Mike by Pelham Grenville Wodehouse (most popular novels .TXT) 📕
He was alone in the carriage. Bob, who had been spending the last week of the holidays with an aunt further down the line, was to board the train at East Wobsley, and the brothers were to make a state entry into Wrykyn together. Meanwhile, Mike was left to his milk chocolate, his magazines, and his reflections.
The latter were not numerous, nor profound. He was excited. He had been petitioning the home authorities for the past year to be allowed to leave his private school and go to Wrykyn, and now the thing had come about. He wondered what sort of a house Wain's was, and whether they had any chance of the cricket cup. According to Bob they had no earthly; but then Bob only recognised one house, Donaldson's. He wondered if Bob would get his first eleven cap this year, and if he himself were likely to do anything at cricket. Marjory had faithfully reported e
Read free book «Mike by Pelham Grenville Wodehouse (most popular novels .TXT) 📕» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Pelham Grenville Wodehouse
- Performer: -
Read book online «Mike by Pelham Grenville Wodehouse (most popular novels .TXT) 📕». Author - Pelham Grenville Wodehouse
insult. At close of play he sought Burgess.
Burgess, besides being captain of the eleven, was also head of the
school. He was the man who arranged prefects’ meetings. And only a
prefects’ meeting, thought Firby-Smith, could adequately avenge his
lacerated dignity.
“I want to speak to you, Burgess,” he said.
“What’s up?” said Burgess.
“You know young Jackson in our house.”
“What about him?”
“He’s been frightfully insolent.”
“Cheeked you?” said Burgess, a man of simple speech.
“I want you to call a prefects’ meeting, and lick him.”
Burgess looked incredulous.
“Rather a large order, a prefects’ meeting,” he said. “It has to be a
pretty serious sort of thing for that.”
“Frightful cheek to a school prefect is a serious thing,” said
Firby-Smith, with the air of one uttering an epigram.
“Well, I suppose—What did he say to you?”
Firby-Smith related the painful details.
Burgess started to laugh, but turned the laugh into a cough.
“Yes,” he said meditatively. “Rather thick. Still, I mean—A prefects’
meeting. Rather like crushing a thingummy with a what-d’you-call-it.
Besides, he’s a decent kid.”
“He’s frightfully conceited.”
“Oh, well—Well, anyhow, look here, I’ll think it over, and let you
know to-morrow. It’s not the sort of thing to rush through without
thinking about it.”
And the matter was left temporarily at that.
MIKE CREATES A VACANCY
Burgess walked off the ground feeling that fate was not using him
well.
Here was he, a well-meaning youth who wanted to be on good terms with
all the world, being jockeyed into slaughtering a kid whose batting he
admired and whom personally he liked. And the worst of it was that he
sympathised with Mike. He knew what it felt like to be run out just
when one had got set, and he knew exactly how maddening the Gazeka’s
manner would be on such an occasion. On the other hand, officially he
was bound to support the head of Wain’s. Prefects must stand together
or chaos will come.
He thought he would talk it over with somebody. Bob occurred to him.
It was only fair that Bob should be told, as the nearest of kin.
And here was another grievance against fate. Bob was a person he did
not particularly wish to see just then. For that morning he had posted
up the list of the team to play for the school against Geddington, one
of the four schools which Wrykyn met at cricket; and Bob’s name did
not appear on that list. Several things had contributed to that
melancholy omission. In the first place, Geddington, to judge from the
weekly reports in the Sportsman and Field, were strong this
year at batting. In the second place, the results of the last few
matches, and particularly the M.C.C. match, had given Burgess the
idea that Wrykyn was weak at bowling. It became necessary, therefore,
to drop a batsman out of the team in favour of a bowler. And either
Mike or Bob must be the man.
Burgess was as rigidly conscientious as the captain of a school eleven
should be. Bob was one of his best friends, and he would have given
much to be able to put him in the team; but he thought the thing over,
and put the temptation sturdily behind him. At batting there was not
much to choose between the two, but in fielding there was a great deal.
Mike was good. Bob was bad. So out Bob had gone, and Neville-Smith, a
fair fast bowler at all times and on his day dangerous, took his place.
These clashings of public duty with private inclination are the
drawbacks to the despotic position of captain of cricket at a public
school. It is awkward having to meet your best friend after you have
dropped him from the team, and it is difficult to talk to him as if
nothing had happened.
Burgess felt very self-conscious as he entered Bob’s study, and was
rather glad that he had a topic of conversation ready to hand.
“Busy, Bob?” he asked.
“Hullo,” said Bob, with a cheerfulness rather over-done in his anxiety
to show Burgess, the man, that he did not hold him responsible in
any way for the distressing acts of Burgess, the captain. “Take a
pew. Don’t these studies get beastly hot this weather. There’s some
ginger-beer in the cupboard. Have some?”
“No, thanks. I say, Bob, look here, I want to see you.”
“Well, you can, can’t you? This is me, sitting over here. The tall,
dark, handsome chap.”
“It’s awfully awkward, you know,” continued Burgess gloomily; “that
ass of a young brother of yours—Sorry, but he is an ass,
though he’s your brother–-”
“Thanks for the ‘though,’ Billy. You know how to put a thing nicely.
What’s Mike been up to?”
“It’s that old fool the Gazeka. He came to me frothing with rage, and
wanted me to call a prefects’ meeting and touch young Mike up.”
Bob displayed interest and excitement for the first time.
