<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch24"> CHAPTER XXIV<br/><br/> CAUGHT</SPAN></h3>
<p>“Got some rather bad news for
you, I’m afraid,” began Mr. Appleby. 
“I’ll smoke, if you don’t mind. 
About Wyatt.”</p>
<p>“James!”</p>
<p>“I was sitting in my garden
a few minutes ago, having a pipe before finishing
the rest of my papers, and Wyatt dropped from the wall
on to my herbaceous border.”</p>
<p>Mr. Appleby said this with a tinge
of bitterness.  The thing still rankled.</p>
<p>“James!  In your garden! 
Impossible.  Why, it is not a quarter of an hour
since I left him in his dormitory.”</p>
<p>“He’s not there now.”</p>
<p>“You astound me, Appleby.  I am astonished.”</p>
<p>“So was I.”</p>
<p>“How is such a thing possible?  His window
is heavily barred.”</p>
<p>“Bars can be removed.”</p>
<p>“You must have been mistaken.”</p>
<p>“Possibly,” said Mr. Appleby,
a little nettled.  Gaping astonishment is always
apt to be irritating.  “Let’s leave
it at that, then.  Sorry to have disturbed you.”</p>
<p>“No, sit down, Appleby. 
Dear me, this is most extraordinary.  Exceedingly
so.  You are certain it was James?”</p>
<p>“Perfectly.  It’s like daylight out
of doors.”</p>
<p>Mr. Wain drummed on the table with his fingers.</p>
<p>“What shall I do?”</p>
<p>Mr. Appleby offered no suggestion.</p>
<p>“I ought to report it to the
headmaster.  That is certainly the course I should
pursue.”</p>
<p>“I don’t see why. 
It isn’t like an ordinary case.  You’re
the parent.  You can deal with the thing directly. 
If you come to think of it, a headmaster’s only
a sort of middleman between boys and parents. 
He plays substitute for the parent in his absence. 
I don’t see why you should drag in the master
at all here.”</p>
<p>“There is certainly something
in what you say,” said Mr. Wain on reflection.</p>
<p>“A good deal.  Tackle the
boy when he comes in, and have it out with him. 
Remember that it must mean expulsion if you report
him to the headmaster.  He would have no choice. 
Everybody who has ever broken out of his house here
and been caught has been expelled.  I should strongly
advise you to deal with the thing yourself.”</p>
<p>“I will.  Yes.  You
are quite right, Appleby.  That is a very good
idea of yours.  You are not going?”</p>
<p>“Must.  Got a pile of examination
papers to look over.  Good-night.”</p>
<p>“Good-night.”</p>
<p>Mr. Appleby made his way out of the
window and through the gate into his own territory
in a pensive frame of mind.  He was wondering what
would happen.  He had taken the only possible course,
and, if only Wain kept his head and did not let the
matter get through officially to the headmaster, things
might not be so bad for Wyatt after all.  He hoped
they would not.  He liked Wyatt.  It would
be a thousand pities, he felt, if he were to be expelled. 
What would Wain do?  What would <i>he</i> do in
a similar case?  It was difficult to say. 
Probably talk violently for as long as he could keep
it up, and then consider the episode closed. 
He doubted whether Wain would have the common sense
to do this.  Altogether it was very painful and
disturbing, and he was taking a rather gloomy view
of the assistant master’s lot as he sat down
to finish off the rest of his examination papers. 
It was not all roses, the life of an assistant master
at a public school.  He had continually to be
sinking his own individual sympathies in the claims
of his duty.  Mr. Appleby was the last man who
would willingly have reported a boy for enjoying a
midnight ramble.  But he was the last man to shirk
the duty of reporting him, merely because it was one
decidedly not to his taste.</p>
<p>Mr. Wain sat on for some minutes after
his companion had left, pondering over the news he
had heard.  Even now he clung to the idea that
Appleby had made some extraordinary mistake.  Gradually
he began to convince himself of this.  He had
seen Wyatt actually in bed a quarter of an hour before—­not
asleep, it was true, but apparently on the verge of
dropping off.  And the bars across the window had
looked so solid....  Could Appleby have been dreaming? 
