I once thrashed him—umph—for climbing on
to the gymnasium roof—to get a ball out of the gutter. Might
have—umph—broken his neck, the young fool. Do you remember him,
Mrs. Wickett? He must have been in your time.”
Mrs. Wickett, before she saved money, had been in charge of the linen room
at the School.
“Yes, I knew ‘im, sir. Cheeky, ‘e was to me, gener’ly. But we never ‘ad no
bad words between us. Just cheeky-like. ‘E never meant no harm. That kind
never does, sir. Wasn’t it ‘im that got the medal, sir?”
“Yes, a D.S.O.”
“Will you be wanting anything else, sir?”
“Nothing more now—umph—till chapel time. He was killed
—in Egypt, I think… Yes—umph—you can bring my supper
about then.”
“Very good, sir.”
A pleasant, placid life, at Mrs. Wickett’s. He had no worries; his pension
was adequate, and there was a little money saved up besides. He could afford
everything and anything he wanted. His room was furnished simply and with
schoolmasterly taste: a few bookshelves and sporting trophies; a mantelpiece
crowded with fixture cards and signed photographs of boys and men; a worn
Turkey carpet; big easy-chairs; pictures on the wall of the Acropolis and the
Forum. Nearly everything had come out of his old housemaster’s room in School
House. The books were chiefly classical, the classics having been his
subject; there was, however, a seasoning of history and belles-lettres. There
was also a bottom shelf piled up with cheap editions of detective novels.
Chips enjoyed these. Sometimes he took down Vergil or Xenophon and read for a
few moments, but he was soon back again with Doctor Thorndyke or Inspector
French. He was not, despite his long years of assiduous teaching, a very
profound classical scholar; indeed, he thought of Latin and Greek far more as
dead languages from which English gentlemen ought to know a few quotations
than as living tongues that had ever been spoken by living people. He liked
those short leading articles in the Times that introduced a few tags that he
recognized. To be among the dwindling number of people who understood such
things was to him a kind of secret and valued freemasonry; it represented, he
felt, one of the chief benefits to be derived from a classical education.
So there he lived, at Mrs. Wickett’s, with his quiet enjoyments of reading
and talking and remembering; an old man, white-haired and only a little bald,
still fairly active for his years, drinking tea, receiving callers, busying
himself with corrections for the next edition of the Brookfeldian Directory,
writing his occasional letters in thin, spidery, but very legible script. He
had new masters to tea, as well as new boys. There were two of them that
autumn term, and as they were leaving after their visit one of them
commented: “Quite a character, the old boy, isn’t he? All that fuss about
mixing the tea—a typical bachelor, if ever there was one.”
Which was oddly incorrect; because Chips was not a bachelor at all. He had
married, though it was so long ago that none of the staff at Brookfield could
remember his wife.
There came to him, stirred by the warmth of the fire and the
gentle aroma of tea, a thousand tangled recollections of old times.
Spring—the spring of 1896. He was forty-eight—an age at which a
permanence of habits begins to be predictable. He had just been appointed
housemaster; with this and his classical forms, he had made for himself a
warm and busy corner of life. During the summer vacation he went up to the
Lake District with Rowden, a colleague; they walked and climbed for a week,
until Rowden had to leave suddenly on some family business.
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