School Stories P. G. Wodehouse (easy readers TXT) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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Jackson was amazed.
âGreat Scott! what a wad of stuff! When did you do it all?â
âOh, at odd times. Dunstableâs got just as much over at Dayâs. So you see the Trust is a jolly big show. Here are your two pages. That looks just like your scrawl, doesnât it? These would be fourpence in the ordinary way, but you can have âem for nothing this time.â
âOh, I say,â said Jackson gratefully, âthatâs awfully good of you.â
After that the Locksley Lines Supplying Trust, Ltd. went ahead with a rush. The brilliant success which attended its first specimenâ âM. Gaudinois took Jacksonâs imposition without a murmurâ âpromoted confidence in the public, and they rushed to buy. Orders poured in from all the houses, and by the middle of the term the organisers of the scheme were able to divide a substantial sum.
âHow are you getting on round your way?â asked Linton of Dunstable at the end of the sixth week of term.
âRipping. Selling like hot cakes.â
âSo are mine,â said Linton. âIâve almost come to the end of my stock. I ought to have written some more, but Iâve been a bit slack lately.â
âYes, buck up. We must keep a lot in hand.â
âI say, did you hear that about Merrett in our house?â asked Linton.
âWhat about him?â
âWhy, he tried to start a rival show. Wrote a prospectus and everything. But it didnât catch on a bit. The only chap who bought any of his lines was young Shoeblossom. He wanted a couple of hundred for Appleby. Appleby was on to them like bricks. Spotted Shoeblossom hadnât written them, and asked who had. He wouldnât say, so he got them doubled. Everyone in the house is jolly sick with Merrett. They think he ought to have owned up.â
âDid that smash up Merrettâs show? Is he going to turn out any more?â
âRather not. Whoâd buy âem?â
It would have been better for the Lines Supplying Trust if Merrett had not received this crushing blow and had been allowed to carry on a rival business on legitimate lines. Locksley was conservative in its habits, and would probably have continued to support the old firm.
As it was, the baffled Merrett, a youth of vindictive nature, brooded over his defeat, and presently hit upon a scheme whereby things might be levelled up.
One afternoon, shortly before lockup, Dunstable was surprised by the advent of Linton to his study in a bruised and dishevelled condition. One of his expressive eyes was closed and blackened. He also wore what is known in ring circles as a thick ear.
âWhat on earthâs up?â inquired Dunstable, amazed at these phenomena. âHave you been scrapping?â
âYesâ âMerrettâ âI won. What are you up toâ âwriting lines? You may as well save yourself the trouble. They wonât be any good.â Dunstable stared.
âThe Trustâs bust,â said Linton.
He never wasted words in moments of emotion.
âWhat!â
âââBustâ was what I said. That beast Merrett gave the show away.â
âWhat did he do? Surely he didnât tell a master?â
âWell, he did the next thing to it. He hauled out that prospectus, and started reading it in form. I watched him do it. He kept it under the desk and made a foul row, laughing over it. Appleby couldnât help spotting him. Of course, he told him to bring him what he was reading. Up went Merrett with the prospectus.â
âWas Appleby sick?â
âI donât believe he was, really. At least, he laughed when he read the thing. But he hauled me up after school and gave me a long jaw, and made me take all the lines Iâd got to his house. He burnt them. I had it out with Merrett just now. He swears he didnât mean to get the thing spotted, but I knew he did.â
âWhere did you scrag him!â
âIn the dormitory. He chucked it after the third round.â
There was a knock at the door.
âCome in,â shouted Dunstable.
Buxton appeared, a member of Applebyâs house.
âOh, Dunstable, Appleby wants to see you.â
âAll right,â said Dunstable wearily.
Mr. Appleby was in facetious mood. He chaffed Dunstable genially about his prospectus, and admitted that it had amused him. Dunstable smiled without enjoyment. It was a good thing, perhaps, that Mr. Appleby saw the humorous rather than the lawless side of the Trust; but all the quips in the world could not save that institution from ruin.
Presently Mr. Applebyâs manner changed. âI am a funny dog, I know,â he seemed to say; âbut duty is duty, and must be done.â
âHow many lines have you at your house, Dunstable?â he asked.
âAbout eight hundred, sir.â
âThen you had better write me eight hundred lines, and show them up to me in this room atâ âshall we say at ten minutes to five? It is now a quarter to, so that you will have plenty of time.â
Dunstable went, and returned five minutes later, bearing an armful of manuscript.
âI donât think I shall need to count them,â said Mr. Appleby. âKindly take them in batches of ten sheets, and tear them in half, Dunstable.â
âYes, sir.â
The last sheet fluttered in two sections into the surfeited waste-paper basket.
âItâs an awful waste, sir,â said Dunstable regretfully.
Mr. Appleby beamed.
âWe must, however,â he said, âalways endeavour to look on the bright side, Dunstable. The writing of these eight hundred lines will have given you a fine grip of the rhythm of Virgil, the splendid prose of Victor Hugo, and the unstudied majesty of the Greek Numerals. Good night, Dunstable.â
âGood night, sir,â said the President of the Locksley Lines Supplying Trust, Ltd.
The Autograph HuntersDunstable had his reasons for wishing to obtain Mr. Montagu Watsonâs autograph, but admiration for that gentlemanâs novels was not one of them.
It was nothing to him that critics considered Mr. Watson one of the most remarkable figures in English literature since Scott. If you had told him of this, he would merely have wondered in his coarse, material way how much
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