Something of the kind might easily have happened. 
He had been working hard, and the night was warm....</p>
<p>Then it occurred to him that he could
easily prove or disprove the truth of his colleague’s
statement by going to the dormitory and seeing if
Wyatt were there or not.  If he had gone out, he
would hardly have returned yet.</p>
<p>He took a candle, and walked quietly upstairs.</p>
<p>Arrived at his step-son’s dormitory,
he turned the door-handle softly and went in. 
The light of the candle fell on both beds.  Mike
was there, asleep.  He grunted, and turned over
with his face to the wall as the light shone on his
eyes.  But the other bed was empty.  Appleby
had been right.</p>
<p>If further proof had been needed,
one of the bars was missing from the window. 
The moon shone in through the empty space.</p>
<p>The house-master sat down quietly
on the vacant bed.  He blew the candle out, and
waited there in the semi-darkness, thinking.  For
years he and Wyatt had lived in a state of armed neutrality,
broken by various small encounters.  Lately, by
silent but mutual agreement, they had kept out of
each other’s way as much as possible, and it
had become rare for the house-master to have to find
fault officially with his step-son.  But there
had never been anything even remotely approaching
friendship between them.  Mr. Wain was not a man
who inspired affection readily, least of all in those
many years younger than himself.  Nor did he easily
grow fond of others.  Wyatt he had regarded, from
the moment when the threads of their lives became
entangled, as a complete nuisance.</p>
<p>It was not, therefore, a sorrowful,
so much as an exasperated, vigil that he kept in the
dormitory.  There was nothing of the sorrowing
father about his frame of mind.  He was the house-master
about to deal with a mutineer, and nothing else.</p>
<p>This breaking-out, he reflected wrathfully,
was the last straw.  Wyatt’s presence had
been a nervous inconvenience to him for years. 
The time had come to put an end to it.  It was
with a comfortable feeling of magnanimity that he
resolved not to report the breach of discipline to
the headmaster.  Wyatt should not be expelled. 
But he should leave, and that immediately.  He
would write to the bank before he went to bed, asking
them to receive his step-son at once; and the letter
should go by the first post next day.  The discipline
of the bank would be salutary and steadying. 
And—­this was a particularly grateful reflection—­a
fortnight annually was the limit of the holiday allowed
by the management to its junior employees.</p>
<p>Mr. Wain had arrived at this conclusion,
and was beginning to feel a little cramped, when Mike
Jackson suddenly sat up.</p>
<p>“Hullo!” said Mike.</p>
<p>“Go to sleep, Jackson, immediately,” snapped
the house-master.</p>
<p>Mike had often heard and read of people’s
hearts leaping to their mouths, but he had never before
experienced that sensation of something hot and dry
springing in the throat, which is what really happens
to us on receipt of a bad shock.  A sickening feeling
that the game was up beyond all hope of salvation
came to him.  He lay down again without a word.</p>
<p>What a frightful thing to happen! 
How on earth had this come about?  What in the
world had brought Wain to the dormitory at that hour? 
Poor old Wyatt!  If it had upset <i>him</i> (Mike)
to see the house-master in the room, what would be
the effect of such a sight on Wyatt, returning from
the revels at Neville-Smith’s!</p>
<p>And what could he do?  Nothing. 
There was literally no way out.  His mind went
back to the night when he had saved Wyatt by a brilliant
<i>coup</i>.  The most brilliant of <i>coups</i>
could effect nothing now.  Absolutely and entirely
the game was up.</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>Every minute that passed seemed like
an hour to Mike.  Dead silence reigned in the
dormitory, broken every now and then by the creak of
the other bed, as the house-master shifted his position. 
Twelve boomed across the field from the school clock. 
Mike could not help thinking what a perfect night
it must be for him to be able to hear the strokes
so plainly.  He strained his ears for any indication
of Wyatt’s approach, but could hear nothing. 
Then a very faint scraping noise broke the stillness,
and presently the patch of moonlight on the floor
was darkened.</p>
<p>At that moment Mr. Wain relit his candle.</p>
<p>The unexpected glare took Wyatt momentarily
aback.  Mike saw him start.  Then he seemed
to recover himself.  In a calm and leisurely manner
he climbed into the room.</p>
<p>“James!” said Mr. Wain. 
