<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch46"> CHAPTER XLVI<br/><br/> THE DECORATION OF SAMMY</SPAN></h3>
<p>Psmith leaned against the mantelpiece
in the senior day-room at Outwood’s—­since
Mike’s innings against Downing’s the Lost
Lambs had been received as brothers by that centre
of disorder, so that even Spiller was compelled to
look on the hatchet as buried—­and gave his
views on the events of the preceding night, or, rather,
of that morning, for it was nearer one than twelve
when peace had once more fallen on the school.</p>
<p>“Nothing that happens in this
luny-bin,” said Psmith, “has power to
surprise me now.  There was a time when I might
have thought it a little unusual to have to leave
the house through a canvas shoot at one o’clock
in the morning, but I suppose it’s quite the
regular thing here.  Old school tradition, &c. 
Men leave the school, and find that they’ve
got so accustomed to jumping out of window that they
look on it as a sort of affectation to go out by the
door.  I suppose none of you merchants can give
me any idea when the next knockabout entertainment
of this kind is likely to take place?”</p>
<p>“I wonder who rang that bell!”
said Stone.  “Jolly sporting idea.”</p>
<p>“I believe it was Downing himself. 
If it was, I hope he’s satisfied.”</p>
<p>Jellicoe, who was appearing in society
supported by a stick, looked meaningly at Mike, and
giggled, receiving in answer a stony stare.  Mike
had informed Jellicoe of the details of his interview
with Mr. Barley at the “White Boar,” and
Jellicoe, after a momentary splutter of wrath against
the practical joker, was now in a particularly light-hearted
mood.  He hobbled about, giggling at nothing and
at peace with all the world.</p>
<p>“It was a stirring scene,”
said Psmith.  “The agility with which Comrade
Jellicoe boosted himself down the shoot was a triumph
of mind over matter.  He seemed to forget his
ankle.  It was the nearest thing to a Boneless
Acrobatic Wonder that I have ever seen.”</p>
<p>“I was in a beastly funk, I can tell you.”</p>
<p>Stone gurgled.</p>
<p>“So was I,” he said, “for
a bit.  Then, when I saw that it was all a rag,
I began to look about for ways of doing the thing really
well.  I emptied about six jugs of water on a
gang of kids under my window.”</p>
<p>“I rushed into Downing’s, and ragged some
of the beds,” said Robinson.</p>
<p>“It was an invigorating time,”
said Psmith.  “A sort of pageant.  I
was particularly struck with the way some of the bright
lads caught hold of the idea.  There was no skimping. 
Some of the kids, to my certain knowledge, went down
the shoot a dozen times.  There’s nothing
like doing a thing thoroughly.  I saw them come
down, rush upstairs, and be saved again, time after
time.  The thing became chronic with them. 
I should say Comrade Downing ought to be satisfied
with the high state of efficiency to which he has
brought us.  At any rate I hope——­”</p>
<p>There was a sound of hurried footsteps
outside the door, and Sharpe, a member of the senior
day-room, burst excitedly in.  He seemed amused.</p>
<p>“I say, have you chaps seen Sammy?”</p>
<p>“Seen who?” said Stone.  “Sammy? 
Why?”</p>
<p>“You’ll know in a second. 
He’s just outside.  Here, Sammy, Sammy,
Sammy!  Sam!  Sam!”</p>
<p>A bark and a patter of feet outside.</p>
<p>“Come on, Sammy.  Good dog.”</p>
<p>There was a moment’s silence. 
Then a great yell of laughter burst forth.  Even
Psmith’s massive calm was shattered.  As
for Jellicoe, he sobbed in a corner.</p>
<p>Sammy’s beautiful white coat
was almost entirely concealed by a thick covering
of bright red paint.  His head, with the exception
of the ears, was untouched, and his serious, friendly
eyes seemed to emphasise the weirdness of his appearance. 
