<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch7"> CHAPTER VII<br/><br/> IN WHICH MIKE IS DISCUSSED</SPAN></h3>
<p>Trevor and Clowes, of Donaldson’s,
were sitting in their study a week after the gramophone
incident, preparatory to going on the river.  At
least Trevor was in the study, getting tea ready. 
Clowes was on the window-sill, one leg in the room,
the other outside, hanging over space.  He loved
to sit in this attitude, watching some one else work,
and giving his views on life to whoever would listen
to them.  Clowes was tall, and looked sad, which
he was not.  Trevor was shorter, and very much
in earnest over all that he did.  On the present
occasion he was measuring out tea with a concentration
worthy of a general planning a campaign.</p>
<p>“One for the pot,” said Clowes.</p>
<p>“All right,” breathed Trevor.  “Come
and help, you slacker.”</p>
<p>“Too busy.”</p>
<p>“You aren’t doing a stroke.”</p>
<p>“My lad, I’m thinking
of Life.  That’s a thing you couldn’t
do.  I often say to people, ’Good chap,
Trevor, but can’t think of Life.  Give him
a tea-pot and half a pound of butter to mess about
with,’ I say, ’and he’s all right. 
But when it comes to deep thought, where is he? 
Among the also-rans.’  That’s what
I say.”</p>
<p>“Silly ass,” said Trevor,
slicing bread.  “What particular rot were
you thinking about just then?  What fun it was
sitting back and watching other fellows work, I should
think.”</p>
<p>“My mind at the moment,”
said Clowes, “was tensely occupied with the
problem of brothers at school.  Have you got any
brothers, Trevor?”</p>
<p>“One.  Couple of years younger
than me.  I say, we shall want some more jam to-morrow. 
Better order it to-day.”</p>
<p>“See it done, Tigellinus, as
our old pal Nero used to remark.  Where is he? 
Your brother, I mean.”</p>
<p>“Marlborough.”</p>
<p>“That shows your sense. 
I have always had a high opinion of your sense, Trevor. 
If you’d been a silly ass, you’d have let
your people send him here.”</p>
<p>“Why not?  Shouldn’t have minded.”</p>
<p>“I withdraw what I said about
your sense.  Consider it unsaid.  I have a
brother myself.  Aged fifteen.  Not a bad chap
in his way.  Like the heroes of the school stories. 
’Big blue eyes literally bubbling over with
fun.’  At least, I suppose it’s fun
to him.  Cheek’s what I call it.  My
people wanted to send him here.  I lodged a protest. 
I said, ‘One Clowes is ample for any public
school.’”</p>
<p>“You were right there,” said Trevor.</p>
<p>“I said, ‘One Clowes is
luxury, two excess.’  I pointed out that
I was just on the verge of becoming rather a blood
at Wrykyn, and that I didn’t want the work of
years spoiled by a brother who would think it a rag
to tell fellows who respected and admired me——­”</p>
<p>“Such as who?”</p>
<p>“——­Anecdotes
of a chequered infancy.  There are stories about
me which only my brother knows.  Did I want them
spread about the school?  No, laddie, I did not. 
Hence, we see my brother two terms ago, packing up
his little box, and tooling off to Rugby.  And
here am I at Wrykyn, with an unstained reputation,
loved by all who know me, revered by all who don’t;
courted by boys, fawned upon by masters.  People’s
faces brighten when I throw them a nod.  If I
frown——­”</p>
<p>“Oh, come on,” said Trevor.</p>
<p>Bread and jam and cake monopolised
Clowes’s attention for the next quarter of an
hour.  At the end of that period, however, he returned
to his subject.</p>
<p>“After the serious business
of the meal was concluded, and a simple hymn had been
sung by those present,” he said, “Mr. Clowes
resumed his very interesting remarks.  We were
on the subject of brothers at school.  Now, take
the melancholy case of Jackson Brothers.  My heart
bleeds for Bob.”</p>
<p>“Jackson’s all right. 
What’s wrong with him?  Besides, naturally,
young Jackson came to Wrykyn when all his brothers
had been here.”</p>
<p>“What a rotten argument. 