His voice sounded ominously hollow.</p>
<p>Wyatt dusted his knees, and rubbed
his hands together.  “Hullo, is that you,
father!” he said pleasantly.</p>
<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch25"> CHAPTER XXV<br/><br/> MARCHING ORDERS</SPAN></h3>
<p>A silence followed.  To Mike,
lying in bed, holding his breath, it seemed a long
silence.  As a matter of fact it lasted for perhaps
ten seconds.  Then Mr. Wain spoke.</p>
<p>“You have been out, James?”</p>
<p>It is curious how in the more dramatic
moments of life the inane remark is the first that
comes to us.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said Wyatt.</p>
<p>“I am astonished.  Exceedingly astonished.”</p>
<p>“I got a bit of a start myself,” said
Wyatt.</p>
<p>“I shall talk to you in my study.  Follow
me there.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>He left the room, and Wyatt suddenly began to chuckle.</p>
<p>“I say, Wyatt!” said Mike,
completely thrown off his balance by the events of
the night.</p>
<p>Wyatt continued to giggle helplessly. 
He flung himself down on his bed, rolling with laughter. 
Mike began to get alarmed.</p>
<p>“It’s all right,”
said Wyatt at last, speaking with difficulty. 
“But, I say, how long had he been sitting there?”</p>
<p>“It seemed hours.  About an hour, I suppose,
really.”</p>
<p>“It’s the funniest thing
I’ve ever struck.  Me sweating to get in
quietly, and all the time him camping out on my bed!”</p>
<p>“But look here, what’ll happen?”</p>
<p>Wyatt sat up.</p>
<p>“That reminds me.  Suppose I’d better
go down.”</p>
<p>“What’ll he do, do you think?”</p>
<p>“Ah, now, what!”</p>
<p>“But, I say, it’s awful.  What’ll
happen?”</p>
<p>“That’s for him to decide.  Speaking
at a venture, I should say——­”</p>
<p>“You don’t think——?”</p>
<p>“The boot.  The swift and
sudden boot.  I shall be sorry to part with you,
but I’m afraid it’s a case of ‘Au
revoir, my little Hyacinth.’  We shall meet
at Philippi.  This is my Moscow.  To-morrow
I shall go out into the night with one long, choking
sob.  Years hence a white-haired bank-clerk will
tap at your door when you’re a prosperous professional
cricketer with your photograph in <i>Wisden</i>. 
That’ll be me.  Well, I suppose I’d
better go down.  We’d better all get to bed
<i>some</i> time to-night.  Don’t go to
sleep.”</p>
<p>“Not likely.”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you all the
latest news when I come back.  Where are me slippers? 
Ha, ’tis well!  Lead on, then, minions. 
I follow.”</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>In the study Mr. Wain was fumbling
restlessly with his papers when Wyatt appeared.</p>
<p>“Sit down, James,” he said.</p>
<p>Wyatt sat down.  One of his slippers
fell off with a clatter.  Mr. Wain jumped nervously.</p>
<p>“Only my slipper,” explained Wyatt. 
“It slipped.”</p>
<p>Mr. Wain took up a pen, and began to tap the table.</p>
<p>“Well, James?”</p>
<p>Wyatt said nothing.</p>
<p>“I should be glad to hear your
explanation of this disgraceful matter.”</p>
<p>“The fact is——­” said
Wyatt.</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“I haven’t one, sir.”</p>
<p>“What were you doing out of
your dormitory, out of the house, at that hour?”</p>
<p>“I went for a walk, sir.”</p>
<p>“And, may I inquire, are you
in the habit of violating the strictest school rules
by absenting yourself from the house during the night?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“This is an exceedingly serious matter.”</p>
<p>Wyatt nodded agreement with this view.</p>
<p>“Exceedingly.”</p>
<p>The pen rose and fell with the rapidity
of the cylinder of a motor-car.  Wyatt, watching
it, became suddenly aware that the thing was hypnotising
him.  In a minute or two he would be asleep.</p>
<p>“I wish you wouldn’t do
that, father.  Tap like that, I mean.  It’s
sending me to sleep.”</p>
<p>“James!”</p>
<p>“It’s like a woodpecker.”</p>
<p>“Studied impertinence——­”</p>
<p>“I’m very sorry.  Only it <i>was</i>
sending me off.”</p>
<p>Mr. Wain suspended tapping operations,
and resumed the thread of his discourse.</p>
<p>“I am sorry, exceedingly, to
see this attitude in you, James.  It is not fitting. 
