<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch32"> CHAPTER XXXII<br/><br/> PSMITH</SPAN></h3>
<p>“Jackson,” said Mike.</p>
<p>“Are you the Bully, the Pride
of the School, or the Boy who is Led Astray and takes
to Drink in Chapter Sixteen?”</p>
<p>“The last, for choice,”
said Mike, “but I’ve only just arrived,
so I don’t know.”</p>
<p>“The boy—­what will
he become?  Are you new here, too, then?”</p>
<p>“Yes!  Why, are you new?”</p>
<p>“Do I look as if I belonged
here?  I’m the latest import.  Sit down
on yonder settee, and I will tell you the painful story
of my life.  By the way, before I start, there’s
just one thing.  If you ever have occasion to
write to me, would you mind sticking a P at the beginning
of my name?  P-s-m-i-t-h.  See?  There
are too many Smiths, and I don’t care for Smythe. 
My father’s content to worry along in the old-fashioned
way, but I’ve decided to strike out a fresh line. 
I shall found a new dynasty.  The resolve came
to me unexpectedly this morning, as I was buying a
simple penn’orth of butterscotch out of the
automatic machine at Paddington.  I jotted it down
on the back of an envelope.  In conversation you
may address me as Rupert (though I hope you won’t),
or simply Smith, the P not being sounded.  Cp.
the name Zbysco, in which the Z is given a similar
miss-in-baulk.  See?”</p>
<p>Mike said he saw.  Psmith thanked
him with a certain stately old-world courtesy.</p>
<p>“Let us start at the beginning,”
he resumed.  “My infancy.  When I was
but a babe, my eldest sister was bribed with a shilling
an hour by my nurse to keep an rye on me, and see
that I did not raise Cain.  At the end of the
first day she struck for one-and six, and got it. 
We now pass to my boyhood.  At an early age, I
was sent to Eton, everybody predicting a bright career
for me.  But,” said Psmith solemnly, fixing
an owl-like gaze on Mike through the eye-glass, “it
was not to be.”</p>
<p>“No?” said Mike.</p>
<p>“No.  I was superannuated last term.”</p>
<p>“Bad luck.”</p>
<p>“For Eton, yes.  But what Eton loses, Sedleigh
gains.”</p>
<p>“But why Sedleigh, of all places?”</p>
<p>“This is the most painful part
of my narrative.  It seems that a certain scug
in the next village to ours happened last year to collar
a Balliol——­”</p>
<p>“Not Barlitt!” exclaimed Mike.</p>
<p>“That was the man.  The
son of the vicar.  The vicar told the curate,
who told our curate, who told our vicar, who told my
father, who sent me off here to get a Balliol too. 
Do <i>you</i> know Barlitt?”</p>
<p>“His pater’s vicar of
our village.  It was because his son got a Balliol
that I was sent here.”</p>
<p>“Do you come from Crofton?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“I’ve lived at Lower Benford
all my life.  We are practically long-lost brothers. 
Cheer a little, will you?”</p>
<p>Mike felt as Robinson Crusoe felt
when he met Friday.  Here was a fellow human being
in this desert place.  He could almost have embraced
Psmith.  The very sound of the name Lower Benford
was heartening.  His dislike for his new school
was not diminished, but now he felt that life there
might at least be tolerable.</p>
<p>“Where were you before you came
here?” asked Psmith.  “You have heard
my painful story.  Now tell me yours.”</p>
<p>“Wrykyn.  My pater took
me away because I got such a lot of bad reports.”</p>
<p>“My reports from Eton were simply
scurrilous.  There’s a libel action in every
sentence.  How do you like this place from what
you’ve seen of it?”</p>
<p>“Rotten.”</p>
<p>“I am with you, Comrade Jackson. 
You won’t mind my calling you Comrade, will
you?  I’ve just become a Socialist. 
It’s a great scheme.  You ought to be one. 
You work for the equal distribution of property, and
start by collaring all you can and sitting on it. 
