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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60067 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60067)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Leave it to Psmith, by P. G. Wodehouse
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Leave it to Psmith
-
-Author: P. G. Wodehouse
-
-Release Date: August 6, 2019 [eBook #60067]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Ramon Pajares Box, Jim Adcock and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEAVE IT TO PSMITH ***
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
- * Italics are denoted by underscores as in _italics_.
-
- * Obvious printer errors have been silently corrected.
-
- * Original spelling was kept, but variant spellings were made
- consistent when a predominant usage was found.
-
- * Ellipses are shown spaced (“. . .” instead of “...”), as in
- the printed original.
-
-
-
-
-LEAVE IT TO PSMITH
-
-
-
-
-WHAT THIS STORY IS ABOUT
-
-
-Freddie Threepwood and his uncle are in difficulties. Freddie wants a
-thousand pounds to start a bookmaker’s business and to marry Eve, while
-his uncle wants to raise three thousand pounds, unbeknown to his wife,
-to help a runaway daughter. Freddie persuades his uncle to steal his
-wife’s necklace and sees Psmith’s advertisement in a daily paper.
-
-Freddie enlists the services of Psmith to steal the necklace. There
-are plots and counterplots. Psmith is not successful in stealing the
-necklace but succeeds in stealing the affections of Eve.
-
-
-_BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR_
-
- THE HEART OF A GOOF 7s. 6d. net
- CARRY ON, JEEVES 3s. 6d. net
- UKRIDGE 3s. 6d. net
- THE INIMITABLE JEEVES 2s. 6d. net
- THE GIRL ON THE BOAT 2s. 6d. net
- JILL THE RECKLESS 2s. 6d. net
- A DAMSEL IN DISTRESS 2s. 6d. net
- LOVE AMONG THE CHICKENS 2s. 6d. net
- A GENTLEMAN OF LEISURE 2s. 6d. net
- INDISCRETIONS OF ARCHIE 2s. 6d. net
- PICCADILLY JIM 2s. 6d. net
- ADVENTURES OF SALLY 2s. 6d. net
- THE CLICKING OF CUTHBERT 2s. 6d. net
- THE COMING OF BILL 2s. 6d. net
-
-
-
-
- LEAVE IT
- TO PSMITH
-
- BY
- P. G. WODEHOUSE
-
- HERBERT JENKINS LIMITED
- 3 YORK STREET LONDON S.W.1
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: A HERBERT JENKINS’ BOOK]
-
-
-_Printed in Great Britain by Wyman & Sons Ltd., London, Reading and
-Fakenham_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I DARK PLOTTINGS AT BLANDINGS CASTLE 7
-
- II ENTER PSMITH 38
-
- III EVE BORROWS AN UMBRELLA 59
-
- IV PAINFUL SCENE AT THE DRONES CLUB 66
-
- V PSMITH APPLIES FOR EMPLOYMENT 70
-
- VI LORD EMSWORTH MEETS A POET 80
-
- VII BAXTER SUSPECTS 112
-
- VIII CONFIDENCES ON THE LAKE 135
-
- IX PSMITH ENGAGES A VALET 167
-
- X SENSATIONAL OCCURRENCE AT A POETRY READING 206
-
- XI ALMOST ENTIRELY ABOUT FLOWER-POTS 239
-
- XII MORE ON THE FLOWER-POT THEME 270
-
- XIII PSMITH RECEIVES GUESTS 282
-
- XIV PSMITH ACCEPTS EMPLOYMENT 313
-
-
-
-
- TO MY DAUGHTER LEONORA,
- QUEEN OF HER SPECIES.
-
-
-
-
-LEAVE IT TO PSMITH
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-DARK PLOTTINGS AT BLANDINGS CASTLE
-
-
-§ 1
-
-At the open window of the great library of Blandings Castle, drooping
-like a wet sock, as was his habit when he had nothing to prop his spine
-against, the Earl of Emsworth, that amiable and boneheaded peer, stood
-gazing out over his domain.
-
-It was a lovely morning and the air was fragrant with gentle summer
-scents. Yet in his lordship’s pale blue eyes there was a look of
-melancholy. His brow was furrowed, his mouth peevish. And this was
-all the more strange in that he was normally as happy as only a
-fluffy-minded man with excellent health and a large income can be. A
-writer, describing Blandings Castle in a magazine article, had once
-said: “Tiny mosses have grown in the cavities of the stones, until,
-viewed near at hand, the place seems shaggy with vegetation.” It would
-not have been a bad description of the proprietor. Fifty-odd years of
-serene and unruffled placidity had given Lord Emsworth a curiously
-moss-covered look. Very few things had the power to disturb him.
-Even his younger son, the Hon. Freddie Threepwood, could only do it
-occasionally.
-
-Yet now he was sad. And--not to make a mystery of it any longer--the
-reason of his sorrow was the fact that he had mislaid his glasses and
-without them was as blind, to use his own neat simile, as a bat. He was
-keenly aware of the sunshine that poured down on his gardens, and was
-yearning to pop out and potter among the flowers he loved. But no man,
-pop he never so wisely, can hope to potter with any good result if the
-world is a mere blur.
-
-The door behind him opened, and Beach the butler entered, a dignified
-procession of one.
-
-“Who’s that?” inquired Lord Emsworth, spinning on his axis.
-
-“It is I, your lordship--Beach.”
-
-“Have you found them?”
-
-“Not yet, your lordship,” sighed the butler.
-
-“You can’t have looked.”
-
-“I have searched assiduously, your lordship, but without avail. Thomas
-and Charles also announce non-success. Stokes has not yet made his
-report.”
-
-“Ah!”
-
-“I am re-despatching Thomas and Charles to your lordship’s bedroom,”
-said the Master of the Hunt. “I trust that their efforts will be
-rewarded.”
-
-Beach withdrew, and Lord Emsworth turned to the window again. The
-scene that spread itself beneath him--though he was unfortunately
-not able to see it--was a singularly beautiful one, for the castle,
-which is one of the oldest inhabited houses in England, stands upon
-a knoll of rising ground at the southern end of the celebrated Vale
-of Blandings in the county of Shropshire. Away in the blue distance
-wooded hills ran down to where the Severn gleamed like an unsheathed
-sword; while up from the river rolling park-land, mounting and dipping,
-surged in a green wave almost to the castle walls, breaking on the
-terraces in a many-coloured flurry of flowers as it reached the spot
-where the province of Angus McAllister, his lordship’s head gardener,
-began. The day being June the thirtieth, which is the very high-tide
-time of summer flowers, the immediate neighbourhood of the castle was
-ablaze with roses, pinks, pansies, carnations, hollyhocks, columbines,
-larkspurs, London pride, Canterbury bells, and a multitude of other
-choice blooms of which only Angus could have told you the names. A
-conscientious man was Angus; and in spite of being a good deal hampered
-by Lord Emsworth’s amateur assistance, he showed excellent results
-in his department. In his beds there was much at which to point with
-pride, little to view with concern.
-
-Scarcely had Beach removed himself when Lord Emsworth was called upon
-to turn again. The door had opened for the second time, and a young man
-in a beautifully-cut suit of grey flannel was standing in the doorway.
-He had a long and vacant face topped by shining hair brushed back and
-heavily brilliantined after the prevailing mode, and he was standing on
-one leg. For Freddie Threepwood was seldom completely at his ease in
-his parent’s presence.
-
-“Hallo, guv’nor.”
-
-“Well, Frederick?”
-
-It would be paltering with the truth to say that Lord Emsworth’s
-greeting was a warm one. It lacked the note of true affection. A few
-weeks before he had had to pay a matter of five hundred pounds to
-settle certain racing debts for his offspring; and, while this had
-not actually dealt an irretrievable blow at his bank account, it had
-undeniably tended to diminish Freddie’s charm in his eyes.
-
-“Hear you’ve lost your glasses, guv’nor.”
-
-“That is so.”
-
-“Nuisance, what?”
-
-“Undeniably.”
-
-“Ought to have a spare pair.”
-
-“I have broken my spare pair.”
-
-“Tough luck! And lost the other?”
-
-“And, as you say, lost the other.”
-
-“Have you looked for the bally things?”
-
-“I have.”
-
-“Must be somewhere, I mean.”
-
-“Quite possibly.”
-
-“Where,” asked Freddie, warming to his work, “did you see them last?”
-
-“Go away!” said Lord Emsworth, on whom his child’s conversation had
-begun to exercise an oppressive effect.
-
-“Eh?”
-
-“Go away!”
-
-“Go away?”
-
-“Yes, go away!”
-
-“Right ho!”
-
-The door closed. His lordship returned to the window once more.
-
-He had been standing there some few minutes when one of those miracles
-occurred which happen in libraries. Without sound or warning a section
-of books started to move away from the parent body and, swinging out in
-a solid chunk into the room, showed a glimpse of a small, study-like
-apartment. A young man in spectacles came noiselessly through and the
-books returned to their place.
-
-The contrast between Lord Emsworth and the new-comer, as they stood
-there, was striking, almost dramatic. Lord Emsworth was so acutely
-spectacle-less; Rupert Baxter, his secretary, so pronouncedly
-spectacled. It was his spectacles that struck you first as you saw the
-man. They gleamed efficiently at you. If you had a guilty conscience,
-they pierced you through and through; and even if your conscience was
-one hundred per cent. pure you could not ignore them. “Here,” you said
-to yourself, “is an efficient young man in spectacles.”
-
-In describing Rupert Baxter as efficient, you did not overestimate him.
-He was essentially that. Technically but a salaried subordinate, he
-had become by degrees, owing to the limp amiability of his employer,
-the real master of the house. He was the Brains of Blandings, the man
-at the switch, the person in charge, and the pilot, so to speak, who
-weathered the storm. Lord Emsworth left everything to Baxter, only
-asking to be allowed to potter in peace; and Baxter, more than equal to
-the task, shouldered it without wincing.
-
-Having got within range, Baxter coughed; and Lord Emsworth, recognising
-the sound, wheeled round with a faint flicker of hope. It might be that
-even this apparently insoluble problem of the missing pince-nez would
-yield before the other’s efficiency.
-
-“Baxter, my dear fellow, I’ve lost my glasses. My glasses. I have
-mislaid them. I cannot think where they can have gone to. You haven’t
-seen them anywhere by any chance?”
-
-“Yes, Lord Emsworth,” replied the secretary, quietly equal to the
-crisis. “They are hanging down your back.”
-
-“Down my back? Why, bless my soul!” His lordship tested the statement
-and found it--like all Baxter’s statements--accurate. “Why, bless my
-soul, so they are! Do you know, Baxter, I really believe I must be
-growing absent-minded.” He hauled in the slack, secured the pince-nez,
-adjusted them beamingly. His irritability had vanished like the dew off
-one of his roses. “Thank you, Baxter, thank you. You are invaluable.”
-
-And with a radiant smile Lord Emsworth made buoyantly for the door, en
-route for God’s air and the society of McAllister. The movement drew
-from Baxter another cough--a sharp, peremptory cough this time; and
-his lordship paused, reluctantly, like a dog whistled back from the
-chase. A cloud fell over the sunniness of his mood. Admirable as Baxter
-was in so many respects, he had a tendency to worry him at times; and
-something told Lord Emsworth that he was going to worry him now.
-
-“The car will be at the door,” said Baxter with quiet firmness, “at two
-sharp.”
-
-“Car? What car?”
-
-“The car to take you to the station.”
-
-“Station? What station?”
-
-Rupert Baxter preserved his calm. There were times when he found his
-employer a little trying, but he never showed it.
-
-“You have perhaps forgotten, Lord Emsworth, that you arranged with Lady
-Constance to go to London this afternoon.”
-
-“Go to London!” gasped Lord Emsworth, appalled. “In weather like this?
-With a thousand things to attend to in the garden? What a perfectly
-preposterous notion! Why should I go to London? I hate London.”
-
-“You arranged with Lady Constance that you would give Mr. McTodd lunch
-to-morrow at your club.”
-
-“Who the devil is Mr. McTodd?”
-
-“The well-known Canadian poet.”
-
-“Never heard of him.”
-
-“Lady Constance has long been a great admirer of his work. She wrote
-inviting him, should he ever come to England, to pay a visit to
-Blandings. He is now in London and is to come down to-morrow for two
-weeks. Lady Constance’s suggestion was that, as a compliment to Mr.
-McTodd’s eminence in the world of literature, you should meet him in
-London and bring him back here yourself.”
-
-Lord Emsworth remembered now. He also remembered that this positively
-infernal scheme had not been his sister Constance’s in the first place.
-It was Baxter who had made the suggestion, and Constance had approved.
-He made use of the recovered pince-nez to glower through them at his
-secretary; and not for the first time in recent months was aware of
-a feeling that this fellow Baxter was becoming a dashed infliction.
-Baxter was getting above himself, throwing his weight about, making
-himself a confounded nuisance. He wished he could get rid of the man.
-But where could he find an adequate successor? That was the trouble.
-With all his drawbacks, Baxter was efficient. Nevertheless, for a
-moment Lord Emsworth toyed with the pleasant dream of dismissing him.
-And it is possible, such was his exasperation, that he might on this
-occasion have done something practical in that direction, had not the
-library door at this moment opened for the third time, to admit yet
-another intruder--at the sight of whom his lordship’s militant mood
-faded weakly.
-
-“Oh--hallo, Connie!” he said, guiltily, like a small boy caught in the
-jam cupboard. Somehow his sister always had this effect upon him.
-
-Of all those who had entered the library that morning the new arrival
-was the best worth looking at. Lord Emsworth was tall and lean and
-scraggy; Rupert Baxter thick-set and handicapped by that vaguely grubby
-appearance which is presented by swarthy young men of bad complexion;
-and even Beach, though dignified, and Freddie, though slim, would
-never have got far in a beauty competition. But Lady Constance Keeble
-really took the eye. She was a strikingly handsome woman in the
-middle forties. She had a fair, broad brow, teeth of a perfect even
-whiteness, and the carriage of an empress. Her eyes were large and
-grey, and gentle--and incidentally misleading, for gentle was hardly
-the adjective which anybody who knew her would have applied to Lady
-Constance. Though genial enough when she got her way, on the rare
-occasions when people attempted to thwart her she was apt to comport
-herself in a manner reminiscent of Cleopatra on one of the latter’s bad
-mornings.
-
-“I hope I am not disturbing you,” said Lady Constance with a bright
-smile. “I just came in to tell you to be sure not to forget, Clarence,
-that you are going to London this afternoon to meet Mr. McTodd.”
-
-“I was just telling Lord Emsworth,” said Baxter, “that the car would be
-at the door at two.”
-
-“Thank you, Mr. Baxter. Of course I might have known that you would not
-forget. You are so wonderfully capable. I don’t know what in the world
-we would do without you.”
-
-The Efficient Baxter bowed. But, though gratified, he was not
-overwhelmed by the tribute. The same thought had often occurred to him
-independently.
-
-“If you will excuse me,” he said, “I have one or two things to attend
-to . . .”
-
-“Certainly, Mr. Baxter.”
-
-The Efficient One withdrew through the door in the bookshelf. He
-realised that his employer was in fractious mood, but knew that he was
-leaving him in capable hands.
-
-Lord Emsworth turned from the window, out of which he had been gazing
-with a plaintive detachment.
-
-“Look here, Connie,” he grumbled feebly. “You know I hate literary
-fellows. It’s bad enough having them in the house, but when it comes to
-going to London to fetch ’em . . .”
-
-He shuffled morosely. It was a perpetual grievance of his, this
-practice of his sister’s of collecting literary celebrities and dumping
-them down in the home for indeterminate visits. You never knew when
-she was going to spring another on you. Already since the beginning of
-the year he had suffered from a round dozen of the species at brief
-intervals; and at this very moment his life was being poisoned by the
-fact that Blandings was sheltering a certain Miss Aileen Peavey, the
-mere thought of whom was enough to turn the sunshine off as with a tap.
-
-“Can’t stand literary fellows,” proceeded his lordship. “Never could.
-And, by Jove, literary females are worse. Miss Peavey . . .” Here words
-temporarily failed the owner of Blandings. “Miss Peavey . . .” he
-resumed after an eloquent pause. “Who is Miss Peavey?”
-
-“My dear Clarence,” replied Lady Constance tolerantly, for the fine
-morning had made her mild and amiable, “if you do not know that Aileen
-is one of the leading poetesses of the younger school, you must be very
-ignorant.”
-
-“I don’t mean that. I know she writes poetry. I mean who _is_ she?
-You suddenly produced her here like a rabbit out of a hat,” said his
-lordship, in a tone of strong resentment. “Where did you find her?”
-
-“I first made Aileen’s acquaintance on an Atlantic liner when Joe and I
-were coming back from our trip round the world. She was very kind to me
-when I was feeling the motion of the vessel. . . . If you mean what is
-her family, I think Aileen told me once that she was connected with the
-Rutlandshire Peaveys.”
-
-“Never heard of them!” snapped Lord Emsworth. “And, if they’re anything
-like Miss Peavey, God help Rutlandshire!”
-
-Tranquil as Lady Constance’s mood was this morning, an ominous
-stoniness came into her grey eyes at these words, and there is little
-doubt that in another instant she would have discharged at her mutinous
-brother one of those shattering come-backs for which she had been
-celebrated in the family from nursery days onward; but at this juncture
-the Efficient Baxter appeared again through the bookshelf.
-
-“Excuse me,” said Baxter, securing attention with a flash of his
-spectacles. “I forgot to mention, Lord Emsworth, that, to suit
-everybody’s convenience, I have arranged that Miss Halliday shall call
-to see you at your club to-morrow after lunch.”
-
-“Good Lord, Baxter!” The harassed peer started as if he had been bitten
-in the leg. “Who’s Miss Halliday? Not another literary female?”
-
-“Miss Halliday is the young lady who is coming to Blandings to
-catalogue the library.”
-
-“Catalogue the library? What does it want cataloguing for?”
-
-“It has not been done since the year 1885.”
-
-“Well, and look how splendidly we’ve got along without it,” said Lord
-Emsworth acutely.
-
-“Don’t be so ridiculous, Clarence,” said Lady Constance, annoyed. “The
-catalogue of a great library like this must be brought up to date.”
-She moved to the door. “I do wish you would try to wake up and take
-an interest in things. If it wasn’t for Mr. Baxter, I don’t know what
-would happen.”
-
-And with a beaming glance of approval at her ally she left the room.
-Baxter, coldly austere, returned to the subject under discussion.
-
-“I have written to Miss Halliday suggesting two-thirty as a suitable
-hour for the interview.”
-
-“But look here . . .”
-
-“You will wish to see her before definitely confirming the engagement.”
-
-“Yes, but look here, I wish you wouldn’t go tying me up with all these
-appointments.”
-
-“I thought that as you were going to London to meet Mr. McTodd . . .”
-
-“But I’m not going to London to meet Mr. McTodd,” cried Lord Emsworth
-with weak fury. “It’s out of the question. I can’t possibly leave
-Blandings. The weather may break at any moment. I don’t want to miss a
-day of it.”
-
-“The arrangements are all made.”
-
-“Send the fellow a wire . . . ‘unavoidably detained.’”
-
-“I could not take the responsibility for such a course myself,” said
-Baxter coldly. “But possibly if you were to make the suggestion to Lady
-Constance . . .”
-
-“Oh, dash it!” said Lord Emsworth unhappily, at once realising the
-impossibility of the scheme. “Oh, well, if I’ve got to go, I’ve got to
-go,” he said after a gloomy pause. “But to leave my garden and stew in
-London at this time of the year . . .”
-
-There seemed nothing further to say on the subject. He took off his
-glasses, polished them, put them on again, and shuffled to the door.
-After all, he reflected, even though the car was coming for him at two,
-at least he had the morning, and he proposed to make the most of it.
-But his first careless rapture at the prospect of pottering among his
-flowers was dimmed, and would not be recaptured. He did not entertain
-any project so mad as the idea of defying his sister Constance, but he
-felt extremely bitter about the whole affair. Confound Constance! . . .
-Dash Baxter! . . . Miss Peavey . . .
-
-The door closed behind Lord Emsworth.
-
-
-§ 2
-
-Lady Constance meanwhile, proceeding downstairs, had reached the big
-hall, when the door of the smoking-room opened and a head popped out. A
-round, grizzled head with a healthy pink face attached to it.
-
-“Connie!” said the head.
-
-Lady Constance halted.
-
-“Yes, Joe?”
-
-“Come in here a minute,” said the head. “Want to speak to you.”
-
-Lady Constance went into the smoking-room. It was large and cosily
-book-lined, and its window looked out on to an Italian garden. A wide
-fire-place occupied nearly the whole of one side of it, and in front
-of this, his legs spread to an invisible blaze, Mr. Joseph Keeble had
-already taken his stand. His manner was bluff, but an acute observer
-might have detected embarrassment in it.
-
-“What is it, Joe?” asked Lady Constance, and smiled pleasantly at her
-husband. When, two years previously, she had married this elderly
-widower, of whom the world knew nothing beyond the fact that he had
-amassed a large fortune in South African diamond mines, there had
-not been wanting cynics to set the match down as one of convenience,
-a purely business arrangement by which Mr. Keeble exchanged his
-money for Lady Constance’s social position. Such was not the case. It
-had been a genuine marriage of affection on both sides. Mr. Keeble
-worshipped his wife, and she was devoted to him, though never foolishly
-indulgent. They were a happy and united couple.
-
-Mr. Keeble cleared his throat. He seemed to find some difficulty
-in speaking. And when he spoke it was not on the subject which he
-had intended to open, but on one which had already been worn out in
-previous conversations.
-
-“Connie, I’ve been thinking about that necklace again.”
-
-Lady Constance laughed.
-
-“Oh, don’t be silly, Joe. You haven’t called me into this stuffy room
-on a lovely morning like this to talk about that for the hundredth
-time.”
-
-“Well, you know, there’s no sense in taking risks.”
-
-“Don’t be absurd. What risks can there be?”
-
-“There was a burglary over at Winstone Court, not ten miles from here,
-only a day or two ago.”
-
-“Don’t be so fussy, Joe.”
-
-“That necklace cost nearly twenty thousand pounds,” said Mr. Keeble, in
-the reverent voice in which men of business traditions speak of large
-sums.
-
-“I know.”
-
-“It ought to be in the bank.”
-
-“Once and for all, Joe,” said Lady Constance, losing her amiability
-and becoming suddenly imperious and Cleopatrine, “I will _not_ keep
-that necklace in a bank. What on earth is the use of having a beautiful
-necklace if it is lying in the strong-room of a bank all the time?
-There is the County Ball coming on, and the Bachelors’ Ball after that,
-and . . . well, I _need_ it. I will send the thing to the bank when we
-pass through London on our way to Scotland, but not till then. And I
-do wish you would stop worrying me about it.”
-
-There was a silence. Mr. Keeble was regretting now that his unfortunate
-poltroonery had stopped him from tackling in a straightforward and
-manly fashion the really important matter which was weighing on his
-mind: for he perceived that his remarks about the necklace, eminently
-sensible though they were, had marred the genial mood in which his wife
-had begun this interview. It was going to be more difficult now than
-ever to approach the main issue. Still, ruffled though she might be,
-the thing had to be done: for it involved a matter of finance, and in
-matters of finance Mr. Keeble was no longer a free agent. He and Lady
-Constance had a mutual banking account, and it was she who supervised
-the spending of it. This was an arrangement, subsequently regretted by
-Mr. Keeble, which had been come to in the early days of the honeymoon,
-when men are apt to do foolish things.
-
-Mr. Keeble coughed. Not the sharp, efficient cough which we have heard
-Rupert Baxter uttering in the library, but a feeble, strangled thing
-like the bleat of a diffident sheep.
-
-“Connie,” he said. “Er--Connie.”
-
-And at the words a sort of cold film seemed to come over Lady
-Constance’s eyes: for some sixth sense told her what subject it was
-that was now about to be introduced.
-
-“Connie, I--er--had a letter from Phyllis this morning.”
-
-Lady Constance said nothing. Her eyes gleamed for an instant, then
-became frozen again. Her intuition had not deceived her.