“Prefects’ meeting! What the dickens is up? What’s he been doing?
Smith must be drunk. What’s all the row about?”
Burgess repeated the main facts of the case as he had them from
Firby-Smith.
“Personally, I sympathise with the kid,” he added, “Still, the Gazeka
is a prefect–-”
Bob gnawed a pen-holder morosely.
“Silly young idiot,” he said.
“Sickening thing being run out,” suggested Burgess.
“Still–-”
“I know. It’s rather hard to see what to do. I suppose if the Gazeka
insists, one’s bound to support him.”
“I suppose so.”
“Awful rot. Prefects’ lickings aren’t meant for that sort of thing.
They’re supposed to be for kids who steal buns at the shop or muck
about generally. Not for a chap who curses a fellow who runs him out.
I tell you what, there’s just a chance Firby-Smith won’t press the
thing. He hadn’t had time to get over it when he saw me. By now he’ll
have simmered down a bit. Look here, you’re a pal of his, aren’t you?
Well, go and ask him to drop the business. Say you’ll curse your
brother and make him apologise, and that I’ll kick him out of the team
for the Geddington match.”
It was a difficult moment for Bob. One cannot help one’s thoughts, and
for an instant the idea of going to Geddington with the team, as he
would certainly do if Mike did not play, made him waver. But he
recovered himself.
“Don’t do that,” he said. “I don’t see there’s a need for anything of
that sort. You must play the best side you’ve got. I can easily talk
the old Gazeka over. He gets all right in a second if he’s treated the
right way. I’ll go and do it now.”
Burgess looked miserable.
“I say, Bob,” he said.
“Yes?”
“Oh, nothing—I mean, you’re not a bad sort.” With which glowing
eulogy he dashed out of the room, thanking his stars that he had won
through a confoundedly awkward business.
Bob went across to Wain’s to interview and soothe Firby-Smith.
He found that outraged hero sitting moodily in his study like Achilles
in his tent.
Seeing Bob, he became all animation.
“Look here,” he said, “I wanted to see you. You know, that frightful
young brother of yours–-”
“I know, I know,” said Bob. “Burgess was telling me. He wants
kicking.”
“He wants a frightful licking from the prefects,” emended the
aggrieved party.
“Well, I don’t know, you know. Not much good lugging the prefects into
it, is there? I mean, apart from everything else, not much of a catch
for me, would it be, having to sit there and look on. I’m a prefect,
too, you know.”
Firby-Smith looked a little blank at this. He had a great admiration
for Bob.
“I didn’t think of you,” he said.
“I thought you hadn’t,” said Bob. “You see it now, though, don’t you?”
Firby-Smith returned to the original grievance.
“Well, you know, it was frightful cheek.”
“Of course it was. Still, I think if I saw him and cursed him, and
sent him up to you to apologise—How would that do?”
“All right. After all, I did run him out.”
“Yes, there’s that, of course. Mike’s all right, really. It isn’t as
if he did that sort of thing as a habit.”
“No. All right then.”
“Thanks,” said Bob, and went to find Mike.
*
The lecture on deportment which he read that future All-England
batsman in a secluded passage near the junior day-room left the latter
rather limp and exceedingly meek. For the moment all the jauntiness
and exuberance had been drained out of him. He was a punctured
balloon. Reflection, and the distinctly discouraging replies of those
experts in school law to whom he had put the question, “What d’you
think he’ll do?” had induced a very chastened frame of mind.
He perceived that he had walked very nearly into a hornets’ nest, and
the realisation of his escape made him agree readily to all the
conditions imposed. The apology to the Gazeka was made without
reserve, and the offensively forgiving, say-no-more-about-it-but-take
care-in-future air of the head of the house roused no spark of
resentment in him, so subdued was his fighting spirit. All he wanted
was to get the thing done with. He was not inclined to be critical.
And, most of all, he felt grateful to Bob. Firby-Smith, in the course
of his address, had not omitted to lay stress on the importance of
Bob’s intervention. But for Bob, he gave him to understand, he, Mike,
would have been prosecuted with the utmost rigour of the law. Mike
came away with a confused picture in his mind of a horde of furious
prefects bent on his slaughter, after the manner of a stage “excited
crowd,” and Bob waving them back. He realised that Bob had done him a
good turn. He wished he could find some way of repaying him.
Curiously enough, it was an enemy of Bob’s who suggested the
way—Burton, of Donaldson’s. Burton was a slippery young gentleman,
fourteen years of age, who had frequently come into contact with
Bob in the house, and owed him many grudges. With Mike he had always
tried to form an alliance, though without success.
He happened to meet Mike going to school next morning, and unburdened
his soul to him. It chanced that Bob and he had had another small
encounter immediately after breakfast, and Burton felt revengeful.
“I say,” said Burton, “I’m jolly glad you’re playing for the first
against Geddington.”
“Thanks,” said Mike.
“I’m specially glad for one reason.”
“What’s that?” inquired Mike, without interest.
“Because your beast of a brother has been chucked out. He’d have been
playing but for you.”
At any other time Mike would have heard Bob called a beast without
active protest. He would have felt that it was no business of his to
fight his brother’s battles for him. But on this occasion he deviated
from his rule.
He kicked Burton. Not once or twice, but several times, so that
Burton, retiring hurriedly, came to the conclusion that it must be
something in the Jackson blood, some taint, as it were. They were
all beasts.
*
Mike walked on, weighing this remark, and gradually made up his mind.
It must be remembered
Comments (0)