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Sinister Street, vol. 1

Chapter 7 VII Randell House

Word Count: 4812    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

aited anxiously in the Headmaster's study in an atmosphere of morocco-leather and large waste-paper baskets. Like every other room in which Mich

rnt from a scarlet book that while Cornelia loved Julia, Julia returned Cornelia's affection. When this fact was established in bo

lia Juli

Corneli

y of this simple love. At eleven o'clock a shrill electric bell throbbed through the school, and Michael, almost before he knew what was happening, was carried in a torrent of boys towards the playground. Michael had never felt supreme lonel

re you a

reathed h

s your

remembered Rodber's war

an

our Chris

est to run quickly out of the playground, to keep silence or to surrender the info

ind out, yo

alling young,

d jolly well better scoot of

lar all the new kids for

tell young Church that Pearson and me are going to jolly we

n, whose teeth seemed to project farther and

, when we give you the biggest lamming you've ever had. Come on, young Fane," he went on, and Micha

e and show yourself to Pearson. He's the captain of o

mfortable grin such as

ood Pearson the leader, languidly eat

inky," he

t voice, "I know this kid at home. He's aw

cely glanced

a new oath written down in a book a

d threw away the

ng to join your army, Pears

y glad," Mic

army," said P

Pearson, that kid Biden said Church w

wed a large piece of a seco

to line up behind the

s eyes

an awfully ripping plan.

uired the

new kids by the tuckshop door and tell them to run towar

ool," said Pearson curtly, and just t

ve," Rodber shouted to Michael

earson occupied his thoughts fully enough. At a quarter-past twelve Mr. Whichelo the First Form master told Michael and the other new boys to go to the book-room and get their school caps, and at half-past twelve Michael waited outside on the yello

ll which led apparently into the narrow shady garden of an empty house next to the school. He explained how Michael was to hang about outside

" said Rodber. "And

ht: he had already seen boys woefully teazed on account of their curls, and Michael congratulated himself that generally his dress and appearance conformed with the fashion of the younger boys' dress at Randell's. It would be terrible to excite notice. In fact, Michael supposed that to excite notice was the worst sin anybody could possibly commit. He hoped he would never excite notice. He would like

emn-faced boys. He thought that to try to crack a chestnut hanging on a piece of string with another chestnut similarly suspended was a very enthralling pastime, and he was much upset when one of the solemn-faced antagonists sudde

me my cap," h

oys went on in sil

ve me my cap," Mi

and Michael, looking round in desp

boy over there has

ng to me, you young ass.

eally?" as

cour

as he could. The solemn-faced boy was so much surprized by this attack that he did not for a moment retaliate,

boy's knees upon his arms pinioned cross-wise. Excited voices chattered about him from an increasing circle. He heard the solemn-faced boy telling his horrified auditors that a n

young Plummer.

Michael in a circle of eager faces

odber. "I'm backin

another in his arm and a third in his chin brought tears and blood together in such quantity that Michael would have li

crowd broke up except for a few admirers of Rodber, who was telling Michael that he had done tolerabl

d Rodber crushingly. "I su

ay. But Rodber called him back and spoke pleasantly, so that Michael forgot the snub and wandered for the res

e most persistent criers of 'donnez,' when richer boys emerged from the tuckshop, sucking gelatines and satin pralines and chocolate creams and raspberry noyau. As for the masters, he was always ready to hear scandalous rumours about their un-official lives, and he was one of the first to fly round the playground with the news that 'Squeaky' Mordaunt had distinctly muttered 'damn' beneath his breath, when Featherstone Minor trod on his toe towards the close of first hour. Soon also with one of the four hundred odd boys who made up the population of this very large private school, Michael formed a great friendship. He and Buckley were inseparable for sixteen whole weeks. During that time they exchanged the most intimate confidences. Buckley told Michael that his Christian names were Claude Arnold Eustace, and Michael told Buckley that he was called Charles Michael Saxby, and also that his mother was generally away from home, that his father was dead, that his governess was called Miss Carthew, that he had a sister who played the piano and that one day when he grew up he hoped to be an explorer and search for orchids in Borneo. So