-
-Into the married life of this happy couple only one shadow had
-intruded itself up to the present. But unfortunately it was a shadow
-of considerable proportions, a kind of super-shadow; and its effect
-had been chilling. It was Phyllis, Mr. Keeble’s stepdaughter, who had
-caused it--by the simple process of jilting the rich and suitable young
-man whom Lady Constance had attached to her (rather in the manner
-of a conjurer forcing a card upon his victim) and running off and
-marrying a far from rich and quite unsuitable person of whom all that
-seemed to be known was that his name was Jackson. Mr. Keeble, whose
-simple creed was that Phyllis could do no wrong, had been prepared to
-accept the situation philosophically; but his wife’s wrath had been
-deep and enduring. So much so that the mere mentioning of the girl’s
-name must be accounted to him for a brave deed, Lady Constance having
-specifically stated that she never wished to hear it again.
-
-Keenly alive to this prejudice of hers, Mr. Keeble stopped after making
-his announcement, and had to rattle his keys in his pocket in order to
-acquire the necessary courage to continue. He was not looking at his
-wife, but he knew just how forbidding her expression must be. This task
-of his was no easy, congenial task for a pleasant summer morning.
-
-“She says in her letter,” proceeded Mr. Keeble, his eyes on the carpet
-and his cheeks a deeper pink, “that young Jackson has got the chance of
-buying a big farm . . . in Lincolnshire, I think she said . . . if he
-can raise three thousand pounds.”
-
-He paused, and stole a glance at his wife. It was as he had feared. She
-had congealed. Like some spell, the name Jackson had apparently turned
-her to marble. It was like the Pygmalion and Galatea business working
-the wrong way round. She was presumably breathing, but there was no
-sign of it.
-
-“So I was just thinking,” said Mr. Keeble, producing another
-_obbligato_ on the keys, “it just crossed my mind . . . it isn’t
-as if the thing were a speculation . . . the place is apparently
-coining money . . . present owner only selling because he wants to go
-abroad . . . it occurred to me . . . and they would pay good interest
-on the loan . . .”
-
-“What loan?” inquired the statue icily, coming to life.
-
-“Well, what I was thinking . . . just a suggestion, you know . . . what
-struck me was that if you were willing we might . . . good investment,
-you know, and nowadays it’s deuced hard to find good investments . . .
-I was thinking that we might lend them the money.”
-
-He stopped. But he had got the thing out and felt happier. He
-rattled his keys again, and rubbed the back of his head against the
-mantelpiece. The friction seemed to give him confidence.
-
-“We had better settle this thing once and for all, Joe,” said Lady
-Constance. “As you know, when we were married, I was ready to do
-everything for Phyllis. I was prepared to be a mother to her. I gave
-her every chance, took her everywhere. And what happened?”
-
-“Yes, I know. But . . .”
-
-“She became engaged to a man with plenty of money . . .”
-
-“Shocking young ass,” interjected Mr. Keeble, perking up for a moment
-at the recollection of the late lamented, whom he had never liked. “And
-a rip, what’s more. I’ve heard stories.”
-
-“Nonsense! If you are going to believe all the gossip you hear about
-people, nobody would be safe. He was a delightful young man and he
-would have made Phyllis perfectly happy. Instead of marrying him, she
-chose to go off with this--Jackson.” Lady Constance’s voice quivered.
-Greater scorn could hardly have been packed into two syllables. “After
-what has happened, I certainly intend to have nothing more to do with
-her. I shall not lend them a penny, so please do not let us continue
-this discussion any longer. I hope I am not an unjust woman, but I must
-say that I consider, after the way Phyllis behaved . . .”
-
-The sudden opening of the door caused her to break off. Lord Emsworth,
-mould-stained and wearing a deplorable old jacket, pottered into the
-room. He peered benevolently at his sister and his brother-in-law, but
-seemed unaware that he was interrupting a conversation.
-
-“‘Gardening As A Fine Art,’” he murmured. “Connie, have you seen a
-book called ‘Gardening As A Fine Art’? I was reading it in here last
-night. ‘Gardening As A Fine Art.’ That is the title. Now, where can
-it have got to?” His dreamy eye flitted to and fro. “I want to show
-it to McAllister. There is a passage in it that directly refutes his
-anarchistic views on . . .”
-
-“It is probably on one of the shelves,” said Lady Constance shortly.
-
-“On one of the shelves?” said Lord Emsworth, obviously impressed by
-this bright suggestion. “Why, of course, to be sure.”
-
-Mr. Keeble was rattling his keys moodily. A mutinous expression was
-on his pink face. These moments of rebellion did not come to him very
-often, for he loved his wife with a dog-like affection and had grown
-accustomed to being ruled by her, but now resentment filled him.
-She was unreasonable, he considered. She ought to have realised how
-strongly he felt about poor little Phyllis. It was too infernally
-cold-blooded to abandon the poor child like an old shoe simply
-because . . .
-
-“Are you going?” he asked, observing his wife moving to the door.
-
-“Yes. I am going into the garden,” said Lady Constance. “Why? Was there
-anything else you wanted to talk to me about?”
-
-“No,” said Mr. Keeble despondently. “Oh, no.”
-
-Lady Constance left the room, and a deep masculine silence fell.
-Mr. Keeble rubbed the back of his head meditatively against the
-mantelpiece, and Lord Emsworth scratched among the book-shelves.
-
-“Clarence!” said Mr. Keeble suddenly. An idea--one might almost say an
-inspiration--had come to him.
-
-“Eh?” responded his lordship absently. He had found his book and was
-turning its pages, absorbed.
-
-“Clarence, can you . . .”
-
-“Angus McAllister,” observed Lord Emsworth bitterly, “is an obstinate,
-stiff-necked son of Belial. The writer of this book distinctly states
-in so many words . . .”
-
-“Clarence, can you lend me three thousand pounds on good security and
-keep it dark from Connie?”
-
-Lord Emsworth blinked.
-
-“Keep something dark from Connie?” He raised his eyes from his book in
-order to peer at this visionary with a gentle pity. “My dear fellow, it
-can’t be done.”
-
-“She would never know. I will tell you just why I want this money . . .”
-
-“Money?” Lord Emsworth’s eye had become vacant again. He was reading
-once more. “Money? Money, my dear fellow? Money? Money? What money? If
-I have said once,” declared Lord Emsworth, “that Angus McAllister is
-all wrong on the subject of hollyhocks, I’ve said it a hundred times.”
-
-“Let me explain. This three thousand pounds . . .”
-
-“My dear fellow, no. No, no. It was like you,” said his lordship with
-a vague heartiness, “it was like you--good and generous--to make
-this offer, but I have ample, thank you, ample. I don’t _need_ three
-thousand pounds.”
-
-“You don’t understand. I . . .”
-
-“No, no. No, no. But I am very much obliged, all the same. It was kind
-of you, my dear fellow, to give me the opportunity. Very kind. Very,
-very, very kind,” proceeded his lordship, trailing to the door and
-reading as he went. “Oh, very, very, very . . .”
-
-The door closed behind him.
-
-“Oh, _damn_!” said Mr. Keeble.
-
-He sank into a chair in a state of profound dejection. He thought of
-the letter he would have to write to Phyllis. Poor little Phyllis . . .
-he would have to tell her that what she asked could not be managed.
-And why, thought Mr. Keeble sourly, as he rose from his seat and went
-to the writing-table, could it not be managed? Simply because he was a
-weak-kneed, spineless creature who was afraid of a pair of grey eyes
-that had a tendency to freeze.
-
-“_My dear Phyllis_,” he wrote.
-
-Here he stopped. How on earth was he to put it? What a letter to have
-to write! Mr. Keeble placed his head between his hands and groaned
-aloud.
-
-“Hallo, Uncle Joe!”
-
-The letter-writer, turning sharply, was aware--without pleasure--of his
-nephew Frederick, standing beside his chair. He eyed him resentfully,
-for he was not only exasperated but startled. He had not heard the door
-open. It was as if the smooth-haired youth had popped up out of a trap.
-
-“Came in through the window,” explained the Hon. Freddie. “I say, Uncle
-Joe.”
-
-“Well, what is it?”
-
-“I say, Uncle Joe,” said Freddie, “can you lend me a thousand quid?”
-
-Mr. Keeble uttered a yelp like a pinched Pomeranian.
-
-
-§ 3
-
-As Mr. Keeble, red-eyed and overwrought, rose slowly from his chair
-and began to swell in ominous silence, his nephew raised his hand
-appealingly. It began to occur to the Hon. Freddie that he had perhaps
-not led up to his request with the maximum of smooth tact.
-
-“Half a jiffy!” he entreated. “I say, don’t go in off the deep end for
-just a second. I can explain.”
-
-Mr. Keeble’s feelings expressed themselves in a loud snort.
-
-“Explain!”
-
-“Well, I can. Whole trouble was, I started at the wrong end. Shouldn’t
-have sprung it on you like that. The fact is, Uncle Joe, I’ve got a
-scheme. I give you my word that, if you’ll only put off having apoplexy
-for about three minutes,” said Freddie, scanning his fermenting
-relative with some anxiety, “I can shove you on to a good thing.
-Honestly I can. And all I say is, if this scheme I’m talking about is
-worth a thousand quid to you, will you slip it across? I’m game to
-spill it and leave it to your honesty to cash up if the thing looks
-good to you.”
-
-“A thousand pounds!”
-
-“Nice round sum,” urged Freddie ingratiatingly.
-
-“Why,” demanded Mr. Keeble, now somewhat recovered, “do you want a
-thousand pounds?”
-
-“Well, who doesn’t, if it comes to that?” said Freddie. “But I don’t
-mind telling you my special reason for wanting it at just this moment,
-if you’ll swear to keep it under your hat as far as the guv’nor is
-concerned.”
-
-“If you mean that you wish me not to repeat to your father anything you
-may tell me in confidence, naturally I should not dream of doing such a
-thing.”
-
-Freddie looked puzzled. His was no lightning brain.
-
-“Can’t quite work that out,” he confessed. “Do you mean you will tell
-him or you won’t?”
-
-“I will not tell him.”
-
-“Good old Uncle Joe!” said Freddie, relieved. “A topper! I’ve always
-said so. Well, look here, you know all the trouble there’s been about
-my dropping a bit on the races lately?”
-
-“I do.”
-
-“Between ourselves, I dropped about five hundred of the best. And I
-just want to ask you one simple question. _Why_ did I drop it?”
-
-“Because you were an infernal young ass.”
-
-“Well, yes,” agreed Freddie, having considered the point, “you might
-put it that way, of course. But why was I an ass?”
-
-“Good God!” exclaimed the exasperated Mr. Keeble. “Am I a
-psycho-analyst?”
-
-“I mean to say, if you come right down to it, I lost all that stuff
-simply because I was on the wrong side of the fence. It’s a mug’s game
-betting on horses. The only way to make money is to be a bookie, and
-that’s what I’m going to do if you’ll part with that thousand. Pal
-of mine, who was up at Oxford with me, is in a bookie’s office, and
-they’re game to take me in too if I can put up a thousand quid. Only I
-must let them know quick, because the offer’s not going to be open for
-ever. You’ve no notion what a deuce of a lot of competition there is
-for that sort of job.”
-
-Mr. Keeble, who had been endeavouring with some energy to get a word in
-during this harangue, now contrived to speak.
-
-“And do you seriously suppose that I would . . . But what’s the use of
-wasting time talking? I have no means of laying my hands on the sum you
-mention. If I had,” said Mr. Keeble wistfully. “If I had . . .” And his
-eye strayed to the letter on the desk, the letter which had got as far
-as “My dear Phyllis” and stuck there.
-
-Freddie gazed upon him with cordial sympathy.
-
-“Oh, I know how you’re situated, Uncle Joe, and I’m dashed sorry for
-you. I mean, Aunt Constance and all that.”
-
-“What!” Irksome as Mr. Keeble sometimes found the peculiar condition
-of his financial arrangements, he had always had the consolation of
-supposing that they were a secret between his wife and himself. “What
-do you mean?”
-
-“Well, I know that Aunt Constance keeps an eye on the doubloons and
-checks the outgoings pretty narrowly. And I think it’s a dashed shame
-that she won’t unbuckle to help poor old Phyllis. A girl,” said
-Freddie, “I always liked. Bally shame! Why the dickens shouldn’t she
-marry that fellow Jackson? I mean, love’s love,” said Freddie, who felt
-strongly on this point.
-
-Mr. Keeble was making curious gulping noises.
-
-“Perhaps I ought to explain,” said Freddie, “that I was having a quiet
-after-breakfast smoke outside the window there and heard the whole
-thing. I mean, you and Aunt Constance going to the mat about poor old
-Phyllis and you trying to bite the guv’nor’s ear and so forth.”
-
-Mr. Keeble bubbled for awhile.
-
-“You--you listened!” he managed to ejaculate at length.
-
-“And dashed lucky for you,” said Freddie with a cordiality unimpaired
-by the frankly unfriendly stare under which a nicer-minded youth would
-have withered; “dashed lucky for you that I did. Because I’ve got a
-scheme.”
-
-Mr. Keeble’s estimate of his young relative’s sagacity was not a high
-one, and it is doubtful whether, had the latter caught him in a less
-despondent mood, he would have wasted time in inquiring into the
-details of this scheme, the mention of which had been playing in and
-out of Freddie’s conversation like a will-o’-the-wisp. But such was his
-reduced state at the moment that a reluctant gleam of hope crept into
-his troubled eye.
-
-“A scheme? Do you mean a scheme to help me out of--out of my
-difficulty?”
-
-“Absolutely! You want the best seats, we have ’em. I mean,” Freddie
-went on in interpretation of these peculiar words, “you want three
-thousand quid, and I can show you how to get it.”
-
-“Then kindly do so,” said Mr. Keeble; and, having opened the door,
-peered cautiously out, and closed it again, he crossed the room and
-shut the window.
-
-“Makes it a bit fuggy, but perhaps you’re right,” said Freddie, eyeing
-these manœuvres. “Well, it’s like this, Uncle Joe. You remember what
-you were saying to Aunt Constance about some bird being apt to sneak up
-and pinch her necklace?”
-
-“I do.”
-
-“Well, why not?”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“I mean, why don’t you?”
-
-Mr. Keeble regarded his nephew with unconcealed astonishment. He had
-been prepared for imbecility, but this exceeded his expectations.
-
-“Steal my wife’s necklace!”
-
-“That’s it. Frightfully quick you are, getting on to an idea. Pinch
-Aunt Connie’s necklace. For, mark you,” continued Freddie, so far
-forgetting the respect due from a nephew as to tap his uncle sharply
-on the chest, “if a husband pinches anything from a wife, it isn’t
-stealing. That’s law. I found that out from a movie I saw in town.”
-
-The Hon. Freddie was a great student of the movies. He could tell a
-super-film from a super-super-film at a glance, and what he did not
-know about erring wives and licentious clubmen could have been written
-in a sub-title.
-
-“Are you insane?” growled Mr. Keeble.
-
-“It wouldn’t be hard for you to get hold of it. And once you’d got it
-everybody would be happy. I mean, all you’d have to do would be to draw
-a cheque to pay for another one for Aunt Connie--which would make her
-perfectly chirpy, as well as putting you one up, if you follow me. Then
-you would have the other necklace, the pinched one, to play about with.
-See what I mean? You could sell it privily and by stealth, ship Phyllis
-her three thousand, push across my thousand, and what was left over
-would be a nice little private account for you to tuck away somewhere
-where Aunt Connie wouldn’t know anything about it. And a dashed useful
-thing,” said Freddie, “to have up your sleeve in case of emergencies.”
-
-“Are you . . . ?”
-
-Mr. Keeble was on the point of repeating his previous remark when
-suddenly there came the realisation that, despite all preconceived
-opinions, the young man was anything but insane. The scheme, at which
-he had been prepared to scoff, was so brilliant, yet simple, that it
-seemed almost incredible that its sponsor could have worked it out for
-himself.
-
-“Not my own,” said Freddie modestly, as if in answer to the thought.
-“Saw much the same thing in a movie once. Only there the fellow, if
-I remember, wanted to do down an insurance company, and it wasn’t a
-necklace that he pinched but bonds. Still, the principle’s the same.
-Well, how do we go, Uncle Joe? How about it? Is that worth a thousand
-quid or not?”
-
-Even though he had seen in person to the closing of the door and the
-window, Mr. Keeble could not refrain from a conspirator-like glance
-about him. They had been speaking with lowered voices, but now words
-came from him in an almost inaudible whisper.
-
-“Could it really be done? Is it feasible?”
-
-“Feasible? Why, dash it, what the dickens is there to stop you? You
-could do it in a second. And the beauty of the whole thing is that, if
-you were copped, nobody could say a word, because husband pinching from
-wife isn’t stealing. Law.”
-
-The statement that in the circumstances indicated nobody could say a
-word seemed to Mr. Keeble so at variance with the facts that he was
-compelled to challenge it.
-
-“Your aunt would have a good deal to say,” he observed ruefully.
-
-“Eh? Oh, yes, I see what you mean. Well, you would have to risk that.
-After all, the chances would be dead against her finding out.”
-
-“But she might.”
-
-“Oh, well, if you put it like that, I suppose she might.”
-
-“Freddie, my boy,” said Mr. Keeble weakly, “I daren’t do it!”
-
-The vision of his thousand pounds slipping from his grasp so wrought
-upon Freddie that he expressed himself in a manner far from fitting in
-one of his years towards an older man.
-
-“Oh, I say, don’t be such a rabbit!”
-
-Mr. Keeble shook his head.
-
-“No,” he repeated, “I daren’t.”
-
-It might have seemed that the negotiations had reached a deadlock, but
-Freddie, with a thousand pounds in sight, was in far too stimulated
-a condition to permit so tame an ending to such a promising plot. As
-he stood there, chafing at his uncle’s pusillanimity, an idea was
-vouchsafed to him.
-
-“By Jove! I’ll tell you what!” he cried.
-
-“Not so loud!” moaned the apprehensive Mr. Keeble. “Not so loud!”
-
-“I’ll tell you what,” repeated Freddie in a hoarse whisper. “How would
-it be if _I_ did the pinching?”
-
-“What!”
-
-“How would it . . .”
-
-“Would you?” Hope, which had vanished from Mr. Keeble’s face, came
-flooding back. “My boy, would you really?”
-
-“For a thousand quid you bet I would.”
-
-Mr. Keeble clutched at his young relative’s hand and gripped it
-feverishly.
-
-“Freddie,” he said, “the moment you place that necklace in my hands, I
-will give you not a thousand but two thousand pounds.”
-
-“Uncle Joe,” said Freddie with equal intensity, “it’s a bet!”
-
-Mr. Keeble mopped at his forehead.
-
-“You think you can manage it?”
-
-“Manage it?” Freddie laughed a light laugh. “Just watch me!”
-
-Mr. Keeble grasped his hand again with the utmost warmth.
-
-“I must go out and get some air,” he said. “I’m all upset. May I really
-leave this matter to you, Freddie?”
-
-“Rather!”
-
-“Good! Then to-night I will write to Phyllis and say that I may be able
-to do what she wishes.”
-
-“Don’t say ‘may,’” cried Freddie buoyantly. “The word is ‘will.’ Bally
-will! What ho!”
-
-
-§ 4
-
-Exhilaration is a heady drug; but, like other drugs, it has the
-disadvantage that its stimulating effects seldom last for very
-long. For perhaps ten minutes after his uncle had left him, Freddie
-Threepwood lay back in his chair in a sort of ecstasy. He felt strong,
-vigorous, alert. Then by degrees, like a chilling wind, doubt began
-to creep upon him--faintly at first, then more and more insistently,
-till by the end of a quarter of an hour he was in a state of pronounced
-self-mistrust. Or, to put it with less elegance, he was suffering from
-an exceedingly severe attack of cold feet.
-
-The more he contemplated the venture which he had undertaken, the
-less alluring did it appear to him. His was not a keen imagination,
-but even he could shape with a gruesome clearness a vision of the
-frightful bust-up that would ensue should he be detected stealing his
-Aunt Constance’s diamond necklace. Common decency would in such an
-event seal his lips as regarded his Uncle Joseph’s share in the matter.
-And even if--as might conceivably happen--common decency failed at the
-crisis, reason told him that his Uncle Joseph would infallibly disclaim
-any knowledge of or connection with the rash act. And then where would
-he be? In the soup, undoubtedly. For Freddie could not conceal it from
-himself that there was nothing in his previous record to make it seem
-inconceivable to his nearest and dearest that he should steal the
-jewellery of a female relative for purely personal ends. The verdict
-in the event of detection would be one of uncompromising condemnation.
-
-And yet he hated the idea of meekly allowing that two thousand pounds
-to escape from his clutch . . .
-
-A young man’s cross-roads.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The agony of spirit into which these meditations cast him had brought
-him up with a bound from the comfortable depths of his arm-chair and
-had set him prowling restlessly about the room. His wanderings led him
-at this point to collide somewhat painfully with the long table on
-which Beach the butler, a tidy soul, was in the habit of arranging in
-a neat row the daily papers, weekly papers, and magazines which found
-their way into the castle. The shock had the effect of rousing him
-from his stupor, and in an absent way he clutched the nearest daily
-paper, which happened to be the _Morning Globe_, and returned to his
-chair in the hope of quieting his nerves with a perusal of the racing
-intelligence. For, though far removed now from any practical share
-in the doings of the racing world, he still took a faint melancholy
-interest in ascertaining what Captain Curb, the Head Lad, Little
-Brighteyes, and the rest of the newspaper experts fancied for the day’s
-big event. He lit a cigarette and unfolded the journal.
-
-The next moment, instead of passing directly, as was his usual
-practice, to the last page, which was devoted to sport, he was gazing
-with a strange dry feeling in his throat at a certain advertisement on
-page one.
-
-It was a well-displayed advertisement, and one that had caught the
-eye of many other readers of the paper that morning. It was worded to
-attract attention, and it had achieved its object. But where others
-who read it had merely smiled and marvelled idly how anybody could
-spend good money putting nonsense like this in the paper, to Freddie
-its import was wholly serious. It read to him like the Real Thing.
-His motion-picture-trained mind accepted this advertisement at its
-face-value.
-
-It ran as follows:--
-
- _LEAVE IT TO PSMITH!_
-
- Psmith Will Help You
-
- Psmith Is Ready For Anything
-
- DO YOU WANT
-
- Someone To Manage Your Affairs?
-
- Someone To Handle Your Business?
-
- Someone To Take The Dog For A Run?
-
- Someone To Assassinate Your Aunt?
-
- PSMITH WILL DO IT
-
- CRIME NOT OBJECTED TO
-
- Whatever Job You Have To Offer
-
- (Provided It Has Nothing To Do With Fish)
-
- _LEAVE IT TO PSMITH!_
-
- Address Applications To ‘R. Psmith, Box 365’
-
- _LEAVE IT TO PSMITH!_
-
-Freddie laid the paper down with a deep intake of breath. He picked it
-up again, and read the advertisement a second time. Yes, it sounded
-good.
-
-More, it had something of the quality of a direct answer to prayer.
-Very vividly now Freddie realised that what he had been wishing for was
-a partner to share the perils of this enterprise which he had so rashly
-undertaken. In fact, not so much to share them as to take them off his
-shoulders altogether. And such a partner he was now in a position to
-command. Uncle Joe was going to give him two thousand if he brought the
-thing off. This advertisement fellow would probably be charmed to come
-in for a few hundred . . .
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two minutes later, Freddie was at the writing-desk, scribbling a
-letter. From time to time he glanced furtively over his shoulder at the
-door. But the house was still. No footsteps came to interrupt him at
-his task.
-
-
-§ 5
-
-Freddie went out into the garden. He had not wandered far when from
-somewhere close at hand there was borne to him on the breeze a remark
-in a high voice about Scottish obstinacy, which could only have
-proceeded from one source. He quickened his steps.
-
-“Hallo, guv’nor.”
-
-“Well, Frederick?”
-
-Freddie shuffled.
-
-“I say, guv’nor, do you think I might go up to town with you this
-afternoon?”
-
-“What!”
-
-“Fact is, I ought to see my dentist. Haven’t been to him for a deuce of
-a time.”