He stood in the doorway, barking and wagging his tail,
plainly puzzled at his reception.  He was a popular
dog, and was always well received when he visited any
of the houses, but he had never before met with enthusiasm
like this.</p>
<p>“Good old Sammy!”</p>
<p>“What on earth’s been happening to him?”</p>
<p>“Who did it?”</p>
<p>Sharpe, the introducer, had no views on the matter.</p>
<p>“I found him outside Downing’s,
with a crowd round him.  Everybody seems to have
seen him.  I wonder who on earth has gone and mucked
him up like that!”</p>
<p>Mike was the first to show any sympathy for the maltreated
animal.</p>
<p>“Poor old Sammy,” he said,
kneeling on the floor beside the victim, and scratching
him under the ear.  “What a beastly shame! 
It’ll take hours to wash all that off him, and
he’ll hate it.”</p>
<p>“It seems to me,” said
Psmith, regarding Sammy dispassionately through his
eyeglass, “that it’s not a case for mere
washing.  They’ll either have to skin him
bodily, or leave the thing to time.  Time, the
Great Healer.  In a year or two he’ll fade
to a delicate pink.  I don’t see why you
shouldn’t have a pink bull-terrier.  It would
lend a touch of distinction to the place.  Crowds
would come in excursion trains to see him.  By
charging a small fee you might make him self-supporting. 
I think I’ll suggest it to Comrade Downing.”</p>
<p>“There’ll be a row about this,”
said Stone.</p>
<p>“Rows are rather sport when
you’re not mixed up in them,” said Robinson,
philosophically.  “There’ll be another
if we don’t start off for chapel soon. 
It’s a quarter to.”</p>
<p>There was a general move.  Mike
was the last to leave the room.  As he was going,
Jellicoe stopped him.  Jellicoe was staying in
that Sunday, owing to his ankle.</p>
<p>“I say,” said Jellicoe,
“I just wanted to thank you again about that——­”</p>
<p>“Oh, that’s all right.”</p>
<p>“No, but it really was awfully
decent of you.  You might have got into a frightful
row.  Were you nearly caught?”</p>
<p>“Jolly nearly.”</p>
<p>“It <i>was</i> you who rang the bell, wasn’t
it?”</p>
<p>“Yes, it was.  But for goodness
sake don’t go gassing about it, or somebody
will get to hear who oughtn’t to, and I shall
be sacked.”</p>
<p>“All right.  But, I say, you <i>are</i>
a chap!”</p>
<p>“What’s the matter now?”</p>
<p>“I mean about Sammy, you know. 
It’s a jolly good score off old Downing. 
He’ll be frightfully sick.”</p>
<p>“Sammy!” cried Mike. 
“My good man, you don’t think I did that,
do you?  What absolute rot!  I never touched
the poor brute.”</p>
<p>“Oh, all right,” said
Jellicoe.  “But I wasn’t going to tell
any one, of course.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“You <i>are</i> a chap!” giggled Jellicoe.</p>
<p>Mike walked to chapel rather thoughtfully.</p>
<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch47"> CHAPTER XLVII<br/><br/> MR. DOWNING ON THE SCENT</SPAN></h3>
<p>There was just one moment, the moment
in which, on going down to the junior day-room of
his house to quell an unseemly disturbance, he was
boisterously greeted by a vermilion bull terrier, when
Mr. Downing was seized with a hideous fear lest he
had lost his senses.  Glaring down at the crimson
animal that was pawing at his knees, he clutched at
his reason for one second as a drowning man clutches
at a lifebelt.</p>
<p>Then the happy laughter of the young
onlookers reassured him.</p>
<p>“Who—­” he shouted, “WHO
has done this?”</p>
<center><SPAN name="illus10">
<ANTIMG src="images/jmike10.jpg" alt="“WHO—­” HE SHOUTED, “WHO HAS DONE THIS?”"></SPAN></center>
<p>“Please, sir, we don’t know,” shrilled
the chorus.</p>
<p>“Please, sir, he came in like that.”</p>
<p>“Please, sir, we were sitting here when he suddenly
ran in, all red.”</p>
<p>A voice from the crowd:  “Look at old Sammy!”</p>
<p>The situation was impossible. 
There was nothing to be done.  He could not find
out by verbal inquiry who had painted the dog. 