We must stick together.  We are companions in
misfortune.  Lost lambs.  Sheep that have
gone astray.  Divided, we fall, together we may
worry through.  Have you seen Professor Radium
yet?  I should say Mr. Outwood.  What do you
think of him?”</p>
<p>“He doesn’t seem a bad
sort of chap.  Bit off his nut.  Jawed about
apses and things.”</p>
<p>“And thereby,” said Psmith,
“hangs a tale.  I’ve been making inquiries
of a stout sportsman in a sort of Salvation Army uniform,
whom I met in the grounds—­he’s the
school sergeant or something, quite a solid man—­and
I hear that Comrade Outwood’s an archaeological
cove.  Goes about the country beating up old ruins
and fossils and things.  There’s an Archaeological
Society in the school, run by him.  It goes out
on half-holidays, prowling about, and is allowed to
break bounds and generally steep itself to the eyebrows
in reckless devilry.  And, mark you, laddie, if
you belong to the Archaeological Society you get off
cricket.  To get off cricket,” said Psmith,
dusting his right trouser-leg, “was the dream
of my youth and the aspiration of my riper years. 
A noble game, but a bit too thick for me.  At Eton
I used to have to field out at the nets till the soles
of my boots wore through.  I suppose you are a
blood at the game?  Play for the school against
Loamshire, and so on.”</p>
<p>“I’m not going to play here, at any rate,”
said Mike.</p>
<p>He had made up his mind on this point
in the train.  There is a certain fascination
about making the very worst of a bad job.  Achilles
knew his business when he sat in his tent.  The
determination not to play cricket for Sedleigh as
he could not play for Wrykyn gave Mike a sort of pleasure. 
To stand by with folded arms and a sombre frown, as
it were, was one way of treating the situation, and
one not without its meed of comfort.</p>
<p>Psmith approved the resolve.</p>
<p>“Stout fellow,” he said.
“’Tis well.  You and I, hand in hand,
will search the countryside for ruined abbeys. 
We will snare the elusive fossil together.  Above
all, we will go out of bounds.  We shall thus
improve our minds, and have a jolly good time as well. 
I shouldn’t wonder if one mightn’t borrow
a gun from some friendly native, and do a bit of rabbit-shooting
here and there.  From what I saw of Comrade Outwood
during our brief interview, I shouldn’t think
he was one of the lynx-eyed contingent.  With
tact we ought to be able to slip away from the merry
throng of fossil-chasers, and do a bit on our own
account.”</p>
<p>“Good idea,” said Mike. 
“We will.  A chap at Wrykyn, called Wyatt,
used to break out at night and shoot at cats with
an air-pistol.”</p>
<p>“It would take a lot to make
me do that.  I am all against anything that interferes
with my sleep.  But rabbits in the daytime is a
scheme.  We’ll nose about for a gun at the
earliest opp.  Meanwhile we’d better go
up to Comrade Outwood, and get our names shoved down
for the Society.”</p>
<p>“I vote we get some tea first somewhere.”</p>
<p>“Then let’s beat up a
study.  I suppose they have studies here. 
Let’s go and look.”</p>
<p>They went upstairs.  On the first
floor there was a passage with doors on either side. 
Psmith opened the first of these.</p>
<p>“This’ll do us well,” he said.</p>
<p>It was a biggish room, looking out
over the school grounds.  There were a couple
of deal tables, two empty bookcases, and a looking-glass,
hung on a nail.</p>
<p>“Might have been made for us,” said Psmith
approvingly.</p>
<p>“I suppose it belongs to some rotter.”</p>
<p>“Not now.”</p>
<p>“You aren’t going to collar it!”</p>
<p>“That,” said Psmith, looking
at himself earnestly in the mirror, and straightening
his tie, “is the exact programme.  We must
stake out our claims.  This is practical Socialism.”</p>
<p>“But the real owner’s bound to turn up
some time or other.”</p>
<p>“His misfortune, not ours. 
You can’t expect two master-minds like us to
pig it in that room downstairs.  There are moments
when one wants to be alone.  It is imperative
that we have a place to retire to after a fatiguing
day.  And now, if you want to be really useful,
come and help me fetch up my box from downstairs. 
