And as the blushing innocent walked up the room, the observed of all observers, and made straight for the Head Master"s table, our heroes became absorbed in admiration of the plates in front of them, and positively trembled with the emotion their beauty evoked.
Every one was most polite to the abashed new boy on his journey up the room. They ceased talking as they beheld him, and respectfully made room for him. Some even were good enough to a.s.sist his progress by word and gesture.
"Where are you going, my pretty maid?" asked Birket of the rosy youth, as he neared his destination.
The poetical suggestion was too much for the Fifth, who caught up the pastoral ditty, and accompanied the measured tread of the wanderer with an undertone chorus of--
""Where are you going, my pretty maid?"
"I"m going to dinner, sir," she said.
"May I go with you, my pretty maid?"
"Not if I know it, sir," she said."
Coote got used to the pretty melody before the term was over, but just now his sense of music was deadened by the apparition of Dr Winter, who entered by a door at the upper end of the Hall, and walked straight for the chair which the modest novice had looked upon as the goal of his tedious journey.
"Cut back!" said Birket, coming to the rescue just in time, and turning the unhappy boy to the rightabout. "They"ve been making a fool of you."
Then might have been seen a spotless white figure flying like the wind down the Hall of Templeton, making the place rosy with his blushes, and merry with his hot haste.
d.i.c.k and Heathcote caught their brother as he made for the door, and squeezed him in between them at their table, where roast beef and good cheer restored some of his drooping spirits, while the applause of his patrons and the success of the whole adventure went far to reduce the tension which otherwise might have threatened the stability of the "Firm."
But after that, Coote felt his confidence in the "two bricks," on whom he had hitherto relied so implicitly, a trifle shaken, and was not quite sure whether, after all, a new boy might not get through his first few days as comfortably without the protection of two bosom friends as with it.
There being very few new boys this term compared with last, he found himself by no means neglected in his walks abroad, and it required all his wariness to elude the gins and pitfalls prepared for him. Indeed, his very wariness got him into trouble.
After chapel on his second morning Swinstead came to him and said--
"Youngster, you are to go to the Doctor at half-past nine."
"Oh, ah!" said Coote to himself, knowingly. "I know what that means."
"Do you hear?" asked Swinstead.
"I suppose you think I"m green," said the new boy.
Swinstead laughed.
"What on earth should make me think that?" said he.
Coote chuckled merrily to himself as he saw the senior depart.
"I"m getting over the worst of it," said he to himself. "They"ll soon give up trying it on me. Ha, ha!"
And he went off to find his chums, who took him for a stroll in the Fields.
"Well, young "un," said d.i.c.k, patronisingly, "getting used to it? Worn your flannels lately?"
"You"re a beastly cad, d.i.c.k," said Coote; "but you don"t catch me like that again."
"No, you"re getting too knowing," said Georgie.
Coote laughed.
"I"m not quite as green as some fellows think," said he. "A fellow came to me this morning and told me to go to the Doctor at 9:30. A nice fool he thought he"d make of me. Ha, ha!"
"What fellow was he?" said d.i.c.k, looking rather serious.
"I don"t know his name," said Coote. "The fellow who marked the names in chapel, I believe."
"What, Swinstead? Did he tell you to go?"
"Rather; and I told him I wasn"t such a fool as I looked--I mean as he thought."
"By Jove!--you young a.s.s! You"ve got yourself into a mess, if you like."
"How do you mean?" inquired the new boy, beginning to be alarmed at the concerned looks of his two friends.
"Why, he"s Chapel usher," said d.i.c.k. "Do you mean to say you didn"t go to the Doctor?"
"Rather not. I--"
"What"s the time?" said d.i.c.k.
"A quarter to ten."
Without more ado they took the unhappy Coote between them and rushed him frantically back to the school, where they shot him in at the Doctor"s door just as that gentleman was about to dismiss his new boys" cla.s.s.
"How is this, Coote?" demanded the Head Master, sternly, as the breathless boy entered. "Were you not told to be here at half-past nine?"
"Yes, sir; I--I made a mistake. I"m very sorry, sir."
The genuine terror in his face procured his reprieve this time. Dr Winter may have been used to "mistakes" of this kind. At any rate, he contented himself with cautioning the new boy against unpunctuality generally, and, by way of punishment, gave him an examination all to himself, which resulted, much to his comfort, in his being placed in the upper third, of which d.i.c.k and Heathcote were already shining lights.
While he was thus engaged, d.i.c.k and Heathcote were holding a secret, and by no means cheerful, consultation over a recent number of the _Templeton Observer_.
"I made sure it was all blown over," said the latter, dejectedly.
"What a cad the fellow must be!" said the former.
"I think newspapers are a regular nuisance!" said Georgie.
"All I know is, he robbed us of all we had, and if we"d informed he"d have been in Botany Bay or somewhere this minute!" said d.i.c.k, working himself up into a pa.s.sion.
The extract from the _Templeton Observer_ which gave rise to this duet of wrath was as follows, dated some ten days before the close of the holidays:--
*The recent mysterious disappearance of a Templeton boat*.--Up to the present time nothing has been heard of the _Martha_, which, as our readers will remember, disappeared from the Templeton beach, on the 4th June last. The supposed clue with which the police professed to be provided has, so far, failed to bring the perpetrators of the outrage to justice; although the hope is by no means abandoned of tracing the missing lad. The matter is somewhat seriously complicated by the discovery that Thomas White, the reputed owner of the boat, was at no time its actual proprietor. The _Martha_ was the joint property of White and three other men, one of them skipper of the brig _Julia_, and the other two well-known fishermen, of this town. It appears that an arrangement was made, whereby White should be the nominal owner of the boat, he undertaking to hand over monthly three quarters of the profits to his partners. In May last, during the absence of his other partners, White p.a.w.ned the _Martha_ representing her to be his sole property, and appropriated the whole proceeds of the transaction. For this act of fraud (which the recent loss of the boat and the return of its joint owners has brought to light) we understand a writ has been issued against White, and that he will be arrested immediately on his return to Templeton from his present cruise with the Fishing Fleet in the high seas.
"Tom White"s a regular bad one," said d.i.c.k.
"Yes. It was a jolly mean trick to p.a.w.n what didn"t belong to him."