-
-“I cannot see the necessity for you to visit a London dentist. There
-is an excellent man in Shrewsbury, and you know I have the strongest
-objection to your going to London.”
-
-“Well, you see, this fellow understands my snappers. Always been to
-him, I mean to say. Anybody who knows anything about these things will
-tell you greatest mistake go buzzing about to different dentists.”
-
-Already Lord Emsworth’s attention was wandering back to the waiting
-McAllister.
-
-“Oh, very well, very well.”
-
-“Thanks awfully, guv’nor.”
-
-“But on one thing I insist, Frederick. I cannot have you loafing about
-London the whole day. You must catch the twelve-fifty train back.”
-
-“Right ho. That’ll be all right, guv’nor.”
-
-“Now, listen to reason, McAllister,” said his lordship. “That is all I
-ask you to do--listen to reason . . .”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-ENTER PSMITH
-
-
-§ 1
-
-At about the hour when Lord Emsworth’s train, whirling him and his son
-Freddie to London, had reached the half-way point in its journey, a
-very tall, very thin, very solemn young man, gleaming in a speckless
-top hat and a morning-coat of irreproachable fit, mounted the steps
-of Number Eighteen, Wallingford Street, West Kensington, and rang the
-front-door bell. This done, he removed the hat; and having touched his
-forehead lightly with a silk handkerchief, for the afternoon sun was
-warm, gazed about him with a grave distaste.
-
-“A scaly neighbourhood!” he murmured.
-
-The young man’s judgment was one at which few people with an eye for
-beauty would have cavilled. When the great revolution against London’s
-ugliness really starts and yelling hordes of artists and architects,
-maddened beyond endurance, finally take the law into their own hands
-and rage through the city burning and destroying, Wallingford Street,
-West Kensington, will surely not escape the torch. Long since it must
-have been marked down for destruction. For, though it possesses certain
-merits of a low practical kind, being inexpensive in the matter of
-rents and handy for the buses and the Underground, it is a peculiarly
-beastly little street. Situated in the middle of one of those
-districts where London breaks out into a sort of eczema of red brick,
-it consists of two parallel rows of semi-detached villas, all exactly
-alike, each guarded by a ragged evergreen hedge, each with coloured
-glass of an extremely regrettable nature let into the panels of the
-front door; and sensitive young impressionists from the artists’ colony
-up Holland Park way may sometimes be seen stumbling through it with
-hands over their eyes, muttering between clenched teeth “How long? How
-long?”
-
-A small maid-of-all-work appeared in answer to the bell, and stood
-transfixed as the visitor, producing a monocle, placed it in his right
-eye and inspected her through it.
-
-“A warm afternoon,” he said cordially.
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“But pleasant,” urged the young man. “Tell me, is Mrs. Jackson at home?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“Not at home?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-The young man sighed.
-
-“Ah well,” he said, “we must always remember that these disappointments
-are sent to us for some good purpose. No doubt they make us more
-spiritual. Will you inform her that I called? The name is Psmith.
-P-smith.”
-
-“Peasmith, sir?”
-
-“No, no. P-s-m-i-t-h. I should explain to you that I started life
-without the initial letter, and my father always clung ruggedly to the
-plain Smith. But it seemed to me that there were so many Smiths in the
-world that a little variety might well be introduced. Smythe I look on
-as a cowardly evasion, nor do I approve of the too prevalent custom of
-tacking another name on in front by means of a hyphen. So I decided to
-adopt the Psmith. The p, I should add for your guidance, is silent, as
-in phthisis, psychic, and ptarmigan. You follow me?”
-
-“Y-yes, sir.”
-
-“You don’t think,” he said anxiously, “that I did wrong in pursuing
-this course?”
-
-“N-no, sir.”
-
-“Splendid!” said the young man, flicking a speck of dust from his
-coat-sleeve. “Splendid! Splendid!”
-
-And with a courteous bow he descended the steps and made his way down
-the street. The little maid, having followed him with bulging eyes till
-he was out of sight, closed the door and returned to her kitchen.
-
-Psmith strolled meditatively on. The genial warmth of the afternoon
-soothed him. He hummed lightly--only stopping when, as he reached the
-end of the street, a young man of his own age, rounding the corner
-rapidly, almost ran into him.
-
-“Sorry,” said the young man. “Hallo, Smith.”
-
-Psmith gazed upon him with benevolent affection.
-
-“Comrade Jackson,” he said, “this is well met. The one man of all
-others whom I would have wished to encounter. We will pop off
-somewhere, Comrade Jackson, should your engagements permit, and restore
-our tissues with a cup of tea. I had hoped to touch the Jackson family
-for some slight refreshment, but I was informed that your wife was out.”
-
-Mike Jackson laughed.
-
-“Phyllis isn’t out. She . . .”
-
-“Not out? Then,” said Psmith, pained, “there has been dirty work done
-this day. For I was turned from the door. It would not be exaggerating
-to say that I was given the bird. Is this the boasted Jackson
-hospitality?”
-
-“Phyllis is giving a tea to some of her old school pals,” explained
-Mike. “She told the maid to say she wasn’t at home to anybody else. I’m
-not allowed in myself.”
-
-“Enough, Comrade Jackson!” said Psmith agreeably. “Say no more. If you
-yourself have been booted out in spite of all the loving, honouring,
-and obeying your wife promised at the altar, who am I to complain? And
-possibly, one can console oneself by reflecting, we are well out of
-it. These gatherings of old girls’-school chums are not the sort of
-function your man of affairs wants to get lugged into. Capital company
-as we are, Comrade Jackson, we should doubtless have been extremely
-in the way. I suppose the conversation would have dealt exclusively
-with reminiscences of the dear old school, of tales of surreptitious
-cocoa-drinking in the dormitories and what the deportment mistress said
-when Angela was found chewing tobacco in the shrubbery. Yes, I fancy we
-have not missed a lot. . . . By the way, I don’t think much of the new
-home. True, I only saw it from the outside, but . . . no, I don’t think
-much of it.”
-
-“Best we can afford.”
-
-“And who,” said Psmith, “am I to taunt my boyhood friend with his
-honest poverty? Especially as I myself am standing on the very brink of
-destitution.”
-
-“You?”
-
-“I in person. That low moaning sound you hear is the wolf bivouacked
-outside my door.”
-
-“But I thought your uncle gave you rather a good salary.”
-
-“So he did. But my uncle and I are about to part company. From now on
-he, so to speak, will take the high road and I’ll take the low road. I
-dine with him to-night, and over the nuts and wine I shall hand him
-the bad news that I propose to resign my position in the firm. I have
-no doubt that he supposed he was doing me a good turn by starting me in
-his fish business, but even what little experience I have had of it has
-convinced me that it is not my proper sphere. The whisper flies round
-the clubs ‘Psmith has not found his niche!’
-
-“I am not,” said Psmith, “an unreasonable man. I realise that humanity
-must be supplied with fish. I am not averse from a bit of fish myself.
-But to be professionally connected with a firm that handles the
-material in the raw is not my idea of a large life-work. Remind me to
-tell you some time what it feels like to sling yourself out of bed at
-four a.m. and go down to toil in Billingsgate Market. No, there is
-money in fish--my uncle has made a pot of it--but what I feel is that
-there must be other walks in life for a bright young man. I chuck it
-to-night.”
-
-“What are you going to do, then?”
-
-“That, Comrade Jackson, is more or less on the knees of the gods.
-To-morrow morning I think I will stroll round to an employment agency
-and see how the market for bright young men stands. Do you know a good
-one?”
-
-“Phyllis always goes to Miss Clarkson’s in Shaftesbury Avenue.
-But . . .”
-
-“Miss Clarkson’s in Shaftesbury Avenue. I will make a note of it . . .
-Meanwhile, I wonder if you saw the _Morning Globe_ to-day?”
-
-“No. Why?”
-
-“I had an advertisement in it, in which I expressed myself as
-willing--indeed, eager--to tackle any undertaking that had nothing to
-do with fish. I am confidently expecting shoals of replies. I look
-forward to winnowing the heap and selecting the most desirable.”
-
-“Pretty hard to get a job these days,” said Mike doubtfully.
-
-“Not if you have something superlatively good to offer.”
-
-“What have you got to offer?”
-
-“My services,” said Psmith with faint reproach.
-
-“What as?”
-
-“As anything. I made no restrictions. Would you care to take a look at
-my manifesto? I have a copy in my pocket.”
-
-Psmith produced from inside his immaculate waistcoat a folded clipping.
-
-“I should welcome your opinion of it, Comrade Jackson. I have
-frequently said that for sturdy common sense you stand alone. Your
-judgment should be invaluable.”
-
-The advertisement, which some hours earlier had so electrified the Hon.
-Freddie Threepwood in the smoking-room at Blandings Castle, seemed to
-affect Mike, whose mind was of the stolid and serious type, somewhat
-differently. He finished his perusal and stared speechlessly.
-
-“Neat, don’t you think?” said Psmith. “Covers the ground adequately? I
-think so, I think so.”
-
-“Do you mean to say you’re going to put drivel like that in the paper?”
-asked Mike.
-
-“I _have_ put it in the paper. As I told you, it appeared this morning.
-By this time to-morrow I shall no doubt have finished sorting out the
-first batch of replies.”
-
-Mike’s emotion took him back to the phraseology of school days.
-
-“You _are_ an ass!”
-
-Psmith restored the clipping to his waistcoat pocket.
-
-“You wound me, Comrade Jackson,” he said. “I had expected a broader
-outlook from you. In fact, I rather supposed that you would have rushed
-round instantly to the offices of the journal and shoved in a similar
-advertisement yourself. But nothing that you can say can damp my
-buoyant spirit. The cry goes round Kensington (and district) ‘Psmith is
-off!’ In what direction the cry omits to state: but that information
-the future will supply. And now, Comrade Jackson, let us trickle into
-yonder tea-shop and drink success to the venture in a cup of the
-steaming. I had a particularly hard morning to-day among the whitebait,
-and I need refreshment.”
-
-
-§ 2
-
-After Psmith had withdrawn his spectacular person from it, there was
-an interval of perhaps twenty minutes before anything else occurred to
-brighten the drabness of Wallingford Street. The lethargy of afternoon
-held the thoroughfare in its grip. Occasionally a tradesman’s cart
-would rattle round the corner, and from time to time cats appeared,
-stalking purposefully among the evergreens. But at ten minutes to five
-a girl ran up the steps of Number Eighteen and rang the bell.
-
-She was a girl of medium height, very straight and slim; and her fair
-hair, her cheerful smile, and the boyish suppleness of her body all
-contributed to a general effect of valiant gaiety, a sort of golden
-sunniness--accentuated by the fact that, like all girls who looked to
-Paris for inspiration in their dress that season, she was wearing black.
-
-The small maid appeared again.
-
-“Is Mrs. Jackson at home?” said the girl. “I think she’s expecting me.
-Miss Halliday.”
-
-“Yes, miss?”
-
-A door at the end of the narrow hall had opened.
-
-“Is that you, Eve?”
-
-“Hallo, Phyl, darling.”
-
-Phyllis Jackson fluttered down the passage like a rose-leaf on the
-wind, and hurled herself into Eve’s arms. She was small and fragile,
-with great brown eyes under a cloud of dark hair. She had a wistful
-look, and most people who knew her wanted to pet her. Eve had always
-petted her, from their first days at school together.
-
-“Am I late or early?” asked Eve.
-
-“You’re the first, but we won’t wait. Jane, will you bring tea into the
-drawing-room.”
-
-“Yes’m.”
-
-“And, remember, I don’t want to see anyone for the rest of the
-afternoon. If anybody calls, tell them I’m not at home. Except Miss
-Clarkson and Mrs. McTodd, of course.”
-
-“Yes’m.”
-
-“Who is Mrs. McTodd?” inquired Eve. “Is that Cynthia?”
-
-“Yes. Didn’t you know she had married Ralston McTodd, the Canadian
-poet? You knew she went out to Canada?”
-
-“I knew that, yes. But I hadn’t heard that she was married. Funny how
-out of touch one gets with girls who were one’s best friends at school.
-Do you realise it’s nearly two years since I saw you?”
-
-“I know. Isn’t it awful! I got your address from Elsa Wentworth two or
-three days ago, and then Clarkie told me that Cynthia was over here on
-a visit with her husband, so I thought how jolly it would be to have a
-regular reunion. We three were such friends in the old days. . . . You
-remember Clarkie, of course? Miss Clarkson, who used to be English
-mistress at Wayland House.”
-
-“Yes, of course. Where did you run into her?”
-
-“Oh, I see a lot of her. She runs a Domestic Employment Agency in
-Shaftesbury Avenue now, and I have to go there about once a fortnight
-to get a new maid. She supplied Jane.”
-
-“Is Cynthia’s husband coming with her this afternoon?”
-
-“No. I wanted it to be simply us four. Do you know him? But of course
-you don’t. This is his first visit to England.”
-
-“I know his poetry. He’s quite a celebrity. Cynthia’s lucky.”
-
-They had made their way into the drawing-room, a gruesome little
-apartment full of all those antimacassars, wax flowers, and china dogs
-inseparable from the cheaper type of London furnished house. Eve,
-though the exterior of Number Eighteen should have prepared her for all
-this, was unable to check a slight shudder as she caught the eye of the
-least prepossessing of the dogs, goggling at her from the mantelpiece.
-
-“Don’t look at them,” recommended Phyllis, following her gaze. “I try
-not to. We’ve only just moved in here, so I haven’t had time to make
-the place nice. Here’s tea. All right, Jane, put it down there. Tea,
-Eve?”
-
-Eve sat down. She was puzzled and curious. She threw her mind back to
-the days at school and remembered the Phyllis of that epoch as almost
-indecently opulent. A millionaire stepfather there had been then, she
-recollected. What had become of him now, that he should allow Phyllis
-to stay in surroundings like this? Eve scented a mystery, and in her
-customary straightforward way went to the heart of it.
-
-“Tell me all about yourself,” she said, having achieved as much comfort
-as the peculiar structure of her chair would permit. “And remember that
-I haven’t seen you for two years, so don’t leave anything out.”
-
-“It’s so difficult to know where to start.”
-
-“Well, you signed your letter ‘Phyllis Jackson.’ Start with the
-mysterious Jackson. Where does he come in? The last I heard about
-you was an announcement in the _Morning Post_ that you were engaged
-to--I’ve forgotten the name, but I’m certain it wasn’t Jackson.”
-
-“Rollo Mountford.”
-
-“Was it? Well, what has become of Rollo? You seem to have mislaid him.
-Did you break off the engagement?”
-
-“Well, it--sort of broke itself off. I mean, you see, I went and
-married Mike.”
-
-“Eloped with him, do you mean?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Good heavens!”
-
-“I’m awfully ashamed about that, Eve. I suppose I treated Rollo awfully
-badly.”
-
-“Never mind. A man with a name like that was made for suffering.”
-
-“I never really cared for him. He had horrid swimmy eyes . . .”
-
-“I understand. So you eloped with your Mike. Tell me about him. Who is
-he? What does he do?”
-
-“Well, at present he’s master at a school. But he doesn’t like it. He
-wants to get back to the country again. When I met him, he was agent
-on a place in the country belonging to some people named Smith. Mike
-had been at school and Cambridge with the son. They were very rich
-then and had a big estate. It was the next place to the Edgelows. I
-had gone to stay with Mary Edgelow--I don’t know if you remember her
-at school? I met Mike first at a dance, and then I met him out riding,
-and then--well, after that we used to meet every day. And we fell in
-love right from the start and we went and got married. Oh, Eve, I wish
-you could have seen our darling little house. It was all over ivy and
-roses, and we had horses and dogs and . . .”
-
-Phyllis’ narrative broke off with a gulp. Eve looked at her
-sympathetically. All her life she herself had been joyously
-impecunious, but it had never seemed to matter. She was strong and
-adventurous, and revelled in the perpetual excitement of trying to make
-both ends meet. But Phyllis was one of those sweet porcelain girls
-whom the roughnesses of life bruise instead of stimulating. She needed
-comfort and pleasant surroundings. Eve looked morosely at the china
-dog, which leered back at her with an insufferable good-fellowship.
-
-“We had hardly got married,” resumed Phyllis, blinking, “when poor
-Mr. Smith died and the whole place was broken up. He must have been
-speculating or something, I suppose, because he hardly left any money,
-and the estate had to be sold. And the people who bought it--they were
-coal people from Wolverhampton--had a nephew for whom they wanted the
-agent job, so Mike had to go. So here we are.”
-
-Eve put the question which she had been waiting to ask ever since she
-had entered the house.
-
-“But what about your stepfather? Surely, when we were at school, you
-had a rich stepfather in the background. Has he lost his money, too?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Well, why doesn’t he help you, then?”
-
-“He would, I know, if he was left to himself. But it’s Aunt Constance.”
-
-“What’s Aunt Constance? And who _is_ Aunt Constance?”
-
-“Well, I call her that, but she’s really my stepmother--sort of. I
-suppose she’s really my step-stepmother. My stepfather married again
-two years ago. It was Aunt Constance who was so furious when I married
-Mike. She wanted me to marry Rollo. She has never forgiven me, and she
-won’t let my stepfather do anything to help us.”
-
-“But the man must be a worm!” said Eve indignantly. “Why doesn’t he
-insist? You always used to tell me how fond he was of you.”
-
-“He isn’t a worm, Eve. He’s a dear. It’s just that he has let her
-boss him. She’s rather a terror, you know. She can be quite nice,
-and they’re awfully fond of each other, but she is as hard as nails
-sometimes.” Phyllis broke off. The front door had opened, and there
-were footsteps in the hall. “Here’s Clarkie. I hope she has brought
-Cynthia with her. She was to pick her up on her way. Don’t talk about
-what I’ve been telling you in front of her, Eve, there’s an angel.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“She’s so motherly about it. It’s sweet of her, but . . .”
-
-Eve understood.
-
-“All right. Later on.”
-
-The door opened to admit Miss Clarkson.
-
-The adjective which Phyllis had applied to her late schoolmistress
-was obviously well chosen. Miss Clarkson exuded motherliness. She was
-large, wholesome, and soft, and she swooped on Eve like a hen on its
-chicken almost before the door had closed.
-
-“Eve! How nice to see you after all this time! My dear, you’re looking
-perfectly lovely! And _so_ prosperous. What a beautiful hat!”
-
-“I’ve been envying it ever since you came, Eve,” said Phyllis. “Where
-did you get it?”
-
-“Madeleine Sœurs, in Regent Street.”
-
-Miss Clarkson, having acquired and stirred a cup of tea, started to
-improve the occasion. Eve had always been a favourite of hers at
-school. She beamed affectionately upon her.
-
-“Now doesn’t this show--what I always used to say to you in the dear
-old days, Eve--that one must never despair, however black the outlook
-may seem? I remember you at school, dear, as poor as a church mouse,
-and with no prospects, none whatever. And yet here you are--rich . . .”
-
-Eve laughed. She got up and kissed Miss Clarkson. She regretted that
-she was compelled to strike a jarring note, but it had to be done.
-
-“I’m awfully sorry, Clarkie dear,” she said, “but I’m afraid I’ve
-misled you. I’m just as broke as I ever was. In fact, when Phyllis
-told me you were running an Employment Agency, I made a note to come
-and see you and ask if you had some attractive billet to dispose of.
-Governess to a thoroughly angelic child would do. Or isn’t there some
-nice cosy author or something who wants his letters answered and his
-press-clippings pasted in an album?”
-
-“Oh, my dear!” Miss Clarkson was deeply concerned. “I did hope . . .
-That hat . . . !”
-
-“The hat’s the whole trouble. Of course I had no business even to think
-of it, but I saw it in the shop-window and coveted it for days, and
-finally fell. And then, you see, I had to live up to it--buy shoes and
-a dress to match. I tell you it was a perfect orgy, and I’m thoroughly
-ashamed of myself now. Too late, as usual.”
-
-“Oh, dear! You always were such a wild, impetuous child, even at
-school. I remember how often I used to speak to you about it.”
-
-“Well, when it was all over and I was sane again, I found I had only a
-few pounds left, not nearly enough to see me through till the relief
-expedition arrived. So I thought it over and decided to invest my
-little all.”
-
-“I hope you chose something safe?”
-
-“It ought to have been. The _Sporting Express_ called it ‘To-day’s
-Safety Bet.’ It was Bounding Willie for the two-thirty race at Sandown
-last Wednesday.”
-
-“Oh, dear!”
-
-“That’s what I said when poor old Willie came in sixth. But it’s
-no good worrying, is it? What it means is that I simply must find
-something to do that will carry me through till I get my next
-quarter’s allowance. And that won’t be till September. . . . But don’t
-let’s talk business here. I’ll come round to your office, Clarkie,
-to-morrow. . . . Where’s Cynthia? Didn’t you bring her?”
-
-“Yes, I thought you were going to pick Cynthia up on your way,
-Clarkie,” said Phyllis.
-
-If Eve’s information as to her financial affairs had caused Miss
-Clarkson to mourn, the mention of Cynthia plunged her into the very
-depths of woe. Her mouth quivered and a tear stole down her cheek. Eve
-and Phyllis exchanged bewildered glances.
-
-“I say,” said Eve after a moment’s pause and a silence broken only by
-a smothered sob from their late instructress, “we aren’t being very
-cheerful, are we, considering that this is supposed to be a joyous
-reunion? Is anything wrong with Cynthia?”
-
-So poignant was Miss Clarkson’s anguish that Phyllis, in a flutter of
-alarm, rose and left the room swiftly in search of the only remedy that
-suggested itself to her--her smelling-salts.
-
-“Poor dear Cynthia!” moaned Miss Clarkson.
-
-“Why, what’s the matter with her?” asked Eve. She was not callous to
-Miss Clarkson’s grief, but she could not help the tiniest of smiles. In
-a flash she had been transported to her school-days, when the other’s
-habit of extracting the utmost tragedy out of the slimmest material had
-been a source of ever-fresh amusement to her. Not for an instant did
-she expect to hear any worse news of her old friend than that she was
-in bed with a cold or had twisted her ankle.
-
-“She’s married, you know,” said Miss Clarkson.
-
-“Well, I see no harm in that, Clarkie. If a few more Safety Bets go
-wrong, I shall probably have to rush out and marry someone myself. Some
-nice, rich, indulgent man who will spoil me.”
-
-“Oh, Eve, my dear,” pleaded Miss Clarkson, bleating with alarm, “do
-please be careful whom you marry. I never hear of one of my girls
-marrying without feeling that the worst may happen and that, all
-unknowing, she may be stepping over a grim precipice!”
-
-“You don’t _tell_ them that, do you? Because I should think it would
-rather cast a damper on the wedding festivities. Has Cynthia gone
-stepping over grim precipices? I was just saying to Phyllis that I
-envied her, marrying a celebrity like Ralston McTodd.”
-
-Miss Clarkson gulped.
-
-“The man must be a _fiend_!” she said brokenly. “I have just left
-poor dear Cynthia in floods of tears at the Cadogan Hotel--she has a
-very nice quiet room on the fourth floor, though the carpet does not
-harmonise with the wall-paper. . . . She was broken-hearted, poor
-child. I did what I could to console her, but it was useless. She
-always was so highly strung. I must be getting back to her very soon.
-I only came on here because I did not want to disappoint you two dear
-girls . . .”
-
-“Why?” said Eve with quiet intensity. She knew from experience that
-Miss Clarkson, unless firmly checked, would pirouette round and round
-the point for minutes without ever touching it.
-
-“Why?” echoed Miss Clarkson, blinking as if the word was something
-solid that had struck her unexpectedly.
-
-“Why was Cynthia in floods of tears?”
-
-“But I’m telling you, my dear. That man has left her!”
-
-“Left her!”
-
-“They had a quarrel, and he walked straight out of the hotel. That
-was the day before yesterday, and he has not been back since. This
-afternoon the curtest note came from him to say that he never intended
-to return. He had secretly and in a most underhand way arranged for his
-luggage to be removed from the hotel to a District Messenger office,
-and from there he has taken it no one knows where. He has completely
-disappeared.”