It’s got an Etna and various things in it.”</p>
<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch33"> CHAPTER XXXIII<br/><br/> STAKING OUT A CLAIM</SPAN></h3>
<p>Psmith, in the matter of decorating
a study and preparing tea in it, was rather a critic
than an executant.  He was full of ideas, but he
preferred to allow Mike to carry them out.  It
was he who suggested that the wooden bar which ran
across the window was unnecessary, but it was Mike
who wrenched it from its place.  Similarly, it
was Mike who abstracted the key from the door of the
next study, though the idea was Psmith’s.</p>
<p>“Privacy,” said Psmith,
as he watched Mike light the Etna, “is what we
chiefly need in this age of publicity.  If you
leave a study door unlocked in these strenuous times,
the first thing you know is, somebody comes right
in, sits down, and begins to talk about himself. 
I think with a little care we ought to be able to make
this room quite decently comfortable.  That putrid
calendar must come down, though.  Do you think
you could make a long arm, and haul it off the parent
tin-tack?  Thanks.  We make progress. 
We make progress.”</p>
<p>“We shall jolly well make it
out of the window,” said Mike, spooning up tea
from a paper bag with a postcard, “if a sort
of young Hackenschmidt turns up and claims the study. 
What are you going to do about it?”</p>
<p>“Don’t let us worry about
it.  I have a presentiment that he will be an
insignificant-looking little weed.  How are you
getting on with the evening meal?”</p>
<p>“Just ready.  What would
you give to be at Eton now?  I’d give something
to be at Wrykyn.”</p>
<p>“These school reports,”
said Psmith sympathetically, “are the very dickens. 
Many a bright young lad has been soured by them. 
Hullo.  What’s this, I wonder.”</p>
<p>A heavy body had plunged against the
door, evidently without a suspicion that there would
be any resistance.  A rattling at the handle followed,
and a voice outside said, “Dash the door!”</p>
<p>“Hackenschmidt!” said Mike.</p>
<p>“The weed,” said Psmith. 
“You couldn’t make a long arm, could you,
and turn the key?  We had better give this merchant
audience.  Remind me later to go on with my remarks
on school reports.  I had several bright things
to say on the subject.”</p>
<p>Mike unlocked the door, and flung
it open.  Framed in the entrance was a smallish,
freckled boy, wearing a bowler hat and carrying a bag. 
On his face was an expression of mingled wrath and
astonishment.</p>
<p>Psmith rose courteously from his chair,
and moved forward with slow stateliness to do the
honours.</p>
<p>“What the dickens,” inquired
the newcomer, “are you doing here?”</p>
<center><SPAN name="illus7">
<ANTIMG src="images/jmike7.jpg" alt="“WHAT THE DICKENS ARE YOU DOING HERE?”"></SPAN></center>
<p>“We were having a little tea,”
said Psmith, “to restore our tissues after our
journey.  Come in and join us.  We keep open
house, we Psmiths.  Let me introduce you to Comrade
Jackson.  A stout fellow.  Homely in appearance,
perhaps, but one of us.  I am Psmith.  Your
own name will doubtless come up in the course of general
chit-chat over the tea-cups.”</p>
<p>“My name’s Spiller, and this is my study.”</p>
<p>Psmith leaned against the mantelpiece,
put up his eyeglass, and harangued Spiller in a philosophical
vein.</p>
<p>“Of all sad words of tongue
or pen,” said he, “the saddest are these: 
‘It might have been.’  Too late! 
That is the bitter cry.  If you had torn yourself
from the bosom of the Spiller family by an earlier
train, all might have been well.  But no. 
Your father held your hand and said huskily, ‘Edwin,
don’t leave us!’ Your mother clung to you
weeping, and said, ‘Edwin, stay!’ Your
sisters——­”</p>
<p>“I want to know what——­”</p>
<p>“Your sisters froze on to your
knees like little octopuses (or octopi), and screamed,
‘Don’t go, Edwin!’ And so,”
said Psmith, deeply affected by his recital, “you
stayed on till the later train; and, on arrival, you
find strange faces in the familiar room, a people that
know not Spiller.”  Psmith went to the table,
and cheered himself with a sip of tea.  Spiller’s
sad case had moved him greatly.</p>
<p>The victim of Fate seemed in no way consoled.</p>
<p>“It’s beastly cheek, that’s what
I call it.  Are you new chaps?”</p>
<p>“The very latest thing,” said Psmith.</p>
<p>“Well, it’s beastly cheek.”</p>
<p>Mike’s outlook on life was of
the solid, practical order.  He went straight
to the root of the matter.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do about it?” he
asked.</p>
<p>Spiller evaded the question.</p>
<p>“It’s beastly cheek,”
he repeated.  “You can’t go about the
place bagging studies.”</p>
<p>“But we do,” said Psmith. 