It’s just the one used by chaps’ people,
too.  They think how nice it will be for all the
sons to have been at the same school.  It may
be all right after they’re left, but while they’re
there, it’s the limit.  You say Jackson’s
all right.  At present, perhaps, he is.  But
the term’s hardly started yet.”</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“Look here, what’s at
the bottom of this sending young brothers to the same
school as elder brothers?”</p>
<p>“Elder brother can keep an eye on him, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“That’s just it. 
For once in your life you’ve touched the spot. 
In other words, Bob Jackson is practically responsible
for the kid.  That’s where the whole rotten
trouble starts.”</p>
<p>“Why?”</p>
<p>“Well, what happens?  He
either lets the kid rip, in which case he may find
himself any morning in the pleasant position of having
to explain to his people exactly why it is that little
Willie has just received the boot, and why he didn’t
look after him better:  or he spends all his spare
time shadowing him to see that he doesn’t get
into trouble.  He feels that his reputation hangs
on the kid’s conduct, so he broods over him
like a policeman, which is pretty rotten for him and
maddens the kid, who looks on him as no sportsman. 
Bob seems to be trying the first way, which is what
I should do myself.  It’s all right, so far,
but, as I said, the term’s only just started.”</p>
<p>“Young Jackson seems all right. 
What’s wrong with him?  He doesn’t
stick on side any way, which he might easily do, considering
his cricket.”</p>
<p>“There’s nothing wrong
with him in that way.  I’ve talked to him
several times at the nets, and he’s very decent. 
But his getting into trouble hasn’t anything
to do with us.  It’s the masters you’ve
got to consider.”</p>
<p>“What’s up?  Does he rag?”</p>
<p>“From what I gather from fellows
in his form he’s got a genius for ragging. 
Thinks of things that don’t occur to anybody
else, and does them, too.”</p>
<p>“He never seems to be in extra. 
One always sees him about on half-holidays.”</p>
<p>“That’s always the way
with that sort of chap.  He keeps on wriggling
out of small rows till he thinks he can do anything
he likes without being dropped on, and then all of
a sudden he finds himself up to the eyebrows in a
record smash.  I don’t say young Jackson
will land himself like that.  All I say is that
he’s just the sort who does.  He’s
asking for trouble.  Besides, who do you see him
about with all the time?”</p>
<p>“He’s generally with Wyatt when I meet
him.”</p>
<p>“Yes.  Well, then!”</p>
<p>“What’s wrong with Wyatt? 
He’s one of the decentest men in the school.”</p>
<p>“I know.  But he’s
working up for a tremendous row one of these days,
unless he leaves before it comes off.  The odds
are, if Jackson’s so thick with him, that he’ll
be roped into it too.  Wyatt wouldn’t land
him if he could help it, but he probably wouldn’t
realise what he was letting the kid in for.  For
instance, I happen to know that Wyatt breaks out of
his dorm. every other night.  I don’t know
if he takes Jackson with him.  I shouldn’t
think so.  But there’s nothing to prevent
Jackson following him on his own.  And if you’re
caught at that game, it’s the boot every time.”</p>
<p>Trevor looked disturbed.</p>
<p>“Somebody ought to speak to Bob.”</p>
<p>“What’s the good? 
Why worry him?  Bob couldn’t do anything. 
You’d only make him do the policeman business,
which he hasn’t time for, and which is bound
to make rows between them.  Better leave him alone.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know.  It
would be a beastly thing for Bob if the kid did get
into a really bad row.”</p>
<p>“If you must tell anybody, tell
the Gazeka.  He’s head of Wain’s, and
has got far more chance of keeping an eye on Jackson
than Bob has.”</p>
<p>“The Gazeka is a fool.”</p>
<p>“All front teeth and side. 
Still, he’s on the spot.  But what’s
the good of worrying.  It’s nothing to do
with us, anyhow.  Let’s stagger out, shall
we?”</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>Trevor’s conscientious nature,
however, made it impossible for him to drop the matter. 