It is in keeping with your behaviour throughout. 
Your conduct has been lax and reckless in the extreme. 
It is possible that you imagine that the peculiar
circumstances of our relationship secure you from
the penalties to which the ordinary boy——­”</p>
<p>“No, sir.”</p>
<p>“I need hardly say,” continued
Mr. Wain, ignoring the interruption, “that I
shall treat you exactly as I should treat any other
member of my house whom I had detected in the same
misdemeanour.”</p>
<p>“Of course,” said Wyatt, approvingly.</p>
<p>“I must ask you not to interrupt
me when I am speaking to you, James.  I say that
your punishment will be no whit less severe than would
be that of any other boy.  You have repeatedly
proved yourself lacking in ballast and a respect for
discipline in smaller ways, but this is a far more
serious matter.  Exceedingly so.  It is impossible
for me to overlook it, even were I disposed to do
so.  You are aware of the penalty for such an
action as yours?”</p>
<p>“The sack,” said Wyatt laconically.</p>
<p>“It is expulsion.  You must leave the school. 
At once.”</p>
<p>Wyatt nodded.</p>
<p>“As you know, I have already
secured a nomination for you in the London and Oriental
Bank.  I shall write to-morrow to the manager
asking him to receive you at once——­”</p>
<p>“After all, they only gain an extra fortnight
of me.”</p>
<p>“You will leave directly I receive
his letter.  I shall arrange with the headmaster
that you are withdrawn privately——­”</p>
<p>“<i>Not</i> the sack?”</p>
<p>“Withdrawn privately.  You
will not go to school to-morrow.  Do you understand? 
That is all.  Have you anything to say?”</p>
<p>Wyatt reflected.</p>
<p>“No, I don’t think——­”</p>
<p>His eye fell on a tray bearing a decanter and a syphon.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” he said. 
“Can’t I mix you a whisky and soda, father,
before I go off to bed?”</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>“Well?” said Mike.</p>
<p>Wyatt kicked off his slippers, and began to undress.</p>
<p>“What happened?”</p>
<p>“We chatted.”</p>
<p>“Has he let you off?”</p>
<p>“Like a gun.  I shoot off
almost immediately.  To-morrow I take a well-earned
rest away from school, and the day after I become the
gay young bank-clerk, all amongst the ink and ledgers.”</p>
<p>Mike was miserably silent.</p>
<p>“Buck up,” said Wyatt
cheerfully.  “It would have happened anyhow
in another fortnight.  So why worry?”</p>
<p>Mike was still silent.  The reflection
was doubtless philosophic, but it failed to comfort
him.</p>
<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch26"> CHAPTER XXVI<br/><br/> THE AFTERMATH</SPAN></h3>
<p>Bad news spreads quickly.  By
the quarter to eleven interval next day the facts
concerning Wyatt and Mr. Wain were public property. 
Mike, as an actual spectator of the drama, was in
great request as an informant.  As he told the
story to a group of sympathisers outside the school
shop, Burgess came up, his eyes rolling in a fine frenzy.</p>
<p>“Anybody seen young—­oh,
here you are.  What’s all this about Jimmy
Wyatt?  They’re saying he’s been sacked,
or some rot.”</p>
<center><SPAN name="illus5">
<ANTIMG src="images/jmike5.jpg" alt="“WHAT’S ALL THIS ABOUT JIMMY WYATT?”"></SPAN></center>
<p>“So he has—­at least, he’s got
to leave.”</p>
<p>“What?  When?”</p>
<p>“He’s left already.  He isn’t
coming to school again.”</p>
<p>Burgess’s first thought, as
befitted a good cricket captain, was for his team.</p>
<p>“And the Ripton match on Saturday!”</p>
<p>Nobody seemed to have anything except silent sympathy
at his command.</p>
<p>“Dash the man!  Silly ass! 