“In this life, Comrade Spiller, we must be prepared
for every emergency.  We must distinguish between
the unusual and the impossible.  It is unusual
for people to go about the place bagging studies,
so you have rashly ordered your life on the assumption
that it is impossible.  Error!  Ah, Spiller,
Spiller, let this be a lesson to you.”</p>
<p>“Look here, I tell you what it——­”</p>
<p>“I was in a motor with a man
once.  I said to him:  ’What would happen
if you trod on that pedal thing instead of that other
pedal thing?’ He said, ’I couldn’t. 
One’s the foot-brake, and the other’s the
accelerator.’  ‘But suppose you did?’
I said.  ‘I wouldn’t,’ he said. 
‘Now we’ll let her rip.’  So
he stamped on the accelerator.  Only it turned
out to be the foot-brake after all, and we stopped
dead, and skidded into a ditch.  The advice I
give to every young man starting life is:  ‘Never
confuse the unusual and the impossible.’ 
Take the present case.  If you had only realised
the possibility of somebody some day collaring your
study, you might have thought out dozens of sound
schemes for dealing with the matter.  As it is,
you are unprepared.  The thing comes on you as
a surprise.  The cry goes round:  ‘Spiller
has been taken unawares.  He cannot cope with the
situation.’”</p>
<p>“Can’t I!  I’ll——­”</p>
<p>“What <i>are</i> you going to do about it?”
said Mike.</p>
<p>“All I know is, I’m going
to have it.  It was Simpson’s last term,
and Simpson’s left, and I’m next on the
house list, so, of course, it’s my study.”</p>
<p>“But what steps,” said
Psmith, “are you going to take?  Spiller,
the man of Logic, we know.  But what of Spiller,
the Man of Action?  How do you intend to set about
it?  Force is useless.  I was saying to Comrade
Jackson before you came in, that I didn’t mind
betting you were an insignificant-looking little weed. 
And you <i>are</i> an insignificant-looking little
weed.”</p>
<p>“We’ll see what Outwood says about it.”</p>
<p>“Not an unsound scheme. 
By no means a scaly project.  Comrade Jackson
and myself were about to interview him upon another
point.  We may as well all go together.”</p>
<p>The trio made their way to the Presence,
Spiller pink and determined, Mike sullen, Psmith particularly
debonair.  He hummed lightly as he walked, and
now and then pointed out to Spiller objects of interest
by the wayside.</p>
<p>Mr. Outwood received them with the
motherly warmth which was evidently the leading characteristic
of his normal manner.</p>
<p>“Ah, Spiller,” he said. 
“And Smith, and Jackson.  I am glad to see
that you have already made friends.”</p>
<p>“Spiller’s, sir,”
said Psmith, laying a hand patronisingly on the study-claimer’s
shoulder—­a proceeding violently resented
by Spiller—­“is a character one cannot
help but respect.  His nature expands before one
like some beautiful flower.”</p>
<p>Mr. Outwood received this eulogy with
rather a startled expression, and gazed at the object
of the tribute in a surprised way.</p>
<p>“Er—­quite so, Smith,
quite so,” he said at last.  “I like
to see boys in my house friendly towards one another.”</p>
<p>“There is no vice in Spiller,”
pursued Psmith earnestly.  “His heart is
the heart of a little child.”</p>
<p>“Please, sir,” burst out
this paragon of all the virtues, “I——­”</p>
<p>“But it was not entirely with
regard to Spiller that I wished to speak to you, sir,
if you were not too busy.”</p>
<p>“Not at all, Smith, not at all.  Is there
anything——­”</p>
<p>“Please, sir—­” began Spiller.</p>
<p>“I understand, sir,” said
Psmith, “that there is an Archaeological Society
in the school.”</p>
<p>Mr. Outwood’s eyes sparkled
behind their pince-nez.  It was a disappointment
to him that so few boys seemed to wish to belong to
his chosen band.  Cricket and football, games
that left him cold, appeared to be the main interest
in their lives.  It was but rarely that he could
induce new boys to join.  His colleague, Mr. Downing,
who presided over the School Fire Brigade, never had
any difficulty in finding support.  Boys came
readily at his call.  Mr. Outwood pondered wistfully
on this at times, not knowing that the Fire Brigade
owed its support to the fact that it provided its
light-hearted members with perfectly unparalleled
opportunities for ragging, while his own band, though
small, were in the main earnest.</p>
<p>“Yes, Smith.” he said. 