-
-Eve stared. She had not been prepared for news of this momentous order.
-
-“But what did they quarrel about?”
-
-“Cynthia, poor child, was too overwrought to tell me!”
-
-Eve clenched her teeth.
-
-“The beast! . . . Poor old Cynthia. . . . Shall I come round with you?”
-
-“No, my dear, better let me look after her alone. I will tell her to
-write and let you know when she can see you. I must be going, Phyllis
-dear,” she said, as her hostess re-entered, bearing a small bottle.
-
-“But you’ve only just come!” said Phyllis, surprised.
-
-“Poor old Cynthia’s husband has left her,” explained Eve briefly. “And
-Clarkie’s going back to look after her. She’s in a pretty bad way, it
-seems.”
-
-“Oh, no!”
-
-“Yes, indeed. And I really must be going at once,” said Miss Clarkson.
-
-Eve waited in the drawing-room till the front door banged and Phyllis
-came back to her. Phyllis was more wistful than ever. She had been
-looking forward to this tea-party, and it had not been the happy
-occasion she had anticipated. The two girls sat in silence for a moment.
-
-“What brutes some men are!” said Eve at length.
-
-“Mike,” said Phyllis dreamily, “is an angel.”
-
-Eve welcomed the unspoken invitation to return to a more agreeable
-topic. She felt very deeply for the stricken Cynthia, but she hated
-aimless talk, and nothing could have been more aimless than for her
-and Phyllis to sit there exchanging lamentations concerning a tragedy
-of which neither knew more than the bare outlines. Phyllis had her
-tragedy, too, and it was one where Eve saw the possibility of doing
-something practical and helpful. She was a girl of action, and was glad
-to be able to attack a living issue.
-
-“Yes, let’s go on talking about you and Mike,” she said. “At present I
-can’t understand the position at all. When Clarkie came in, you were
-just telling me about your stepfather and why he wouldn’t help you. And
-I thought you made out a very poor case for him. Tell me some more.
-I’ve forgotten his name, by the way.”
-
-“Keeble.”
-
-“Oh? Well, I think you ought to write and tell him how hard-up you are.
-He may be under the impression that you are still living in luxury and
-don’t need any help. After all, he can’t know unless you tell him. And
-I should ask him straight out to come to the rescue. It isn’t as if it
-was your Mike’s fault that you’re broke. He married you on the strength
-of a very good position which looked like a permanency, and lost it
-through no fault of his own. I should write to him, Phyl. Pitch it
-strong.”
-
-“I have. I wrote to-day. Mike’s just been offered a wonderful
-opportunity. A sort of farm place in Lincolnshire. You know. Cows and
-things. Just what he would like and just what he would do awfully well.
-And we only need three thousand pounds to get it. . . . But I’m afraid
-nothing will come of it.”
-
-“Because of Aunt Constance, you mean?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“You must _make_ something come of it.” Eve’s chin went up. She looked
-like a Goddess of Determination. “If I were you, I’d haunt their
-doorstep till they had to give you the money to get rid of you. The
-idea of anybody doing that absurd driving-into-the-snow business in
-these days! Why _shouldn’t_ you marry the man you were in love with? If
-I were you, I’d go and chain myself to their railings and howl like a
-dog till they rushed out with cheque-books just to get some peace. Do
-they live in London?”
-
-“They are down in Shropshire at present at a place called Blandings
-Castle.”
-
-Eve started.
-
-“Blandings Castle? Good gracious!”
-
-“Aunt Constance is Lord Emsworth’s sister.”
-
-“But this is the most extraordinary thing. I’m going to Blandings
-myself in a few days.”
-
-“No!”
-
-“They’ve engaged me to catalogue the castle library.”
-
-“But, Eve, were you only joking when you asked Clarkie to find you
-something to do? She took you quite seriously.”
-
-“No, I wasn’t joking. There’s a drawback to my going to Blandings. I
-suppose you know the place pretty well?”
-
-“I’ve often stayed there. It’s beautiful.”
-
-“Then you know Lord Emsworth’s second son, Freddie Threepwood?”
-
-“Of course.”
-
-“Well, he’s the drawback. He wants to marry me, and I certainly don’t
-want to marry him. And what I’ve been wondering is whether a nice easy
-job like that, which would tide me over beautifully till September, is
-attractive enough to make up for the nuisance of having to be always
-squelching poor Freddie. I ought to have thought of it right at the
-beginning, of course, when he wrote and told me to apply for the
-position, but I was so delighted at the idea of regular work that it
-didn’t occur to me. Then I began to wonder. He’s such a persevering
-young man. He proposes early and often.”
-
-“Where did you meet Freddie?”
-
-“At a theatre party. About two months ago. He was living in London
-then, but he suddenly disappeared and I had a heart-broken letter
-from him, saying that he had been running up debts and things and his
-father had snatched him away to live at Blandings, which apparently is
-Freddie’s idea of the Inferno. The world seems full of hard-hearted
-relatives.”
-
-“Oh, Lord Emsworth isn’t really hard-hearted. You will love him. He’s
-so dreamy and absent-minded. He potters about the garden all the time.
-I don’t think you’ll like Aunt Constance much. But I suppose you won’t
-see a great deal of her.”
-
-“Whom _shall_ I see much of--except Freddie, of course?”
-
-“Mr. Baxter, Lord Emsworth’s secretary, I expect. I don’t like him at
-all. He’s a sort of spectacled cave-man.”
-
-“He doesn’t sound attractive. But you say the place is nice?”
-
-“It’s gorgeous. I should go, if I were you, Eve.”
-
-“Well, I had intended not to. But now you’ve told me about Mr. Keeble
-and Aunt Constance, I’ve changed my mind. I’ll have to look in at
-Clarkie’s office to-morrow and tell her I’m fixed up and shan’t need
-her help. I’m going to take your sad case in hand, darling. I shall go
-to Blandings, and I will dog your stepfather’s footsteps. . . . Well, I
-must be going. Come and see me to the front door, or I’ll be losing my
-way in the miles of stately corridors. . . . I suppose I mayn’t smash
-that china dog before I go? Oh, well, I just thought I’d ask.”
-
-Out in the hall the little maid-of-all-work bobbed up and intercepted
-them.
-
-“I forgot to tell you, mum, a gentleman called. I told him you was out.”
-
-“Quite right, Jane.”
-
-“Said his name was Smith, ’m.”
-
-Phyllis gave a cry of dismay.
-
-“Oh, no! What a shame! I particularly wanted you to meet him, Eve. I
-wish I’d known.”
-
-“Smith?” said Eve. “The name seems familiar. Why were you so anxious
-for me to meet him?”
-
-“He’s Mike’s best friend. Mike worships him. He’s the son of the Mr.
-Smith I was telling you about--the one Mike was at school and Cambridge
-with. He’s a perfect darling, Eve, and you would love him. He’s just
-your sort. I do wish we had known. And now you’re going to Blandings
-for goodness knows how long, and you won’t be able to see him.”
-
-“What a pity,” said Eve, politely uninterested.
-
-“I’m so sorry for him.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“He’s in the fish business.”
-
-“Ugh!”
-
-“Well, he hates it, poor dear. But he was left stranded like all the
-rest of us after the crash, and he was put into the business by an
-uncle who is a sort of fish magnate.”
-
-“Well, why does he stay there, if he dislikes it so much?” said Eve
-with indignation. The helpless type of man was her pet aversion. “I
-hate a man who’s got no enterprise.”
-
-“I don’t think you could call him unenterprising. He never struck me
-like that. . . . You simply must meet him when you come back to London.”
-
-“All right,” said Eve indifferently. “Just as you like. I might put
-business in his way. I’m very fond of fish.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-EVE BORROWS AN UMBRELLA
-
-
-What strikes the visitor to London most forcibly, as he enters the
-heart of that city’s fashionable shopping district, is the almost
-entire absence of ostentation in the shop-windows, the studied
-avoidance of garish display. About the front of the premises of Messrs.
-Thorpe & Briscoe, for instance, who sell coal in Dover Street, there
-is as a rule nothing whatever to attract fascinated attention. You
-might give the place a glance as you passed, but you would certainly
-not pause and stand staring at it as at the Sistine Chapel or the
-Taj Mahal. Yet at ten-thirty on the morning after Eve Halliday had
-taken tea with her friend Phyllis Jackson in West Kensington, Psmith,
-lounging gracefully in the smoking-room window of the Drones Club,
-which is immediately opposite the Thorpe & Briscoe establishment, had
-been gazing at it fixedly for a full five minutes. One would have said
-that the spectacle enthralled him. He seemed unable to take his eyes
-off it.
-
-There is always a reason for the most apparently inexplicable
-happenings. It is the practice of Thorpe (or Briscoe) during the months
-of summer to run out an awning over the shop. A quiet, genteel awning,
-of course, nothing to offend the eye--but an awning which offers a
-quite adequate protection against those sudden showers which are such
-a delightfully piquant feature of the English summer: one of which
-had just begun to sprinkle the West End of London with a good deal of
-heartiness and vigour. And under this awning, peering plaintively out
-at the rain, Eve Halliday, on her way to the Ada Clarkson Employment
-Bureau, had taken refuge. It was she who had so enchained Psmith’s
-interest. It was his considered opinion that she improved the Thorpe &
-Briscoe frontage by about ninety-five per cent.
-
-Pleased and gratified as Psmith was to have something nice to look at
-out of the smoking-room window, he was also somewhat puzzled. This girl
-seemed to him to radiate an atmosphere of wealth. Starting at farthest
-south and proceeding northward, she began in a gleam of patent-leather
-shoes. Fawn stockings, obviously expensive, led up to a black crêpe
-frock. And then, just as the eye was beginning to feel that there
-could be nothing more, it was stunned by a supreme hat of soft, dull
-satin with a black bird of Paradise feather falling down over the left
-shoulder. Even to the masculine eye, which is notoriously to seek in
-these matters, a whale of a hat. And yet this sumptuously upholstered
-young woman had been marooned by a shower of rain beneath the awning of
-Messrs. Thorpe & Briscoe. Why, Psmith asked himself, was this? Even,
-he argued, if Charles the chauffeur had been given the day off or was
-driving her father the millionaire to the City to attend to his vast
-interests, she could surely afford a cab-fare? We, who are familiar
-with the state of Eve’s finances, can understand her inability to take
-cabs, but Psmith was frankly perplexed.
-
-Being, however, both ready-witted and chivalrous, he perceived that
-this was no time for idle speculation. His not to reason why; his
-obvious duty was to take steps to assist Beauty in distress. He
-left the window of the smoking-room, and, having made his way with a
-smooth dignity to the club’s cloak-room, proceeded to submit a row of
-umbrellas to a close inspection. He was not easy to satisfy. Two which
-he went so far as to pull out of the rack he returned with a shake of
-the head. Quite good umbrellas, but not fit for this special service.
-At length, however, he found a beauty, and a gentle smile flickered
-across his solemn face. He put up his monocle and gazed searchingly at
-this umbrella. It seemed to answer every test. He was well pleased with
-it.
-
-“Whose,” he inquired of the attendant, “is this?”
-
-“Belongs to the Honourable Mr. Walderwick, sir.”
-
-“Ah!” said Psmith tolerantly.
-
-He tucked the umbrella under his arm and went out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile Eve Halliday, lightening up the sombre austerity of Messrs.
-Thorpe & Briscoe’s shop-front, continued to think hard thoughts of the
-English climate and to inspect the sky in the hope of detecting a spot
-of blue. She was engaged in this cheerless occupation when at her side
-a voice spoke.
-
-“Excuse me!”
-
-A hatless young man was standing beside her, holding an umbrella. He
-was a striking-looking young man, very tall, very thin, and very well
-dressed. In his right eye there was a monocle, and through this he
-looked down at her with a grave friendliness. He said nothing further,
-but, taking her fingers, clasped them round the handle of the umbrella,
-which he had obligingly opened, and then with a courteous bow proceeded
-to dash with long strides across the road, disappearing through the
-doorway of a gloomy building which, from the number of men who had
-gone in and out during her vigil, she had set down as a club of some
-sort.
-
-A good many surprising things had happened to Eve since first she
-had come to live in London, but nothing quite so surprising as this.
-For several minutes she stood where she was without moving, staring
-round-eyed at the building opposite. The episode was, however,
-apparently ended. The young man did not reappear. He did not even show
-himself at the window. The club had swallowed him up. And eventually
-Eve, deciding that this was not the sort of day on which to refuse
-umbrellas even if they dropped inexplicably from heaven, stepped out
-from under the awning, laughing helplessly, and started to resume her
-interrupted journey to Miss Clarkson’s.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The offices of the Ada Clarkson International Employment Bureau
-(“Promptitude--Courtesy--Intelligence”) are at the top of Shaftesbury
-Avenue, a little way past the Palace Theatre. Eve, closing the
-umbrella, which had prevented even a spot of rain falling on her hat,
-climbed the short stair leading to the door and tapped on the window
-marked “Enquiries.”
-
-“Can I see Miss Clarkson?”
-
-“What name, please?” responded Enquiries promptly and with intelligent
-courtesy.
-
-“Miss Halliday.”
-
-Brief interlude, involving business with speaking-tube.
-
-“Will you go into the private office, please,” said Enquiries a moment
-later, in a voice which now added respect to the other advertised
-qualities, for she had had time to observe and digest the hat.
-
-Eve passed in through the general waiting-room with its
-magazine-covered table, and tapped at the door beyond marked “Private.”
-
-“Eve, dear!” exclaimed Miss Clarkson the moment she had entered, “I
-don’t know how to tell you, but I have been looking through my books
-and I have nothing, simply nothing. There is not a single place that
-you could possibly take. What _is_ to be done?”
-
-“That’s all right, Clarkie.”
-
-“But . . .”
-
-“I didn’t come to talk business. I came to ask after Cynthia. How is
-she?”
-
-Miss Clarkson sighed.
-
-“Poor child, she is still in a dreadful state, and no wonder. No news
-at all from her husband. He has simply deserted her.”
-
-“Poor darling! Can’t I see her?”
-
-“Not at present. I have persuaded her to go down to Brighton for a
-day or two. I think the sea air will pick her up. So much better than
-mooning about in a London hotel. She is leaving on the eleven o’clock
-train. I gave her your love, and she was most grateful that you should
-have remembered your old friendship and be sorry for her in her
-affliction.”
-
-“Well, I can write to her. Where is she staying?”
-
-“I don’t know her Brighton address, but no doubt the Cadogan Hotel
-would forward letters. I think she would be glad to hear from you,
-dear.”
-
-Eve looked sadly at the framed testimonials which decorated the wall.
-She was not often melancholy, but it was such a beast of a day and all
-her friends seemed to be having such a bad time.
-
-“Oh, Clarkie,” she said, “what a lot of trouble there is in the world!”
-
-“Yes, yes!” sighed Miss Clarkson, a specialist on this subject.
-
-“All the horses you back finish sixth and all the girls you like best
-come croppers. Poor little Phyllis! weren’t you sorry for her?”
-
-“But her husband, surely, is most devoted?”
-
-“Yes, but she’s frightfully hard up, and you remember how opulent she
-used to be at school. Of course, it must sound funny hearing me pitying
-people for having no money. But somehow other people’s hard-upness
-always seems so much worse than mine. Especially poor old Phyl’s,
-because she really isn’t fit to stand it. I’ve been used to being
-absolutely broke all my life. Poor dear father always seemed to be
-writing an article against time, with creditors scratching earnestly
-at the door.” Eve laughed, but her eyes were misty. “He was a brick,
-wasn’t he? I mean, sending me to a first-class school like Wayland
-House when he often hadn’t enough money to buy tobacco, poor angel. I
-expect he wasn’t always up to time with fees, was he?”
-
-“Well, my dear, of course I was only an assistant mistress at Wayland
-House and had nothing to do with the financial side, but I did hear
-sometimes. . .”
-
-“Poor darling father! Do you know, one of my earliest recollections--I
-couldn’t have been more than ten--is of a ring at the front-door bell
-and father diving like a seal under the sofa and poking his head out
-and imploring me in a hoarse voice to hold the fort. I went to the door
-and found an indignant man with a blue paper. I prattled so prettily
-and innocently that he not only went away quite contentedly but
-actually patted me on the head and gave me a penny. And when the door
-had shut father crawled out from under the sofa and gave me twopence,
-making threepence in all--a good morning’s work. I bought father a
-diamond ring with it at a shop down the street, I remember. At least
-I thought it was a diamond. They may have swindled me, for I was very
-young.”
-
-“You have had a hard life, dear.”
-
-“Yes, but hasn’t it been a lark! I’ve loved every minute of it.
-Besides, you can’t call me really one of the submerged tenth. Uncle
-Thomas left me a hundred and fifty pounds a year, and mercifully I’m
-not allowed to touch the capital. If only there were no hats or safety
-bets in the world, I should be smugly opulent. . . . But I mustn’t
-keep you any longer, Clarkie dear. I expect the waiting-room is full
-of dukes who want cooks and cooks who want dukes, all fidgeting and
-wondering how much longer you’re going to keep them. Good-bye, darling.”
-
-And, having kissed Miss Clarkson fondly and straightened her hat, which
-the other’s motherly embrace had disarranged, Eve left the room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-PAINFUL SCENE AT THE DRONES CLUB
-
-
-Meanwhile, at the Drones Club, a rather painful scene had been taking
-place. Psmith, regaining the shelter of the building, had made his way
-to the wash-room, where, having studied his features with interest
-for a moment in the mirror, he smoothed his hair, which the rain had
-somewhat disordered, and brushed his clothes with extreme care. He then
-went to the cloak-room for his hat. The attendant regarded him as he
-entered with the air of one whose mind is not wholly at rest.
-
-“Mr. Walderwick was in here a moment ago, sir,” said the attendant.
-
-“Yes?” said Psmith, mildly interested. “An energetic, bustling soul,
-Comrade Walderwick. Always somewhere. Now here, now there.”
-
-“Asking about his umbrella, he was,” pursued the attendant with a touch
-of coldness.
-
-“Indeed? Asking about his umbrella, eh?”
-
-“Made a great fuss about it, sir, he did.”
-
-“And rightly,” said Psmith with approval. “The good man loves his
-umbrella.”
-
-“Of course I had to tell him that you had took it, sir.”
-
-“I would not have it otherwise,” assented Psmith heartily. “I like
-this spirit of candour. There must be no reservations, no subterfuges
-between you and Comrade Walderwick. Let all be open and above-board.”
-
-“He seemed very put out, sir. He went off to find you.”
-
-“I am always glad of a chat with Comrade Walderwick,” said Psmith.
-“Always.”
-
-He left the cloak-room and made for the hall, where he desired the
-porter to procure him a cab. This having drawn up in front of the club,
-he descended the steps and was about to enter it, when there was a
-hoarse cry in his rear, and through the front door there came bounding
-a pinkly indignant youth, who called loudly:
-
-“Here! Hi! Smith! Dash it!”
-
-Psmith climbed into the cab and gazed benevolently out at the new-comer.
-
-“Ah, Comrade Walderwick!” he said. “What have we on our mind?”
-
-“Where’s my umbrella?” demanded the pink one. “The cloak-room waiter
-says you took my umbrella. I mean, a joke’s a joke, but that was a
-dashed good umbrella.”
-
-“It was, indeed,” Psmith agreed cordially. “It may be of interest to
-you to know that I selected it as the only possible one from among a
-number of competitors. I fear this club is becoming very mixed, Comrade
-Walderwick. You with your pure mind would hardly believe the rottenness
-of some of the umbrellas I inspected in the cloak-room.”
-
-“Where is it?”
-
-“The cloak-room? You turn to the left as you go in at the main entrance
-and . . .”
-
-“My umbrella, dash it! Where’s my umbrella?”
-
-“Ah, there,” said Psmith, and there was a touch of manly regret in his
-voice, “you have me. I gave it to a young lady in the street. Where she
-is at the present moment I could not say.”
-
-The pink youth tottered slightly.
-
-“You gave my umbrella to a girl?”
-
-“A very loose way of describing her. You would not speak of her in
-that light fashion if you had seen her. Comrade Walderwick, she was
-wonderful! I am a plain, blunt, rugged man, above the softer emotions
-as a general thing, but I frankly confess that she stirred a chord in
-me which is not often stirred. She thrilled my battered old heart,
-Comrade Walderwick. There is no other word. Thrilled it!”
-
-“But, dash it! . . .”
-
-Psmith reached out a long arm and laid his hand paternally on the
-other’s shoulder.
-
-“Be brave, Comrade Walderwick!” he said. “Face this thing like a man!
-I am sorry to have been the means of depriving you of an excellent
-umbrella, but as you will readily understand I had no alternative. It
-was raining. She was over there, crouched despairingly beneath the
-awning of that shop. She wanted to be elsewhere, but the moisture
-lay in wait to damage her hat. What could I do? What could any man
-worthy of the name do but go down to the cloak-room and pinch the
-best umbrella in sight and take it to her? Yours was easily the best.
-There was absolutely no comparison. I gave it to her, and she has
-gone off with it, happy once more. This explanation,” said Psmith,
-“will, I am sure, sensibly diminish your natural chagrin. You have
-lost your umbrella, Comrade Walderwick, but in what a cause! In what
-a cause, Comrade Walderwick! You are now entitled to rank with Sir
-Philip Sidney and Sir Walter Raleigh. The latter is perhaps the closer
-historical parallel. He spread his cloak to keep a queen from wetting
-her feet. You--by proxy--yielded up your umbrella to save a girl’s
-hat. Posterity will be proud of you, Comrade Walderwick. I shall be
-vastly surprised if you do not go down in legend and song. Children in
-ages to come will cluster about their grandfather’s knees, saying,
-‘Tell us how the great Walderwick lost his umbrella, grandpapa!’ And
-he will tell them, and they will rise from the recital better, deeper,
-broader children. . . . But now, as I see that the driver has started
-his meter, I fear I must conclude this little chat--which I, for one,
-have heartily enjoyed. Drive on,” he said, leaning out of the window.
-“I want to go to Ada Clarkson’s International Employment Bureau in
-Shaftesbury Avenue.”
-
-The cab moved off. The Hon. Hugo Walderwick, after one passionate
-glance in its wake, realised that he was getting wet and went back into
-the club.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Arriving at the address named, Psmith paid his cab and, having mounted
-the stairs, delicately knuckled the ground-glass window of Enquiries.
-
-“My dear Miss Clarkson,” he began in an affable voice, the instant the
-window had shot up, “if you can spare me a few moments of your valuable
-time . . .”
-
-“Miss Clarkson’s engaged.”
-
-Psmith scrutinised her gravely through his monocle.
-
-“Aren’t _you_ Miss Clarkson?”
-
-Enquiries said she was not.
-
-“Then,” said Psmith, “there has been a misunderstanding, for which,” he
-added cordially, “I am to blame. Perhaps I could see her anon? You will
-find me in the waiting-room when required.”
-
-He went into the waiting-room, and, having picked up a magazine from
-the table, settled down to read a story in _The Girl’s Pet_--the
-January number of the year 1919, for Employment Agencies, like
-dentists, prefer their literature of a matured vintage. He was absorbed
-in this when Eve came out of the private office.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-PSMITH APPLIES FOR EMPLOYMENT
-
-
-Psmith rose courteously as she entered.
-
-“My dear Miss Clarkson,” he said, “if you can spare me a moment of your
-valuable time . . .”
-
-“Good gracious!” said Eve. “How extraordinary!”
-
-“A singular coincidence,” agreed Psmith.
-
-“You never gave me time to thank you for the umbrella,” said Eve
-reproachfully. “You must have thought me awfully rude. But you took my
-breath away.”
-
-“My dear Miss Clarkson, please do not . . .”
-
-“Why do you keep calling me that?”
-
-“Aren’t _you_ Miss Clarkson either?”
-
-“Of course I’m not.”
-
-“Then,” said Psmith, “I must start my quest all over again. These
-constant checks are trying to an ardent spirit. Perhaps you are a young
-bride come to engage her first cook?”
-
-“No. I’m not married.”
-
-“Good!”
-
-Eve found his relieved thankfulness a little embarrassing. In the
-momentary pause which followed his remark, Enquiries entered alertly.
