Mike
tories he had read the whole school came back by the same train, and, having smashed in one another's hats
none of the fellows came back by this train," he said. "Heaps of them
te they can possibly manage. Silly idea. I s
aid Bob. "Come and ha
rig
ng the fact that he would be in the way;
will want to see you, and tell you all about things, which is your dorm. and so on. See you later," he concluded airily. "Any one'll tell you the way to the sch
it is simplicity itself. Probably he really does imagine that he goes straight on, ignoring the fact that for him the cho
untain and an equestrian statue in its centre. On the fourth repetition of this feat he stopped in a disheartened way, and
as a short, thick-set figure clad in grey flannel trousers, a blue blazer,
e way to the school
and a pair of very deep-set grey eyes which somehow put Mike at his ease. There was something singularly cool and genial about th
said the stranger. "Be
" sai
ouse do
in'
ght man this time. What I don't kno
u there
holidays. There's no
Wyatt, then
n the detective story always says to the detective, who's se
saying something abo
your br
He's in Do
make of Jackson, latest model, with all the mo
thers,"
e a team, then? Are you a s
hool. Only a private school,
? What was you
y. "It was only against kids, you know." He wa
useful. Any m
id Mike,
w m
as a good bit bigger than most of the chaps there. And my pater always has
ling. We shall want some batting in the house this term. Look
"My brother and Firby-Smith hav
w he lived in your part of th
"Why is he called Gazeka
ooks like one? What d
ays delicate work answering a question like this unless one h
prince of the blood dropping a gracious word to one of the three Small-Heads at the Hippodrome, but that'
and insignificance. Everything looked so big--the buildings, the grounds, everything. He felt out of the picture. He was glad that h
houses which lined the road on the south side of the cricket fiel
" he said. "How many fe
this term,
an there were a
King-H
chool I was at
y remote and unreal
al of punting and drop-kicking in the winter and fielding-practice in the summer. The next terrace was the biggest of all, and formed the first eleven cricket ground, a beautiful piece of turf, a shade too narrow for its length, bounded on the terrace side by a sharply sloping bank, some fifteen feet deep, and on the other by the pr
were signs of activity, however, inside; and a smell of so
ron's room, a small room ope
said. "Which dormitory
n consult
n yours
other bed? There are going to
st heard that he is not coming back this term. H
in the world," said Wyatt. "I've often thought of giving him Roug
e passage, and up
are," sa
e window, heavily barred, lo
said Wyatt, "but the house is so full
er a rag to get out of the window on to that wall at nig
m curiously, and m
ause you'd go getting caught, and dropped on, which isn't
t moment he was standing with it in his
e!" sai
ir putty. "I get out at night myself because I think my health needs it. Besides, it's my last term, anyhow, so
e, reluctantly. "But
t. Promise you w
I say, what do
mply keeps them bright and interested in life; and if you miss you've had all the fun anyhow. Have you ev
ou'd let
l take you over the rest of the school. You'll have to see