“And you replied to John Porson?”
“I said he should have another look to make sure it had gone. If it had, he should tell the housemaster or one of the two petty officers on duty. Petty Officer Carter was on that day. I said not to waste time, the sooner he reported it, the better his chances of getting it back.”
“Admirable,” said Holmes, “Then you spoke as a good sensible friend, not as a frightened thief.”
“I hope I did, sir. I knew nothing about it until Porson told me then, in the locker room.”
As I listened, I was standing by a table on which his toiletries and other articles were set out in regulation order. Among them was a rather expensive clothes-brush, with black bristles and a polished walnut back, evidently brought from home. On this varnished back someone at home had very precisely cut the name “Riley” and his school number, “178.” Next to this there were several words lightly scratched, as if to deface the varnish. They in turn had been scraped over, as neatly as possible, to obliterate them. Even under these neater scratches it was just possible to see that an unknown hand had cut four words next to Riley’s name. The effect was to make the whole lettering read “Riley Is an Oily Hog.”
There was also a cheap hair-brush which had been similarly treated. Once again, whatever had defaced it was scratched over in its turn but I could still make out an ominous jingle.
Tell-tale tit.
Your tongue shall be split,
And all the little dicky-birds
Shall have a little bit.
The old-fashioned clothes-brush might have been an heirloom of some kind. The hair-brush seemed a cheap replacement, perhaps for one that had already been defaced in this way.
Several more pieces of the puzzle fell into place. I picked up the clothes-brush and turned round.
“Who carved your name and number so neatly on the back of this?”
Riley glanced up.
“It was my uncle, sir, before I came for my first term. I was in Collingwood Term.”
“And who scratched these other words?”
He bit his lip and shook his head.
“Don’t know, sir.”
I would have bet a hundred pounds that he did.
“Very well, then tell me at least who scratched them out—did you do it?”
He shook his head again. “My mother did it, when I went home for the first holidays. There were so many things to be bought for school that we couldn’t throw away the brush. And it belonged to my father.”
Holmes gave a murmur of approval.
“And what are Oily Hogs? I regret having to ask that. Please tell me.”
The boy stared at the table-top and hesitated. To my astonishment, with his deliverance now a possibility, he was close to tears. Then he pulled himself together and said, “We are. The Engineers. The Executive Cadets—the Deck Officers—are the Ocean Swells. There are far more of them. One or two of us at a time have to go to be bully-ragged. The rest of us keep quiet because we’re glad it’s someone else. They gang round and rag us for half an hour or so, thirty or forty of them sometimes. There’s no reason—they get excited and it just happens. Everything is quiet one minute and then they’re singing “Oily Hogs, Oily Togs, Dirty Dogs and Frenchie Frogs,” throwing things, punching, spitting. Once or twice they pushed the same chap’s head into the wash-room latrine and flushed it. He ran away from school in the end. He got home on the railway somehow and never came back. Most get caught before they get very far. Then they cop it from old Winter for being out of bounds.”
“Do they never complain?”
“We’re not allowed to sneak or split. That only makes it worse.”
“And what of the Ocean Swells?” Holmes inquired.
“They say they’ll own the decks one day and we’ll be the hogs down in the grease pit.”
Again I thought he might weep, but I underestimated him.
“Deck officers—children of twelve or fourteen!” I said angrily, “Look, my boy, remember this. So far as names go, sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me.”
“It was my mother’s name,” he said sadly, and then indeed, he began to weep. “Sovran-Phillips is one of the Ocean Swells. He found out that her name was Clemency. They thought it was a funny name. Phillips and the others went ganging round the school after me, shouting it, shouting that my father never died because I never had a father. My mother never had a husband. They ganged round me shouting lies about her. The more I begged them to stop, the more they did it. Now it doesn’t matter, because I shan’t ever go back or see them again.”
I stood there. For the first time in my life the word “dumbfounded” meant something to me. When our case began I had never imagined such juvenile evil would be unearthed. Forging a postal order was nothing compared with this! But now that Patrick Riley had begun it was hard to stop him going on. What had he to lose? His eyes were dry again, reddened but angry.
“The worst of it is that I thought some of them were my friends. When it happened, even the ones I thought were friends … I could see them standing on the edge of the gang smiling and laughing at me. I’ll never forget who they were.”
Sherlock Holmes had listened very quietly to all this.
“And Mr Winter?” he inquired, “What does he have to say?”
Patrick Riley looked up miserably and blew his nose.
“He won’t have sneaking or splitting. If a boy won’t stand up for himself but goes sneaking on the others, Mr Winter sends him away or beats him for it. That’s what I was warned.”
The eyes of Sherlock Holmes were dark, glittering ice. His fury, on the few occasions when it overtook him, was terrifyingly quiet and cold. I was more angry than I had been for a very long time. If half of this was true, then the sooner Sir John Fisher had all such places as this closed down the better. Patrick Riley ended his pause.
“John Porson is my friend, on the same side in the same class. We share the same desk. Still we daren’t fight Sovran-Phillips and his gang. But Porson is the last person I would steal from.”
Listening to him, I thought that was the most persuasive argument we had heard in our young client’s favour.
Holmes nodded and said, “You mention Sovran-Phillips. Tell me about him.”
“He’s Captain of Boats and prefect of the Deck Swells in the Upper Middle. The new boys act as servants to the captains and they get beaten if they don’t. He knows how to fight, that’s half the trouble. His step-brother’s a lot older, a cruiser captain. Phillips never lets us forget it. His real brother was here a few years ago and at Dartmouth now. He says his grandfather was an admiral, but I don’t know if that’s true. I don’t care now anyway. He says all the maids in the kitchen are spoony on him and he goes with them. Winter’s maid mostly. That’s a lie, I should say.”
Holmes let it rest there for a moment. I tried to imagine the shame and humiliation of Patrick Riley, defeated at every resistance to the smug and superior Phillips. I might have doubted the truth of it all but for the sincerity and grief in our young informant’s manner.
“Very well,” said Holmes at length. “If I have my way, you will find on your side an Admiral of the Fleet, who will outrank a cruiser captain two or three times over. In the next holidays, Dr Watson and I will find a room for you with Mrs Hudson. I am not inexpert in boxing and single-stick combat. After a fortnight’s instruction, I think I may promise that you shall return to St Vincent’s and give young Phillips the thrashing of his life. It is not a matter of size—for I suspect you are smaller than he is—but of skill.”
“I don’t care if I never go back, sir. I don’t mind not going back, but I won’t be called a thief. Could you teach me to fight, Mr Holmes?”