About a week before he went back to
school his father again sent for him into the dining-room,
and told him that he should restore him his watch,
but that he should deduct the sum he had paid for it—for
he had thought it better to pay a few shillings rather
than dispute the ownership of the watch, seeing that
Ernest had undoubtedly given it to Ellen—from
his pocket money, in payments which should extend
over two half years. He would therefore have
to go back to Roughborough this half year with only
five shillings’ pocket money. If he wanted
more he must earn more merit money.
Ernest was not so careful about money
as a pattern boy should be. He did not say to
himself, “Now I have got a sovereign which must
last me fifteen weeks, therefore I may spend exactly
one shilling and fourpence in each week”—and
spend exactly one and fourpence in each week accordingly.
He ran through his money at about the same rate as
other boys did, being pretty well cleaned out a few
days after he had got back to school. When he
had no more money, he got a little into debt, and
when as far in debt as he could see his way to repaying,
he went without luxuries. Immediately he got
any money he would pay his debts; if there was any
over he would spend it; if there was not—and
there seldom was—he would begin to go on
tick again.
His finance was always based upon
the supposition that he should go back to school with
1 pound in his pocket—of which he owed say
a matter of fifteen shillings. There would be
five shillings for sundry school subscriptions—but
when these were paid the weekly allowance of sixpence
given to each boy in hall, his merit money (which this
half he was resolved should come to a good sum) and
renewed credit, would carry him through the half.
The sudden failure of 15/- was disastrous
to my hero’s scheme of finance. His face
betrayed his emotions so clearly that Theobald said
he was determined “to learn the truth at once,
and this time without days and days of falsehood”
before he reached it. The melancholy fact was
not long in coming out, namely, that the wretched
Ernest added debt to the vices of idleness, falsehood
and possibly—for it was not impossible—immorality.
How had he come to get into debt?
Did the other boys do so? Ernest reluctantly
admitted that they did.
With what shops did they get into debt?
This was asking too much, Ernest said he didn’t
know!
“Oh, Ernest, Ernest,”
exclaimed his mother, who was in the room, “do
not so soon a second time presume upon the forbearance
of the tenderest-hearted father in the world.
Give time for one stab to heal before you wound him
with another.”
This was all very fine, but what was
Ernest to do? How could he get the school shop-keepers
into trouble by owning that they let some of the boys
go on tick with them? There was Mrs Cross, a
good old soul, who used to sell hot rolls and butter
for breakfast, or eggs and toast, or it might be the
quarter of a fowl with bread sauce and mashed potatoes
for which she would charge 6d. If she made a
farthing out of the sixpence it was as much as she
did. When the boys would come trooping into her
shop after “the hounds” how often had
not Ernest heard her say to her servant girls, “Now
then, you wanches, git some cheers.” All
the boys were fond of her, and was he, Ernest, to
tell tales about her? It was horrible.
“Now look here, Ernest,”
said his father with his blackest scowl, “I am
going to put a stop to this nonsense once for all.
Either take me fully into your confidence, as a son
should take a father, and trust me to deal with this
matter as a clergyman and a man of the world—or
understand distinctly that I shall take the whole
story to Dr Skinner, who, I imagine, will take much
sterner measures than I should.”
“Oh, Ernest, Ernest,”
sobbed Christina, “be wise in time, and trust
those who have already shown you that they know but
too well how to be forbearing.”
No genuine hero of romance should
have hesitated for a moment. Nothing should
have cajoled or frightened him into telling tales out
of school. Ernest thought of his ideal boys:
they, he well knew, would have let their tongues be
cut out of them before information could have been
wrung from any word of theirs. But Ernest was
not an ideal boy, and he was not strong enough for
his surroundings; I doubt how far any boy could withstand
the moral pressure which was brought to bear upon him;
at any rate he could not do so, and after a little
more writhing he yielded himself a passive prey to
the enemy. He consoled himself with the reflection
that his papa had not played the confidence trick on
him quite as often as his mamma had, and that probably
it was better he should tell his father, than that
his father should insist on Dr Skinner’s making
an inquiry. His papa’s conscience “jabbered”
a good deal, but not as much as his mamma’s.
The little fool forgot that he had not given his father
as many chances of betraying him as he had given to
Christina.
Then it all came out. He owed
this at Mrs Cross’s, and this to Mrs Jones,
and this at the “Swan and Bottle” public
house, to say nothing of another shilling or sixpence
or two in other quarters. Nevertheless, Theobald
and Christina were not satiated, but rather the more
they discovered the greater grew their appetite for
discovery; it was their obvious duty to find out everything,
for though they might rescue their own darling from
this hotbed of iniquity without getting to know more
than they knew at present, were there not other papas
and mammas with darlings whom also they were bound
to rescue if it were yet possible? What boys,
then, owed money to these harpies as well as Ernest?
Here, again, there was a feeble show
of resistance, but the thumbscrews were instantly
applied, and Ernest, demoralised as he already was,
recanted and submitted himself to the powers that were.
He told only a little less than he knew or thought
he knew. He was examined, re-examined, cross-examined,
sent to the retirement of his own bedroom and cross-examined
again; the smoking in Mrs Jones’ kitchen all
came out; which boys smoked and which did not; which
boys owed money and, roughly, how much and where;
which boys swore and used bad language. Theobald
was resolved that this time Ernest should, as he called
it, take him into his confidence without reserve,
so the school list which went with Dr Skinner’s
half-yearly bills was brought out, and the most secret
character of each boy was gone through seriatim
by Mr and Mrs Pontifex, so far as it was in Ernest’s
power to give information concerning it, and yet Theobald
had on the preceding Sunday preached a less feeble
sermon than he commonly preached, upon the horrors
of the Inquisition. No matter how awful was
the depravity revealed to them, the pair never flinched,
but probed and probed, till they were on the point
of reaching subjects more delicate than they had yet
touched upon. Here Ernest’s unconscious
self took the matter up and made a resistance to which
his conscious self was unequal, by tumbling him off
his chair in a fit of fainting.
Dr Martin was sent for and pronounced
the boy to be seriously unwell; at the same time he
prescribed absolute rest and absence from nervous
excitement. So the anxious parents were unwillingly
compelled to be content with what they had got already—being
frightened into leading him a quiet life for the short
remainder of the holidays. They were not idle,
but Satan can find as much mischief for busy hands
as for idle ones, so he sent a little job in the direction
of Battersby which Theobald and Christina undertook
immediately. It would be a pity, they reasoned,
that Ernest should leave Roughborough, now that he
had been there three years; it would be difficult
to find another school for him, and to explain why
he had left Roughborough. Besides, Dr Skinner
and Theobald were supposed to be old friends, and
it would be unpleasant to offend him; these were all
valid reasons for not removing the boy. The
proper thing to do, then, would be to warn Dr Skinner
confidentially of the state of his school, and to
furnish him with a school list annotated with the
remarks extracted from Ernest, which should be appended
to the name of each boy.
Theobald was the perfection of neatness;
while his son was ill upstairs, he copied out the
school list so that he could throw his comments into
a tabular form, which assumed the following shape—only
that of course I have changed the names. One
cross in each square was to indicate occasional offence;
two stood for frequent, and three for habitual delinquency.
Smoking Drinking beer
Swearing Notes
at the “Swan and Obscene
and Bottle.”
Language.
Smith O O XX
Will smoke
next
half
Brown XXX O X
Jones X XX XXX
Robinson XX XX X
And thus through the whole school.
Of course, in justice to Ernest, Dr
Skinner would be bound over to secrecy before a word
was said to him, but, Ernest being thus protected,
he could not be furnished with the facts too completely.