-
-“Miss Clarkson will see you now, sir.”
-
-“Leave us,” said Psmith with a wave of his hand. “We would be alone.”
-
-Enquiries stared; then, awed by his manner and general appearance of
-magnificence, withdrew.
-
-“I suppose really,” said Eve, toying with the umbrella, “I ought to
-give this back to you.” She glanced at the dripping window. “But it
-_is_ raining rather hard, isn’t it?”
-
-“Like the dickens,” assented Psmith.
-
-“Then would you mind very much if I kept it till this evening?”
-
-“Please do.”
-
-“Thanks ever so much. I will send it back to you to-night if you will
-give me the name and address.”
-
-Psmith waved his hand deprecatingly.
-
-“No, no. If it is of any use to you, I hope that you will look on it as
-a present.”
-
-“A present!”
-
-“A gift,” explained Psmith.
-
-“But I really can’t go about accepting expensive umbrellas from people.
-Where shall I send it?”
-
-“If you insist, you may send it to the Hon. Hugo Walderwick, Drones
-Club, Dover Street. But it really isn’t necessary.”
-
-“I won’t forget. And thank you very much, Mr. Walderwick.”
-
-“Why do you call me that?”
-
-“Well, you said . . .”
-
-“Ah, I see. A slight confusion of ideas. No, I am not Mr. Walderwick.
-And between ourselves I should hate to be. His is a very C3
-intelligence. Comrade Walderwick is merely the man to whom the umbrella
-belongs.”
-
-Eve’s eyes opened wide.
-
-“Do you mean to say you gave me somebody else’s umbrella?”
-
-“I had unfortunately omitted to bring my own out with me this morning.”
-
-“I never heard of such a thing!”
-
-“Merely practical Socialism. Other people are content to talk about the
-Redistribution of Property. I go out and do it.”
-
-“But won’t he be awfully angry when he finds out it has gone?”
-
-“He _has_ found out. And it was pretty to see his delight. I explained
-the circumstances, and he was charmed to have been of service to you.”
-
-The door opened again, and this time it was Miss Clarkson in person
-who entered. She had found Enquiries’ statement over the speaking-tube
-rambling and unsatisfactory, and had come to investigate for herself
-the reason why the machinery of the office was being held up.
-
-“Oh, I must go,” said Eve, as she saw her. “I’m interrupting your
-business.”
-
-“I’m so glad you’re still here, dear,” said Miss Clarkson. “I have just
-been looking over my files, and I see that there _is_ one vacancy. For
-a nurse,” said Miss Clarkson with a touch of the apologetic in her
-voice.
-
-“Oh, no, that’s all right,” said Eve. “I don’t really need anything.
-But thanks ever so much for bothering.”
-
-She smiled affectionately upon the proprietress, bestowed another smile
-upon Psmith as he opened the door for her, and went out. Psmith turned
-away from the door with a thoughtful look upon his face.
-
-“Is that young lady a nurse?” he asked.
-
-“Do you want a nurse?” inquired Miss Clarkson, at once the woman of
-business.
-
-“I want that nurse,” said Psmith with conviction.
-
-“She is a delightful girl,” said Miss Clarkson with enthusiasm. “There
-is no one in whom I would feel more confidence in recommending to a
-position. She is a Miss Halliday, the daughter of a very clever but
-erratic writer, who died some years ago. I can speak with particular
-knowledge of Miss Halliday, for I was for many years an assistant
-mistress at Wayland House, where she was at school. She is a charming,
-warm-hearted, impulsive girl. . . . But you will hardly want to hear
-all this.”
-
-“On the contrary,” said Psmith, “I could listen for hours. You have
-stumbled upon my favourite subject.”
-
-Miss Clarkson eyed him a little doubtfully, and decided that it would
-be best to reintroduce the business theme.
-
-“Perhaps, when you say you are looking for a nurse, you mean you need a
-hospital nurse?”
-
-“My friends have sometimes suggested it.”
-
-“Miss Halliday’s greatest experience has, of course, been as a
-governess.”
-
-“A governess is just as good,” said Psmith agreeably.
-
-Miss Clarkson began to be conscious of a sensation of being out of her
-depth.
-
-“How old are your children, sir?” she asked.
-
-“I fear,” said Psmith, “you are peeping into Volume Two. This romance
-has only just started.”
-
-“I am afraid,” said Miss Clarkson, now completely fogged, “I do not
-quite understand. What exactly are you looking for?”
-
-Psmith flicked a speck of fluff from his coat-sleeve.
-
-“A job,” he said.
-
-“A job!” echoed Miss Clarkson, her voice breaking in an amazed squeak.
-
-Psmith raised his eyebrows.
-
-“You seem surprised. Isn’t this a job emporium?”
-
-“This _is_ an Employment Bureau,” admitted Miss Clarkson.
-
-“I knew it, I knew it,” said Psmith. “Something seemed to tell me.
-Possibly it was the legend ‘Employment Bureau’ over the door. And
-those framed testimonials would convince the most sceptical. Yes, Miss
-Clarkson, I want a job, and I feel somehow that you are the woman
-to find it for me. I have inserted an advertisement in the papers,
-expressing my readiness to undertake any form of employment, but I have
-since begun to wonder if after all this will lead to wealth and fame.
-At any rate, it is wise to attack the great world from another angle as
-well, so I come to you.”
-
-“But you must excuse me if I remark that this application of yours
-strikes me as most extraordinary.”
-
-“Why? I am young, active, and extremely broke.”
-
-“But your--er--your clothes . . .”
-
-Psmith squinted, not without complacency, down a faultlessly fitting
-waistcoat, and flicked another speck of dust off his sleeve.
-
-“You consider me well dressed?” he said. “You find me natty? Well,
-well, perhaps you are right, perhaps you are right. But consider, Miss
-Clarkson. If one expects to find employment in these days of strenuous
-competition, one must be neatly and decently clad. Employers look
-askance at a baggy trouser-leg. A zippy waistcoat is more to them than
-an honest heart. This beautiful crease was obtained with the aid of the
-mattress upon which I tossed feverishly last night in my attic room.”
-
-“I can’t take you seriously.”
-
-“Oh, don’t say that, please.”
-
-“You really want me to find you work?”
-
-“I prefer the term ‘employment.’”
-
-Miss Clarkson produced a notebook.
-
-“If you are really not making this application just as a joke . . .”
-
-“I assure you, no. My entire capital consists, in specie, of about ten
-pounds.”
-
-“Then perhaps you will tell me your name.”
-
-“Ah! Things are beginning to move. The name is Psmith. P-smith. The p
-is silent.”
-
-“Psmith?”
-
-“Psmith.”
-
-Miss Clarkson brooded over this for a moment in almost pained silence,
-then recovered her slipping grip of affairs.
-
-“I think,” she said, “you had better give me a few particulars about
-yourself.”
-
-“There is nothing I should like better,” responded Psmith warmly. “I
-am always ready--I may say eager--to tell people the story of my life,
-but in this rushing age I get little encouragement. Let us start at
-the beginning. My infancy. When I was but a babe, my eldest sister was
-bribed with sixpence an hour by my nurse to keep an eye on me and see
-that I did not raise Cain. At the end of the first day she struck for a
-shilling, and got it. We now pass to my boyhood. At an early age I was
-sent to Eton, everybody predicting a bright career for me. Those were
-happy days, Miss Clarkson. A merry, laughing lad with curly hair and a
-sunny smile, it is not too much to say that I was the pet of the place.
-The old cloisters. . . . But I am boring you. I can see it in your eye.”
-
-“No, no,” protested Miss Clarkson. “But what I meant was . . . I
-thought you might have had some experience in some particular line
-of . . . In fact, what sort of work . . . ?”
-
-“Employment.”
-
-“What sort of employment do you require?”
-
-“Broadly speaking,” said Psmith, “any reasonably salaried position that
-has nothing to do with fish.”
-
-“Fish!” quavered Miss Clarkson, slipping again. “Why fish?”
-
-“Because, Miss Clarkson, the fish trade was until this morning my walk
-in life, and my soul has sickened of it.”
-
-“You are in the _fish_ trade?” squeaked Miss Clarkson, with an amazed
-glance at the knife-like crease in his trousers.
-
-“These are not my working clothes,” said Psmith, following and
-interpreting her glance. “Yes, owing to a financial upheaval in my
-branch of the family, I was until this morning at the beck and call
-of an uncle who unfortunately happens to be a Mackerel Monarch or a
-Sardine Sultan, or whatever these merchant princes are called who rule
-the fish market. He insisted on my going into the business to learn
-it from the bottom up, thinking, no doubt, that I would follow in his
-footsteps and eventually work my way to the position of a Whitebait
-Wizard. Alas! he was too sanguine. It was not to be,” said Psmith
-solemnly, fixing an owl-like gaze on Miss Clarkson through his eyeglass.
-
-“No?” said Miss Clarkson.
-
-“No. Last night I was obliged to inform him that the fish business
-was all right, but it wouldn’t do, and that I proposed to sever my
-connection with the firm for ever. I may say at once that there ensued
-something in the nature of a family earthquake. Hard words,” sighed
-Psmith. “Black looks. Unseemly wrangle. And the upshot of it all was
-that my uncle washed his hands of me and drove me forth into the great
-world. Hence my anxiety to find employment. My uncle has definitely
-withdrawn his countenance from me, Miss Clarkson.”
-
-“Dear, dear!” murmured the proprietress sympathetically.
-
-“Yes. He is a hard man, and he judges his fellows solely by their
-devotion to fish. I never in my life met a man so wrapped up in a
-subject. For years he has been practically a monomaniac on the subject
-of fish. So much so that he actually looks like one. It is as if he
-had taken one of those auto-suggestion courses and had kept saying
-to himself, ‘Every day, in every way, I grow more and more like a
-fish.’ His closest friends can hardly tell now whether he more nearly
-resembles a halibut or a cod. . . . But I am boring you again with this
-family gossip?”
-
-He eyed Miss Clarkson with such a sudden and penetrating glance that
-she started nervously.
-
-“No, no,” she exclaimed.
-
-“You relieve my apprehensions. I am only too well aware that, when
-fairly launched on the topic of fish, I am more than apt to weary my
-audience. I cannot understand this enthusiasm for fish. My uncle used
-to talk about an unusually large catch of pilchards in Cornwall in
-much the same awed way as a right-minded curate would talk about the
-spiritual excellence of his bishop. To me, Miss Clarkson, from the very
-start, the fish business was what I can only describe as a wash-out. It
-nauseated my finer feelings. It got right in amongst my fibres. I had
-to rise and partake of a simple breakfast at about four in the morning,
-after which I would make my way to Billingsgate Market and stand for
-some hours knee-deep in dead fish of every description. A jolly life
-for a cat, no doubt, but a bit too thick for a Shropshire Psmith.
-Mine, Miss Clarkson, is a refined and poetic nature. I like to be
-surrounded by joy and life, and I know nothing more joyless and deader
-than a dead fish. Multiply that dead fish by a million, and you have
-an environment which only a Dante could contemplate with equanimity.
-My uncle used to tell me that the way to ascertain whether a fish
-was fresh was to peer into its eyes. Could I spend the springtime
-of life staring into the eyes of dead fish? No!” He rose. “Well, I
-will not detain you any longer. Thank you for the unfailing courtesy
-and attention with which you have listened to me. You can understand
-now why my talents are on the market and why I am compelled to state
-specifically that no employment can be considered which has anything
-to do with fish. I am convinced that you will shortly have something
-particularly good to offer me.”
-
-“I don’t know that I can say that, Mr. Psmith.”
-
-“The p is silent, as in pshrimp,” he reminded her. “Oh, by the way,” he
-said, pausing at the door, “there is one other thing before I go. While
-I was waiting for you to be disengaged, I chanced on an instalment of a
-serial story in _The Girl’s Pet_ for January, 1919. My search for the
-remaining issues proved fruitless. The title was ‘Her Honour At Stake,’
-by Jane Emmeline Moss. You don’t happen to know how it all came out
-in the end, do you? Did Lord Eustace ever learn that, when he found
-Clarice in Sir Jasper’s rooms at midnight, she had only gone there to
-recover some compromising letters for a girl friend? You don’t know?
-I feared as much. Well, good morning, Miss Clarkson, good morning. I
-leave my future in your hands with a light heart.”
-
-“I will do my best for you, of course.”
-
-“And what,” said Psmith cordially, “could be better than Miss
-Clarkson’s best?”
-
-He closed the door gently behind him, and went out. Struck by a kindly
-thought, he tapped upon Enquiries’ window, and beamed benevolently as
-her bobbed head shot into view.
-
-“They tell me,” he said, “that Aspidistra is much fancied for the four
-o’clock race at Birmingham this afternoon. I give the information
-without prejudice, for what it is worth. Good day!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-LORD EMSWORTH MEETS A POET
-
-
-§ 1
-
-The rain had stopped when Psmith stepped out into the street, and
-the sun was shining again in that half blustering, half apologetic
-manner which it affects on its reappearance after a summer shower. The
-pavements glistened cheerfully, and the air had a welcome freshness.
-Pausing at the corner, he pondered for a moment as to the best method
-of passing the hour and twenty minutes which must elapse before he
-could reasonably think of lunching. The fact that the offices of the
-_Morning Globe_ were within easy strolling distance decided him to go
-thither and see if the first post had brought anything in the shape
-of answers to his advertisements. And his energy was rewarded a few
-minutes later when Box 365 on being opened yielded up quite a little
-budget of literary matter. No fewer than seven letters in all. A nice
-bag.
-
-What, however, had appeared at first sight evidence of a pleasing
-ebullition of enterprise on the part of the newspaper-reading public
-turned out on closer inspection, when he had retired to a corner where
-he could concentrate in peace, a hollow delusion. Enterprising in a
-sense though the communications were--and they certainly showed the
-writers as men of considerable ginger and business push--to Psmith they
-came as a disappointment. He had expected better things. These letters
-were not at all what he had paid good money to receive. They missed
-the point altogether. The right spirit, it seemed to him, was entirely
-absent.
-
-The first envelope, attractive though it looked from the outside, being
-of an expensive brand of stationery and gaily adorned with a somewhat
-startling crest merely contained a pleasantly-worded offer from a Mr.
-Alistair MacDougall to advance him any sum from ten to fifty thousand
-pounds on his note of hand only. The second revealed a similar proposal
-from another Scot named Colin MacDonald. While in the third Mr. Ian
-Campbell was prepared to go as high as one hundred thousand. All three
-philanthropists had but one stipulation to make--they would have no
-dealings with minors. Youth, with all its glorious traditions, did not
-seem to appeal to them. But they cordially urged Psmith, in the event
-of his having celebrated his twenty-first birthday, to come round to
-the office and take the stuff away in a sack.
-
-Keeping his head well in the midst of this shower of riches, Psmith
-dropped the three letters with a sigh into the waste-paper basket,
-and opened the next in order. This was a bulky envelope, and its
-contents consisted of a printed brochure entitled, “This Night Shall
-Thy Soul Be Required Of Thee”--while, by a curious and appropriate
-coincidence, Number Five proved to be a circular from an energetic firm
-of coffin-makers offering to bury him for eight pounds ten. Number
-Six, also printed, was a manifesto from one Howard Hill, of Newmarket,
-recommending him to apply without delay for “Hill’s Three-Horse
-Special,” without which--(“Who,” demanded Mr. Hill in large type, “gave
-you Wibbly-Wob for the Jubilee Cup?”)--no sportsman could hope to
-accomplish the undoing of the bookmakers.
-
-Although by doing so he convicted himself of that very lack of
-enterprise which he had been deploring in the great public, Psmith
-placed this communication with the others in the waste-paper baskets.
-There now remained only Number Seven, and a slight flicker of hope
-returned to him when he perceived that this envelope was addressed by
-hand and not in typescript. He opened it.
-
-Beyond a doubt he had kept the pick of the bunch to the last. Here was
-something that made up for all those other disappointments. Written in
-a scrawly and apparently agitated hand, the letter ran as follows:
-
- “_If R. Psmith will meet the writer in the lobby of the Piccadilly
- Palace Hotel at twelve sharp, Friday, July 1, business may result
- if business meant and terms reasonable. R. Psmith will wear a pink
- chrysanthemum in his buttonhole, and will say to the writer, ‘There
- will be rain in Northumberland to-morrow,’ to which the writer will
- reply, ‘Good for the crops.’ Kindly be punctual._”
-
-A pleased smile played about Psmith’s solemn face as he read this
-communication for the second time. It was much more the sort of thing
-for which he had been hoping. Although his closest friend, Mike
-Jackson, was a young man of complete ordinariness, Psmith’s tastes
-when he sought companionship lay as a rule in the direction of the
-bizarre. He preferred his humanity eccentric. And “the writer,” to
-judge him by this specimen of his correspondence, appeared to be
-eccentric enough for the most exacting taste. Whether this promising
-person turned out to be a ribald jester or an earnest crank, Psmith
-felt no doubt whatever as to the advisability of following the matter
-up. Whichever he might be, his society ought to afford entertainment
-during the interval before lunch. Psmith glanced at his watch. The
-hour was a quarter to twelve. He would be able to secure the necessary
-chrysanthemum and reach the Piccadilly Palace Hotel by twelve sharp,
-thus achieving the businesslike punctuality on which the unknown writer
-seemed to set such store.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was not until he had entered a florist’s shop on the way to the
-tryst that it was borne in upon him that the adventure was going
-to have its drawbacks. The first of these was the chrysanthemum.
-Preoccupied with the rest of the communication, Psmith, when he had
-read the letter, had not given much thought to the decoration which
-it would be necessary for him to wear; and it was only when, in reply
-to his demand for a chrysanthemum, the florist came forward, almost
-hidden, like the army at Dunsinane, behind what looked like a small
-shrubbery, that he realised what he, a correct and fastidious dresser,
-was up against.
-
-“Is that a chrysanthemum?”
-
-“Yes, sir. Pink chrysanthemum.”
-
-“One?”
-
-“Yes, sir. One pink chrysanthemum.”
-
-Psmith regarded the repellent object with disfavour through his
-eyeglass. Then, having placed it in his buttonhole, he proceeded on his
-way, feeling like some wild thing peering through the undergrowth. The
-distressing shrub completely spoiled his walk.
-
-Arrived at the hotel and standing in the lobby, he perceived the
-existence of further complications. The lobby was in its usual state of
-congestion, it being a recognised meeting-place for those who did not
-find it convenient to go as far east as that traditional rendezvous of
-Londoners, the spot under the clock at Charing Cross Station; and “the
-writer,” while giving instructions as to how Psmith should ornament his
-exterior, had carelessly omitted to mention how he himself was to be
-recognised. A rollicking, slap-dash conspirator, was Psmith’s opinion.
-
-It seemed best to take up a position as nearly as possible in the
-centre of the lobby and stand there until “the writer,” lured by
-the chrysanthemum, should come forward and start something. This
-he accordingly did, but when at the end of ten minutes nothing had
-happened beyond a series of collisions with perhaps a dozen hurrying
-visitors to the hotel, he decided on a more active course. A young
-man of sporting appearance had been standing beside him for the last
-five minutes, and ever and anon this young man had glanced with some
-impatience at his watch. He was plainly waiting for someone, so Psmith
-tried the formula on him.
-
-“There will be rain,” said Psmith, “in Northumberland to-morrow.”
-
-The young man looked at him, not without interest, certainly, but
-without that gleam of intelligence in his eye which Psmith had hoped to
-see.
-
-“What?” he replied.
-
-“There will be rain in Northumberland to-morrow.”
-
-“Thanks, Zadkiel,” said the young man. “Deuced gratifying, I’m sure. I
-suppose you couldn’t predict the winner of the Goodwood Cup as well?”
-
-He then withdrew rapidly to intercept a young woman in a large hat
-who had just come through the swing doors. Psmith was forced to the
-conclusion that this was not his man. He was sorry on the whole, for he
-had seemed a pleasant fellow.
-
-As Psmith had taken up a stationary position and the population of
-the lobby was for the most part in a state of flux, he was finding
-himself next to someone new all the time; and now he decided to accost
-the individual whom the re-shuffle had just brought elbow to elbow
-with him. This was a jovial-looking soul with a flowered waistcoat, a
-white hat, and a mottled face. Just the man who might have written that
-letter.
-
-The effect upon this person of Psmith’s meteorological remark was
-instantaneous. A light of the utmost friendliness shone in his
-beautifully-shaven face as he turned. He seized Psmith’s hand and
-gripped it with a delightful heartiness. He had the air of a man who
-has found a friend, and what is more, an old friend. He had a sort of
-journeys-end-in-lovers’-meeting look.
-
-“My dear old chap!” he cried. “I’ve been waiting for you to speak for
-the last five minutes. Knew we’d met before somewhere, but couldn’t
-place you. Face familiar as the dickens, of course. Well, well, well!
-And how are they all?”
-
-“Who?” said Psmith courteously.
-
-“Why, the boys, my dear chap.”
-
-“Oh, the boys?”
-
-“The dear old boys,” said the other, specifying more exactly. He
-slapped Psmith on the shoulder. “What times those were, eh?”
-
-“Which?” said Psmith.
-
-“The times we all used to have together.”
-
-“Oh, _those_?” said Psmith.
-
-Something of discouragement seemed to creep over the other’s
-exuberance, as a cloud creeps over the summer sky. But he persevered.
-
-“Fancy meeting you again like this!”
-
-“It is a small world,” agreed Psmith.
-
-“I’d ask you to come and have a drink,” said the jovial one, with the
-slight increase of tensity which comes to a man who approaches the
-core of a business deal, “but the fact is my ass of a man sent me out
-this morning without a penny. Forgot to give me my note-case. Damn’
-careless! I’ll have to sack the fellow.”
-
-“Annoying, certainly,” said Psmith.
-
-“I wish I could have stood you a drink,” said the other wistfully.
-
-“Of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these, ‘It might
-have been,’” sighed Psmith.
-
-“I’ll tell you what,” said the jovial one, inspired. “Lend me a fiver,
-my dear old boy. That’s the best way out of the difficulty. I can send
-it round to your hotel or wherever you are this evening when I get
-home.”
-
-A sweet, sad smile played over Psmith’s face.
-
-“Leave me, comrade!” he murmured.
-
-“Eh?”
-
-“Pass along, old friend, pass along.”
-
-Resignation displaced joviality in the other’s countenance.
-
-“Nothing doing?” he inquired.
-
-“Nothing.”
-
-“Well, there was no harm in trying,” argued the other.
-
-“None whatever.”
-
-“You see,” said the now far less jovial man confidentially, “you look
-such a perfect mug with that eyeglass that it tempts a chap.”
-
-“I can quite understand how it must!”
-
-“No offence.”
-
-“Assuredly not.”
-
-The white hat disappeared through the swing doors, and Psmith returned
-to his quest. He engaged the attention of a middle-aged man in a
-snuff-coloured suit who had just come within hail.
-
-“There will be rain in Northumberland to-morrow,” he said.
-
-The man peered at him inquiringly.
-
-“Hey?” he said.
-
-Psmith repeated his observation.
-
-“Huh?” said the man.
-
-Psmith was beginning to lose the unruffled calm which made him
-such an impressive figure to the public eye. He had not taken into
-consideration the possibility that the object of his search might be
-deaf. It undoubtedly added to the embarrassment of the pursuit. He was
-moving away, when a hand fell on his sleeve.
-
-Psmith turned. The hand which still grasped his sleeve belonged to
-an elegantly dressed young man of somewhat nervous and feverish
-appearance. During his recent vigil Psmith had noticed this young man
-standing not far away, and had had half a mind to include him in the
-platoon of new friends he was making that morning.
-
-“I say,” said this young man in a tense whisper, “did I hear you say
-that there would be rain in Northumberland to-morrow?”
-
-“If,” said Psmith, “you were anywhere within the radius of a dozen
-yards while I was chatting with the recent deaf adder, I think it is
-possible that you did.”
-
-“Good for the crops,” said the young man. “Come over here where we can
-talk quietly.”
