“I don’t believe it,” replied the big boy, who was known as Bully Pigeon; “it’s such a rum name.”
“I’ll make you believe it, and remember it too,” exclaimed the new-comer, eyeing the other from head to foot, and walking firmly up to him, with his lips closed, while he moved his head slowly from side to side. “I tell you my name is Jack Rogers—Now!”
The bully did not say a word. He looked as if he would have liked to have hit, but Paddy Adair had followed his new friend, and was evidently about to join in the fray if it was once begun; so the big boy thought better of it. He would gain no credit for attacking a little fellow the first day of his coming. There were many witnesses of the scene, and Jack was unanimously pronounced to be a plucky little chap. Pigeon, defeated in one direction, turned his attention to the first-named boy, who had scarcely moved since he entered the playground, but kept looking round with his large black eyes on the scene before him, which was evidently strange to his sight.
“What are you called, I should like to know?” he asked in a rude tone.
“Alick Murray,” was the answer, in a quiet, gentlemanly voice.
“Then you come from Scotland, I suppose?” said the bully.
“Yes, I do,” replied the former.
“Oh! I wonder your mamma would let you go away from her,” observed the big boy, with a sneer.
“My mamma is just dead,” answered Murray, in a mild tone, a tear springing to his eye.
“Shame! shame!” shouted the voices of several boys who had come up; among them that of Jack Rogers was the loudest.