“Yes.  We have a small Archaeological Society. 
I—­er—­in a measure look after
it.  Perhaps you would care to become a member?”</p>
<p>“Please, sir—­” said Spiller.</p>
<p>“One moment, Spiller.  Do you want to join,
Smith?”</p>
<p>“Intensely, sir.  Archaeology fascinates
me.  A grand pursuit, sir.”</p>
<p>“Undoubtedly, Smith.  I
am very pleased, very pleased indeed.  I will
put down your name at once.”</p>
<p>“And Jackson’s, sir.”</p>
<p>“Jackson, too!” Mr. Outwood
beamed.  “I am delighted.  Most delighted. 
This is capital.  This enthusiasm is most capital.”</p>
<p>“Spiller, sir,” said Psmith
sadly, “I have been unable to induce to join.”</p>
<p>“Oh, he is one of our oldest members.”</p>
<p>“Ah,” said Psmith, tolerantly, “that
accounts for it.”</p>
<p>“Please, sir—­” said Spiller.</p>
<p>“One moment, Spiller.  We
shall have the first outing of the term on Saturday. 
We intend to inspect the Roman Camp at Embury Hill,
two miles from the school.”</p>
<p>“We shall be there, sir.”</p>
<p>“Capital!”</p>
<p>“Please, sir—­” said Spiller.</p>
<p>“One moment, Spiller,”
said Psmith.  “There is just one other matter,
if you could spare the time, sir.”</p>
<p>“Certainly, Smith.  What is that?”</p>
<p>“Would there be any objection
to Jackson and myself taking Simpson’s old study?”</p>
<p>“By all means, Smith.  A very good idea.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.  It would give
us a place where we could work quietly in the evenings.”</p>
<p>“Quite so.  Quite so.”</p>
<p>“Thank you very much, sir.  We will move
our things in.”</p>
<p>“Thank you very much, sir,” said Mike.</p>
<p>“Please, sir,” shouted
Spiller, “aren’t I to have it?  I’m
next on the list, sir.  I come next after Simpson. 
Can’t I have it?”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I have already
promised it to Smith, Spiller.  You should have
spoken before.”</p>
<p>“But, sir——­”</p>
<p>Psmith eyed the speaker pityingly.</p>
<p>“This tendency to delay, Spiller,”
he said, “is your besetting fault.  Correct
it, Edwin.  Fight against it.”</p>
<p>He turned to Mr. Outwood.</p>
<p>“We should, of course, sir,
always be glad to see Spiller in our study.  He
would always find a cheery welcome waiting there for
him.  There is no formality between ourselves
and Spiller.”</p>
<p>“Quite so.  An excellent
arrangement, Smith.  I like this spirit of comradeship
in my house.  Then you will be with us on Saturday?”</p>
<p>“On Saturday, sir.”</p>
<p>“All this sort of thing, Spiller,”
said Psmith, as they closed the door, “is very,
very trying for a man of culture.  Look us up in
our study one of these afternoons.”</p>
<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch34"> CHAPTER XXXIV<br/><br/> GUERRILLA WARFARE</SPAN></h3>
<p>“There are few pleasures,”
said Psmith, as he resumed his favourite position
against the mantelpiece and surveyed the commandeered
study with the pride of a householder, “keener
to the reflective mind than sitting under one’s
own roof-tree.  This place would have been wasted
on Spiller; he would not have appreciated it properly.”</p>
<p>Mike was finishing his tea.  “You’re
a jolly useful chap to have by you in a crisis, Smith,”
he said with approval.  “We ought to have
known each other before.”</p>
<p>“The loss was mine,” said
Psmith courteously.  “We will now, with your
permission, face the future for awhile.  I suppose
you realise that we are now to a certain extent up
against it.  Spiller’s hot Spanish blood
is not going to sit tight and do nothing under a blow
like this.”</p>
<p>“What can he do?  Outwood’s given
us the study.”</p>
<p>“What would you have done if somebody had bagged
your study?”</p>
<p>“Made it jolly hot for them!”</p>
<p>“So will Comrade Spiller. 
