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‘Well, look here, old chap,’ he said, ‘let’s have strict business between friends. If you’ll pay me back four quid at the end of term, you shall have the two pounds. How does that strike you?’

It struck Farnie, as it would have struck most people, that if this was Monk’s idea of strict business, there were the makings of no ordinary financier in him. But to get his two pounds he would have agreed to anything. And the end of term seemed a long way off.

The awkward part of the billiard-playing episode was that the punishment for it, if detected, was not expulsion, but flogging. And Farnie resembled the lady in The Ingoldsby Legends who ‘didn’t mind death, but who couldn’t stand pinching’. He didn’t mind expulsion—he was used to it, but he could not stand flogging.

‘That’ll be all right,’ he said. And the money changed hands.

[6]

—AND STAYS THERE

‘I say,’ said Baker of Jephson’s excitedly some days later, reeling into the study which he shared with Norris, ‘have you seen the team the M.C.C.’s bringing down?’

At nearly every school there is a type of youth who asks this question on the morning of the M.C.C. match. Norris was engaged in putting the finishing touches to a snow-white pair of cricket boots.

‘No. Hullo, where did you raise that Sporter? Let’s have a look.’

But Baker proposed to conduct this business in person. It is ten times more pleasant to administer a series of shocks to a friend than to sit by and watch him administering them to himself. He retained The Sportsman, and began to read out the team.

‘Thought Middlesex had a match,’ said Norris, as Baker paused dramatically to let the name of a world-famed professional sink in.

‘No. They don’t play Surrey till Monday.’

‘Well, if they’ve got an important match like Surrey on on Monday,’ said Norris disgustedly, ‘what on earth do they let their best man come down here today for, and fag himself out?’

Baker suggested gently that if anybody was going to be fagged out at the end of the day, it would in all probability be the Beckford bowlers, and not a man who, as he was careful to point out, had run up a century a mere three days ago against Yorkshire, and who was apparently at that moment at the very top of his form.

‘Well,’ said Norris, ‘he might crock himself or anything. Rank bad policy, I call it. Anybody else?’

Baker resumed his reading. A string of unknowns ended in another celebrity.

‘Blackwell?’ said Norris. ‘Not O. T. Blackwell?’

‘It says A. T. But,’ went on Baker, brightening up again, ‘they always get the initials wrong in the papers. Certain to be O. T. By the way, I suppose you saw that he made eighty-three against Notts the other day?’

Norris tried to comfort himself by observing that Notts couldn’t bowl for toffee.

‘Last week, too,’ said Baker, ‘he made a hundred and forty-six not out against Malvern for the Gentlemen of Warwickshire. They couldn’t get him out,’ he concluded with unction. In spite of the fact that he himself was playing in the match today, and might under the circumstances reasonably look forward to a considerable dose of leather-hunting, the task of announcing the bad news to Norris appeared to have a most elevating effect on his spirits:

‘That’s nothing extra special,’ said Norris, in answer to the last item of information, ‘the Malvern wicket’s like a billiard-table.’

‘Our wickets aren’t bad either at this time of year,’ said Baker, ‘and I heard rumours that they had got a record one ready for this match.’

‘It seems to me,’ said Norris, ‘that what I’d better do if we want to bat at all today is to win the toss. Though Sammy and the Bishop and Baynes ought to be able to get any ordinary side out all right.’

‘Only this isn’t an ordinary side. It’s a sort of improved county team.’

‘They’ve got about four men who might come off, but the M.C.C. sometimes have a bit of a tail. We ought to have a look in if we win the toss.’

‘Hope so,’ said Baker. ‘I doubt it, though.’

At a quarter to eleven the School always went out in a body to inspect the pitch. After the wicket had been described by experts in hushed whispers as looking pretty good, the bell rang, and all who were not playing for the team, with the exception of the lucky individual who had obtained for himself the post of scorer, strolled back towards the blocks. Monk had come out with Waterford, but seeing Farnie ahead and walking alone he quitted Waterford, and attached himself to the genial Reginald. He wanted to talk business. He had not found the speculation of the two pounds a very profitable one. He had advanced the money under the impression that Farnie, by accepting it, was practically selling his independence. And there were certain matters in which Monk was largely interested, connected with the breaking of bounds and the purchase of contraband goods, which he would have been exceedingly glad to have performed by deputy. He had fancied that Farnie would have taken over these jobs as part of his debt. But he had mistaken his man. On the very first occasion when he had attempted to put on the screw, Farnie had flatly refused to have anything to do with what he proposed. He said that he was not Monk’s fag—a remark which had the merit of being absolutely true.

All this, combined with a slight sinking of his own funds, induced Monk to take steps towards recovering the loan.

‘I say, Farnie, old chap.’

‘Hullo!’

‘I say, do you remember my lending you two quid some time ago?’

‘You don’t give me much chance of forgetting it,’ said Farnie.

Monk smiled. He could afford to be generous towards such witticisms.

‘I want it back,’ he said.

‘All right. You’ll get it at the end of term.’

‘I want it now.’

‘Why?’

‘Awfully hard up, old chap.’

‘You aren’t,’ said Farnie. ‘You’ve got three pounds twelve and sixpence halfpenny. If you will keep counting your money in public, you can’t blame a chap for knowing how much you’ve got.’

Monk, slightly disconcerted, changed his plan of action. He abandoned skirmishing tactics.

‘Never mind that,’ he said, ‘the point is that I want that four pounds. I’m going to have it, too.’

‘I know. At the end of term.’

‘I’m going to have it now.’

‘You can have a pound of it now.’

‘Not enough.’

‘I don’t see how you expect me to raise any more. If I could, do you think I should have borrowed it? You might chuck rotting for a change.’

‘Now, look here, old chap,’ said Monk, ‘I should think you’d rather raise that tin somehow than have it get about that you’d been playing pills at some pub out of bounds. What?’

Farnie, for one of the few occasions on record, was shaken out of his usual sang-froid. Even in his easy code of morality there had always been one crime which was an anathema, the sort of thing no fellow could think of doing. But it was obviously at this that Monk was hinting.

‘Good Lord, man,’ he cried, ‘you don’t mean to say you’re thinking of sneaking? Why, the fellows would boot you round the field. You couldn’t stay in the place a week.’

‘There are heaps of ways,’ said Monk, ‘in which a thing can get about without anyone actually telling the beaks. At present I’ve not told a soul. But, you know, if I let it out to anyone they might tell someone else, and so on. And if everybody knows a thing, the beaks generally get hold of it sooner or later. You’d much better let me have that four quid, old chap.’

Farnie capitulated.

‘All right,’ he said, ‘I’ll get it somehow.’