-
-
-§ 2
-
-“So you’re R. Psmith?” said the young man, when they had made their way
-to a remote corner of the lobby, apart from the throng.
-
-“The same.”
-
-“I say, dash it, you’re frightfully late, you know. I told you to be
-here at twelve sharp. It’s nearly twelve past.”
-
-“You wrong me,” said Psmith. “I arrived here precisely at twelve. Since
-when, I have been standing like Patience on a monument. . . .”
-
-“Like what?”
-
-“Let it go,” said Psmith. “It is not important.”
-
-“I asked you to wear a pink chrysanthemum. So I could recognise you,
-you know.”
-
-“I _am_ wearing a pink chrysanthemum. I should have imagined that that
-was a fact that the most casual could hardly have overlooked.”
-
-“That thing?” The other gazed disparagingly at the floral decoration.
-“I thought it was some kind of cabbage. I meant one of those little
-what-d’you-may-call-its that people do wear in their button-holes.”
-
-“Carnation, possibly?”
-
-“Carnation! That’s right.”
-
-Psmith removed the chrysanthemum and dropped it behind his chair. He
-looked at his companion reproachfully.
-
-“If you had studied botany at school, comrade,” he said, “much misery
-might have been averted. I cannot begin to tell you the spiritual agony
-I suffered, trailing through the metropolis behind that shrub.”
-
-Whatever decent sympathy and remorse the other might have shown at
-these words was swept away in the shock resultant on a glance at his
-watch. Not for an instant during this brief return of his to London
-had Freddie Threepwood been unmindful of his father’s stern injunction
-to him to catch the twelve-fifty train back to Market Blandings. If
-he missed it, there would be the deuce of a lot of unpleasantness,
-and unpleasantness in the home was the one thing Freddie wanted to
-avoid nowadays; for, like a prudent convict in a prison, he hoped by
-exemplary behaviour to get his sentence of imprisonment at Blandings
-Castle reduced for good conduct.
-
-“Good Lord! I’ve only got about five minutes. Got to talk quick. . . .
-About this thing. This business. That advertisement of yours.”
-
-“Ah, yes. My advertisement. It interested you?”
-
-“Was it on the level?”
-
-“Assuredly. We Psmiths do not deceive.”
-
-Freddie looked at him doubtfully.
-
-“You know, you aren’t a bit like I expected you’d be.”
-
-“In what respect,” inquired Psmith, “do I fall short of the ideal?”
-
-“It isn’t so much falling short. It’s--oh, I don’t know . . . Well,
-yes, if you want to know, I thought you’d be a tougher specimen
-altogether. I got the impression from your advertisement that you were
-down and out and ready for anything, and you look as if you were on
-your way to a garden-party at Buckingham Palace.”
-
-“Ah!” said Psmith, enlightened. “It is my costume that is causing these
-doubts in your mind. This is the second time this morning that such a
-misunderstanding has occurred. Have no misgivings. These trousers may
-sit well, but, if they do, it is because the pockets are empty.”
-
-“Are you really broke?”
-
-“As broke as the Ten Commandments.”
-
-“I’m hanged if I can believe it.”
-
-“Suppose I brush my hat the wrong way for a moment?” said Psmith
-obligingly. “Would that help?”
-
-His companion remained silent for a few moments. In spite of the fact
-that he was in so great a hurry and that every minute that passed
-brought nearer the moment when he would be compelled to tear himself
-away and make a dash for Paddington Station, Freddie was finding it
-difficult to open the subject he had come there to discuss.
-
-“Look here,” he said at length, “I shall have to trust you, dash it.”
-
-“You could pursue no better course.”
-
-“It’s like this. I’m trying to raise a thousand quid . . .”
-
-“I regret that I cannot offer to advance it to you myself. I have,
-indeed, already been compelled to decline to lend a gentleman who
-claimed to be an old friend of mine so small a sum as a fiver. But
-there is a dear, obliging soul of the name of Alistair MacDougall
-who . . .”
-
-“Good Lord! You don’t think I’m trying to touch you?”
-
-“That impression did flit through my mind.”
-
-“Oh, dash it, no. No, but--well, as I was saying, I’m frightfully keen
-to get hold of a thousand quid.”
-
-“So am I,” said Psmith. “Two minds with but a single thought. How
-do _you_ propose to start about it? For my part, I must freely
-confess that I haven’t a notion. I am stumped. The cry goes round the
-chancelleries, ‘Psmith is baffled!’”
-
-“I say, old thing,” said Freddie plaintively, “you couldn’t talk a bit
-less, could you? I’ve only got about two minutes.”
-
-“I beg your pardon. Proceed.”
-
-“It’s so dashed difficult to know how to begin the thing. I mean, it’s
-all a bit complicated till you get the hang of it. . . . Look here, you
-said in your advertisement that you had no objection to crime.”
-
-Psmith considered the point.
-
-“Within reason--and if undetected--I see no objection to two-pennorth
-of crime.”
-
-“Well, look here . . . look here . . . Well, look here,” said Freddie,
-“will you steal my aunt’s diamond necklace?”
-
-Psmith placed his monocle in his eye and bent gravely toward his
-companion.
-
-“Steal your aunt’s necklace?” he said indulgently.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“You do not think she might consider it a liberty from one to whom she
-has never been introduced?”
-
-What Freddie might have replied to this pertinent question will never
-be known, for at this moment, looking nervously at his watch for the
-twentieth time, he observed that the hands had passed the half-hour and
-were well on their way to twenty-five minutes to one. He bounded up
-with a cry.
-
-“I must go! I shall miss that damned train!”
-
-“And meanwhile . . . ?” said Psmith.
-
-The familiar phrase--the words “And meanwhile” had occurred at least
-once in every film Freddie had ever seen--had the effect of wrenching
-the latter’s mind back to the subject in hand for a moment. Freddie was
-not a clear-thinking young man, but even he could see that he had left
-the negotiations suspended at a very satisfactory point. Nevertheless,
-he had to catch that twelve-fifty.
-
-“Write and tell me what you think about it,” panted Freddie, skimming
-through the lobby like a swallow.
-
-“You have unfortunately omitted to leave a name and address,” Psmith
-pointed out, following him at an easy jog-trot.
-
-In spite of his hurry, a prudence born of much movie-seeing restrained
-Freddie from supplying the information asked for. Give away your name
-and address and you never knew what might happen.
-
-“I’ll write to you,” he cried, racing for a cab.
-
-“I shall count the minutes,” said Psmith courteously.
-
-“Drive like blazes!” said Freddie to the chauffeur.
-
-“Where?” inquired the man, not unreasonably.
-
-“Eh? Oh, Paddington.”
-
-The cab whirled off, and Psmith, pleasantly conscious of a morning
-not ill-spent, gazed after it pensively for a moment. Then, with
-the feeling that the authorities of Colney Hatch or some kindred
-establishment had been extraordinarily negligent, he permitted his mind
-to turn with genial anticipation in the direction of lunch. For, though
-he had celebrated his first day of emancipation from Billingsgate Fish
-Market by rising late and breakfasting later, he had become aware by
-now of that not unpleasant emptiness which is the silent luncheon-gong
-of the soul.
-
-
-§ 3
-
-The minor problem now presented itself of where to lunch; and with
-scarcely a moment’s consideration he dismissed those large, noisy, and
-bustling restaurants which lie near Piccadilly Circus. After a morning
-spent with Eve Halliday and the young man who was going about the place
-asking people to steal his aunt’s necklace, it was imperative that he
-select some place where he could sit and think quietly. Any food of
-which he partook must be consumed in calm, even cloistral surroundings,
-unpolluted by the presence of a first violin who tied himself into
-knots and an orchestra in whose lexicon there was no such word as
-_piano_. One of his clubs seemed indicated.
-
-In the days of his prosperity, Psmith’s father, an enthusiastic
-clubman, had enrolled his son’s name on the list of several
-institutions: and now, although the lean years had arrived, he
-was still a member of six, and would continue to be a member till
-the beginning of the new year and the consequent call for fresh
-subscriptions. These clubs ranged from the Drones, frankly frivolous,
-to the Senior Conservative, solidly worthy. Almost immediately Psmith
-decided that for such a mood as was upon him at the moment, the latter
-might have been specially constructed.
-
-Anybody familiar with the interior of the Senior Conservative Club
-would have applauded his choice. In the whole of London no better
-haven could have been found by one desirous of staying his interior
-with excellently-cooked food while passing his soul under a leisurely
-examination. They fed you well at the Drones, too, no doubt: but
-there Youth held carnival, and the thoughtful man, examining his
-soul, was apt at any moment to have his meditations broken in upon
-by a chunk of bread, dexterously thrown by some bright spirit at an
-adjoining table. No horror of that description could possibly occur
-at the Senior Conservative. The Senior Conservative has six thousand
-one hundred and eleven members. Some of the six thousand one hundred
-and eleven are more respectable than the others, but they are all
-respectable--whether they be numbered among the oldest inhabitants like
-the Earl of Emsworth, who joined as a country member in 1888, or are
-among the recent creations of the last election of candidates. They are
-bald, reverend men, who look as if they are on their way to the City to
-preside at directors’ meetings or have dropped in after conferring with
-the Prime Minister at Downing Street as to the prospects at the coming
-by-election in the Little Wabsley Division.
-
-With the quiet dignity which atoned for his lack in years in this
-stronghold of mellow worth, Psmith mounted the steps, passed through
-the doors which were obligingly flung open for him by two uniformed
-dignitaries, and made his way to the coffee-room. Here, having
-selected a table in the middle of the room and ordered a simple and
-appetising lunch, he gave himself up to thoughts of Eve Halliday. As
-he had confessed to his young friend Mr. Walderwick, she had made
-a powerful impression upon him. He was tearing himself from his
-day-dreams in order to wrestle with a mutton chop, when a foreign body
-shot into his orbit and blundered heavily against the table. Looking
-up, he perceived a long, thin, elderly gentleman of pleasantly vague
-aspect, who immediately began to apologise.
-
-“My dear sir, I am extremely sorry. I trust I have caused no damage.”
-
-“None whatever,” replied Psmith courteously.
-
-“The fact is, I have mislaid my glasses. Blind as a bat without them.
-Can’t see where I’m going.”
-
-A gloomy-looking young man with long and disordered hair, who stood at
-the elderly gentleman’s elbow, coughed suggestively. He was shuffling
-restlessly, and appeared to be anxious to close the episode and move
-on. A young man, evidently, of highly-strung temperament. He had a
-sullen air.
-
-The elderly gentleman started vaguely at the sound of the cough.
-
-“Eh?” he said, as if in answer to some spoken remark. “Oh, yes, quite
-so, quite so, my dear fellow. Mustn’t stop here chatting, eh? Had to
-apologise, though. Nearly upset this gentleman’s table. Can’t see where
-I’m going without my glasses. Blind as a bat. Eh? What? Quite so, quite
-so.”
-
-He ambled off, doddering cheerfully, while his companion still
-preserved his look of sulky aloofness. Psmith gazed after them with
-interest.
-
-“Can you tell me,” he asked of the waiter, who was rallying round with
-the potatoes, “who that was?”
-
-The waiter followed his glance.
-
-“Don’t know who the young gentleman is, sir. Guest here, I fancy. The
-old gentleman is the Earl of Emsworth. Lives in the country and doesn’t
-often come to the club. Very absent-minded gentleman, they tell me.
-Potatoes, sir?”
-
-“Thank you,” said Psmith.
-
-The waiter drifted away, and returned.
-
-“I have been looking at the guest-book, sir. The name of the gentleman
-lunching with Lord Emsworth is Mr. Ralston McTodd.”
-
-“Thank you very much. I am sorry you had the trouble.”
-
-“No trouble, sir.”
-
-Psmith resumed his meal.
-
-
-§ 4
-
-The sullen demeanour of the young man who had accompanied Lord Emsworth
-through the coffee-room accurately reflected the emotions which were
-vexing his troubled soul. Ralston McTodd, the powerful young singer
-of Saskatoon (“Plumbs the depths of human emotion and strikes a new
-note”--_Montreal Star_. “Very readable”--_Ipsilanti Herald_), had not
-enjoyed his lunch. The pleasing sense of importance induced by the fact
-that for the first time in his life he was hob-nobbing with a genuine
-earl had given way after ten minutes of his host’s society to a mingled
-despair and irritation which had grown steadily deeper as the meal
-proceeded. It is not too much to say that by the time the fish course
-arrived it would have been a relief to Mr. McTodd’s feelings if he
-could have taken up the butter-dish and banged it down, butter and all,
-on his lordship’s bald head.
-
-A temperamental young man was Ralston McTodd. He liked to be the
-centre of the picture, to do the talking, to air his views, to be
-listened to respectfully and with interest by a submissive audience.
-At the meal which had just concluded none of these reasonable demands
-had been permitted to him. From the very beginning, Lord Emsworth
-had collared the conversation and held it with a gentle, bleating
-persistency against all assaults. Five times had Mr. McTodd almost
-succeeded in launching one of his best epigrams, only to see it swept
-away on the tossing flood of a lecture on hollyhocks. At the sixth
-attempt he had managed to get it out, complete and sparkling, and the
-old ass opposite him had taken it in his stride like a hurdle and gone
-galloping off about the mental and moral defects of a creature named
-Angus McAllister, who appeared to be his head gardener or something of
-the kind. The luncheon, though he was a hearty feeder and as a rule
-appreciative of good cooking, had turned to ashes in Mr. McTodd’s
-mouth, and it was a soured and chafing Singer of Saskatoon who dropped
-scowlingly into an arm-chair by the window of the lower smoking-room a
-few moments later. We introduce Ralston McTodd to the reader, in short,
-at a moment when he is very near the breaking-point. A little more
-provocation, and goodness knows what he may not do. For the time being,
-he is merely leaning back in his chair and scowling. He has a faint
-hope, however, that a cigar may bring some sort of relief, and he is
-waiting for one to be ordered for him.
-
-The Earl of Emsworth did not see the scowl. He had not really seen
-Mr. McTodd at all from the moment of his arrival at the club, when
-somebody, who sounded like the head porter, had informed him that a
-gentleman was waiting to see him and had led him up to a shapeless
-blur which had introduced itself as his expected guest. The loss
-of his glasses had had its usual effect on Lord Emsworth, making
-the world a misty place in which indefinite objects swam dimly like
-fish in muddy water. Not that this mattered much, seeing that he was
-in London, for in London there was never anything worth looking at.
-Beyond a vague feeling that it would be more comfortable on the whole
-if he had his glasses--a feeling just strong enough to have made him
-send off a messenger boy to his hotel to hunt for them--Lord Emsworth
-had not allowed lack of vision to interfere with his enjoyment of the
-proceedings.
-
-And, unlike Mr. McTodd, he had been enjoying himself very much. A
-good listener, this young man, he felt. Very soothing, the way he
-had constituted himself a willing audience, never interrupting or
-thrusting himself forward, as is so often the deplorable tendency of
-the modern young man. Lord Emsworth was bound to admit that, much as
-he had disliked the idea of going to London to pick up this poet or
-whatever he was, the thing had turned out better than he had expected.
-He liked Mr. McTodd’s silent but obvious interest in flowers, his tacit
-but warm-hearted sympathy in the matter of Angus McAllister. He was
-glad he was coming to Blandings. It would be agreeable to conduct him
-personally through the gardens, to introduce him to Angus McAllister
-and allow him to plumb for himself the black abysses of that outcast’s
-mental processes.
-
-Meanwhile, he had forgotten all about ordering that cigar . . .
-
-“In large gardens where ample space permits,” said Lord Emsworth,
-dropping cosily into his chair and taking up the conversation at the
-point where it had been broken off, “nothing is more desirable than
-that there should be some places, or one at least, of quiet greenery
-alone, without any flowers whatever. I see that you agree with me.”
-
-Mr. McTodd had not agreed with him. The grunt which Lord Emsworth had
-taken for an exclamation of rapturous adhesion to his sentiments had
-been merely a sort of bubble of sound rising from the tortured depths
-of Mr. McTodd’s suffering soul--the cry, as the poet beautifully puts
-it, “of some strong smoker in his agony.” The desire to smoke had now
-gripped Mr. McTodd’s very vitals; but, as some lingering remains of the
-social sense kept him from asking point-blank for the cigar for which
-he yearned, he sought in his mind for a way of approaching the subject
-obliquely.
-
-“In no other way,” proceeded Lord Emsworth, “can the brilliancy of
-flowers be so keenly enjoyed as by . . .”
-
-“Talking of flowers,” said Mr. McTodd, “it is a fact, I believe, that
-tobacco smoke is good for roses.”
-
-“. . . as by pacing for a time,” said Lord Emsworth, “in some cool,
-green alley, and then passing on to the flowery places. It is partly,
-no doubt, the unconscious working out of some optical law, the
-explanation of which in everyday language is that the eye . . .”
-
-“Some people say that smoking is bad for the eyes. I don’t agree with
-them,” said Mr. McTodd warmly.
-
-“. . . being, as it were, saturated with the green colour, is the more
-attuned to receive the others, especially the reds. It was probably
-some such consideration that influenced the designers of the many old
-gardens of England in devoting so much attention to the cult of the yew
-tree. When you come to Blandings, my dear fellow, I will show you our
-celebrated yew alley. And, when you see it, you will agree that I was
-right in taking the stand I did against Angus McAllister’s pernicious
-views.”
-
-“I was lunching in a club yesterday,” said Mr. McTodd, with the
-splendid McTodd doggedness, “where they had no matches on the tables in
-the smoking-room. Only spills. It made it very inconvenient . . .”
-
-“Angus McAllister,” said Lord Emsworth, “is a professional gardener.
-I need say no more. You know as well as I do, my dear fellow, what
-professional gardeners are like when it is a question of moss . . .”
-
-“What it meant was that, when you wanted to light your after-luncheon
-cigar, you had to get up and go to a gas-burner on a bracket at the
-other end of the room . . .”
-
-“Moss, for some obscure reason, appears to infuriate them. It rouses
-their basest passions. Nature intended a yew alley to be carpeted with
-a mossy growth. The mossy path in the yew alley at Blandings is in
-true relation for colour to the trees and grassy edges; yet will you
-credit it that that soulless disgrace to Scotland actually wished to
-grub it all up and have a rolled gravel path staring up from beneath
-those immemorial trees! I have already told you how I was compelled
-to give in to him in the matter of the hollyhocks--head gardeners
-of any ability at all are rare in these days and one has to make
-concessions--but this was too much. I was perfectly friendly and civil
-about it. ‘Certainly, McAllister,’ I said, ‘you may have your gravel
-path if you wish it. I make but one proviso, that you construct it over
-my dead body. Only when I am weltering in my blood on the threshold of
-that yew alley shall you disturb one inch of my beautiful moss. Try to
-remember, McAllister,’ I said, still quite cordially, ‘that you are not
-laying out a recreation ground in a Glasgow suburb--you are proposing
-to make an eyesore of what is possibly the most beautiful nook in one
-of the finest and oldest gardens in the United Kingdom.’ He made some
-repulsive Scotch noise at the back of his throat, and there the matter
-rests. . . . Let me, my dear fellow,” said Lord Emsworth, writhing down
-into the depths of his chair like an aristocratic snake until his spine
-rested snugly against the leather, “let me describe for you the Yew
-Alley at Blandings. Entering from the west . . .”
-
-Mr. McTodd gave up the struggle and sank back, filled with black and
-deleterious thoughts, into a tobacco-less hell. The smoking-room was
-full now, and on all sides fragrant blue clouds arose from the little
-groups of serious thinkers who were discussing what Gladstone had said
-in ’78. Mr. McTodd, as he watched them, had something of the emotions
-of the Peri excluded from Paradise. So reduced was he by this time that
-he would have accepted gratefully the meanest straight-cut cigarette in
-place of the Corona of his dreams. But even this poor substitute for
-smoking was denied him.
-
-Lord Emsworth droned on. Having approached from the west, he was now
-well inside the yew alley.
-
-“Many of the yews, no doubt, have taken forms other than those that
-were originally designed. Some are like turned chessmen; some might
-be taken for adaptations of human figures, for one can trace here
-and there a hat-covered head or a spreading petticoat. Some rise in
-solid blocks with rounded roof and stemless mushroom finial. These
-have for the most part arched recesses, forming arbours. One of the
-tallest . . . Eh? What?”
-
-Lord Emsworth blinked vaguely at the waiter who had sidled up. A
-moment before he had been a hundred odd miles away, and it was not
-easy to adjust his mind immediately to the fact that he was in the
-smoking-room of the Senior Conservative Club.
-
-“Eh? What?”
-
-“A messenger boy has just arrived with these, your lordship.”
-
-Lord Emsworth peered in a dazed and woolly manner at the proffered
-spectacle-case. Intelligence returned to him.
-
-“Oh, thank you. Thank you very much. My glasses. Capital! Thank you,
-thank you, thank you.”
-
-He removed the glasses from their case and placed them on his nose:
-and instantly the world sprang into being before his eyes, sharp and
-well-defined. It was like coming out of a fog.
-
-“Dear me!” he said in a self-congratulatory voice.
-
-Then abruptly he sat up, transfixed. The lower smoking-room at the
-Senior Conservative Club is on the street level, and Lord Emsworth’s
-chair faced the large window. Through this, as he raised his now
-spectacled face, he perceived for the first time that among the row of
-shops on the opposite side of the road was a jaunty new florist’s. It
-had not been there at his last visit to the metropolis, and he stared
-at it raptly, as a small boy would stare at a saucer of ice-cream if
-such a thing had suddenly descended from heaven immediately in front of
-him. And, like a small boy in such a situation, he had eyes for nothing
-else. He did not look at his guest. Indeed, in the ecstasy of his
-discovery, he had completely forgotten that he had a guest.
-
-Any flower shop, however small, was a magnet to the Earl of Emsworth.
-And this was a particularly spacious and arresting flower shop. Its
-window was gay with summer blooms. And Lord Emsworth, slowly rising
-from his chair, “pointed” like a dog that sees a pheasant.
-
-“Bless my soul!” he murmured.
-
-If the reader has followed with the closeness which it deserves the
-extremely entertaining conversation of his lordship recorded in the
-last few paragraphs, he will have noted a reference to hollyhocks. Lord
-Emsworth had ventilated the hollyhock question at some little length
-while seated at the luncheon table. But, as we had not the good fortune
-to be present at that enjoyable meal, a brief résumé of the situation
-must now be given and the intelligent public allowed to judge between
-his lordship and the uncompromising McAllister.
-
-Briefly, the position was this. Many head gardeners are apt to favour
-in the hollyhock forms that one cannot but think have for their aim
-an ideal that is a false and unworthy one. Angus McAllister, clinging
-to the head-gardeneresque standard of beauty and correct form, would
-not sanction the wide outer petal. The flower, so Angus held, must
-be very tight and very round, like the uniform of a major-general.
-Lord Emsworth, on the other hand, considered this view narrow, and
-claimed the liberty to try for the very highest and truest beauty
-in hollyhocks. The loosely-folded inner petals of the hollyhock, he
-considered, invited a wonderful play and brilliancy of colour; while
-the wide outer petal, with its slightly waved surface and gently
-frilled edge . . . well, anyway, Lord Emsworth liked his hollyhocks
-floppy and Angus McAllister liked them tight, and bitter warfare had
-resulted, in which, as we have seen, his lordship had been compelled to
-give way. He had been brooding on this defeat ever since, and in the
-florist opposite he saw a possible sympathiser, a potential ally, an
-intelligent chum with whom he could get together and thoroughly damn
-Angus McAllister’s Glaswegian obstinacy.
-
-You would not have suspected Lord Emsworth, from a casual glance, of
-having within him the ability to move rapidly; but it is a fact that
-he was out of the smoking-room and skimming down the front steps of
-the club before Mr. McTodd’s jaw, which had fallen at the spectacle of
-his host bounding out of his horizon of vision like a jack-rabbit, had
-time to hitch itself up again. A moment later, Mr. McTodd, happening
-to direct his gaze out of the window, saw him whiz across the road and
-vanish into the florist’s shop.
-
-It was at this juncture that Psmith, having finished his lunch,
-came downstairs to enjoy a quiet cup of coffee. The room was rather
-crowded, and the chair which Lord Emsworth had vacated offered a wide
-invitation. He made his way to it.