It disturbed him all the time that he and Clowes were
on the river; and, walking back to the house, he resolved
to see Bob about it during preparation.</p>
<p>He found him in his study, oiling a bat.</p>
<p>“I say, Bob,” he said, “look here. 
Are you busy?”</p>
<p>“No.  Why?”</p>
<p>“It’s this way.  Clowes and I were
talking——­”</p>
<p>“If Clowes was there he was probably talking. 
Well?”</p>
<p>“About your brother.”</p>
<p>“Oh, by Jove,” said Bob,
sitting up.  “That reminds me.  I forgot
to get the evening paper.  Did he get his century
all right?”</p>
<p>“Who?” asked Trevor, bewildered.</p>
<p>“My brother, J. W. He’d
made sixty-three not out against Kent in this morning’s
paper.  What happened?”</p>
<p>“I didn’t get a paper
either.  I didn’t mean that brother. 
I meant the one here.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mike?  What’s Mike been up to?”</p>
<p>“Nothing as yet, that I know
of; but, I say, you know, he seems a great pal of
Wyatt’s.”</p>
<p>“I know.  I spoke to him about it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you did?  That’s all right, then.”</p>
<p>“Not that there’s anything wrong with
Wyatt.”</p>
<p>“Not a bit.  Only he is
rather mucking about this term, I hear.  It’s
his last, so I suppose he wants to have a rag.”</p>
<p>“Don’t blame him.”</p>
<p>“Nor do I. Rather rot, though,
if he lugged your brother into a row by accident.”</p>
<p>“I should get blamed.  I think I’ll
speak to him again.”</p>
<p>“I should, I think.”</p>
<p>“I hope he isn’t idiot
enough to go out at night with Wyatt.  If Wyatt
likes to risk it, all right.  That’s his
look out.  But it won’t do for Mike to go
playing the goat too.”</p>
<p>“Clowes suggested putting Firby-Smith
on to him.  He’d have more chance, being
in the same house, of seeing that he didn’t come
a mucker than you would.”</p>
<p>“I’ve done that.  Smith said he’d
speak to him.”</p>
<p>“That’s all right then.  Is that a
new bat?”</p>
<p>“Got it to-day.  Smashed my other yesterday—­against
the school house.”</p>
<p>Donaldson’s had played a friendly
with the school house during the last two days, and
had beaten them.</p>
<p>“I thought I heard it go.  You were rather
in form.”</p>
<p>“Better than at the beginning
of the term, anyhow.  I simply couldn’t
do a thing then.  But my last three innings have
been 33 not out, 18, and 51.</p>
<p>“I should think you’re bound to get your
first all right.”</p>
<p>“Hope so.  I see Mike’s playing for
the second against the O.W.s.”</p>
<p>“Yes.  Pretty good for his
first term.  You have a pro. to coach you in the
holidays, don’t you?”</p>
<p>“Yes.  I didn’t go
to him much this last time.  I was away a lot. 
But Mike fairly lived inside the net.”</p>
<p>“Well, it’s not been chucked
away.  I suppose he’ll get his first next
year.  There’ll be a big clearing-out of
colours at the end of this term.  Nearly all the
first are leaving.  Henfrey’ll be captain,
I expect.”</p>
<p>“Saunders, the pro. at home,
always says that Mike’s going to be the star
cricketer of the family.  Better than J. W. even,
he thinks.  I asked him what he thought of me,
and he said, ’You’ll be making a lot of
runs some day, Mr. Bob.’  There’s a
subtle difference, isn’t there?  I shall
have Mike cutting me out before I leave school if I’m
not careful.”</p>
<p>“Sort of infant prodigy,”
said Trevor.  “Don’t think he’s
quite up to it yet, though.”</p>
<p>He went back to his study, and Bob,
having finished his oiling and washed his hands, started
on his Thucydides.  And, in the stress of wrestling
with the speech of an apparently delirious Athenian
general, whose remarks seemed to contain nothing even
remotely resembling sense and coherence, he allowed
the question of Mike’s welfare to fade from
his mind like a dissolving view.</p>
<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch8"> CHAPTER VIII<br/><br/> A ROW WITH THE TOWN</SPAN></h3>
<p>The beginning of a big row, one of
those rows which turn a school upside down like a
volcanic eruption and provide old boys with something
to talk about, when they meet, for years, is not unlike
the beginning of a thunderstorm.</p>
<p>You are walking along one seemingly
fine day, when suddenly there is a hush, and there
falls on you from space one big drop.  The next
moment the thing has begun, and you are standing in
a shower-bath.  It is just the same with a row. 