I take it that he will collect a gang and make an
offensive movement against us directly he can. 
To all appearances we are in a fairly tight place. 
It all depends on how big Comrade Spiller’s
gang will be.  I don’t like rows, but I’m
prepared to take on a reasonable number of bravoes
in defence of the home.”</p>
<p>Mike intimated that he was with him
on the point.  “The difficulty is, though,”
he said, “about when we leave this room. 
I mean, we’re all right while we stick here,
but we can’t stay all night.”</p>
<p>“That’s just what I was
about to point out when you put it with such admirable
clearness.  Here we are in a stronghold, they can
only get at us through the door, and we can lock that.”</p>
<p>“And jam a chair against it.”</p>
<p>“<i>And</i>, as you rightly
remark, jam a chair against it.  But what of the
nightfall?  What of the time when we retire to
our dormitory?”</p>
<p>“Or dormitories.  I say,
if we’re in separate rooms we shall be in the
cart.”</p>
<p>Psmith eyed Mike with approval. 
“He thinks of everything!  You’re the
man, Comrade Jackson, to conduct an affair of this
kind—­such foresight! such resource! 
We must see to this at once; if they put us in different
rooms we’re done—­we shall be destroyed
singly in the watches of the night.”</p>
<p>“We’d better nip down to the matron right
off.”</p>
<p>“Not the matron—­Comrade
Outwood is the man.  We are as sons to him; there
is nothing he can deny us.  I’m afraid we
are quite spoiling his afternoon by these interruptions,
but we must rout him out once more.”</p>
<p>As they got up, the door handle rattled
again, and this time there followed a knocking.</p>
<p>“This must be an emissary of
Comrade Spiller’s,” said Psmith.  “Let
us parley with the man.”</p>
<p>Mike unlocked the door.  A light-haired
youth with a cheerful, rather vacant face and a receding
chin strolled into the room, and stood giggling with
his hands in his pockets.</p>
<p>“I just came up to have a look at you,”
he explained.</p>
<p>“If you move a little to the
left,” said Psmith, “you will catch the
light and shade effects on Jackson’s face better.”</p>
<p>The new-comer giggled with renewed
vigour.  “Are you the chap with the eyeglass
who jaws all the time?”</p>
<p>“I <i>do</i> wear an eyeglass,”
said Psmith; “as to the rest of the description——­”</p>
<p>“My name’s Jellicoe.”</p>
<p>“Mine is Psmith—­P-s-m-i-t-h—­one
of the Shropshire Psmiths.  The object on the
skyline is Comrade Jackson.”</p>
<p>“Old Spiller,” giggled
Jellicoe, “is cursing you like anything downstairs. 
You <i>are</i> chaps!  Do you mean to say you simply
bagged his study?  He’s making no end of
a row about it.”</p>
<p>“Spiller’s fiery nature is a byword,”
said Psmith.</p>
<p>“What’s he going to do?” asked Mike,
in his practical way.</p>
<p>“He’s going to get the chaps to turn you
out.”</p>
<p>“As I suspected,” sighed
Psmith, as one mourning over the frailty of human
nature.  “About how many horny-handed assistants
should you say that he would be likely to bring? 
Will you, for instance, join the glad throng?”</p>
<p>“Me?  No fear!  I think Spiller’s
an ass.”</p>
<p>“There’s nothing like
a common thought for binding people together. <i>I</i>
think Spiller’s an ass.”</p>
<p>“How many <i>will</i> there be, then?”
asked Mike.</p>
<p>“He might get about half a dozen,
not more, because most of the chaps don’t see
why they should sweat themselves just because Spiller’s
study has been bagged.”</p>
<p>“Sturdy common sense,”
said Psmith approvingly, “seems to be the chief
virtue of the Sedleigh character.”</p>
<p>“We shall be able to tackle
a crowd like that,” said Mike.  “The
only thing is we must get into the same dormitory.”</p>
<p>“This is where Comrade Jellicoe’s
knowledge of the local geography will come in useful. 