-
-“Is this chair occupied?” he inquired politely. So politely that Mr.
-McTodd’s reply sounded by contrast even more violent than it might
-otherwise have done.
-
-“No, it isn’t!” snapped Mr. McTodd.
-
-Psmith seated himself. He was feeling agreeably disposed to
-conversation.
-
-“Lord Emsworth has left you then?” he said.
-
-“Is he a friend of yours?” inquired Mr. McTodd in a voice that
-suggested that he was perfectly willing to accept a proxy as a target
-for his wrath.
-
-“I know him by sight. Nothing more.”
-
-“Blast him!” muttered Mr. McTodd with indescribable virulence.
-
-Psmith eyed him inquiringly.
-
-“Correct me if I am wrong,” he said, “but I seem to detect in your
-manner a certain half-veiled annoyance. Is anything the matter?”
-
-Mr. McTodd barked bitterly.
-
-“Oh, no. Nothing’s the matter. Nothing whatever, except that that old
-beaver--”--here he wronged Lord Emsworth, who, whatever his faults, was
-not a bearded man--“that old beaver invited me to lunch, talked all the
-time about his infernal flowers, never let me get a word in edgeways,
-hadn’t the common civility to offer me a cigar, and now has gone off
-without a word of apology and buried himself in that shop over the way.
-I’ve never been so insulted in my life!” raved Mr. McTodd.
-
-“Scarcely the perfect host,” admitted Psmith.
-
-“And if he thinks,” said Mr. McTodd, rising, “that I’m going to go and
-stay with him at his beastly castle after this, he’s mistaken. I’m
-supposed to go down there with him this evening. And perhaps the old
-fossil thinks I will! After this!” A horrid laugh rolled up from Mr.
-McTodd’s interior. “Likely! I see myself! After being insulted like
-this . . . Would _you_?” he demanded.
-
-Psmith gave the matter thought.
-
-“I am inclined to think no.”
-
-“And so am I damned well inclined to think no!” cried Mr. McTodd. “I’m
-going away now, this very minute. And if that old total loss ever comes
-back, you can tell him he’s seen the last of me.”
-
-And Ralston McTodd, his blood boiling with justifiable indignation and
-pique to a degree dangerous on such a warm day, stalked off towards
-the door with a hard, set face. Through the door he stalked to the
-cloak-room for his hat and cane; then, his lips moving silently, he
-stalked through the hall, stalked down the steps, and passed from the
-scene, stalking furiously round the corner in quest of a tobacconist’s.
-At the moment of his disappearance, the Earl of Emsworth had just
-begun to give the sympathetic florist a limpid character-sketch of
-Angus McAllister.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Psmith shook his head sadly. These clashings of human temperament were
-very lamentable. They disturbed the after-luncheon repose of the man of
-sensibility. He ordered coffee, and endeavoured to forget the painful
-scene by thinking of Eve Halliday.
-
-
-§ 5
-
-The florist who had settled down to ply his trade opposite the Senior
-Conservative Club was a delightful fellow, thoroughly sound on the
-hollyhock question and so informative in the matter of delphiniums,
-achilleas, coreopsis, eryngiums, geums, lupines, bergamot and early
-phloxes that Lord Emsworth gave himself up whole-heartedly to the feast
-of reason and the flow of soul; and it was only some fifteen minutes
-later that he remembered that he had left a guest languishing in the
-lower smoking-room and that this guest might be thinking him a trifle
-remiss in the observance of the sacred duties of hospitality.
-
-“Bless my soul, yes!” said his lordship, coming out from under the
-influence with a start.
-
-Even then he could not bring himself to dash abruptly from the shop.
-Twice he reached the door and twice pottered back to sniff at flowers
-and say something he had forgotten to mention about the Stronger
-Growing Clematis. Finally, however, with one last, longing, lingering
-look behind, he tore himself away and trotted back across the road.
-
-Arrived in the lower smoking-room, he stood in the doorway for a
-moment, peering. The place had been a blur to him when he had left it,
-but he remembered that he had been sitting in the middle window and,
-as there were only two seats by the window, that tall, dark young man
-in one of them must be the guest he had deserted. That he could be a
-changeling never occurred to Lord Emsworth. So pleasantly had the time
-passed in the shop across the way that he had the impression that he
-had only been gone a couple of minutes or so. He made his way to where
-the young man sat. A vague idea came into his head that the other had
-grown a bit in his absence, but it passed.
-
-“My dear fellow,” he said genially, as he slid into the other chair, “I
-really must apologise.”
-
-It was plain to Psmith that the other was under a misapprehension, and
-a really nice-minded young man would no doubt have put the matter right
-at once. The fact that it never for a single instant occurred to Psmith
-to do so was due, no doubt, to some innate defect in his character.
-He was essentially a young man who took life as it came, and the more
-inconsequently it came the better he liked it. Presently, he reflected,
-it would become necessary for him to make some excuse and steal quietly
-out of the other’s life; but meanwhile the situation seemed to him to
-present entertaining possibilities.
-
-“Not at all,” he replied graciously. “Not at all.”
-
-“I was afraid for a moment,” said Lord Emsworth, “that you might--quite
-naturally--be offended.”
-
-“Absurd!”
-
-“Shouldn’t have left you like that. Shocking bad manners. But, my dear
-fellow, I simply had to pop across the street.”
-
-“Most decidedly,” said Psmith. “Always pop across streets. It is the
-secret of a happy and successful life.”
-
-Lord Emsworth looked at him a little perplexedly, and wondered if he
-had caught the last remark correctly. But his mind had never been
-designed for the purpose of dwelling closely on problems for any
-length of time, and he let it go.
-
-“Beautiful roses that man has,” he observed. “Really an extraordinarily
-fine display.”
-
-“Indeed?” said Psmith.
-
-“Nothing to touch mine, though. I wish, my dear fellow, you could have
-been down at Blandings at the beginning of the month. My roses were at
-their best then. It’s too bad you weren’t there to see them.”
-
-“The fault no doubt was mine,” said Psmith.
-
-“Of course you weren’t in England then.”
-
-“Ah! That explains it.”
-
-“Still, I shall have plenty of flowers to show you when you are at
-Blandings. I expect,” said Lord Emsworth, at last showing a host-like
-disposition to give his guest a belated innings, “I expect you’ll write
-one of your poems about my gardens, eh?”
-
-Psmith was conscious of a feeling of distinct gratification. Weeks of
-toil among the herrings of Billingsgate had left him with a sort of
-haunting fear that even in private life there clung to him the miasma
-of the fish market. Yet here was a perfectly unprejudiced observer
-looking squarely at him and mistaking him for a poet--showing that in
-spite of all he had gone through there must still be something notably
-spiritual and unfishy about his outward appearance.
-
-“Very possibly,” he said. “Very possibly.”
-
-“I suppose you get ideas for your poetry from all sorts of things,”
-said Lord Emsworth, nobly resisting the temptation to collar the
-conversation again. He was feeling extremely friendly towards this poet
-fellow. It was deuced civil of him not to be put out and huffy at being
-left alone in the smoking-room.
-
-“From practically everything,” said Psmith, “except fish.”
-
-“Fish?”
-
-“I have never written a poem about fish.”
-
-“No?” said Lord Emsworth, again feeling that a pin had worked loose in
-the machinery of the conversation.
-
-“I was once offered a princely sum,” went on Psmith, now floating
-happily along on the tide of his native exuberance, “to write a ballad
-for the _Fishmonger’s Gazette_ entitled, ‘Herbert the Turbot.’ But I
-was firm. I declined.”
-
-“Indeed?” said Lord Emsworth.
-
-“One has one’s self-respect,” said Psmith.
-
-“Oh, decidedly,” said Lord Emsworth.
-
-“It was painful, of course. The editor broke down completely when he
-realised that my refusal was final. However, I sent him on with a
-letter of introduction to John Drinkwater, who, I believe, turned him
-out quite a good little effort on the theme.”
-
-At this moment, when Lord Emsworth was feeling a trifle dizzy, and
-Psmith, on whom conversation always acted as a mental stimulus, was on
-the point of plunging even deeper into the agreeable depths of light
-persiflage, a waiter approached.
-
-“A lady to see you, your lordship.”
-
-“Eh? Ah, yes, of course, of course. I was expecting her. It is a Miss
----- what is the name? Holliday? Halliday. It is a Miss Halliday,” he
-said in explanation to Psmith, “who is coming down to Blandings to
-catalogue the library. My secretary, Baxter, told her to call here and
-see me. If you will excuse me for a moment, my dear fellow?”
-
-“Certainly.”
-
-As Lord Emsworth disappeared, it occurred to Psmith that the moment
-had arrived for him to get his hat and steal softly out of the other’s
-life for ever. Only so could confusion and embarrassing explanations
-be avoided. And it was Psmith’s guiding rule in life always to avoid
-explanations. It might, he felt, cause Lord Emsworth a momentary
-pang when he returned to the smoking-room and found that he was a
-poet short, but what is that in these modern days when poets are so
-plentiful that it is almost impossible to fling a brick in any public
-place without damaging some stern young singer. Psmith’s view of the
-matter was that, if Lord Emsworth was bent on associating with poets,
-there was bound to be another one along in a minute. He was on the
-point, therefore, of rising, when the laziness induced by a good lunch
-decided him to remain in his comfortable chair for a few minutes
-longer. He was in one of those moods of rare tranquillity which it is
-rash to break.
-
-He lit another cigarette, and his thoughts, as they had done after the
-departure of Mr. McTodd, turned dreamily in the direction of the girl
-he had met at Miss Clarkson’s Employment Bureau. He mused upon her with
-a gentle melancholy. Sad, he felt, that two obviously kindred spirits
-like himself and her should meet in the whirl of London life, only
-to separate again--presumably for ever--simply because the etiquette
-governing those who are created male and female forbids a man to cement
-a chance acquaintanceship by ascertaining the lady’s name and address,
-asking her to lunch, and swearing eternal friendship. He sighed as he
-gazed thoughtfully out of the lower smoking-room window. As he had
-indicated in his conversation with Mr. Walderwick, those blue eyes and
-that cheerful, friendly face had made a deep impression on him. Who was
-she? Where did she live? And was he ever to see her again?
-
-He was. Even as he asked himself the question, two figures came down
-the steps of the club, and paused. One was Lord Emsworth, without his
-hat. The other--and Psmith’s usually orderly heart gave a spasmodic
-bound at the sight of her--was the very girl who was occupying
-his thoughts. There she stood, as blue-eyed, as fair-haired, as
-indescribably jolly and charming as ever.
-
-Psmith rose from his chair with a vehemence almost equal to that
-recently displayed by Mr. McTodd. It was his intention to add himself
-immediately to the group. He raced across the room in a manner that
-drew censorious glances from the local greybeards, many of whom had
-half a mind to write to the committee about it.
-
-But when he reached the open air the pavement at the foot of the club
-steps was empty. The girl was just vanishing round the corner into the
-Strand, and of Lord Emsworth there was no sign whatever.
-
-By this time, however, Psmith had acquired a useful working knowledge
-of his lordship’s habits, and he knew where to look. He crossed the
-street and headed for the florist’s shop.
-
-“Ah, my dear fellow,” said his lordship amiably, suspending his
-conversation with the proprietor on the subject of delphiniums, “must
-you be off? Don’t forget that our train leaves Paddington at five
-sharp. You take your ticket for Market Blandings.”
-
-Psmith had come into the shop merely with the intention of asking his
-lordship if he happened to know Miss Halliday’s address, but these
-words opened out such a vista of attractive possibilities that he had
-abandoned this tame programme immediately. He remembered now that among
-Mr. McTodd’s remarks on things in general had been one to the effect
-that he had received an invitation to visit Blandings Castle--of which
-invitation he did not propose to avail himself; and he argued that if
-he had acted as substitute for Mr. McTodd at the club, he might well
-continue the kindly work by officiating for him at Blandings. Looking
-at the matter altruistically, he would prevent his kind host much
-disappointment by taking this course; and, looking at it from a more
-personal viewpoint, only by going to Blandings could he renew his
-acquaintance with this girl. Psmith had never been one of those who
-hang back diffidently when Adventure calls, and he did not hang back
-now.
-
-“At five sharp,” he said. “I will be there.”
-
-“Capital, my dear fellow,” said his lordship.
-
-“Does Miss Halliday travel with us?”
-
-“Eh? No, she is coming down in a day or two.”
-
-“I shall look forward to meeting her,” said Psmith. He turned to the
-door, and Lord Emsworth with a farewell beam resumed his conversation
-with the florist.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-BAXTER SUSPECTS
-
-
-§ 1
-
-The five o’clock train, having given itself a spasmodic jerk, began to
-move slowly out of Paddington Station. The platform past which it was
-gliding was crowded with a number of the fauna always to be seen at
-railway stations at such moments, but in their ranks there was no sign
-of Mr. Ralston McTodd: and Psmith, as he sat opposite Lord Emsworth
-in a corner seat of a first-class compartment, felt that genial glow
-of satisfaction which comes to the man who has successfully taken a
-chance. Until now, he had been half afraid that McTodd, having changed
-his mind, might suddenly appear with bag and baggage--an event which
-must necessarily have caused confusion and discomfort. His mind was
-now tranquil. Concerning the future he declined to worry. It would, no
-doubt, contain its little difficulties, but he was prepared to meet
-them in the right spirit; and his only trouble in the world now was the
-difficulty he was experiencing in avoiding his lordship’s legs, which
-showed a disposition to pervade the compartment like the tentacles
-of an octopus. Lord Emsworth rather ran to leg, and his practice of
-reclining when at ease on the base of his spine was causing him to
-straddle, like Apollyon in Pilgrim’s Progress, “right across the way.”
-It became manifest that in a journey lasting several hours his society
-was likely to prove irksome. For the time being, however, he endured
-it, and listened with polite attention to his host’s remarks on the
-subject of the Blandings gardens. Lord Emsworth, in a train moving
-in the direction of home, was behaving like a horse heading for his
-stable. He snorted eagerly, and spoke at length and with emotion of
-roses and herbaceous borders.
-
-“It will be dark, I suppose, by the time we arrive,” he said
-regretfully, “but the first thing to-morrow, my dear fellow, I must
-take you round and show you my gardens.”
-
-“I shall look forward to it keenly,” said Psmith. “They are, I can
-readily imagine, distinctly oojah-cum-spiff.”
-
-“I beg your pardon?” said Lord Emsworth with a start.
-
-“Not at all,” said Psmith graciously.
-
-“Er--what did you say?” asked his lordship after a slight pause.
-
-“I was saying that, from all reports, you must have a very nifty
-display of garden-produce at your rural seat.”
-
-“Oh, yes. Oh, most,” said his lordship, looking puzzled. He examined
-Psmith across the compartment with something of the peering curiosity
-which he would have bestowed upon a new and unclassified shrub. “Most
-extraordinary!” he murmured. “I trust, my dear fellow, you will not
-think me personal, but, do you know, nobody would imagine that you were
-a poet. You don’t look like a poet, and, dash it, you don’t talk like a
-poet.”
-
-“How should a poet talk?”
-
-“Well . . .” Lord Emsworth considered the point. “Well, Miss
-Peavey . . . But of course you don’t know Miss Peavey . . . Miss Peavey
-is a poetess, and she waylaid me the other morning while I was having
-a most important conference with McAllister on the subject of bulbs and
-asked me if I didn’t think that it was fairies’ tear-drops that made
-the dew. Did you ever hear such dashed nonsense?”
-
-“Evidently an aggravated case. Is Miss Peavey staying at the castle?”
-
-“My dear fellow, you couldn’t shift her with blasting-powder. Really
-this craze of my sister Constance for filling the house with these
-infernal literary people is getting on my nerves. I can’t stand these
-poets and what not. Never could.”
-
-“We must always remember, however,” said Psmith gravely, “that poets
-are also God’s creatures.”
-
-“Good heavens!” exclaimed his lordship, aghast. “I had forgotten that
-you were one. What will you think of me, my dear fellow! But, of
-course, as I said a moment ago, you are different. I admit that when
-Constance told me that she had invited you to the house I was not
-cheered, but, now that I have had the pleasure of meeting you . . .”
-
-The conversation had worked round to the very point to which Psmith
-had been wishing to direct it. He was keenly desirous of finding out
-why Mr. McTodd had been invited to Blandings and--a still more vital
-matter--of ascertaining whether, on his arrival there as Mr. McTodd’s
-understudy, he was going to meet people who knew the poet by sight. On
-this latter point, it seemed to him, hung the question of whether he
-was about to enjoy a delightful visit to a historic country house in
-the society of Eve Halliday--or leave the train at the next stop and
-omit to return to it.
-
-“It was extremely kind of Lady Constance,” he hazarded, “to invite a
-perfect stranger to Blandings.”
-
-“Oh, she’s always doing that sort of thing,” said his lordship. “It
-didn’t matter to her that she’d never seen you in her life. She had
-read your books, you know, and liked them: and when she heard that you
-were coming to England, she wrote to you.”
-
-“I see,” said Psmith, relieved.
-
-“Of course, it is all right as it has turned out,” said Lord Emsworth
-handsomely. “As I say, you’re different. And how you came to write
-that . . . that . . .”
-
-“Bilge?” suggested Psmith.
-
-“The very word I was about to employ, my dear fellow . . . No, no,
-I don’t mean that . . . I--I . . . Capital stuff, no doubt, capital
-stuff . . . but . . .”
-
-“I understand.”
-
-“Constance tried to make me read the things, but I couldn’t. I fell
-asleep over them.”
-
-“I hope you rested well.”
-
-“I--er--the fact is, I suppose they were beyond me. I couldn’t see any
-sense in the things.”
-
-“If you would care to have another pop at them,” said Psmith agreeably,
-“I have a complete set in my bag.”
-
-“No, no, my dear fellow, thank you very much, thank you a thousand
-times. I--er--find that reading in the train tries my eyes.”
-
-“Ah! You would prefer that I read them aloud?”
-
-“No, no.” A look of hunted alarm came into his lordship’s speaking
-countenance at the suggestion. “As a matter of fact, I generally take a
-short nap at the beginning of a railway journey. I find it refreshing
-and--er--in short, refreshing. You will excuse me?”
-
-“If you think you can get to sleep all right without the aid of my
-poems, certainly.”
-
-“You won’t think me rude?”
-
-“Not at all, not at all. By the way, am I likely to meet any old
-friends at Blandings?”
-
-“Eh? Oh no. There will be nobody but ourselves. Except my sister and
-Miss Peavey, of course. You said you had not met Miss Peavey, I think?”
-
-“I have not had that pleasure. I am, of course, looking forward to it
-with the utmost keenness.”
-
-Lord Emsworth eyed him for a moment, astonished: then concluded the
-conversation by closing his eyes defensively. Psmith was left to his
-reflections, which a few minutes later were interrupted by a smart kick
-on the shin, as Lord Emsworth, a jumpy sleeper, began to throw his long
-legs about. Psmith moved to the other end of the seat, and, taking his
-bag down from the rack, extracted a slim volume bound in squashy mauve.
-After gazing at this in an unfriendly manner for a moment, he opened it
-at random and began to read. His first move on leaving Lord Emsworth
-at the florist’s had been to spend a portion of his slender capital on
-the works of Ralston McTodd in order not to be taken at a disadvantage
-in the event of questions about them at Blandings: but he speedily
-realised, as he dipped into the poems, that anything in the nature of
-a prolonged study of them was likely to spoil his little holiday. They
-were not light summer reading.
-
- “_Across the pale parabola of Joy_ . . .”
-
-A gurgling snort from the other end of the compartment abruptly
-detached his mind from its struggle with this mystic line. He perceived
-that his host had slipped even further down on to his spine and was now
-lying with open mouth in an attitude suggestive of dislocation. And as
-he looked, there was a whistling sound, and another snore proceeded
-from the back of his lordship’s throat.
-
-Psmith rose and took his book of poems out into the corridor with
-the purpose of roaming along the train until he should find an empty
-compartment in which to read in peace.
-
-With the two adjoining compartments he had no luck. One was occupied by
-an elderly man with a retriever, while the presence of a baby in the
-other ruled it out of consideration. The third, however, looked more
-promising. It was not actually empty, but there was only one occupant,
-and he was asleep. He was lying back in the far corner with a large
-silk handkerchief draped over his face and his feet propped up on the
-seat opposite. His society did not seem likely to act as a bar to the
-study of Mr. McTodd’s masterpieces. Psmith sat down and resumed his
-reading.
-
- “_Across the pale parabola of Joy_ . . .”
-
-Psmith knitted his brow. It was just the sort of line which was likely
-to have puzzled his patroness, Lady Constance, and he anticipated that
-she would come to him directly he arrived and ask for an explanation.
-It would obviously be a poor start for his visit to confess that he had
-no theory as to its meaning himself. He tried it again.
-
- “_Across the pale parabola of Joy_ . . .”
-
-A sound like two or three pigs feeding rather noisily in the middle of
-a thunderstorm interrupted his meditations. Psmith laid his book down
-and gazed in a pained way across the compartment. There came to him a
-sense of being unfairly put upon, as towards the end of his troubles
-it might have come upon Job. This, he felt, was too much. He was being
-harried.
-
-The man in the corner went on snoring.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is always a way. Almost immediately Psmith saw what Napoleon
-would have done in this crisis. On the seat beside the sleeper was
-lying a compact little suit-case with hard, sharp edges. Rising softly,
-Psmith edged along the compartment and secured this. Then, having
-balanced it carefully on the rack above the sleeper’s stomach, he
-returned to his seat to await developments.
-
-These were not long in coming. The train, now flying at its best speed
-through open country, was shaking itself at intervals in a vigorous
-way as it raced along. A few seconds later it apparently passed over
-some points, and shivered briskly down its whole length. The suit-case
-wobbled insecurely, hesitated, and fell chunkily in the exact middle
-of its owner’s waistcoat. There was a smothered gulp beneath the
-handkerchief. The sleeper sat up with a jerk. The handkerchief fell
-off. And there was revealed to Psmith’s interested gaze the face of the
-Hon. Freddie Threepwood.
-
-
-§ 2
-
-“Goo!” observed Freddie. He removed the bag from his midriff and began
-to massage the stricken spot. Then suddenly perceiving that he was not
-alone he looked up and saw Psmith.
-
-“Goo!” said Freddie, and sat staring wildly.
-
-Nobody is more alive than we are to the fact that the dialogue of
-Frederick Threepwood, recorded above, is not bright. Nevertheless,
-those were his opening remarks, and the excuse must be that he had
-passed through a trying time and had just received two shocks, one
-after the other. From the first of these, the physical impact of the
-suit-case, he was recovering; but the second had simply paralysed him.
-When, the mists of sleep having cleared away, he saw sitting but a few
-feet away from him on the train that was carrying him home the very man
-with whom he had plotted in the lobby of the Piccadilly Palace Hotel, a
-cold fear gripped Freddie’s very vitals.
-
-Freddie’s troubles had begun when he just missed the twelve-fifty
-train. This disaster had perturbed him greatly, for he could not
-forget his father’s stern injunctions on the subject. But what had
-really upset him was the fact that he had come within an ace of
-missing the five o’clock train as well. He had spent the afternoon in
-a motion-picture palace, and the fascination of the film had caused
-him to lose all sense of time, so that only the slow fade-out on the
-embrace and the words “The End” reminded him to look at his watch. A
-mad rush had got him to Paddington just as the five o’clock express was
-leaving the station. Exhausted, he had fallen into a troubled sleep,
-from which he had been aroused by a violent blow in the waistcoat and
-the nightmare vision of Psmith in the seat across the compartment. One
-cannot wonder in these circumstances that Freddie did not immediately
-soar to the heights of eloquence.
