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Head of Kay’s
CHAPTER XXIV - THE SPORTS
P G Wodehouse
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       CHAPTER XXIV - THE SPORTS
       There were certain houses at Eckleton which had, as it were,
       specialised in certain competitions. Thus, Gay's, who never by any
       chance survived the first two rounds of the cricket and football
       housers, invariably won the shooting shield. All the other houses sent
       their brace of men to the range to see what they could do, but every
       year it was the same. A pair of weedy obscurities from Gay's would
       take the shield by a comfortable margin. In the same way Mulholland's
       had only won the cricket cup once since they had become a house, but
       they had carried off the swimming cup three years in succession, and
       six years in all out of the last eight. The sports had always been
       looked on as the perquisite of the School House; and this year, with
       Milligan to win the long distances, and Maybury the high jump and the
       weight, there did not seem much doubt at their success. These two
       alone would pile up fifteen points. Three points were given for a win,
       two for second place, and one for third. It was this that encouraged
       Kennedy in the hope that Dencroft's might have a chance. Nobody in the
       house could beat Milligan or Maybury, but the School House second and
       third strings were not so invincible. If Dencroft's, by means of
       second and third places in the long races and the other events which
       were certainties for their opponents, could hold the School House,
       Fenn's sprinting might just give them the cup. In the meantime they
       trained hard, but in an unobtrusive fashion which aroused no fear in
       School House circles.
       The sports were fixed for the last Saturday of term, but not all the
       races were run on that day. The half-mile came off on the previous
       Thursday, and the long steeplechase on the Monday after.
       The School House won the half-mile, as they were expected to do.
       Milligan led from the start, increased his lead at the end of the
       first lap, doubled it half-way through the second, and finally, with a
       dazzling sprint in the last seventy yards, lowered the Eckleton record
       by a second and three-fifths, and gave his house three points.
       Kennedy, who stuck gamely to his man for half the first lap, was
       beaten on the tape by Crake, of Mulholland's. When sports' day came,
       therefore, the score was School House three points, Mulholland's two,
       Dencroft's one. The success of Mulholland's in the half was to the
       advantage of Dencroft's. Mulholland's was not likely to score many
       more points, and a place to them meant one or two points less to the
       School House.
       The sports opened all in favour of Dencroft's, but those who knew drew
       no great consolation from this. School sports always begin with the
       sprints, and these were Dencroft's certainties. Fenn won the hundred
       yards as easily as Milligan had won the half. Peel was second, and a
       Beddell's man got third place. So that Dencroft's had now six points
       to their rival's three. Ten minutes later they had increased their
       lead by winning the first two places at throwing the cricket ball,
       Fenn's throw beating Kennedy's by ten yards, and Kennedy's being a few
       feet in front of Jimmy Silver's, which, by gaining third place,
       represented the only point Blackburn's managed to amass during the
       afternoon.
       It now began to dawn upon the School House that their supremacy was
       seriously threatened. Dencroft's, by its success in the football
       competition, had to a great extent lived down the reputation the house
       had acquired when it had been Kay's, but even now the notion of its
       winning a cup seemed somehow vaguely improper. But the fact had to be
       faced that it now led by eleven points to the School House's three.
       "It's all right," said the School House, "our spot events haven't come
       off yet. Dencroft's can't get much more now."
       And, to prove that they were right, the gap between the two scores
       began gradually to be filled up. Dencroft's struggled hard, but the
       School House total crept up and up. Maybury brought it to six by
       winning the high jump. This was only what had been expected of him.
       The discomforting part of the business was that the other two places
       were filled by Morrell, of Mulholland's, and Smith, of Daly's. And
       when, immediately afterwards, Maybury won the weight, with another
       School House man second, leaving Dencroft's with third place only,
       things began to look black for the latter. They were now only one
       point ahead, and there was the mile to come: and Milligan could give
       any Dencroftian a hundred yards at that distance.
       But to balance the mile there was the quarter, and in the mile Kennedy
       contrived to beat Crake by much the same number of feet as Crake had
       beaten him by in the half. The scores of the two houses were now
       level, and a goodly number of the School House certainties were past.
       Dencroft's forged ahead again by virtue of the quarter-mile. Fenn won
       it; Peel was second; and a dark horse from Denny's got in third. With
       the greater part of the sports over, and a lead of five points to
       their name, Dencroft's could feel more comfortable. The hurdle-race
       was productive of some discomfort. Fenn should have won it, as being
       blessed with twice the pace of any of his opponents. But Maybury, the
       jumper, made up for lack of pace by the scientific way in which he
       took his hurdles, and won off him by a couple of feet. Smith,
       Dencroft's second string, finished third, thus leaving the totals
       unaltered by the race.
