“They are not my papers,” insisted Ralph, “and no person on earth can prove them to be. Sir, I request this matter be further investigated.”
“A mistake is impossible,” exclaimed the professor.
“Is it possible for an examination paper to be stolen before the examination occurs?” asked Ralph suddenly.
“By George, Mr. Osborn, we’ll look into this matter,” said the superintendent, now full of interest. “I’ll send for your other papers and compare the writing. But can you imagine how this could have happened?”
Then came vividly to Ralph’s mind the angry, revengeful face of the man behind him in the examination room the week before. Recalling the number of the desk back of his, a thought flashed through him.
“Yes, sir, I can,” he quietly said. “I can imagine how a person doing poorly could have marked his sheets with my desk number, and then could have exchanged his papers with mine, erased my desk number, and on my sheets write his own number. I would ask that the papers of number 155 be brought here.”
CHAPTER IV
Short’s Naval Career is Short
“Why do you ask for the papers marked 155?” inquired the superintendent.
“That was the number of the desk nearest my own, the desk just behind mine,” explained Ralph.