HOW d.i.c.k HAS ONE LATIN EXERCISE MORE THAN HE BARGAINED FOR.
d.i.c.k did not often feel ashamed of himself. He had a knack of keeping his head above water, even in reverses, which usually stood him in good stead. But after that mournful scratch match with Cazenove and Wade, he certainly did feel ashamed.
And, be it said to the credit of his honesty, that he blamed the right offender. Ponty had been rough on him, but it wasn"t Ponty"s fault.
Cazenove and Wade had knocked him and his chum into a c.o.c.ked hat, but it wasn"t Cazenove"s or Wade"s fault. Heathcote had mulled his game dreadfully, and done nothing to save the match, but it wasn"t Heathcote"s fault. Basil the son of Richard was the guilty man, and Basil the son of Richard kicked himself and called himself a fool.
Not publicly, though. In the Den, despite the blushes his tennis had caused, he did his best to keep up his swagger and restore confidence by a few acts of special audacity; and the Den was forgiving on the whole.
They did feel sore for a day, and showed it; but gradually they came back to their allegiance, and made excuses for their hero of their own accord.
If truth must be told, d.i.c.k was far more concerned as to the possible effect of his public humiliation on his election at "the Sociables,"
which was now only a day off.
Braider told him, with rather a long face, that his chances had been rather shaken by the affair, and that there was again some talk of pushing Culver against him. This alarming news drove all immediate projects of virtue out of d.i.c.k"s head. Not that membership of the club was his one ideal of bliss; but, being a candidate, he could not bear the idea of being defeated, particularly by a young ruffian like Culver.
So he indulged in all sorts of extravagances on the last day of his probation, and led Heathcote on to the very verge of a further punishment in order to recover some of the ground he had lost with the "select" twenty.
After school he could settle to nothing till he knew his fate. He dragged the unsuspecting Heathcote up and down the great Quadrangle under pretext of discussing Tom White"s boat, but really in order to keep his eye on the door behind which the select "Sociables" sat in congress.
Heathcote saw there was a secret somewhere, and, feeling himself out of it, departed somewhat moodily to Pledge"s study. d.i.c.k, however, continued his walk, heedless if every friend on earth deserted him, so long as Culver should not be preferred before him behind that door.
He was getting tired of this solitary promenade, and beginning to wonder whether the "Select Sociables" had fallen asleep in the act of voting for him, when a ball pitched suddenly on to the pavement between his feet.
He couldn"t tell where it came from--probably from some window above, for no one just then was about in the Quadrangle.
He stooped down to pick it up and pitch it back into the first open window, when, greatly to his surprise, he saw his name written across it, and discovered that the ball was not a tennis ball at all, but a round paper box, which came in two as he held it.
d.i.c.k was not superst.i.tious. He had scoffed at the Templeton ghost when he first heard of it, and made up his mind long since it was a bogey kept for the benefit of new boys.
But it certainly gave him a start to find himself, at this late period of the term, when he had almost forgotten he ever was a new boy, pitched upon as the recipient of one of these mysterious missives.
The letter inside was written in printed characters, like those addressed to Heathcote.
"d.i.c.k," it began.
"Hallo," thought d.i.c.k to himself, "rather cheek of a ghost to call a fellow by his Christian name, isn"t it?"
"d.i.c.k,--Don"t be a fool. You were a fine fellow when you came. What are you now? Don"t let fellows lead you astray. You can be a fine fellow without being a bad one. Let the "Sociables" alone. They"ll teach you to be a cad. If you don"t care for yourself, think of Heathcote, who only needs your encouragement to make a worse failure than he has made already. Save him from Pledge. Then you"ll be a fine fellow, with a vengeance. Your real friend,--
"Junius.
"P.S.--Translate "Dominat qui in se dominatur.""
The first thing that struck d.i.c.k about this extraordinary epistle was, that it was odd the ghost should write his letters on Templeton exercise paper. It then occurred to him that it was rather rough to put him through his paces in Latin idioms at a time like this. Couldn"t the ghost get a dictionary, or ask a senior, and find out for himself?
It then occurred to him, who on earth was it who had written to him like this? Some one who knew him, that was certain; and he almost fancied it must be some one who liked him, for a fellow wouldn"t take the trouble to tell him he was a fine fellow at the beginning of the term, and all that sort of thing, unless he had a fancy for him.
What did he mean by "What are you now?" It sounded as if he meant "You are not a fine fellow now." Rather a personal remark.
"What"s it got to do with him what I am now?" reflected d.i.c.k, digging his hands into his pockets, and resuming his promenade. "And what does he mean by fellows leading me astray? Like to catch any one trying it on, that"s all. Like to catch _him_, for the matter of that, for his howling cheek!"
d.i.c.k sat down on one of the stone benches, and pulled out the letter for another perusal.
""Let the Sociables alone." Oh, ah! most likely he"s been blackballed himself, and don"t like any one to--. Humph! wonder if they _are_ a shady lot or not? What does he mean by saying they"ll teach me to be a cad? Who"ll teach me to be a cad? Not a m.u.f.f like Braider."
At that moment a door opened at the end of the corridor, and a voice shouted--
"Richardson!"
It was Braider"s voice, and d.i.c.k knew it.
He crumpled the letter up in his hand, and the colour came and went from his cheeks.
"Richardson! where are you?" called Braider again, for it was dusk, and our hero"s seat was screened from view.
d.i.c.k coloured again, and bit his lips; and finally got up from the bench, and strolled off in an opposite direction.
"Richardson! do you hear?" once more shouted the invisible Braider.
d.i.c.k walked on in the dusk, wondering to himself whether Braider would get into a row for kicking up that uproar in the Quad.
At last, after one final shout, he heard the door slam. Then he quickened his pace, and made for Cresswell"s study.
On the staircase he met Aspinall.
"I heard some one calling you out in the Quad.," said the small boy.
"Did you?" replied d.i.c.k. "I wonder who it can have been? Is Cresswell in his study?"
"No."
"All serene. Come back with me. Have you done your swot?"
"Yes, I did my lessons an hour ago."
"Oh!" said d.i.c.k, and strode on, followed somewhat dubiously by his young _protege_.
"Shut the door," said d.i.c.k, sternly, as they entered the study.
"Whatever is going to happen to me?" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the small boy, inwardly, as he obeyed. d.i.c.k had never spoken to him like this before. Had he offended him unwittingly? Had he been disloyal to his sovereignty?
d.i.c.k walked to the fireplace, and, pulling a letter from his pocket, read it through twice, apparently heedless of his subject"s presence.
Then he looked up suddenly, and, crushing the paper viciously back into his pocket, stared hard at his perturbed companion.
"Young Aspinall," said he, sharply, "do you say I"m a fool?"
"Oh, no," replied the boy, staggered by the very suggestion, "I should never think of saying such a thing."
"Should you say I was a blackguard?"
"No, indeed, d.i.c.k. No one could say that."