The possibility of Sammy being painted red during
the night had never occurred to Mr. Downing, and now
that the thing had happened he had no scheme of action. 
As Psmith would have said, he had confused the unusual
with the impossible, and the result was that he was
taken by surprise.</p>
<p>While he was pondering on this the
situation was rendered still more difficult by Sammy,
who, taking advantage of the door being open, escaped
and rushed into the road, thus publishing his condition
to all and sundry.  You can hush up a painted
dog while it confines itself to your own premises,
but once it has mixed with the great public this becomes
out of the question.  Sammy’s state advanced
from a private trouble into a row.  Mr. Downing’s
next move was in the same direction that Sammy had
taken, only, instead of running about the road, he
went straight to the headmaster.</p>
<p>The Head, who had had to leave his
house in the small hours in his pyjamas and a dressing-gown,
was not in the best of tempers.  He had a cold
in the head, and also a rooted conviction that Mr.
Downing, in spite of his strict orders, had rung the
bell himself on the previous night in order to test
the efficiency of the school in saving themselves
in the event of fire.  He received the housemaster
frostily, but thawed as the latter related the events
which had led up to the ringing of the bell.</p>
<p>“Dear me!” he said, deeply
interested.  “One of the boys at the school,
you think?”</p>
<p>“I am certain of it,” said Mr. Downing.</p>
<p>“Was he wearing a school cap?”</p>
<p>“He was bare-headed.  A
boy who breaks out of his house at night would hardly
run the risk of wearing a distinguishing cap.”</p>
<p>“No, no, I suppose not.  A big boy, you
say?”</p>
<p>“Very big.”</p>
<p>“You did not see his face?”</p>
<p>“It was dark and he never looked
back—­he was in front of me all the time.”</p>
<p>“Dear me!”</p>
<p>“There is another matter——­”</p>
<p>“Yes?”</p>
<p>“This boy, whoever he was, had
done something before he rang the bell—­he
had painted my dog Sampson red.”</p>
<p>The headmaster’s eyes protruded
from their sockets.  “He—­he—­<i>what</i>,
Mr. Downing?”</p>
<p>“He painted my dog red—­bright
red.”  Mr. Downing was too angry to see
anything humorous in the incident.  Since the previous
night he had been wounded in his tenderest feelings. 
His Fire Brigade system had been most shamefully abused
by being turned into a mere instrument in the hands
of a malefactor for escaping justice, and his dog had
been held up to ridicule to all the world.  He
did not want to smile, he wanted revenge.</p>
<p>The headmaster, on the other hand,
did want to smile.  It was not his dog, he could
look on the affair with an unbiased eye, and to him
there was something ludicrous in a white dog suddenly
appearing as a red dog.</p>
<p>“It is a scandalous thing!” said Mr. Downing.</p>
<p>“Quite so!  Quite so!”
said the headmaster hastily.  “I shall punish
the boy who did it most severely.  I will speak
to the school in the Hall after chapel.”</p>
<p>Which he did, but without result. 
A cordial invitation to the criminal to come forward
and be executed was received in wooden silence by the
school, with the exception of Johnson III., of Outwood’s,
who, suddenly reminded of Sammy’s appearance
by the headmaster’s words, broke into a wild
screech of laughter, and was instantly awarded two
hundred lines.</p>
<p>The school filed out of the Hall to
their various lunches, and Mr. Downing was left with
the conviction that, if he wanted the criminal discovered,
he would have to discover him for himself.</p>
<p>The great thing in affairs of this
kind is to get a good start, and Fate, feeling perhaps
that it had been a little hard upon Mr. Downing, gave
him a most magnificent start.  Instead of having
to hunt for a needle in a haystack, he found himself
in a moment in the position of being set to find it
in a mere truss of straw.</p>
<p>It was Mr. Outwood who helped him. 
