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he would not have appreciated it properly.”

Mike was finishing his tea.  “You’re a jolly useful chap to have by you in a crisis, Smith,” he said with approval.  “We ought to have known each other before.”

“The loss was mine,” said Psmith courteously.  “We will now, with your permission, face the future for awhile.  I suppose you realise that we are now to a certain extent up against it.  Spiller’s hot Spanish blood is not going to sit tight and do nothing under a blow like this.”

“What can he do?  Outwood’s given us the study.”

“What would you have done if somebody had bagged your study?”

“Made it jolly hot for them!”

“So will Comrade Spiller.  I take it that he will collect a gang and make an offensive movement against us directly he can.  To all appearances we are in a fairly tight place.  It all depends on how big Comrade Spiller’s gang will be.  I don’t like rows, but I’m prepared to take on a reasonable number of bravoes in defence of the home.”

Mike intimated that he was with him on the point.  “The difficulty is, though,” he said, “about when we leave this room.  I mean, we’re all right while we stick here, but we can’t stay all night.”

“That’s just what I was about to point out when you put it with such admirable clearness.  Here we are in a stronghold, they can only get at us through the door, and we can lock that.”

“And jam a chair against it.”

“And, as you rightly remark, jam a chair against it.  But what of the nightfall?  What of the time when we retire to our dormitory?”

“Or dormitories.  I say, if we’re in separate rooms we shall be in the cart.”

Psmith eyed Mike with approval.  “He thinks of everything!  You’re the man, Comrade Jackson, to conduct an affair of this kind—­such foresight! such resource!  We must see to this at once; if they put us in different rooms we’re done—­we shall be destroyed singly in the watches of the night.”

“We’d better nip down to the matron right off.”

“Not the matron—­Comrade Outwood is the man.  We are as sons to him; there is nothing he can deny us.  I’m afraid we are quite spoiling his afternoon by these interruptions, but we must rout him out once more.”

As they got up, the door handle rattled again, and this time there followed a knocking.

“This must be an emissary of Comrade Spiller’s,” said Psmith.  “Let us parley with the man.”

Mike unlocked the door.  A light-haired youth with a cheerful, rather vacant face and a receding chin strolled into the room, and stood giggling with his hands in his pockets.

“I just came up to have a look at you,” he explained.

“If you move a little to the left,” said Psmith, “you will catch the light and shade effects on Jackson’s face better.”

The new-comer giggled with renewed vigour.  “Are you the chap with the eyeglass who jaws all the time?”

“I do wear an eyeglass,” said Psmith; “as to the rest of the description——­”

“My name’s Jellicoe.”

“Mine is Psmith—­P-s-m-i-t-h—­one of the Shropshire Psmiths.  The object on the skyline is Comrade Jackson.”

“Old Spiller,” giggled Jellicoe, “is cursing you like anything downstairs.  You are chaps!  Do you mean to say you simply bagged his study?  He’s making no end of a row about it.”

“Spiller’s fiery nature is a byword,” said Psmith.

“What’s he going to do?” asked Mike, in his practical way.

“He’s going to get the chaps to turn you out.”

“As I suspected,” sighed Psmith, as one mourning over the frailty of human nature.  “About how many horny-handed assistants should you say that he would be likely to bring?  Will you, for instance, join the glad throng?”

“Me?  No fear!  I think Spiller’s an ass.”

“There’s nothing like a common thought for binding people together. I think Spiller’s an ass.”

“How many will there be, then?” asked Mike.

“He might get about half a dozen, not more, because most of the chaps don’t see why they should sweat themselves just because Spiller’s study has been bagged.”

“Sturdy common sense,” said Psmith approvingly, “seems to be the chief virtue of the Sedleigh character.”

“We shall be able to tackle a crowd like that,” said Mike.  “The only thing is we must get into the same dormitory.”

“This is where Comrade Jellicoe’s knowledge of the local geography will come in useful.  Do you happen to know of any snug little room, with, say, about four beds in it?  How many dormitories are there?”

“Five—­there’s one with three beds in it, only it belongs to three chaps.”

“I believe in the equal distribution of property.  We will go to Comrade Outwood and stake out another claim.”

Mr. Outwood received them even more beamingly than before.  “Yes, Smith?” he said.

“We must apologise for disturbing you, sir——­”

“Not at all, Smith, not at all!  I like the boys in my house to come to me when they wish for my advice or help.”

“We were wondering, sir, if you would have any objection to Jackson, Jellicoe and myself sharing the dormitory with the three beds in it.  A very warm friendship—­” explained Psmith, patting the gurgling Jellicoe kindly on the shoulder, “has sprung up between Jackson, Jellicoe and myself.”

“You make friends easily, Smith.  I like to see it—­I like to see it.”

“And we can have the room, sir?”

“Certainly—­certainly!  Tell the matron as you go down.”

“And now,” said Psmith, as they returned to the study, “we may say that we are in a fairly winning position.  A vote of thanks to Comrade Jellicoe for his valuable assistance.”

“You are a chap!” said Jellicoe.

The handle began to revolve again.

“That door,” said Psmith, “is getting a perfect incubus!  It cuts into one’s leisure cruelly.”

This time it was a small boy.  “They told me to come up and tell you to come down,” he said.

Psmith looked at him searchingly through his eyeglass.

“Who?”

“The senior day-room chaps.”

“Spiller?”

“Spiller and Robinson and Stone, and some other chaps.”

“They want us to speak to them?”

“They told me to come up and tell you to come down.”

“Go and give Comrade Spiller our compliments and say that we can’t come down, but shall be delighted to see him up here.  Things,” he said, as the messenger departed, “are beginning to move.  Better leave the door open, I think; it will save trouble.  Ah, come in, Comrade Spiller, what can we do for you?”

Spiller advanced into the study; the others waited outside, crowding in the doorway.

“Look here,” said Spiller, “are you going to clear out of here or not?”

“After Mr. Outwood’s kindly thought in giving us the room?  You suggest a black and ungrateful action, Comrade Spiller.”

“You’ll get it hot, if you don’t.”

“We’ll risk it,” said Mike.

Jellicoe giggled in the background; the drama in the atmosphere appealed to him.  His was a simple and appreciative mind.

“Come on, you chaps,” cried Spiller suddenly.

There was an inward rush on the enemy’s part, but Mike had been watching.  He grabbed Spiller by the shoulders and ran him back against the advancing crowd.  For a moment the doorway was blocked, then the weight and impetus of Mike and Spiller prevailed, the enemy gave back, and Mike, stepping into the room again, slammed the door and locked it.

“A neat piece of work,” said Psmith approvingly, adjusting his tie at the looking-glass.  “The preliminaries may now be considered over, the first shot has been fired.  The dogs of war are now loose.”

A heavy body crashed against the door.

“They’ll have it down,” said Jellicoe.

“We must act, Comrade Jackson!  Might I trouble you just to turn that key quietly, and the handle, and then to stand by for the next attack.”

There was a scrambling of feet in the passage outside, and then a repetition of the onslaught on the door.  This time, however, the door, instead of resisting, swung open, and the human battering-ram staggered through into the study.  Mike, turning after re-locking the door, was just in time to see Psmith, with a display of energy of which one would not have believed him capable, grip the invader scientifically by an arm and a leg.

Mike jumped to help, but it was needless; the captive was already on the window-sill.  As Mike arrived, Psmith dropped him on to the flower-bed below.

Psmith closed the window gently and turned to Jellicoe.  “Who was our guest?” he asked, dusting the knees of his trousers where they had pressed against the wall.

“Robinson.  I say, you are a chap!”

“Robinson, was it?  Well, we are always glad to see Comrade Robinson, always.  I wonder if anybody else is thinking of calling?”

Apparently frontal attack had been abandoned.  Whisperings could be heard in the corridor.

Somebody hammered on the door.

“Yes?” called Psmith patiently.

“You’d better come out, you know; you’ll only get it hotter if you don’t.”

“Leave us, Spiller; we would be alone.”

A bell rang in the distance.

“Tea,” said Jellicoe; “we shall have to go now.”

“They won’t do anything till after tea, I shouldn’t think,” said Mike.  “There’s no harm in going out.”

The passage was empty when they opened the door; the call to food was evidently a thing not to be treated lightly by the enemy.

In the dining-room the beleaguered garrison were the object of general attention.  Everybody turned to look at them as they came in.  It was plain that the study episode had been a topic of conversation.  Spiller’s face was crimson, and Robinson’s coat-sleeve still bore traces of garden mould.

Mike felt rather conscious of the eyes, but Psmith was in his element.  His demeanour throughout the meal was that of some whimsical monarch condescending for a freak to revel with his humble subjects.

Towards the end of the meal Psmith scribbled a note and passed it to Mike.  It read:  “Directly this is over, nip upstairs as quickly as you can.”

Mike followed the advice; they were first out of the room.  When they had been in the study a few moments, Jellicoe knocked at the door.  “Lucky you two cut away so quick,” he said.  “They were going to try and get you into the senior day-room and scrag you there.”

“This,” said Psmith, leaning against the mantelpiece, “is exciting, but it can’t go on.  We have got for our sins to be in this place for a whole term, and if we are going to do the Hunted Fawn business all the time, life in the true sense of the word will become an impossibility.  My nerves are so delicately attuned that the strain would simply reduce them to hash.  We are not prepared to carry on a long campaign—­the thing must be settled at once.”

“Shall we go down to the senior day-room, and have it out?” said Mike.

“No, we will play the fixture on our own ground.  I think we may take it as tolerably certain that Comrade Spiller and his hired ruffians will try to corner us in the dormitory to-night.  Well, of course, we could fake up some sort of barricade for the door, but then we should have all the trouble over again to-morrow and the day after that.  Personally I don’t propose to be chivvied about indefinitely like this, so I propose that we let them come into the dormitory, and see what happens.  Is this meeting with me?”

“I think that’s sound,” said Mike.  “We needn’t drag Jellicoe into it.”

“As a matter of fact—­if you don’t mind—­” began that man of peace.

“Quite right,” said Psmith; “this is not Comrade Jellicoe’s scene at all; he has got to spend the term in the senior day-room, whereas we have our little wooden châlet to retire to in times of stress.  Comrade Jellicoe must stand out of the game altogether.  We shall be glad of his moral support, but otherwise, ne pas.  And now, as there won’t be anything doing till bedtime, I think I’ll collar this table and write home and tell my people that all is well with their Rupert.”

CHAPTER XXXV

UNPLEASANTNESS IN THE SMALL HOURS

Jellicoe, that human encyclopaedia, consulted on the probable movements of the enemy, deposed that Spiller, retiring at ten, would make for Dormitory One in the same passage, where Robinson also had a bed.  The rest of the opposing forces were distributed among other and more distant rooms.  It was probable, therefore, that Dormitory One would be the rendezvous.  As to the time when an attack might be expected, it was unlikely that it would occur before half-past eleven.  Mr. Outwood went the round of the dormitories at eleven.

“And touching,” said Psmith, “the matter of noise, must this business be conducted in a subdued and sotto voce manner, or may we let ourselves go a bit here and there?”

“I shouldn’t think old Outwood’s likely to hear you—­he sleeps miles away on the other side of the house.  He never hears anything.  We often rag half the night and nothing happens.”

“This appears to be a thoroughly nice, well-conducted establishment.  What would my mother say if she could see her Rupert in the midst of these reckless youths!”

“All the better,” said Mike; “we don’t want anybody butting in and stopping the show before it’s half started.”

“Comrade Jackson’s Berserk blood is up—­I can hear it sizzling.  I quite agree these things are all very disturbing and painful, but it’s as well to do them thoroughly when one’s once in for them.  Is there nobody else who might interfere with our gambols?”

“Barnes might,” said Jellicoe, “only he won’t.”

“Who is Barnes?”

“Head of the house—­a rotter.  He’s in a funk of Stone and Robinson; they rag him; he’ll simply sit tight.”

“Then I think,” said Psmith placidly, “we

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