Some trivial episode occurs, and in an instant the
place is in a ferment.  It was so with the great
picnic at Wrykyn.</p>
<p>The bare outlines of the beginning
of this affair are included in a letter which Mike
wrote to his father on the Sunday following the Old
Wrykynian matches.</p>
<p>This was the letter: </p>
<blockquote>“DEAR FATHER,—­Thanks
awfully for your letter.  I hope you are quite
well.  I have been getting on all right at cricket
lately.  My scores since I wrote last have
been 0 in a scratch game (the sun got in my eyes
just as I played, and I got bowled); 15 for the third
against an eleven of masters (without G. B. Jones,
the Surrey man, and Spence); 28 not out in the
Under Sixteen game; and 30 in a form match.  Rather
decent.  Yesterday one of the men put down for
the second against the O.W.’s second couldn’t
play because his father was very ill, so I played. 
Wasn’t it luck?  It’s the first time
I’ve played for the second.  I didn’t
do much, because I didn’t get an innings. 
They stop the cricket on O.W. matches day because
they have a lot of rotten Greek plays and things
which take up a frightful time, and half the chaps
are acting, so we stop from lunch to four.  Rot
I call it.  So I didn’t go in, because
they won the toss and made 215, and by the time we’d
made 140 for 6 it was close of play.  They’d
stuck me in eighth wicket.  Rather rot. 
Still, I may get another shot.  And I made rather
a decent catch at mid-on.  Low down.  I
had to dive for it.  Bob played for the first,
but didn’t do much.  He was run out after
he’d got ten.  I believe he’s rather
sick about it.</blockquote>
<blockquote>“Rather a rummy thing happened
after lock-up.  I wasn’t in it, but a fellow
called Wyatt (awfully decent chap.  He’s
Wain’s step-son, only they bar one another)
told me about it.  He was in it all right. 
There’s a dinner after the matches on O.W.
day, and some of the chaps were going back to their
houses after it when they got into a row with a
lot of brickies from the town, and there was rather
a row.  There was a policeman mixed up in it
somehow, only I don’t quite know where he comes
in.  I’ll find out and tell you next time
I write.  Love to everybody.  Tell Marjory
I’ll write to her in a day or two.</blockquote>
<p align="center">“Your loving son,</p>
<p align="center">“MIKE.</p>
<blockquote>“P.S.—­I say, I
suppose you couldn’t send me five bob, could
you?  I’m rather broke.</blockquote>
<blockquote>“P.P.S.—­Half-a-crown
would do, only I’d rather it was five bob.”</blockquote>
<p>And, on the back of the envelope,
these words:  “Or a bob would be better
than nothing.”</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>The outline of the case was as Mike
had stated.  But there were certain details of
some importance which had not come to his notice when
he sent the letter.  On the Monday they were public
property.</p>
<p>The thing had happened after this
fashion.  At the conclusion of the day’s
cricket, all those who had been playing in the four
elevens which the school put into the field against
the old boys, together with the school choir, were
entertained by the headmaster to supper in the Great
Hall.  The banquet, lengthened by speeches, songs,
and recitations which the reciters imagined to be
songs, lasted, as a rule, till about ten o’clock,
when the revellers were supposed to go back to their
houses by the nearest route, and turn in.  This
was the official programme.  The school usually
performed it with certain modifications and improvements.</p>
<p>About midway between Wrykyn, the school,
and Wrykyn, the town, there stands on an island in
the centre of the road a solitary lamp-post.  It
was the custom, and had been the custom for generations
back, for the diners to trudge off to this lamp-post,
dance round it for some minutes singing the school
song or whatever happened to be the popular song of
the moment, and then race back to their houses. 