Sergeant Collard had waylaid the archaeological expert
on his way to chapel, and informed him that at close
on twelve the night before he had observed a youth,
unidentified, attempting to get into his house <i>via</i>
the water-pipe.  Mr. Outwood, whose thoughts were
occupied with apses and plinths, not to mention cromlechs,
at the time, thanked the sergeant with absent-minded
politeness and passed on.  Later he remembered
the fact <i>à propos</i> of some reflections on the
subject of burglars in mediaeval England, and passed
it on to Mr. Downing as they walked back to lunch.</p>
<p>“Then the boy was in your house!”
exclaimed Mr. Downing.</p>
<p>“Not actually in, as far as
I understand.  I gather from the sergeant that
he interrupted him before——­”</p>
<p>“I mean he must have been one
of the boys in your house.”</p>
<p>“But what was he doing out at that hour?”</p>
<p>“He had broken out.”</p>
<p>“Impossible, I think.  Oh
yes, quite impossible!  I went round the dormitories
as usual at eleven o’clock last night, and all
the boys were asleep—­all of them.”</p>
<p>Mr. Downing was not listening. 
He was in a state of suppressed excitement and exultation
which made it hard for him to attend to his colleague’s
slow utterances.  He had a clue!  Now that
the search had narrowed itself down to Outwood’s
house, the rest was comparatively easy.  Perhaps
Sergeant Collard had actually recognised the boy. 
Or reflection he dismissed this as unlikely, for the
sergeant would scarcely have kept a thing like that
to himself; but he might very well have seen more
of him than he, Downing, had seen.  It was only
with an effort that he could keep himself from rushing
to the sergeant then and there, and leaving the house
lunch to look after itself.  He resolved to go
the moment that meal was at an end.</p>
<p>Sunday lunch at a public-school house
is probably one of the longest functions in existence. 
It drags its slow length along like a languid snake,
but it finishes in time.  In due course Mr. Downing,
after sitting still and eyeing with acute dislike
everybody who asked for a second helping, found himself
at liberty.</p>
<p>Regardless of the claims of digestion,
he rushed forth on the trail.</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>Sergeant Collard lived with his wife
and a family of unknown dimensions in the lodge at
the school front gate.  Dinner was just over when
Mr. Downing arrived, as a blind man could have told.</p>
<p>The sergeant received his visitor
with dignity, ejecting the family, who were torpid
after roast beef and resented having to move, in order
to ensure privacy.</p>
<p>Having requested his host to smoke,
which the latter was about to do unasked, Mr. Downing
stated his case.</p>
<p>“Mr. Outwood,” he said,
“tells me that last night, sergeant, you saw
a boy endeavouring to enter his house.”</p>
<p>The sergeant blew a cloud of smoke. 
“Oo-oo-oo, yer,” he said; “I did,
sir—­spotted ‘im, I did.  Feeflee
good at spottin’, I am, sir.  Dook of Connaught,
he used to say, ‘’Ere comes Sergeant Collard,’
he used to say, ‘’e’s feeflee good
at spottin’.’”</p>
<p>“What did you do?”</p>
<p>“Do?  Oo-oo-oo!  I shouts
’Oo-oo-oo yer, yer young monkey, what yer doin’
there?’”</p>
<p>“Yes?”</p>
<p>“But ’e was off in a flash, and I doubles
after ’im prompt.”</p>
<p>“But you didn’t catch him?”</p>
<p>“No, sir,” admitted the sergeant reluctantly.</p>
<p>“Did you catch sight of his face, sergeant?”</p>
<p>“No, sir, ‘e was doublin’ away in
the opposite direction.”</p>
<p>“Did you notice anything at all about his appearance?”</p>
<p>“’E was a long young chap,
sir, with a pair of legs on him—­feeflee
fast ’e run, sir.  Oo-oo-oo, feeflee!”</p>
<p>“You noticed nothing else?”</p>
<p>“’E wasn’t wearing no cap of any
sort, sir.”</p>
<p>“Ah!”</p>
<p>“Bare-’eaded, sir,” added the sergeant,
rubbing the point in.</p>
<p>“It was undoubtedly the same
boy, undoubtedly!  I wish you could have caught
a glimpse of his face, sergeant.”</p>
<p>“So do I, sir.”</p>
<p>“You would not be able to recognise
him again if you saw him, you think?”</p>
<p>“Oo-oo-oo!  Wouldn’t
go so far as to say that, sir, ’cos yer see,
I’m feeflee good at spottin’, but it was
a dark night.”</p>
<p>Mr. Downing rose to go.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, “the
search is now considerably narrowed down, considerably! 