What did he want to do it for!  Poor old Jimmy,
though!” he added after a pause.  “What
rot for him!”</p>
<p>“Beastly,” agreed Mike.</p>
<p>“All the same,” continued
Burgess, with a return to the austere manner of the
captain of cricket, “he might have chucked playing
the goat till after the Ripton match.  Look here,
young Jackson, you’ll turn out for fielding
with the first this afternoon.  You’ll play
on Saturday.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Mike,
without enthusiasm.  The Wyatt disaster was too
recent for him to feel much pleasure at playing against
Ripton <i>vice</i> his friend, withdrawn.</p>
<p>Bob was the next to interview him. 
They met in the cloisters.</p>
<p>“Hullo, Mike!” said Bob. 
“I say, what’s all this about Wyatt?”</p>
<p>“Wain caught him getting back
into the dorm. last night after Neville-Smith’s,
and he’s taken him away from the school.”</p>
<p>“What’s he going to do? 
Going into that bank straight away?”</p>
<p>“Yes.  You know, that’s
the part he bars most.  He’d have been leaving
anyhow in a fortnight, you see; only it’s awful
rot for a chap like Wyatt to have to go and froust
in a bank for the rest of his life.”</p>
<p>“He’ll find it rather
a change, I expect.  I suppose you won’t
be seeing him before he goes?”</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t think so. 
Not unless he comes to the dorm. during the night. 
He’s sleeping over in Wain’s part of the
house, but I shouldn’t be surprised if he nipped
out after Wain has gone to bed.  Hope he does,
anyway.”</p>
<p>“I should like to say good-bye. 
But I don’t suppose it’ll be possible.”</p>
<p>They separated in the direction of
their respective form-rooms.  Mike felt bitter
and disappointed at the way the news had been received. 
Wyatt was his best friend, his pal; and it offended
him that the school should take the tidings of his
departure as they had done.  Most of them who
had come to him for information had expressed a sort
of sympathy with the absent hero of his story, but
the chief sensation seemed to be one of pleasurable
excitement at the fact that something big had happened
to break the monotony of school routine.  They
treated the thing much as they would have treated
the announcement that a record score had been made
in first-class cricket.  The school was not so
much regretful as comfortably thrilled.  And Burgess
had actually cursed before sympathising.  Mike
felt resentful towards Burgess.  As a matter of
fact, the cricket captain wrote a letter to Wyatt during
preparation that night which would have satisfied even
Mike’s sense of what was fit.  But Mike
had no opportunity of learning this.</p>
<p>There was, however, one exception
to the general rule, one member of the school who
did not treat the episode as if it were merely an
interesting and impersonal item of sensational news. 
Neville-Smith heard of what had happened towards the
end of the interval, and rushed off instantly in search
of Mike.  He was too late to catch him before
he went to his form-room, so he waited for him at half-past
twelve, when the bell rang for the end of morning
school.</p>
<p>“I say, Jackson, is this true about old Wyatt?”</p>
<p>Mike nodded.</p>
<p>“What happened?”</p>
<p>Mike related the story for the sixteenth
time.  It was a melancholy pleasure to have found
a listener who heard the tale in the right spirit. 
There was no doubt about Neville-Smith’s interest
and sympathy.  He was silent for a moment after
Mike had finished.</p>
<p>“It was all my fault,”
he said at length.  “If it hadn’t been
for me, this wouldn’t have happened.  What
a fool I was to ask him to my place!  I might
have known he would be caught.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” said Mike.</p>
<p>“It was absolutely my fault.”</p>
<p>Mike was not equal to the task of
soothing Neville-Smith’s wounded conscience. 