Antiquity had given the custom a sort of sanctity,
and the authorities, if they knew—­which
they must have done—­never interfered.</p>
<p>But there were others.</p>
<p>Wrykyn, the town, was peculiarly rich
in “gangs of youths.”  Like the vast
majority of the inhabitants of the place, they seemed
to have no work of any kind whatsoever to occupy their
time, which they used, accordingly, to spend prowling
about and indulging in a mild, brainless, rural type
of hooliganism.  They seldom proceeded to practical
rowdyism and never except with the school.  As
a rule, they amused themselves by shouting rude chaff. 
The school regarded them with a lofty contempt, much
as an Oxford man regards the townee.  The school
was always anxious for a row, but it was the unwritten
law that only in special circumstances should they
proceed to active measures.  A curious dislike
for school-and-town rows and most misplaced severity
in dealing with the offenders when they took place,
were among the few flaws in the otherwise admirable
character of the headmaster of Wrykyn.  It was
understood that one scragged bargees at one’s
own risk, and, as a rule, it was not considered worth
it.</p>
<p>But after an excellent supper and
much singing and joviality, one’s views are
apt to alter.  Risks which before supper seemed
great, show a tendency to dwindle.</p>
<p>When, therefore, the twenty or so
Wrykynians who were dancing round the lamp-post were
aware, in the midst of their festivities, that they
were being observed and criticised by an equal number
of townees, and that the criticisms were, as usual,
essentially candid and personal, they found themselves
forgetting the headmaster’s prejudices and feeling
only that these outsiders must be put to the sword
as speedily as possible, for the honour of the school.</p>
<p>Possibly, if the town brigade had
stuck to a purely verbal form of attack, all might
yet have been peace.  Words can be overlooked.</p>
<p>But tomatoes cannot.</p>
<p>No man of spirit can bear to be pelted
with over-ripe tomatoes for any length of time without
feeling that if the thing goes on much longer he will
be reluctantly compelled to take steps.</p>
<p>In the present crisis, the first tomato
was enough to set matters moving.</p>
<p>As the two armies stood facing each
other in silence under the dim and mysterious rays
of the lamp, it suddenly whizzed out from the enemy’s
ranks, and hit Wyatt on the right ear.</p>
<p>There was a moment of suspense. 
Wyatt took out his handkerchief and wiped his face,
over which the succulent vegetable had spread itself.</p>
<p>“I don’t know how you
fellows are going to pass the evening,” he said
quietly.  “My idea of a good after-dinner
game is to try and find the chap who threw that. 
Anybody coming?”</p>
<p>For the first five minutes it was
as even a fight as one could have wished to see. 
It raged up and down the road without a pause, now
in a solid mass, now splitting up into little groups. 
The science was on the side of the school.  Most
Wrykynians knew how to box to a certain extent. 
But, at any rate at first, it was no time for science. 
To be scientific one must have an opponent who observes
at least the more important rules of the ring. 
It is impossible to do the latest ducks and hooks
taught you by the instructor if your antagonist butts
you in the chest, and then kicks your shins, while
some dear friend of his, of whose presence you had
no idea, hits you at the same time on the back of
the head.  The greatest expert would lose his science
in such circumstances.</p>
<p>Probably what gave the school the
victory in the end was the righteousness of their
cause.  They were smarting under a sense of injury,
and there is nothing that adds a force to one’s
blows and a recklessness to one’s style of delivering
them more than a sense of injury.</p>
<p>Wyatt, one side of his face still
showing traces of the tomato, led the school with
a vigour that could not be resisted.  He very seldom
lost his temper, but he did draw the line at bad tomatoes.</p>
<p>Presently the school noticed that
the enemy were vanishing little by little into the
darkness which concealed the town.  Barely a dozen
remained.  And their lonely condition seemed to
be borne in upon these by a simultaneous brain-wave,
for they suddenly gave the fight up, and stampeded
as one man.</p>
<p>The leaders were beyond recall, but
two remained, tackled low by Wyatt and Clowes after
the fashion of the football-field.</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>The school gathered round its prisoners,
panting.  The scene of the conflict had shifted
little by little to a spot some fifty yards from where
it had started.  By the side of the road at this
point was a green, depressed looking pond.  Gloomy
in the daytime, it looked unspeakable at night. 