       By this time the public had become alive to the fact that Dencroft's
       were making a great fight for the cup. They had noticed that
       Dencroft's colours always seemed to be coming in near the head of the
       procession, but the School House had made the cup so much their own,
       that it took some time for the school to realise that another
       house--especially the late Kay's--was running them hard for first
       place. Then, just before the hurdle-race, fellows with "correct cards"
       hastily totted up the points each house had won up-to-date. To the
       general amazement it was found that, while the School House had
       fourteen, Dencroft's had reached nineteen, and, barring the long run
       to be decided on the Monday, there was nothing now that the School
       House must win without dispute.
       A house that will persist in winning a cup year after year has to pay
       for it when challenged by a rival. Dencroft's instantly became warm
       favourites. Whenever Dencroft's brown and gold appeared at the
       scratch, the school shouted for it wildly till the event was over. By
       the end of the day the totals were more nearly even, but Dencroft's
       were still ahead. They had lost on the long jump, but not
       unexpectedly. The totals at the finish were, School House
       twenty-three, Dencroft's twenty-five. Everything now depended on the
       long run.
       "We might do it," said Kennedy to Fenn, as they changed. "Milligan's a
       cert for three points, of course, but if we can only get two we win
       the cup."
       "There's one thing about the long run," said Fenn; "you never quite
       know what's going to happen. Milligan might break down over one of the
       hedges or the brook. There's no telling."
       Kennedy felt that such a remote possibility was something of a broken
       reed to lean on. He had no expectation of beating the School House
       long distance runner, but he hoped for second place; and second place
       would mean the cup, for there was nobody to beat either himself or
       Crake.
       The distance of the long run was as nearly as possible five miles. The
       course was across country to the village of Ledby in a sort of
       semicircle of three and a half miles, and then back to the school
       gates by road. Every Eckletonian who ran at all knew the route by
       heart. It was the recognised training run if you wanted to train
       particularly hard. If you did not, you took a shorter spin. At the
       milestone nearest the school--it was about half a mile from the
       gates--a good number of fellows used to wait to see the first of the
       runners and pace their men home. But, as a rule, there were few really
       hot finishes in the long run. The man who got to Ledby first generally
       kept the advantage, and came in a long way ahead of the field.
       On this occasion the close fight Kennedy and Crake had had in the mile
       and the half, added to the fact that Kennedy had only to get second
       place to give Dencroft's the cup, lent a greater interest to the race
       than usual. The crowd at the milestone was double the size of the one
       in the previous year, when Milligan had won for the first time. And
       when, amidst howls of delight from the School House, the same runner
       ran past the stone with his long, effortless stride, before any of the
       others were in sight, the crowd settled down breathlessly to watch for
       the second man.
       Then a yell, to which the other had been nothing, burst from the
       School House as a white figure turned the corner. It was Crake.
       Waddling rather than running, and breathing in gasps; but still Crake.
       He toiled past the crowd at the milestone.
       "By Jove, he looks bad," said someone.
       And, indeed, he looked very bad. But he was ahead of Kennedy. That was
       the great thing.
       He had passed the stone by thirty yards, when the cheering broke out
       again. Kennedy this time, in great straits, but in better shape than
       Crake. Dencroft's in a body trotted along at the side of the road,
       shouting as they went. Crake, hearing the shouts, looked round, almost
       fell, and then pulled himself together and staggered on again. There
       were only a hundred yards to go now, and the school gates were in
       sight at the end of a long lane of spectators. They looked to Kennedy
       like two thick, black hedges. He could not sprint, though a hundred
       voices were shouting to him to do so. It was as much as he could do to
       keep moving. Only his will enabled him to run now. He meant to get to
       the gates, if he had to crawl.
       The hundred yards dwindled to fifty, and he had diminished Crake's
       lead by a third. Twenty yards from the gates, and he was only
       half-a-dozen yards behind.
       Crake looked round again, and this time did what he had nearly done
       before. His legs gave way; he rolled over; and there he remained, with
       the School House watching him in silent dismay, while Kennedy went on
       and pitched in a heap on the other side of the gates.
       * * * * *
       "Feeling bad?" said Jimmy Silver, looking in that evening to make
       inquiries.
       "I'm feeling good," said Kennedy.
       "That the cup?" asked Jimmy.
       Kennedy took the huge cup from the table.
       "That's it. Milligan has just brought it round. Well, they can't say
       they haven't had their fair share of it. Look here. School House.
       School House. School House. School House. Daly's. School House.
       Denny's. School House. School House. _Ad infinitum_."
       They regarded the trophy in silence.
       "First pot the house has won," said Kennedy at length. "The very
       first."
       "It won't be the last," returned Jimmy Silver, with decision.
       Content of CHAPTER XXIV - THE SPORTS
       -THE END-
       P G Wodehouse's novel: Head of Kay's
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