so was Ditmore. I sent Ditmore to his room as a punishment.”
“You may call Ruddy in,” answered the head of the school, briefly. He understood Josiah Crabtree’s dictatorial manner perfectly, and he only retained the man because of his unusual ability as a teacher.