morning Michael saw Buckley coming into school with a light blue swallow pinned to the left of his sailor-knot and when Buckley perceived attached to Michael's sailor-top a medal dependent from a dark blue ribbon, they eyed each other as

the heart of massed factions mo

the cakes; Cambridge downs

uckley wou

for ever; Oxford in a match

nd Buckley cut Michael publicly. Finally, owing to some alteration in the Buckley home, Buckley became a boarder, and was able with sneering voice to call Michael a beastly 'day-bug.' Such was the friendship of Michael and Buckley, which lasted for sixteen weeks and might not indeed have so much wounded Michael, when the rupture was made final, if

k friends outside Carlington Road and the six roads of the alliance. There all secrets must be kept, and all quarrel

ed that puckered monkey-like face, and in a four-wheeler Nurse vanished without making any difference in the life of Sixty-four, save by a convenient shifting about of the upstair rooms. The old night-nursery was redecorated and became for many years Michael's bedroom. Miss Carthew slept in Michael's old big lonely front room, and Stella slept in a little dressing-room opening out of it. Down in the kitchen, whence withered Gladys and the impersonal cook had also vanished, Michael gleaned a certain amount of gossip and found that the immediate cause of Nurse's departure was due to Miss Carthew

all to do him credit. It was the fashion to choose colours in which to run, and Michael after a week's debate elected to appear in violet running-drawers and primrose-bordered vest. The twin Macalisters, contemporaries of Michael, ran in cerise and eau-de-nil, while the older Macalister wore ultramarine and mauve. Garrod chose dark green and Rodber looked dangerously swift in black and yellow. Every evening there was steady practice under Rodber, either in canvas shoes from lamp-post to lamp-post or, during the actual week before the sports, in spiked running-shoes on the grass-track, with corks to grip and a temperamental stop-watch to cause many disputes. It was a great humiliation for the Confederate Roads when Rodber himself f

opposition to friendship with strange children, and Michael joined an association for asking everybody on the Leas what the time was. The association would not have been disbanded all the holidays if one of the members had not asked the time from the same old gentleman twice in one minute. The old gentleman was so acutely irritated by this that he walked about the Leas warning p

pressed by the prospect. But Miss Carthew found a charming and youthful French governess at a girls' school, where about half a dozen girls were remaining during the holidays, and Michael did not mind so much. He rather liked the atmosphere of the gi

wished very much that the others would let the matter drop, but the discussion went on endlessly and as, just before he went home, he happened to see the offending girl sitting by a window with tear-stained face, Michael felt more sorry than ever and wished that he dared to say a comforting word, to explain how well he understood it was all an accident. On the way home, he walked silently, meditating upon disgrace, and for the first time he realized something of human cruelty and the lust to humiliate and submerge deeper still the fallen. At the same time he himself experienced, in retrospect of the incident, a certain curious excitement, and did not know whether, after all, he had not taken pleasure in the little girl's shame, whether, after all, he would not have liked to go back

eral as he saluted stiffly.

, Michael set out from the lodgings and ran all the way to the General's house on the Leas, and walked about and fidgeted and fretted himself until the clock stru

y turned into a toy-shop where Michael was told to choose two boxes of soldiers. Michael at first chose a box of Highlanders doubling fiercely with fixed bayonets and a stationary Highland Regimental Band, each individual of which had a different instrument and actually a music-stand as well. These two boxes together cost seven shillings, and Michael was just leaving the shop when he saw a small penny box containing twelve very tiny soldiers. Michael was in a quandary. For seven shillings he would

from the dusty little toy-shop. "Quite right. Quality before

d the glories of patriotism. Michael told tales, slightly exaggerated, of the exploits of Pearson's army and General Mace described the Relief of Lucknow. Michael felt that they were in profound sympathy: they both recognized the splendour of action. The rain stopped, and

y," said the General, standing up as tall and thin

e," said

Monday spent in buying a Norfolk suit and Eton collars, the new term began with all the excitements of 'moving up,' of a new form-mas

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