School Stories P. G. Wodehouse (easy readers TXT) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
Book online «School Stories P. G. Wodehouse (easy readers TXT) đ». Author P. G. Wodehouse
âWhat do you want to do it for?â he asked. âWhatâs the point of it? You canât like those chaps.â
âAwfully good sorts when you get to know them,â said Dunstable.
âYouâve been some time finding it out.â
âI know. Chadwickâs an acquired taste. By the way, Iâm giving a tea on Thursday. Will you come?â
âWhoâs going to be there?â inquired Linton warily.
âWell, Chadwick for one; and Merrett and Ruthven and three other chaps.â
âThen,â said Linton with some warmth, âI think youâll have to do without me. I believe youâre mad.â
And he went off in disgust to the fives-courts.
When on the following Thursday Dunstable walked into Ringâs Stores with his five guests, and demanded six public-school teas, the manager was perhaps justified in allowing a triumphant smile to wander across his face. It was a signal victory for him. âNo free list today, sir,â he said. âEntirely suspended.â
âNever mind,â said Dunstable, âIâm good for six shillings.â
âFree list?â said Merrett, as the manager retired, âI didnât know there was one.â
âThere isnât. Only he and I palled up so much the other day that he offered me a tea for nothing.â
âDidnât you take it?â
âNo. I went to Cookâs.â
âRotten hole, Cookâs. Iâm never going there again,â said Chadwick. âYou take my tip, Dun, old chap, and come here.â
âDun, old chap,â smiled amiably.
âI donât know,â he said, looking up from the teapot, into which he had been pouring water; âyou can be certain of the food at Cookâs.â
âWhat do you mean? So you can here.â
âOh,â said Dunstable, âI didnât know. Iâve never had tea here before. But Iâve often heard that American food upsets one sometimes.â
By this time, the tea having stood long enough, he poured out, and the meal began.
Merrett and his friends were hearty feeders, and conversation languished for some time. Then Chadwick leaned back in his chair, and breathed heavily.
âYou couldnât get stuff like that at Cookâs,â he said.
âI suppose it is a bit different,â said Dunstable. âHave any of youâ ââ ⊠noticed something queerâ ââ âŠâ?â
Merrett stared at Ruthven. Ruthven stared at Merrett.
âI.â ââ âŠâ said Merrett.
âDâyou know.â ââ âŠâ said Ruthven.
Chadwickâs face was a delicate green.
âI believe,â said Dunstable, âthe stuffâ ââ ⊠wasâ ââ ⊠poisoned. I.â ââ âŠâ
âDrink this,â said the school doctor, briskly, bending over Dunstableâs bed with a medicine-glass in his hand, âand be ashamed of yourself. The fact is youâve over-eaten yourself. Nothing more and nothing less. Why canât you boys be content to feed moderately?â
âI donât think I ate much, sir,â protested Dunstable. âIt must have been what I ate. I went to that new American place.â
âSo you went there, too? Why, Iâve just come from attending a bilious boy in Mr. Seymourâs house. He said he had been at the American place, too.â
âWas that Merrett, sir? He was one of the party. We were all bad. We canât all have eaten too much.â
The doctor looked thoughtful.
âHâm. Curious. Very curious. Do you remember what you had?â
âI had some things the man called buckwheat cakes, with some stuff he said was maple syrup.â
âBah. American trash.â The doctor was a staunch Briton, conservative in his views both on politics and on food. âWhy canât you boys eat good English food? I must tell the headmaster of this. I havenât time to look after the school if all the boys are going to poison themselves. You lie still and try to go to sleep, and youâll be right enough in no time.â
But Dunstable did not go to sleep. He stayed awake to interview Linton, who came to pay him a visit.
âWell,â said Linton, looking down at the sufferer with an expression that was a delicate blend of pity and contempt, âyouâve made a nice sort of ass of yourself, havenât you! I donât know if itâs any consolation to you, but Merrettâs just as bad as you are. And I hear the others are, too. So now you see what comes of going to Ringâs instead of Cookâs.â
âAnd now,â said Dunstable, âif youâve quite finished, you can listen to me for a bit.â ââ âŠâ
âSo now you know,â he concluded.
Lintonâs face beamed with astonishment and admiration.
âWell, Iâm hanged,â he said. âYouâre a marvel. But how did you know it wouldnât poison you?â
âI relied on you. You said it wasnât poison when I asked you in the lab. My faith in you is touching.â
âBut why did you take any yourself?â
âSort of idea of diverting suspicion. But the thing isnât finished yet. Listen.â
Linton left the dormitory five minutes later with a look of a young disciple engaged on some holy mission.
Part IIIâYou think the food is unwholesome, then?â said the headmaster after dinner that night.
âUnwholesome!â said the school doctor. âIt must be deadly. It must be positively lethal. Here we have six ordinary, strong, healthy boys struck down at one fell swoop as if there were a pestilence raging. Whyâ ââ
âOne moment,â said the headmaster. âCome in.â
A small figure appeared in the doorway.
âPlease, sir,â said the figure in the strained voice of one speaking a âpieceâ which he has committed to memory. âMr. Seymour says please would you mind letting the doctor come to his house at once because Linton is ill.â
âWhat!â exclaimed the doctor. âWhatâs the matter with him?â
âPlease, sir, I believe itâs buckwheat cakes.â
âWhat! And hereâs another of them!â
A second small figure had appeared in the doorway.
âSir, please, sir,â said the newcomer, âMr. Bradfield says may the doctorâ ââ
âAnd what boy is it this time?â
âPlease, sir, itâs Brown. He went to Ringâs Storesâ ââ
The headmaster rose.
âPerhaps you had better go at once, Oakes,â he said. âThis is becoming serious. That place is a positive menace to the community. I shall put it out of bounds tomorrow morning.â
And when Dunstable and Linton, pale but cheerful, made their wayâ âslowly, as befitted convalescentsâ âto Cookâs two days afterwards, they had to sit on the counter. All the other seats were occupied.
Shieldsâ and the Cricket CupThe house cricket cup
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