It is certain that the boy was one of the boys in Mr.
Outwood’s house.”</p>
<p>“Young monkeys!” interjected the sergeant
helpfully.</p>
<p>“Good-afternoon, sergeant.”</p>
<p>“Good-afternoon to you, sir.”</p>
<p>“Pray do not move, sergeant.”</p>
<p>The sergeant had not shown the slightest
inclination of doing anything of the kind.</p>
<p>“I will find my way out.  Very hot to-day,
is it not?”</p>
<p>“Feeflee warm, sir; weather’s goin’
to break—­workin’ up for thunder.”</p>
<p>“I hope not.  The school
plays the M.C.C. on Wednesday, and it would be a pity
if rain were to spoil our first fixture with them. 
Good afternoon.”</p>
<p>And Mr. Downing went out into the
baking sunlight, while Sergeant Collard, having requested
Mrs. Collard to take the children out for a walk at
once, and furthermore to give young Ernie a clip side
of the ’ead, if he persisted in making so much
noise, put a handkerchief over his face, rested his
feet on the table, and slept the sleep of the just.</p>
<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch48"> CHAPTER XLVIII<br/><br/> THE SLEUTH-HOUND</SPAN></h3>
<p>For the Doctor Watsons of this world,
as opposed to the Sherlock Holmeses, success in the
province of detective work must always be, to a very
large extent, the result of luck.  Sherlock Holmes
can extract a clue from a wisp of straw or a flake
of cigar-ash.  But Doctor Watson has got to have
it taken out for him, and dusted, and exhibited clearly,
with a label attached.</p>
<p>The average man is a Doctor Watson. 
We are wont to scoff in a patronising manner at that
humble follower of the great investigator, but, as
a matter of fact, we should have been just as dull
ourselves.  We should not even have risen to the
modest level of a Scotland Yard Bungler.  We should
simply have hung around, saying: </p>
<p>“My dear Holmes, how—?”
and all the rest of it, just as the downtrodden medico
did.</p>
<p>It is not often that the ordinary
person has any need to see what he can do in the way
of detection.  He gets along very comfortably in
the humdrum round of life without having to measure
footprints and smile quiet, tight-lipped smiles. 
But if ever the emergency does arise, he thinks naturally
of Sherlock Holmes, and his methods.</p>
<p>Mr. Downing had read all the Holmes
stories with great attention, and had thought many
times what an incompetent ass Doctor Watson was; but,
now that he had started to handle his own first case,
he was compelled to admit that there was a good deal
to be said in extenuation of Watson’s inability
to unravel tangles.  It certainly was uncommonly
hard, he thought, as he paced the cricket field after
leaving Sergeant Collard, to detect anybody, unless
you knew who had really done the crime.  As he
brooded over the case in hand, his sympathy for Dr.
Watson increased with every minute, and he began to
feel a certain resentment against Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle.  It was all very well for Sir Arthur to
be so shrewd and infallible about tracing a mystery
to its source, but he knew perfectly well who had
done the thing before he started!</p>
<p>Now that he began really to look into
this matter of the alarm bell and the painting of
Sammy, the conviction was creeping over him that the
problem was more difficult than a casual observer might
imagine.  He had got as far as finding that his
quarry of the previous night was a boy in Mr. Outwood’s
house, but how was he to get any farther?  That
was the thing.  There were, of course, only a limited
number of boys in Mr. Outwood’s house as tall
as the one he had pursued; but even if there had been
only one other, it would have complicated matters. 
If you go to a boy and say, “Either you or Jones
were out of your house last night at twelve o’clock,”
the boy does not reply, “Sir, I cannot tell
a lie—­I was out of my house last night at
twelve o’clock.”  He simply assumes
the animated expression of a stuffed fish, and leaves
the next move to you.  It is practically Stalemate.</p>
<p>All these things passed through Mr.
