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urn of Professor Lesard, I jumped up and peered into his perplexed eyes. "They've elected a president," he said, "but they won't tell us who the president is until to-morrow." "You don't think--" I stammered. "I don't know. But I know this: the new president sanctions the expedition to the Graham Glacier, and directs you to choose an assistant and begin preparations for four people." Overjoyed, I seized his hand and said, "Hurray!" in a voice weak with emotion. "The old dragon isn't elected this time," I added, triumphantly. "By-the-way," he said, "who was the other dragon with her in the park this evening?" I described her in a more modulated voice. "Whew!" observed Professor Lesard, "that must be her assistant, Professor Dorothy Van Twiller! She's the prettiest blue-stocking in town." With this curious remark my confrere followed me into my room and wrote down the list of articles I dictated to him. The list included a complete camping equipment for myself and three other men. "Am I one of those other men?" inquired Lesard, with an unhappy smile. Before I could reply my door was shoved open and a figure appeared at the threshold, cap in hand. "What do you want?" I asked, sternly; but my heart was beating high with triumph. The figure shuffled; then came a subdued voice: "Mister, I guess I'll go back to the Graham Glacier along with you. I'm Billy Spike, an' it kinder scares me to go back to them Hudson Mountains, but somehow, mister, when you choked me and kinder walked me off on my ear, why, mister, I kinder took to you like." There was absolute silence for a minute; then he said: "So if you go, I guess I'll go, too, mister." "For a thousand dollars?" "Fur nawthin'," he muttered--"or what you like." "All right, Billy," I said, briskly; "just look over those rifles and ammunition and see that everything's sound." He slowly lifted his tough young face and gave me a doglike glance. They were hard eyes, but there was gratitude in them. "You'll get your throat slit," whispered Lesard. "Not while Billy's with me," I replied, cheerfully. Late that night, as I was preparing for pleasant dreams, a knock came on my door and a telegraph-messenger handed me a note, which I read, shivering in my bare feet, although the thermometer marked eighty Fahrenheit: "You will immediately leave for the Hudson Mountains via Wellman Bay, Labrador, there to await further instructions.
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