Do you happen to know of any snug little room, with,
say, about four beds in it?  How many dormitories
are there?”</p>
<p>“Five—­there’s
one with three beds in it, only it belongs to three
chaps.”</p>
<p>“I believe in the equal distribution
of property.  We will go to Comrade Outwood and
stake out another claim.”</p>
<p>Mr. Outwood received them even more
beamingly than before.  “Yes, Smith?”
he said.</p>
<p>“We must apologise for disturbing you, sir——­”</p>
<p>“Not at all, Smith, not at all! 
I like the boys in my house to come to me when they
wish for my advice or help.”</p>
<p>“We were wondering, sir, if
you would have any objection to Jackson, Jellicoe
and myself sharing the dormitory with the three beds
in it.  A very warm friendship—­”
explained Psmith, patting the gurgling Jellicoe kindly
on the shoulder, “has sprung up between Jackson,
Jellicoe and myself.”</p>
<p>“You make friends easily, Smith. 
I like to see it—­I like to see it.”</p>
<p>“And we can have the room, sir?”</p>
<p>“Certainly—­certainly!  Tell the
matron as you go down.”</p>
<p>“And now,” said Psmith,
as they returned to the study, “we may say that
we are in a fairly winning position.  A vote of
thanks to Comrade Jellicoe for his valuable assistance.”</p>
<p>“You <i>are</i> a chap!” said Jellicoe.</p>
<p>The handle began to revolve again.</p>
<p>“That door,” said Psmith,
“is getting a perfect incubus!  It cuts into
one’s leisure cruelly.”</p>
<p>This time it was a small boy. 
“They told me to come up and tell you to come
down,” he said.</p>
<p>Psmith looked at him searchingly through his eyeglass.</p>
<p>“Who?”</p>
<p>“The senior day-room chaps.”</p>
<p>“Spiller?”</p>
<p>“Spiller and Robinson and Stone, and some other
chaps.”</p>
<p>“They want us to speak to them?”</p>
<p>“They told me to come up and tell you to come
down.”</p>
<p>“Go and give Comrade Spiller
our compliments and say that we can’t come down,
but shall be delighted to see him up here.  Things,”
he said, as the messenger departed, “are beginning
to move.  Better leave the door open, I think;
it will save trouble.  Ah, come in, Comrade Spiller,
what can we do for you?”</p>
<p>Spiller advanced into the study; the
others waited outside, crowding in the doorway.</p>
<p>“Look here,” said Spiller,
“are you going to clear out of here or not?”</p>
<p>“After Mr. Outwood’s kindly
thought in giving us the room?  You suggest a
black and ungrateful action, Comrade Spiller.”</p>
<p>“You’ll get it hot, if you don’t.”</p>
<p>“We’ll risk it,” said Mike.</p>
<p>Jellicoe giggled in the background;
the drama in the atmosphere appealed to him. 
His was a simple and appreciative mind.</p>
<p>“Come on, you chaps,” cried Spiller suddenly.</p>
<p>There was an inward rush on the enemy’s
part, but Mike had been watching.  He grabbed
Spiller by the shoulders and ran him back against
the advancing crowd.  For a moment the doorway
was blocked, then the weight and impetus of Mike and
Spiller prevailed, the enemy gave back, and Mike,
stepping into the room again, slammed the door and
locked it.</p>
<p>“A neat piece of work,”
said Psmith approvingly, adjusting his tie at the
looking-glass.  “The preliminaries may now
be considered over, the first shot has been fired. 
The dogs of war are now loose.”</p>
<p>A heavy body crashed against the door.</p>
<p>“They’ll have it down,” said Jellicoe.</p>
<p>“We must act, Comrade Jackson! 
