"No!" we shouted virtuously, all together, though we were dying to hear it, and we turned once more to the loathsome inanities of the second chorus. If we had been doing Homer, we should have felt more in touch with Bradshaw. There"s a good deal of similarity, when you come to compare them, between Homer and Haggard. They both deal largely in bloodshed, for instance. As events proved, the Euripides paper, like many things which seem formidable at a distance, was not nearly so bad as I had expected. I did a fair-to-moderate paper, and Kendal and White both seemed satisfied with themselves. Bradshaw confessed without emotion that he had only attempted the last half of the last question, and on being pressed for further information, merely laughed mysteriously, and said vaguely that it would be all right.

It now became plain that he had something up his sleeve. We expressed a unanimous desire to know what it was.

"You might tell a chap," I said.

"Out with it, Bradshaw, or we"ll lynch you," added Kendal.

Bradshaw, however, was not to be drawn. Much of his success in the paths of crime, both at school and afterwards, was due to his secretive habits. He never permitted accomplices.

On the following Wednesday the marks were read out. Out of a possible hundred I had obtained sixty--which pleased me very much indeed--White, fifty-five, Kendal, sixty-one. The unspeakable Bradshaw"s net total was four.

Mellish always read out bad marks in a hushed voice, expressive of disgust and horror, but four per cent was too much for him. He shouted it, and the form yelled applause, until Ponsonby came in from the Upper Fifth next door with Mr Yorke"s compliments, "and would we recollect that his form were trying to do an examination".

When order had been restored, Mellish settled his gla.s.ses and glared through them at Bradshaw, who, it may be remarked, had not turned a hair.

"Bradshaw," he said, "how do you explain this?"

It was merely a sighting shot, so to speak. n.o.body was ever expected to answer the question. Bradshaw, however, proved himself the exception to the rule.

"I can explain, sir," he said, "if I may speak to you privately afterwards."

I have seldom seen anyone so astonished as Mellish was at these words.

In the whole course of his professional experience, he had never met with a parallel case. It was hard on the poor man not to be allowed to speak his mind about a matter of four per cent in a book-paper, but what could he do? He could not proceed with his denunciation, for if Bradshaw"s explanation turned out a sufficient excuse, he would have to withdraw it all again, and vast stores of golden eloquence would be wasted. But, then, if he bottled up what he wished to say altogether, it might do him a serious internal injury. At last he hit on a compromise. He said, "Very well, Bradshaw, I will hear what you have to say," and then sprang, like the cat in the poem, "all claws", upon an unfortunate individual who had scored twenty-nine, and who had been congratulating himself that Bradshaw"s failings would act as a sort of lightning-conductor to him. Bradshaw worked off his explanation in under five minutes. I tried to stay behind to listen, on the pretext of wanting to tidy up my desk, but was ejected by request. Bradshaw explained that his statement was private.

After a time they came out together like long-lost brothers, Mellish with his hand on Bradshaw"s shoulder. It was some small comfort to me to remember that Bradshaw had the greatest dislike to this sort of thing.

It was evident that Bradshaw, able exponent of the art of fiction that he was, must have excelled himself on this occasion. I tried to get the story out of him in the study that evening. White and Kendal a.s.sisted.

We tried persuasion first. That having failed, we tried taunts. Then we tried kindness. Kendal sat on his legs, and I sat on his head, and White twisted his arm. I think that we should have extracted something soon, either his arm from its socket or a full confession, but we were interrupted. The door flew open, and Prater (the same being our House-master, and rather a good sort) appeared.

"Now then, now then," he said. Prater"s manner is always abrupt.

"What"s this? I can"t have this. I can"t have this. Get up at once.

Where"s Bradshaw?"

I rose gracefully to my feet, thereby disclosing the cla.s.sic features of the lost one.

"The Headmaster wants to see you at once, Bradshaw, at the School House. You others had better find something to do, or you will be getting into trouble."

He and Bradshaw left together, while we speculated on the cause of the summons.

We were not left very long in suspense. In a quarter of an hour Bradshaw returned, walking painfully, and bearing what, to the expert"s eye, are the unmistakable signs of a "touching up", which, being interpreted, is corporal punishment.

"Hullo," said White, as he appeared, "what"s all this?"

"How many?" enquired the statistically-minded Kendal. "You"ll be thankful for this when you"re a man, Bradshaw."

"That"s what I always say to myself when I"m touched up," added Kendal.

I said nothing, but it was to me that the wounded one addressed himself.

"You utter a.s.s," he said, in tones of concentrated venom.

"Look here, Bradshaw--" I began, protestingly.

"It"s all through you--you idiot," he snarled. "I got twelve."

"Twelve isn"t so dusty," said White, critically. "Most I ever got was six."

"But why was it?" asked Kendal. "That"s what we want to know. What have you been and gone and done?"

"It"s about that Euripides paper," said Bradshaw.

"Ah!" said Kendal.

"Yes, I don"t mind telling you about it now. When Mellish had me up after school today, I"d got my yarn all ready. There wasn"t a flaw in it anywhere as far as I could see. My idea was this. I told him I"d been to Yorke"s room the day before the exam, to ask him if he had any marks for us. That was all right. Yorke was doing the two Unseen papers, and it was just the sort of thing a fellow would do to go and ask him about the marks."

"Well?"

"Then when I got there he was out, and I looked about for the marks, and on the table I saw the Euripides paper."

"By Jove!" said Kendal. We began to understand, and to realize that here was a master-mind.

"Well, of course, I read it, not knowing what it was, and then, as the only way of not taking an unfair advantage, I did as badly as I could in the exam. That was what I told Mellish. Any beak would have swallowed it."

"Well, didn"t he?"

"Mellish did all right, but the rotter couldn"t keep it to himself.

Went and told the Old Man. The Old Man sent for me. He was as decent as anything at first. That was just his guile. He made me describe exactly where I had seen the paper, and so on. That was rather risky, of course, but I put it as vaguely as I could. When I had finished, he suddenly whipped round, and said, "Bradshaw, why are you telling me all these lies?" That"s the sort of thing that makes you feel rather a wreck. I was too surprised to say anything."

"I can guess the rest," said Kendal. "But how on earth did he know it was all lies? Why didn"t you stick to your yarn?"

"And, besides," I put in, "where do I come in? I don"t see what I"ve got to do with it."

Bradshaw eyed me fiercely. "Why, the whole thing was your fault," he said. "You told me Yorke was setting the paper."

"Well, so he did, didn"t he?"

"No, he didn"t. The Old Man set it himself," said Bradshaw, gloomily.

[6]

A SHOCKING AFFAIR

The Bradshaw who appears in the following tale is the same youth who figures as the hero--or villain, label him as you like--of the preceding equally veracious narrative. I mention this because I should not care for you to go away with the idea that a waistcoat marked with the name of Bradshaw must of necessity cover a scheming heart. It may, however, be noticed that a good many members of the Bradshaw family possess a keen and rather sinister sense of the humorous, inherited doubtless from their great ancestor, the dry wag who wrote that monument of quiet drollery, _Bradshaw"s Railway Guide_. So with the hero of my story.

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