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THE PURPLE PENNANT

I—there isn't such an awful hurry." The truth was that Fudge was not an enthusiastic pedestrian, a fact due partly to his physical formation and partly to a disposition contemplative rather than active. Nature had endowed Fudge—his real name, by the way, was William—with a rotund body and capable but rather short legs. Walking for the mere sake of locomotion didn't appeal to him. He would have denied indignantly that he was lazy, and, to do him justice, he wasn't. With Fudge it was less a matter of laziness than discrimination. Give him something to do that interested him—such as playing baseball or football—and Fudge would willingly, enthusiastically work his short legs for all that was in them, but this thing of deliberately tiring oneself out with no sensible end in view—well, Fudge couldn't see it! He had a round face from which two big blue eyes viewed the world with a constant expression of surprise. His hair was sandy-red, and he was fifteen, almost sixteen, years old.

"It's too nice a day to sit around and do nothing," objected Perry. "Why don't you get your studying done earlier?"

"I meant to, but I had some writing to do." Fudge looked important. Perry smiled slightly. "I finished that story I told you about."

"Did you?" Perry strove to make his question

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