Downing’s mind as he walked up and down the
cricket field that afternoon.</p>
<p>What he wanted was a clue.  But
it is so hard for the novice to tell what is a clue
and what isn’t.  Probably, if he only knew,
there were clues lying all over the place, shouting
to him to pick them up.</p>
<p>What with the oppressive heat of the
day and the fatigue of hard thinking, Mr. Downing
was working up for a brain-storm, when Fate once more
intervened, this time in the shape of Riglett, a junior
member of his house.</p>
<p>Riglett slunk up in the shamefaced
way peculiar to some boys, even when they have done
nothing wrong, and, having capped Mr. Downing with
the air of one who has been caught in the act of doing
something particularly shady, requested that he might
be allowed to fetch his bicycle from the shed.</p>
<p>“Your bicycle?” snapped
Mr. Downing.  Much thinking had made him irritable. 
“What do you want with your bicycle?”</p>
<p>Riglett shuffled, stood first on his
left foot, then on his right, blushed, and finally
remarked, as if it were not so much a sound reason
as a sort of feeble excuse for the low and blackguardly
fact that he wanted his bicycle, that he had got leave
for tea that afternoon.</p>
<p>Then Mr. Downing remembered. 
Riglett had an aunt resident about three miles from
the school, whom he was accustomed to visit occasionally
on Sunday afternoons during the term.</p>
<p>He felt for his bunch of keys, and
made his way to the shed, Riglett shambling behind
at an interval of two yards.</p>
<p>Mr. Downing unlocked the door, and
there on the floor was the Clue!</p>
<p>A clue that even Dr. Watson could not have overlooked.</p>
<p>Mr. Downing saw it, but did not immediately
recognise it for what it was.  What he saw at
first was not a Clue, but just a mess.  He had
a tidy soul and abhorred messes.  And this was
a particularly messy mess.  The greater part of
the flooring in the neighbourhood of the door was
a sea of red paint.  The tin from which it had
flowed was lying on its side in the middle of the
shed.  The air was full of the pungent scent.</p>
<p>“Pah!” said Mr. Downing.</p>
<p>Then suddenly, beneath the disguise
of the mess, he saw the clue.  A foot-mark! 
No less.  A crimson foot-mark on the grey concrete!</p>
<p>Riglett, who had been waiting patiently
two yards away, now coughed plaintively.  The
sound recalled Mr. Downing to mundane matters.</p>
<p>“Get your bicycle, Riglett,”
he said, “and be careful where you tread. 
Somebody has upset a pot of paint on the floor.”</p>
<p>Riglett, walking delicately through
dry places, extracted his bicycle from the rack, and
presently departed to gladden the heart of his aunt,
leaving Mr. Downing, his brain fizzing with the enthusiasm
of the detective, to lock the door and resume his
perambulation of the cricket field.</p>
<p>Give Dr. Watson a fair start, and
he is a demon at the game.  Mr. Downing’s
brain was now working with a rapidity and clearness
which a professional sleuth might have envied.</p>
<p>Paint.  Red paint.  Obviously
the same paint with which Sammy had been decorated. 
A foot-mark.  Whose foot-mark?  Plainly that
of the criminal who had done the deed of decoration.</p>
<p>Yoicks!</p>
<p>There were two things, however, to
be considered.  Your careful detective must consider
everything.  In the first place, the paint might
have been upset by the ground-man.  It was the
ground-man’s paint.  He had been giving
a fresh coating to the wood-work in front of the pavilion
scoring-box at the conclusion of yesterday’s
match. (A labour of love which was the direct outcome
of the enthusiasm for work which Adair had instilled
into him.) In that case the foot-mark might be his.</p>
<p><i>Note one</i>:  Interview the ground-man on
this point.</p>
<p>In the second place Adair might have
upset the tin and trodden in its contents when he
went to get his bicycle in order to fetch the doctor
for the suffering MacPhee.  This was the more probable
of the two contingencies, for it would have been dark
in the shed when Adair went into it.</p>
<p><i>Note two</i> Interview Adair as
to whether he found, on returning to the house, that
there was paint on his boots.</p>
<p>Things were moving.</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>He resolved to take Adair first. 