It struck Wyatt, whose finer feelings had been entirely
blotted out by tomato, as an ideal place in which to
bestow the captives.</p>
<p>“Let’s chuck ’em in there,”
he said.</p>
<p>The idea was welcomed gladly by all,
except the prisoners.  A move was made towards
the pond, and the procession had halted on the brink,
when a new voice made itself heard.</p>
<p>“Now then,” it said, “what’s
all this?”</p>
<p>A stout figure in policeman’s
uniform was standing surveying them with the aid of
a small bull’s-eye lantern.</p>
<p>“What’s all this?”</p>
<p>“It’s all right,” said Wyatt.</p>
<p>“All right, is it?  What’s on?”</p>
<p>One of the prisoners spoke.</p>
<p>“Make ’em leave hold of
us, Mr. Butt.  They’re a-going to chuck us
in the pond.”</p>
<p>“Ho!” said the policeman,
with a change in his voice.  “Ho, are they? 
Come now, young gentleman, a lark’s a lark, but
you ought to know where to stop.”</p>
<p>“It’s anything but a lark,”
said Wyatt in the creamy voice he used when feeling
particularly savage.  “We’re the Strong
Right Arm of Justice.  That’s what we are. 
This isn’t a lark, it’s an execution.”</p>
<p>“I don’t want none of
your lip, whoever you are,” said Mr. Butt, understanding
but dimly, and suspecting impudence by instinct.</p>
<p>“This is quite a private matter,”
said Wyatt.  “You run along on your beat. 
You can’t do anything here.”</p>
<p>“Ho!”</p>
<p>“Shove ’em in, you chaps.”</p>
<p>“Stop!” From Mr. Butt.</p>
<p>“Oo-er!” From prisoner number one.</p>
<p>There was a sounding splash as willing
hands urged the first of the captives into the depths. 
He ploughed his way to the bank, scrambled out, and
vanished.</p>
<p>Wyatt turned to the other prisoner.</p>
<p>“You’ll have the worst
of it, going in second.  He’ll have churned
up the mud a bit.  Don’t swallow more than
you can help, or you’ll go getting typhoid. 
I expect there are leeches and things there, but if
you nip out quick they may not get on to you. 
Carry on, you chaps.”</p>
<p>It was here that the regrettable incident
occurred.  Just as the second prisoner was being
launched, Constable Butt, determined to assert himself
even at the eleventh hour, sprang forward, and seized
the captive by the arm.  A drowning man will clutch
at a straw.  A man about to be hurled into an
excessively dirty pond will clutch at a stout policeman. 
The prisoner did.</p>
<p>Constable Butt represented his one
link with dry land.  As he came within reach he
attached himself to his tunic with the vigour and
concentration of a limpet.</p>
<p>At the same moment the executioners
gave their man the final heave.  The policeman
realised his peril too late.  A medley of noises
made the peaceful night hideous.  A howl from
the townee, a yell from the policeman, a cheer from
the launching party, a frightened squawk from some
birds in a neighbouring tree, and a splash compared
with which the first had been as nothing, and all
was over.</p>
<p>The dark waters were lashed into a
maelstrom; and then two streaming figures squelched
up the further bank.</p>
<center><SPAN name="illus2">
<ANTIMG src="images/jmike2.jpg" alt="THE DARK WATERS WERE LASHED INTO A MAELSTROM"></SPAN></center>
<p>The school stood in silent consternation. 
It was no occasion for light apologies.</p>
<p>“Do you know,” said Wyatt,
as he watched the Law shaking the water from itself
on the other side of the pond, “I’m not
half sure that we hadn’t better be moving!”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />