The Gold Bat by P. G. Wodehouse (best book reader .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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âI wonder if Trevor would be any good in a row,â said Moriarty.
âHe canât box,â said OâHara, âbut heâd go on till he was killed entirely. I say, Iâm getting rather tired of sitting here, arenât you? Letâs go to the other end of the passage and have some cricket.â
So, having unearthed a piece of wood from the debris at the top of the cupboard, and rolled a handkerchief into a ball, they adjourned.
Recalling the stirring events of six years back, when the League had first been started, OâHara remembered that the members of that enterprising society had been wont to hold meetings in a secluded spot, where it was unlikely that they would be disturbed. It seemed to him that the first thing he ought to do, if he wanted to make their nearer acquaintance now, was to find their present rendezvous. They must have one. They would never run the risk involved in holding mass-meetings in one anotherâs studies. On the last occasion, it had been an old quarry away out on the downs. This had been proved by the not-to-be-shaken testimony of three school-house fags, who had wandered out one half-holiday with the unconcealed intention of finding the Leagueâs place of meeting. Unfortunately for them, they had found it. They were going down the path that led to the quarry before-mentioned, when they were unexpectedly seized, blindfolded, and carried off. An impromptu court-martial was heldâÂin whispersâÂand the three explorers forthwith received the most spirited âtouching-upâ they had ever experienced. Afterwards they were released, and returned to their house with their zeal for detection quite quenched. The episode had created a good deal of excitement in the school at the time.
On three successive afternoons, OâHara and Moriarty scoured the downs, and on each occasion they drew blank. On the fourth day, just before lock-up, OâHara, who had been to tea with Gregson, of Dayâs, was going over to the gymnasium to keep a pugilistic appointment with Moriarty, when somebody ran swiftly past him in the direction of the boarding-houses. It was almost dark, for the days were still short, and he did not recognise the runner. But it puzzled him a little to think where he had sprung from. OâHara was walking quite close to the wall of the College buildings, and the runner had passed between it and him. And he had not heard his footsteps. Then he understood, and his pulse quickened as he felt that he was on the track. Beneath the block was a large sort of cellar-basement. It was used as a store-room for chairs, and was never opened except when prize-day or some similar event occurred, when the chairs were needed. It was supposed to be locked at other times, but never was. The door was just by the spot where he was standing. As he stood there, half-a-dozen other vague forms dashed past him in a knot. One of them almost brushed against him. For a moment he thought of stopping him, but decided not to. He could wait.
On the following afternoon he slipped down into the basement soon after school. It was as black as pitch in the cellar. He took up a position near the door.
It seemed hours before anything happened. He was, indeed, almost giving up the thing as a bad job, when a ray of light cut through the blackness in front of him, and somebody slipped through the door. The next moment, a second form appeared dimly, and then the light was shut off again.
OâHara could hear them groping their way past him. He waited no longer. It is difficult to tell where sound comes from in the dark. He plunged forward at a venture. His hand, swinging round in a semicircle, met something which felt like a shoulder. He slipped his grasp down to the arm, and clutched it with all the force at his disposal.
IX MAINLY ABOUT FERRETSâOw!â exclaimed the captive, with no uncertain voice. âLet go, you ass, youâre hurting.â
The voice was a treble voice. This surprised OâHara. It looked very much as if he had put up the wrong bird. From the dimensions of the arm which he was holding, his prisoner seemed to be of tender years.
âLet go, Harvey, you idiot. I shall kick.â
Before the threat could be put into execution, OâHara, who had been fumbling all this while in his pocket for a match, found one loose, and struck a light. The features of the owner of the armâÂhe was still holding itâÂwere lit up for a moment.
âWhy, itâs young Renford!â he exclaimed. âWhat are you doing down here?â
Renford, however, continued to pursue the topic of his arm, and the effect that the vice-like grip of the Irishman had had upon it.
âYouâve nearly broken it,â he said, complainingly.
âIâm sorry. I mistook you for somebody else. Whoâs that with you?â
âItâs me,â said an ungrammatical voice.
âWhoâs me?â
âHarvey.â
At this point a soft yellow light lit up the more immediate neighbourhood. Harvey had brought a bicycle lamp into action.
âThatâs more like it,â said Renford. âLook here, OâHara, you wonât split, will you?â
âIâm not an informer by profession, thanks,â said OâHara.
âOh, I know itâs all right, really, but you canât be too careful, because one isnât allowed down here, and thereâd be a beastly row if it got out about our being down here.â
âAnd they would be cobbed,â put in Harvey.
âWho are they?â asked OâHara.
âFerrets. Like to have a look at them?â
âFerrets!â
âYes. Harvey brought back a couple at the beginning of term. Ripping little beasts. We couldnât keep them in the house, as theyâd have got dropped on in a second, so we had to think of somewhere else, and thought why not keep them down here?â
âWhy, indeed?â said OâHara. âDo ye find they like it?â
âOh, they donât mind,â said Harvey. âWe feed âem twice a day. Once before breakfastâÂwe take it in turns to get up earlyâÂand once directly after school. And on half-holidays and Sundays we take them out on to the downs.â
âWhat for?â
âWhy, rabbits, of course. Renford brought back a saloon-pistol with him. We keep it locked up in a boxâÂdonât tell any one.â
âAnd what do ye do with the rabbits?â
âWe pot at them as they come out of the holes.â
âYes, but when ye hit âem?â
âOh,â said Renford, with some reluctance, âwe havenât exactly hit any yet.â
âWeâve got jolly near, though, lots of times,â said Harvey. âLast Saturday I swear I wasnât more than a quarter of an inch off one of them. If it had been a decent-sized rabbit, I should have plugged it middle stump; only it was a small one, so I missed. But come and see them. We keep âem right at the other end of the place, in case anybody comes in.â
âHave you ever seen anybody down here?â asked OâHara.