He could get the ground-man’s address from him.</p>
<p>Passing by the trees under whose shade
Mike and Psmith and Dunster had watched the match
on the previous day, he came upon the Head of his
house in a deck-chair reading a book.  A summer
Sunday afternoon is the time for reading in deck-chairs.</p>
<p>“Oh, Adair,” he said. 
“No, don’t get up.  I merely wished
to ask you if you found any paint on your boots when
you returned to the house last night?”</p>
<p>“Paint, sir?” Adair was
plainly puzzled.  His book had been interesting,
and had driven the Sammy incident out of his head.</p>
<p>“I see somebody has spilt some
paint on the floor of the bicycle shed.  You did
not do that, I suppose, when you went to fetch your
bicycle?”</p>
<p>“No, sir.”</p>
<p>“It is spilt all over the floor. 
I wondered whether you had happened to tread in it. 
But you say you found no paint on your boots this
morning?”</p>
<p>“No, sir, my bicycle is always
quite near the door of the shed.  I didn’t
go into the shed at all.”</p>
<p>“I see.  Quite so. 
Thank you, Adair.  Oh, by the way, Adair, where
does Markby live?”</p>
<p>“I forget the name of his cottage,
sir, but I could show you in a second.  It’s
one of those cottages just past the school gates, on
the right as you turn out into the road.  There
are three in a row.  His is the first you come
to.  There’s a barn just before you get to
them.”</p>
<p>“Thank you.  I shall be
able to find them.  I should like to speak to
Markby for a moment on a small matter.”</p>
<p>A sharp walk took him to the cottages
Adair had mentioned.  He rapped at the door of
the first, and the ground-man came out in his shirt-sleeves,
blinking as if he had just woke up, as was indeed
the case.</p>
<p>“Oh, Markby!”</p>
<p>“Sir?”</p>
<p>“You remember that you were
painting the scoring-box in the pavilion last night
after the match?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.  It wanted a
lick of paint bad.  The young gentlemen will scramble
about and get through the window.  Makes it look
shabby, sir.  So I thought I’d better give
it a coating so as to look ship-shape when the Marylebone
come down.”</p>
<p>“Just so.  An excellent
idea.  Tell me, Markby, what did you do with the
pot of paint when you had finished?”</p>
<p>“Put it in the bicycle shed, sir.”</p>
<p>“On the floor?”</p>
<p>“On the floor, sir?  No. 
On the shelf at the far end, with the can of whitening
what I use for marking out the wickets, sir.”</p>
<p>“Of course, yes.  Quite so.  Just as
I thought.”</p>
<p>“Do you want it, sir?”</p>
<p>“No, thank you, Markby, no,
thank you.  The fact is, somebody who had no business
to do so has moved the pot of paint from the shelf
to the floor, with the result that it has been kicked
over, and spilt.  You had better get some more
to-morrow.  Thank you, Markby.  That is all
I wished to know.”</p>
<p>Mr. Downing walked back to the school
thoroughly excited.  He was hot on the scent now. 
The only other possible theories had been tested and
successfully exploded.  The thing had become simple
to a degree.  All he had to do was to go to Mr.
Outwood’s house—­the idea of searching
a fellow-master’s house did not appear to him
at all a delicate task; somehow one grew unconsciously
to feel that Mr. Outwood did not really exist as a
man capable of resenting liberties—­find
the paint-splashed boot, ascertain its owner, and
denounce him to the headmaster.  Picture, Blue
Fire and “God Save the King” by the full
strength of the company.  There could be no doubt
that a paint-splashed boot must be in Mr. Outwood’s
house somewhere.  A boy cannot tread in a pool
of paint without showing some signs of having done
so.  It was Sunday, too, so that the boot would
not yet have been cleaned.  Yoicks!  Also Tally-ho! 
This really was beginning to be something like business.</p>
<p>Regardless of the heat, the sleuth-hound
hurried across to Outwood’s as fast as he could
walk.</p>
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