Might I trouble you just to turn that key quietly,
and the handle, and then to stand by for the next
attack.”</p>
<p>There was a scrambling of feet in
the passage outside, and then a repetition of the
onslaught on the door.  This time, however, the
door, instead of resisting, swung open, and the human
battering-ram staggered through into the study. 
Mike, turning after re-locking the door, was just
in time to see Psmith, with a display of energy of
which one would not have believed him capable, grip
the invader scientifically by an arm and a leg.</p>
<p>Mike jumped to help, but it was needless;
the captive was already on the window-sill.  As
Mike arrived, Psmith dropped him on to the flower-bed
below.</p>
<p>Psmith closed the window gently and
turned to Jellicoe.  “Who was our guest?”
he asked, dusting the knees of his trousers where they
had pressed against the wall.</p>
<p>“Robinson.  I say, you <i>are</i> a chap!”</p>
<p>“Robinson, was it?  Well,
we are always glad to see Comrade Robinson, always. 
I wonder if anybody else is thinking of calling?”</p>
<p>Apparently frontal attack had been
abandoned.  Whisperings could be heard in the
corridor.</p>
<p>Somebody hammered on the door.</p>
<p>“Yes?” called Psmith patiently.</p>
<p>“You’d better come out,
you know; you’ll only get it hotter if you don’t.”</p>
<p>“Leave us, Spiller; we would be alone.”</p>
<p>A bell rang in the distance.</p>
<p>“Tea,” said Jellicoe; “we shall
have to go now.”</p>
<p>“They won’t do anything
till after tea, I shouldn’t think,” said
Mike.  “There’s no harm in going out.”</p>
<p>The passage was empty when they opened
the door; the call to food was evidently a thing not
to be treated lightly by the enemy.</p>
<p>In the dining-room the beleaguered
garrison were the object of general attention. 
Everybody turned to look at them as they came in. 
It was plain that the study episode had been a topic
of conversation.  Spiller’s face was crimson,
and Robinson’s coat-sleeve still bore traces
of garden mould.</p>
<p>Mike felt rather conscious of the
eyes, but Psmith was in his element.  His demeanour
throughout the meal was that of some whimsical monarch
condescending for a freak to revel with his humble
subjects.</p>
<p>Towards the end of the meal Psmith
scribbled a note and passed it to Mike.  It read: 
“Directly this is over, nip upstairs as quickly
as you can.”</p>
<p>Mike followed the advice; they were
first out of the room.  When they had been in
the study a few moments, Jellicoe knocked at the door. 
“Lucky you two cut away so quick,” he said. 
“They were going to try and get you into the
senior day-room and scrag you there.”</p>
<p>“This,” said Psmith, leaning
against the mantelpiece, “is exciting, but it
can’t go on.  We have got for our sins to
be in this place for a whole term, and if we are going
to do the Hunted Fawn business all the time, life
in the true sense of the word will become an impossibility. 
My nerves are so delicately attuned that the strain
would simply reduce them to hash.  We are not
prepared to carry on a long campaign—­the
thing must be settled at once.”</p>
<p>“Shall we go down to the senior
day-room, and have it out?” said Mike.</p>
<p>“No, we will play the fixture
on our own ground.  I think we may take it as
tolerably certain that Comrade Spiller and his hired
ruffians will try to corner us in the dormitory to-night. 
Well, of course, we could fake up some sort of barricade
for the door, but then we should have all the trouble
over again to-morrow and the day after that. 
Personally I don’t propose to be chivvied about
indefinitely like this, so I propose that we let them
come into the dormitory, and see what happens. 
Is this meeting with me?”</p>
<p>“I think that’s sound,”
said Mike.  “We needn’t drag Jellicoe
into it.”</p>
<p>“As a matter of fact—­if
you don’t mind—­” began that
man of peace.</p>
<p>“Quite right,” said Psmith;
“this is not Comrade Jellicoe’s scene at
all; he has got to spend the term in the senior day-room,
whereas we have our little wooden <i>châlet</i> to
retire to in times of stress.  Comrade Jellicoe
must stand out of the game altogether.  We shall
be glad of his moral support, but otherwise, <i>ne
pas</i>.  And now, as there won’t be anything
doing till bedtime, I think I’ll collar this
table and write home and tell my people that all is
well with their Rupert.”</p>
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