âOnce,â said Renford. âHalf-a-dozen chaps came down here once while we were feeding the ferrets. We waited till theyâd got well in, then we nipped out quietly. They didnât see us.â
âDid you see who they were?â
âNo. It was too dark. Here they are. Rummy old crib this, isnât it? Look out for your shins on the chairs. Switch on the light, Harvey. There, arenât they rippers? Quite tame, too. They know us quite well. They know theyâre going to be fed, too. Hullo, Sir Nigel! This is Sir Nigel. Out of the âWhite Companyâ, you know. Donât let him nip your fingers. This other oneâs Sherlock Holmes.â
âCats-s-sâÂs!!â said OâHara. He had a sort of idea that that was the right thing to say to any animal that could chase and bite.
Renford was delighted to be able to show his ferrets off to so distinguished a visitor.
âWhat were you down here about?â inquired Harvey, when the little animals had had their meal, and had retired once more into private life.
OâHara had expected this question, but he did not quite know what answer to give. Perhaps, on the whole, he thought, it would be best to tell them the real reason. If he refused to explain, their curiosity would be roused, which would be fatal. And to give any reason except the true one called for a display of impromptu invention of which he was not capable. Besides, they would not be likely to give away his secret while he held this one of theirs connected with the ferrets. He explained the situation briefly, and swore them to silence on the subject.
Renfordâs comment was brief.
âBy Jove!â he observed.
Harvey went more deeply into the question.
âWhat makes you think they meet down here?â he asked.
âI saw some fellows cutting out of here last night. And you say yeâve seen them here, too. I donât see what object they could have down here if they werenât the League holding a meeting. I donât see what else a chap would be after.â
âHe might be keeping ferrets,â hazarded Renford.
âThe whole school doesnât keep ferrets,â said OâHara. âYouâre unique in that way. No, it must be the League, anâ I mean to wait here till they come.â
âNot all night?â asked Harvey. He had a great respect for OâHara, whose reputation in the school for out-of-the-way doings was considerable. In the bright lexicon of OâHara he believed there to be no such word as âimpossible.â
âNo,â said OâHara, âbut till lock-up. You two had better cut now.â
âYes, I think weâd better,â said Harvey.
âAnd donât ye breathe a word about this to a soulââÂa warning which extracted fervent promises of silence from both youths.
âThis,â said Harvey, as they emerged on to the gravel, âis something like. Iâm jolly glad weâre in it.â
âRather. Do you think OâHara will catch them?â
âHe must if he waits down there long enough. Theyâre certain to come again. Donât you wish youâd been here when the League was on before?â
âI should think I did. Race you over to the shop. I want to get something before it shuts.â
âRight ho!â And they disappeared.
OâHara waited where he was till six struck from the clock-tower, followed by the sound of the bell as it rang for lock-up. Then he picked his way carefully through the groves of chairs, barking his shins now and then on their out-turned legs, and, pushing open the door, went out into the open air. It felt very fresh and pleasant after the brand of atmosphere supplied in the vault. He then ran over to the gymnasium to meet Moriarty, feeling a little disgusted at the lack of success that had attended his detective efforts up to the present. So far he had nothing to show for his trouble except a good deal of dust on his clothes, and a dirty collar, but he was full of determination. He could play a waiting game.
It was a pity, as it happened, that OâHara left the vault when he did. Five minutes after he had gone, six shadowy forms made their way silently and in single file through the doorway of the vault, which they closed carefully behind them. The fact that it was after lock-up was of small consequence. A good deal of latitude in that way was allowed at Wrykyn. It was the custom to go out, after the bell had sounded, to visit the gymnasium. In the winter and Easter terms, the gymnasium became a sort of social club. People went there with a very small intention of doing gymnastics. They went to lounge about, talking to cronies, in front of the two huge stoves which warmed the place. Occasionally, as a concession to the look of the thing, they would do an easy exercise or two on the horse or parallels, but, for the most part, they preferred the rĂŽle of spectator. There was plenty to see. In one corner OâHara and Moriarty would be sparring their nightly six rounds (in two batches of three rounds each). In another, Drummond, who was going up to Aldershot as a feather-weight, would be putting in a little practice with the instructor. On the apparatus, the members of the gymnastic six, including the two experts who were to carry the school colours to Aldershot in the spring, would be performing their usual marvels. It was worth dropping into the gymnasium of an evening. In no other place in the school were so many sights to be seen.
When you were surfeited with sightseeing, you went off to your house. And this was where the peculiar beauty of the gymnasium system came in. You went up to any master who happened to be thereâÂthere was always one at leastâÂand observed in suave accents, âPlease, sir, can I have a paper?â Whereupon, he, taking a scrap of paper, would write upon it, âJ. O. Jones (or A. B. Smith or C. D. Robinson) left gymnasium at such-and-such a timeâ. And, by presenting this to
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