He did not attempt it.  They walked on without
further conversation till they reached Wain’s
gate, where Mike left him.  Neville-Smith proceeded
on his way, plunged in meditation.</p>
<p>The result of which meditation was
that Burgess got a second shock before the day was
out.  Bob, going over to the nets rather late in
the afternoon, came upon the captain of cricket standing
apart from his fellow men with an expression on his
face that spoke of mental upheavals on a vast scale.</p>
<p>“What’s up?” asked Bob.</p>
<p>“Nothing much,” said Burgess,
with a forced and grisly calm.  “Only that,
as far as I can see, we shall play Ripton on Saturday
with a sort of second eleven.  You don’t
happen to have got sacked or anything, by the way,
do you?”</p>
<p>“What’s happened now?”</p>
<p>“Neville-Smith.  In extra
on Saturday.  That’s all.  Only our first-
and second-change bowlers out of the team for the
Ripton match in one day.  I suppose by to-morrow
half the others’ll have gone, and we shall take
the field on Saturday with a scratch side of kids from
the Junior School.”</p>
<p>“Neville-Smith!  Why, what’s he been
doing?”</p>
<p>“Apparently he gave a sort of
supper to celebrate his getting his first, and it
was while coming back from that that Wyatt got collared. 
Well, I’m blowed if Neville-Smith doesn’t
toddle off to the Old Man after school to-day and
tell him the whole yarn!  Said it was all his
fault.  What rot!  Sort of thing that might
have happened to any one.  If Wyatt hadn’t
gone to him, he’d probably have gone out somewhere
else.”</p>
<p>“And the Old Man shoved him in extra?”</p>
<p>“Next two Saturdays.”</p>
<p>“Are Ripton strong this year?”
asked Bob, for lack of anything better to say.</p>
<p>“Very, from all accounts. 
They whacked the M.C.C.  Jolly hot team of M.C.C.
too.  Stronger than the one we drew with.”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, you never know what’s
going to happen at cricket.  I may hold a catch
for a change.”</p>
<p>Burgess grunted.</p>
<p>Bob went on his way to the nets.  Mike was just
putting on his pads.</p>
<p>“I say, Mike,” said Bob. 
“I wanted to see you.  It’s about Wyatt. 
I’ve thought of something.”</p>
<p>“What’s that?”</p>
<p>“A way of getting him out of
that bank.  If it comes off, that’s to say.”</p>
<p>“By Jove, he’d jump at anything. 
What’s the idea?”</p>
<p>“Why shouldn’t he get
a job of sorts out in the Argentine?  There ought
to be heaps of sound jobs going there for a chap like
Wyatt.  He’s a jolly good shot, to start
with.  I shouldn’t wonder if it wasn’t
rather a score to be able to shoot out there. 
And he can ride, I know.”</p>
<p>“By Jove, I’ll write to
father to-night.  He must be able to work it, I
should think.  He never chucked the show altogether,
did he?”</p>
<p>Mike, as most other boys of his age
would have been, was profoundly ignorant as to the
details by which his father’s money had been,
or was being, made.  He only knew vaguely that
the source of revenue had something to do with the
Argentine.  His brother Joe had been born in Buenos
Ayres; and once, three years ago, his father had gone
over there for a visit, presumably on business. 
All these things seemed to show that Mr. Jackson senior
was a useful man to have about if you wanted a job
in that Eldorado, the Argentine Republic.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, Mike’s
father owned vast tracts of land up country, where
countless sheep lived and had their being.  He
had long retired from active superintendence of his
estate.  Like Mr. Spenlow, he had a partner, a
stout fellow with the work-taint highly developed,
who asked nothing better than to be left in charge. 
So Mr. Jackson had returned to the home of his fathers,
glad to be there again.  But he still had a decided
voice in the ordering of affairs on the ranches, and
Mike was going to the fountain-head of things when
he wrote to his father that night, putting forward
Wyatt’s claims to attention and ability to perform
any sort of job with which he might be presented.</p>
<p>The reflection that he had done all
that could be done tended to console him for the non-appearance
of Wyatt either that night or next morning—­a
non-appearance which was due to the simple fact that
he passed that night in a bed in Mr. Wain’s
dressing-room, the door of which that cautious pedagogue,
who believed in taking no chances, locked from the
outside on retiring to rest.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />