A Prefect's Uncle
       'Yes, I think so,' said Lorimer. 'Why?'     

       'Is your sister coming?'     

       'Oh, I don't know.' A brother's utter lack of interest in his sister's actions is a weird and wonderful thing for an outsider to behold.     

       'Well, look here, I wish you'd get her to come. We could give them tea in here, and have rather a good time, don't you think?'     

       'All right. I'll make her come. Look here, Pringle, I believe you're rather gone on Mabel.'     

       This was Lorimer's vulgar way.     

       'Don't be an ass,' said Pringle, with a laugh which should have been careless, but was in reality merely feeble. 'She's quite a kid.'     

       Miss Mabel Lorimer's exact age was fifteen. She had brown hair, blue eyes, and a smile which disclosed to view a dimple. There are worse things than a dimple. Distinctly so, indeed. When ladies of fifteen possess dimples, mere man becomes but as a piece of damp blotting-paper. Pringle was seventeen and a half, and consequently too old to take note of such frivolous attributes; but all the same he had a sort of vague, sketchy impression that it would be pleasanter to run up a lively century against the O.B.s with Miss Lorimer as a spectator than in her absence. He felt pleased that she was coming.     

       'I say, about this poem,' said Lorimer, dismissing a subject which manifestly bored him, and returning to one which was of vital interest,       'you're sure you can write fairly decent stuff? It's no good sending in stuff that'll turn the examiner's hair grey. Can you turn out something really decent?'     

       Pringle said nothing. He smiled gently as who should observe, 'I and Shakespeare.'  

  

       5 — FARNIE GETS INTO TROUBLE—     

       It was perhaps only natural that Farnie, having been warned so strongly of the inadvisability of having anything to do with Monk, should for that very reason be attracted to him. Nobody ever wants to do anything except what they are not allowed to do. Otherwise there is no explaining the friendship that arose between them. Jack Monk was not an attractive individual. He had a slack 
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