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Riddell took no notice of the inquiry, but continued rather more earnestly, "Now I'd like your advice, Wyndham, old fellow. I want to do this fellow a good turn. Which do you suppose would be the best turn to do him; to pitch into the fellows that are always doing him harm? or to try to persuade him to stick up for himself and not let them do just what they like with him, eh?"
Wyndham had seen it all before the question was ended, and hung down his head in silence.
Riddell did not disturb him, but waited quietly, and, if truth be told, anxiously, till he should reply.
Presently the boy looked up with a troubled face, and said, "I know I'm an awful fool, Riddell."
"But you're not obliged to be," said the captain, cheerily.
"I'll try not to be, I really will," said Wyndham. "Only--"
"Only what?" asked Riddell, after a pause.
"Only somehow I never think of it at the time."
"I know," said Riddell, kindly.
"Why only this afternoon," said Wyndham, drawn out by the sympathy of his companion, "I tried to object to going down to the town, and they made up some excuse, so that I would have seemed like a regular prig to hold out, and so I went. I'm awfully sorry now. I know I'm a coward, Riddell; I ought to have stuck out."
"I think you ought," said Riddell; "they would probably have laughed at you, and possibly tried to bully you a bit. But you can take care of yourself, I fancy, when it comes to that, eh?"
"I can about the bullying," said Wyndham.
"And so," said Riddell, "you really advise me to say to this fellow I was telling you about, to stand up for himself and not let himself be led about by any one?"
"Except you, Riddell," said the boy.
"No," said Riddell, "not even me. _I_ can't profess to tell you all you ought to do."
"I should like to know who can, if you can't?" said Wyndham.
"I think we both know," said Riddell, gravely.
The conversation ended here. For an hour and a half after that each boy was busy over his work, and neither spoke a word. Their thoughts may not all have been in the books before them; in fact it may safely be said they were not. But they were thoughts that did not require words.
Only when Wyndham rose to go, and wished his friend good-night, Riddell indirectly referred to the subject of their talk.
"By the way, Wyndham, Isaacs has given up the school librarians.h.i.+p; I suppose you know. How would you like to take it?"
"What has a fellow got to do?" asked Wyndham.
"You have to issue the new books every Monday and collect the old ones every Sat.u.r.day. There are about one hundred boys subscribe, and they order the new book when they give up the old, so it's simple enough."
"Takes a lot of time, doesn't it?" said Wyndham.
"No, not very much, I believe. Isaacs s.h.i.+rked it a good deal, and you'd have to keep the lists rather better than he did. But I fancy you'd enjoy it rather; and," he added, "it will be an excuse for seeing less of some not very nice friends."
Wyndham said he would take the post, and went off happier in his own mind than he had been for a long time, and leaving Riddell happier too, despite all his failures and vexations elsewhere, than he had been since he became captain of Willoughby.
But, though happy, he could hardly be elated. His effort that evening had certainly been a success, but how long would its effects last?
Riddell was not fool enough to imagine that his promise to old Wyndham was now discharged by that one evening's talk. He knew the boy well enough to be sure that the task was only just begun. And his thankfulness at having made a beginning was tempered with many anxieties for the future. And he might well be anxious!
For a day or two Wyndham was an altered boy. He surprised his masters by his attention in cla.s.s, and his schoolfellows--all except Riddell--by the steadiness of his behaviour. He avoided his former companions, and devoted himself with enthusiasm to his new duties as librarian, to which the doctor, at Riddell's suggestion, had appointed him.
This alteration, approved of as it was in many quarters, was by no means appreciated by two boys at Willoughby. It was not that they cared twopence about the society of their young Limpet, or that they had any moral objection to good behaviour and steady work. What irritated Gilks and Silk over the business was that they saw in it the hand of an enemy, and felt that the present change in their _protege_ was due to Riddell's influence in opposition to their own. The two monitors felt hurt at this; it was like a direct snub aimed at them, and, considering the quarter from which it came, they did not like it at all.
"This sort of thing won't do," said Gilks to his friend one day, shortly after Riddell's talk with Wyndham. "The young 'un's cut our acquaintance."
"Hope we shall recover in time," said Silk, sneering. "Yes; he's gone decidedly `pi.' the last week."
"It's all that reverend prig's doing!" growled Gilks. "I mean to spoil his little game for him, though," added he. "How'll you do it?" asked Silk. "That's just it! I wish I knew," said Gilks.
"Oh! leave it to me, I'll get at him somehow. I don't suppose he's too far gone yet."
Accordingly Silk took an early opportunity of meeting his young friend.
"Ah! Wyndham," said he, casually; "don't see much of you now."
"No," said Wyndham, shortly; "I'm busy with the library."
"Oh! I'm afraid, though, you're rather glad of an excuse to cut Silks and me after the row we got you into last week."
"You didn't get me into any row," said Wyndham. "What! didn't he lick you for it? Ah! I see how it is. He's afraid you'd let out on him for being down too. Rather a good dodge too. Gilks and I half thought of reporting him, but we didn't."
"He had a permit, hadn't he?"
"Oh, yes--rather! I don't doubt that. Just like Brown's, the town boy's excuses. Writes them himself."
"I'm certain Riddell wouldn't do such a thing," said Wyndham, warming.
"I never said he would," replied Silk, seeing he was going a little too far. "You see, captains don't want permits. There's no one to pull them up. But I say, I'm awfully sorry about last week."
"Oh! it doesn't matter," said Wyndham, who could not help being rather gratified to hear a monitor making apologies to him; "only I don't mean to go down again."
"No, of course not; and if Gilks suggests it I'll back you up. By the way," he added, in tones of feigned alarm, "I suppose you didn't tell him about going to Beamish's, did you?"
"No," said Wyndham, whose conscience had already reproached him several times for not having confessed the fact.
"I'm awfully glad of that," said Silk, apparently much relieved.
"Whatever you do, keep that quiet."
"Why?" said Wyndham, rather concerned.
"My dear fellow, if that got out--well, I don't know what would happen."
"Why, is it a bad place, then?"
"Oh, no, not at all," laughed Silk with a mysterious wink. "All serene for follows like Gilks; but if it was known we'd taken _you_ there, we'd be done for."