-
-The picture which the Hon. Frederick Threepwood had selected for his
-patronage that afternoon was the well-known super-super-film, “Fangs Of
-The Past,” featuring Bertha Blevitch and Maurice Heddlestone--which,
-as everybody knows, is all about blackmail. Green-walled by primeval
-hills, bathed in the golden sunshine of peace and happiness, the
-village of Honeydean slumbered in the clear morning air. But off
-the train from the city stepped A Stranger--(The Stranger--Maxwell
-Bannister). He inquired of a passing rustic--(The Passing
-Rustic--Claude Hepworth)--the way to the great house where Myrtle Dale,
-the Lady Bountiful of the village . . . well, anyway, it is all about
-blackmail, and it had affected Freddie profoundly. It still coloured
-his imagination, and the conclusion to which he came the moment he saw
-Psmith was that the latter had shadowed him and was following him home
-with the purpose of extracting hush-money.
-
-While he was still gurgling wordlessly, Psmith opened the conversation.
-
-“A delightful and unexpected pleasure, comrade. I thought you had left
-the Metropolis some hours since.”
-
-As Freddie sat looking like a cornered dormouse a voice from the
-corridor spoke.
-
-“Ah, there you are, my dear fellow!”
-
-Lord Emsworth was beaming in the doorway. His slumbers, like those of
-Freddie, had not lasted long. He had been aroused only a few minutes
-after Psmith’s departure by the arrival of the retriever from the next
-compartment, which, bored by the society of its owner, had strolled off
-on a tour of investigation and, finding next door an old acquaintance
-in the person of his lordship, had jumped on the seat and licked his
-face with such hearty good will that further sleep was out of the
-question. Being awake, Lord Emsworth, as always when he was awake, had
-begun to potter.
-
-When he saw Freddie his amiability suffered a shock.
-
-“Frederick! I thought I told you to be sure to return on the
-twelve-fifty train!”
-
-“Missed it, guv’nor,” mumbled Freddie thickly. “Not my fault.”
-
-“H’mph!” His father seemed about to pursue the subject, but the fact
-that a stranger and one who was his guest was present apparently
-decided him to avoid anything in the shape of family wrangles. He
-peered from Freddie to Psmith and back again. “Do you two know each
-other?” he said.
-
-“Not yet,” said Psmith. “We only met a moment ago.”
-
-“My son Frederick,” said Lord Emsworth, rather in the voice with which
-he would have called attention to the presence of a slug among his
-flowers. “Frederick, this is Mr. McTodd, the poet, who is coming to
-stay at Blandings.”
-
-Freddie started, and his mouth opened. But, meeting Psmith’s friendly
-gaze, he closed the orifice again without speaking. He licked his lips
-in an overwrought way.
-
-“You’ll find me next door, if you want me,” said Lord Emsworth to
-Psmith. “Just discovered that George Willard, very old friend of mine,
-is in there. Never saw him get on the train. His dog came into my
-compartment and licked my face. One of my neighbours. A remarkable
-rose-grower. As you are so interested in flowers, I will take you over
-to his place some time. Why don’t you join us now?”
-
-“I would prefer, if you do not mind,” said Psmith, “to remain here for
-the moment and foster what I feel sure is about to develop into a great
-and lasting friendship. I am convinced that your son and I will have
-much to talk about together.”
-
-“Very well, my dear fellow. We will meet at dinner in the
-restaurant-car.”
-
-Lord Emsworth pottered off, and Psmith rose and closed the door. He
-returned to his seat to find Freddie regarding him with a tortured
-expression in his rather prominent eyes. Freddie’s brain had had more
-exercise in the last few minutes than in years of his normal life, and
-he was feeling the strain.
-
-“I say, what?” he observed feebly.
-
-“If there is anything,” said Psmith kindly, “that I can do to clear
-up any little difficulty that is perplexing you, call on me. What is
-biting you?”
-
-Freddie swallowed convulsively.
-
-“I say, he said your name was McTodd!”
-
-“Precisely.”
-
-“But you said it was Psmith.”
-
-“It is.”
-
-“Then why did father call you McTodd?”
-
-“He thinks I am. It is a harmless error, and I see no reason why it
-should be discouraged.”
-
-“But why does he think you’re McTodd?”
-
-“It is a long story, which you may find tedious. But, if you really
-wish to hear it . . .”
-
-Nothing could have exceeded the raptness of Freddie’s attention as he
-listened to the tale of the encounter with Lord Emsworth at the Senior
-Conservative Club.
-
-“Do you mean to say,” he demanded at its conclusion, “that you’re
-coming to Blandings pretending to be this poet blighter?”
-
-“That is the scheme.”
-
-“But why?”
-
-“I have my reasons, Comrade--what is the name? Threepwood? I thank
-you. You will pardon me, Comrade Threepwood, if I do not go into them.
-And now,” said Psmith, “to resume our very interesting chat which was
-unfortunately cut short this morning, why do you want me to steal your
-aunt’s necklace?”
-
-Freddie jumped. For the moment, so tensely had the fact of his
-companion’s audacity chained his interest, he had actually forgotten
-about the necklace.
-
-“Great Scott!” he exclaimed. “Why, of course!”
-
-“You still have not made it quite clear.”
-
-“It fits splendidly.”
-
-“The necklace?”
-
-“I mean to say, the great difficulty would have been to find a way of
-getting you into the house, and here you are, coming there as this poet
-bird. Topping!”
-
-“If,” said Psmith, regarding him patiently through his eyeglass, “I do
-not seem to be immediately infected by your joyous enthusiasm, put it
-down to the fact that I haven’t the remotest idea what you’re talking
-about. Could you give me a pointer or two? What, for instance, assuming
-that I agreed to steal your aunt’s necklace, would you expect me to do
-with it, when and if stolen?”
-
-“Why, hand it over to me.”
-
-“I see. And what would you do with it?”
-
-“Hand it over to my uncle.”
-
-“And whom would he hand it over to?”
-
-“Look here,” said Freddie, “I might as well start at the beginning.”
-
-“An excellent idea.”
-
-The speed at which the train was now proceeding had begun to render
-conversation in anything but stentorian tones somewhat difficult.
-Freddie accordingly bent forward till his mouth almost touched Psmith’s
-ear.
-
-“You see, it’s like this. My uncle, old Joe Keeble . . .”
-
-“Keeble?” said Psmith. “Why,” he murmured meditatively, “is that name
-familiar?”
-
-“Don’t interrupt, old lad,” pleaded Freddie.
-
-“I stand corrected.”
-
-“Uncle Joe has a stepdaughter--Phyllis her name is--and some time ago
-she popped off and married a cove called Jackson . . .”
-
-Psmith did not interrupt the narrative again, but as it proceeded
-his look of interest deepened. And at the conclusion he patted his
-companion encouragingly on the shoulder.
-
-“The proceeds, then, of this jewel-robbery, if it comes off,” he said,
-“will go to establish the Jackson home on a firm footing? Am I right in
-thinking that?”
-
-“Absolutely.”
-
-“There is no danger--you will pardon the suggestion--of you clinging
-like glue to the swag and using it to maintain yourself in the position
-to which you are accustomed?”
-
-“Absolutely not. Uncle Joe is giving me--er--giving me a bit for
-myself. Just a small bit, you understand. This is the scheme. You sneak
-the necklace and hand it over to me. I push the necklace over to Uncle
-Joe, who hides it somewhere for the moment. There is the dickens of a
-fuss, and Uncle Joe comes out strong by telling Aunt Constance that
-he’ll buy her another necklace, just as good. Then he takes the stones
-out of the necklace, has them reset, and gives them to Aunt Constance.
-Looks like a new necklace, if you see what I mean. Then he draws a
-cheque for twenty thousand quid, which Aunt Constance naturally thinks
-is for the new necklace, and he shoves the money somewhere as a little
-private account. He gives Phyllis her money, and everybody’s happy.
-Aunt Constance has got her necklace, Phyllis has got her money, and all
-that’s happened is that Aunt Constance’s and Uncle Joe’s combined bank
-balance has had a bit of a hole knocked in it. See?”
-
-“I see. It is a little difficult to follow all the necklaces. I seemed
-to count about seventeen of them while you were talking, but I suppose
-I was wrong. Yes, I see, Comrade Threepwood, and I may say at once that
-you can rely on my co-operation.”
-
-“You’ll do it?”
-
-“I will.”
-
-“Of course,” said Freddie awkwardly, “I’ll see that you get a bit all
-right. I mean . . .”
-
-Psmith waved his hand deprecatingly.
-
-“My dear Comrade Threepwood, let us not become sordid on this glad
-occasion. As far as I am concerned, there will be no charge.”
-
-“What! But look here . . .”
-
-“Any assistance I can give will be offered in a purely amateur spirit.
-I would have mentioned before, only I was reluctant to interrupt you,
-that Comrade Jackson is my boyhood chum, and that Phyllis, his wife,
-injects into my life the few beams of sunshine that illumine its dreary
-round. I have long desired to do something to ameliorate their lot,
-and now that the chance has come I am delighted. It is true that I am
-not a man of affluence--my bank-manager, I am told, winces in a rather
-painful manner whenever my name is mentioned--but I am not so reduced
-that I must charge a fee for performing, on behalf of a pal, a simple
-act of courtesy like pinching a twenty thousand pound necklace.”
-
-“Good Lord! Fancy that!”
-
-“Fancy what, Comrade Threepwood?”
-
-“Fancy your knowing Phyllis and her husband.”
-
-“It is odd, no doubt. But true. Many a whack at the cold beef have I
-had on Sunday evenings under their roof, and I am much obliged to you
-for putting in my way this opportunity of repaying their hospitality.
-Thank you!”
-
-“Oh, that’s all right,” said Freddie, somewhat bewildered by this
-eloquence.
-
-“Even if the little enterprise meets with disaster, the reflection that
-I did my best for the young couple will be a great consolation to me
-when I am serving my bit of time in Wormwood Scrubbs. It will cheer me
-up. The jailers will cluster outside the door to listen to me singing
-in my cell. My pet rat, as he creeps out to share the crumbs of my
-breakfast, will wonder why I whistle as I pick the morning’s oakum.
-I shall join in the hymns on Sundays in a way that will electrify
-the chaplain. That is to say, if anything goes wrong and I am what
-I believe is technically termed ‘copped.’ I say ‘if,’” said Psmith,
-gazing solemnly at his companion. “But I do not intend to be copped. I
-have never gone in largely for crime hitherto, but something tells me
-I shall be rather good at it. I look forward confidently to making a
-nice, clean job of the thing. And now, Comrade Threepwood, I must ask
-you to excuse me while I get the half-nelson on this rather poisonous
-poetry of good old McTodd’s. From the cursory glance I have taken at
-it, the stuff doesn’t seem to mean anything. I think the boy’s _non
-compos_. _You_ don’t happen to understand the expression ‘Across the
-pale parabola of Joy,’ do you? . . . I feared as much. Well, pip-pip
-for the present, Comrade Threepwood. I shall now ask you to retire
-into your corner and amuse yourself for awhile as you best can. I must
-concentrate, concentrate.”
-
-And Psmith, having put his feet up on the opposite seat and reopened
-the mauve volume, began to read. Freddie, his mind still in a whirl,
-looked out of the window at the passing scenery in a mood which was a
-nice blend of elation and apprehension.
-
-
-§ 3
-
-Although the hands of the station clock pointed to several minutes past
-nine, it was still apparently early evening when the train drew up
-at the platform of Market Blandings and discharged its distinguished
-passengers. The sun, taken in as usual by the never-failing practical
-joke of the Daylight Saving Act, had only just set, and a golden
-afterglow lingered on the fields as the car which had met the train
-purred over the two miles of country road that separated the little
-town from the castle. As they passed in between the great stone
-gate-posts and shot up the winding drive, the soft murmur of the
-engines seemed to deepen rather than break the soothing stillness.
-The air was fragrant with indescribable English scents. Somewhere
-in the distance sheep-bells tinkled; rabbits, waggling white tails,
-bolted across the path; and once a herd of agitated deer made a brief
-appearance among the trees. The only thing that disturbed the magic
-hush was the fluting voice of Lord Emsworth, on whom the spectacle of
-his beloved property had acted as an immediate stimulant. Unlike his
-son Freddie, who sat silent in his corner wrestling with his hopes
-and fears, Lord Emsworth had plunged into a perfect Niagara of speech
-the moment the car entered the park. In a high tenor voice, and with
-wide, excited gestures, he pointed out to Psmith oaks with a history
-and rhododendrons with a past: his conversation as they drew near the
-castle and came in sight of the flower-beds taking on an almost lyrical
-note and becoming a sort of anthem of gladness, through which, like
-some theme in the minor, ran a series of opprobrious observations on
-the subject of Angus McAllister.
-
-Beach, the butler, solicitously scooping them out of the car at the
-front door, announced that her ladyship and Miss Peavey were taking
-their after-dinner coffee in the arbour by the bowling-green; and
-presently Psmith, conducted by his lordship, found himself shaking
-hands with a strikingly handsome woman in whom, though her manner
-was friendliness itself, he could detect a marked suggestion of the
-formidable. Æsthetically, he admired Lady Constance’s appearance, but
-he could not conceal from himself that in the peculiar circumstances
-he would have preferred something rather more fragile and drooping.
-Lady Constance conveyed the impression that anybody who had the choice
-between stealing anything from her and stirring up a nest of hornets
-with a short walking-stick would do well to choose the hornets.
-
-“How do you do, Mr. McTodd?” said Lady Constance with great amiability.
-“I am so glad you were able to come after all.”
-
-Psmith wondered what she meant by “after all,” but there were so many
-things about his present situation calculated to tax the mind that he
-had no desire to probe slight verbal ambiguities. He shook her hand and
-replied that it was very kind of her to say so.
-
-“We are quite a small party at present,” continued Lady Constance, “but
-we are expecting a number of people quite soon. For the moment Aileen
-and you are our only guests. Oh, I am sorry, I should have . . . Miss
-Peavey, Mr. McTodd.”
-
-The slim and willowy female who during this brief conversation had been
-waiting in an attitude of suspended animation, gazing at Psmith with
-large, wistful eyes, stepped forward. She clasped Psmith’s hand in
-hers, held it, and in a low, soft voice, like thick cream made audible,
-uttered one reverent word.
-
-“_Maître!_”
-
-“I beg your pardon?” said Psmith. A young man capable of bearing
-himself with calm and dignity in most circumstances, however trying, he
-found his poise wobbling under the impact of Miss Aileen Peavey.
-
-Miss Peavey often had this effect on the less soulful type of man,
-especially in the mornings, when such men are not at their strongest
-and best. When she came into the breakfast-room of a country house,
-brave men who had been up a bit late the night before quailed and tried
-to hide behind newspapers. She was the sort of woman who tells a man
-who is propping his eyes open with his fingers and endeavouring to
-correct a headache with strong tea, that she was up at six watching the
-dew fade off the grass, and didn’t he think that those wisps of morning
-mist were the elves’ bridal-veils. She had large, fine, melancholy
-eyes, and was apt to droop dreamily.
-
-“Master!” said Miss Peavey, obligingly translating.
-
-There did not seem to be any immediate come-back to a remark like this,
-so Psmith contented himself with beaming genially at her through his
-monocle: and Miss Peavey came to bat again.
-
-“How wonderful that you were able to come--after all!”
-
-Again this “after all” motive creeping into the theme. . . .
-
-“You know Miss Peavey’s work, of course?” said Lady Constance, smiling
-pleasantly on her two celebrities.
-
-“Who does not?” said Psmith courteously.
-
-“Oh, _do_ you?” said Miss Peavey, gratification causing her slender
-body to perform a sort of ladylike shimmy down its whole length. “I
-scarcely hoped that you would know my name. My Canadian sales have not
-been large.”
-
-“Quite large enough,” said Psmith. “I mean, of course,” he added with a
-paternal smile, “that, while your delicate art may not have a universal
-appeal in a young country, it is intensely appreciated by a small and
-select body of the intelligentsia.”
-
-And if that was not the stuff to give them, he reflected with not a
-little complacency, he was dashed.
-
-“Your own wonderful poems,” replied Miss Peavey, “are, of course, known
-the whole world over. Oh, Mr. McTodd, you can hardly appreciate how I
-feel, meeting you. It is like the realisation of some golden dream of
-childhood. It is like . . .”
-
-Here the Hon. Freddie Threepwood remarked suddenly that he was going
-to pop into the house for a whisky and soda. As he had not previously
-spoken, his observation had something of the effect of a voice from
-the tomb. The daylight was ebbing fast now, and in the shadows he had
-contrived to pass out of sight as well as out of mind. Miss Peavey
-started like an abruptly awakened somnambulist, and Psmith was at last
-able to release his hand, which he had begun to look on as gone beyond
-his control for ever. Until this fortunate interruption there had
-seemed no reason why Miss Peavey should not have continued to hold it
-till bedtime.
-
-Freddie’s departure had the effect of breaking a spell. Lord Emsworth,
-who had been standing perfectly still with vacant eyes, like a dog
-listening to a noise a long way off, came to life with a jerk.
-
-“I’m going to have a look at my flowers,” he announced.
-
-“Don’t be silly, Clarence,” said his sister. “It’s much too dark to see
-flowers.”
-
-“I could smell ’em,” retorted his lordship argumentatively.
-
-It seemed as if the party must break up, for already his lordship had
-begun to potter off, when a new-comer arrived to solidify it again.
-
-“Ah, Baxter, my dear fellow,” said Lord Emsworth. “Here we are, you
-see.”
-
-“Mr. Baxter,” said Lady Constance, “I want you to meet Mr. McTodd.”
-
-“Mr. McTodd!” said the new arrival, on a note of surprise.
-
-“Yes, he found himself able to come after all.”
-
-“Ah!” said the Efficient Baxter.
-
-It occurred to Psmith as a passing thought, to which he gave no more
-than a momentary attention, that this spectacled and capable-looking
-man was gazing at him, as they shook hands, with a curious intensity.
-But possibly, he reflected, this was merely a species of optical
-illusion due to the other’s spectacles. Baxter, staring through his
-spectacles, often gave people the impression of possessing an eye that
-could pierce six inches of harveyised steel and stick out on the other
-side. Having registered in his consciousness the fact that he had been
-stared at keenly by this stranger, Psmith thought no more of the matter.
-
-In thus lightly dismissing the Baxterian stare, Psmith had acted
-injudiciously. He should have examined it more closely and made
-an effort to analyse it, for it was by no means without its
-message. It was a stare of suspicion. Vague suspicion as yet, but
-nevertheless suspicion. Rupert Baxter was one of those men whose chief
-characteristic is a disposition to suspect their fellows. He did not
-suspect them of this or that definite crime: he simply suspected them.
-He had not yet definitely accused Psmith in his mind of any specific
-tort or malfeasance. He merely had a nebulous feeling that he would
-bear watching.
-
-Miss Peavey now fluttered again into the centre of things. On the
-arrival of Baxter she had withdrawn for a moment into the background,
-but she was not the woman to stay there long. She came forward holding
-out a small oblong book, which, with a languishing firmness, she
-pressed into Psmith’s hands.
-
-“Could I persuade you, Mr. McTodd,” said Miss Peavey pleadingly, “to
-write some little thought in my autograph-book and sign it? I have a
-fountain-pen.”
-
-Light flooded the arbour. The Efficient Baxter, who knew where
-everything was, had found and pressed the switch. He did this not so
-much to oblige Miss Peavey as to enable him to obtain a clearer view
-of the visitor. With each minute that passed the Efficient Baxter was
-finding himself more and more doubtful in his mind about this visitor.
-
-“There!” said Miss Peavey, welcoming the illumination.
-
-Psmith tapped his chin thoughtfully with the fountain-pen. He felt
-that he should have foreseen this emergency earlier. If ever there was
-a woman who was bound to have an autograph-book, that woman was Miss
-Peavey.
-
-“Just some little thought . . .”
-
-Psmith hesitated no longer. In a firm hand he wrote the words “Across
-the pale parabola of Joy . . .” added an unfaltering “Ralston McTodd,”
-and handed the book back.
-
-“How strange,” sighed Miss Peavey.
-
-“May I look?” said Baxter, moving quickly to her side.
-
-“How strange!” repeated Miss Peavey. “To think that you should have
-chosen that line! There are several of your more mystic passages that I
-meant to ask you to explain, but particularly ‘Across the pale parabola
-of Joy’ . . .”
-
-“You find it difficult to understand?”
-
-“A little, I confess.”
-
-“Well, well,” said Psmith indulgently, “perhaps I did put a bit of
-top-spin on that one.”
-
-“I beg your pardon?”
-
-“I say, perhaps it is a little obscure. We must have a long chat about
-it--later on.”
-
-“Why not now?” demanded the Efficient Baxter, flashing his spectacles.
-
-“I am rather tired,” said Psmith with gentle reproach, “after my
-journey. Fatigued. We artists . . .”
-
-“Of course,” said Miss Peavey, with an indignant glance at the
-secretary. “Mr. Baxter does not understand the sensitive poetic
-temperament.”
-
-“A bit unspiritual, eh?” said Psmith tolerantly. “A trifle earthy? So
-I thought, so I thought. One of these strong, hard men of affairs, I
-shouldn’t wonder.”
-
-“Shall we go and find Lord Emsworth, Mr. McTodd?” said Miss Peavey,
-dismissing the fermenting Baxter with a scornful look. “He wandered off
-just now. I suppose he is among his flowers. Flowers are very beautiful
-by night.”
-
-“Indeed, yes,” said Psmith. “And also by day. When I am surrounded by
-flowers, a sort of divine peace floods over me, and the rough, harsh
-world seems far away. I feel soothed, tranquil. I sometimes think, Miss
-Peavey, that flowers must be the souls of little children who have died
-in their innocence.”
-
-“What a beautiful thought, Mr. McTodd!” exclaimed Miss Peavey
-rapturously.
-
-“Yes,” agreed Psmith. “Don’t pinch it. It’s copyright.”
-
-The darkness swallowed them up. Lady Constance turned to the Efficient
-Baxter, who was brooding with furrowed brow.
-
-“Charming, is he not?”
-
-“I beg your pardon?”
-
-“I said I thought Mr. McTodd was charming.”
-
-“Oh, quite.”
-
-“Completely unspoiled.”
-
-“Oh, decidedly.”
-
-“I am so glad that he was able to come after all. That telegram he sent
-this afternoon cancelling his visit seemed so curt and final.”
-
-“So I thought it.”
-
-“Almost as if he had taken offence at something and decided to have
-nothing to do with us.”
-
-“Quite.”
-
-Lady Constance shivered delicately. A cool breeze had sprung up. She
-drew her wrap more closely about her shapely shoulders, and began to
-walk to the house. Baxter did not accompany her. The moment she had
-gone he switched off the light and sat down, chin in hand. That massive
-brain was working hard.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-CONFIDENCES ON THE LAKE
-
-
-§ 1
-
-“Miss Halliday,” announced the Efficient Baxter, removing another
-letter from its envelope and submitting it to a swift, keen scrutiny,
-“arrives at about three to-day. She is catching the twelve-fifty train.”
-
-He placed the letter on the pile beside his plate; and, having
-decapitated an egg, peered sharply into its interior as if hoping
-to surprise guilty secrets. For it was the breakfast hour, and the
-members of the house party, scattered up and down the long table, were
-fortifying their tissues against another day. An agreeable scent of
-bacon floated over the scene like a benediction.
-
-Lord Emsworth looked up from the seed catalogue in which he was
-immersed. For some time past his enjoyment of the meal had been marred
-by a vague sense of something missing, and now he knew what it was.
-
-“Coffee!” he said, not violently, but in the voice of a good man
-oppressed. “I want coffee. Why have I no coffee? Constance, my dear, I
-should have coffee. Why have I none?”
-
-“I’m sure I gave you some,” said Lady Constance, brightly presiding
-over the beverages at the other end of the table.
-
-“Then where is it?” demanded his lordship clinchingly.
-
-Baxter--almost regretfully, it seemed--gave the egg a clean bill of
-health, and turned in his able way to cope with this domestic problem.
-
-“Your coffee is behind the catalogue you are reading, Lord Emsworth.
-You propped the catalogue against your cup.”
-
-“Did I? Did I? Why, so I did! Bless my soul!” His lordship, relieved,
-took an invigorating sip. “What were you saying just then, my dear
-fellow?”
-
-“I have had a letter from Miss Halliday,” said Baxter. “She writes that
-she is catching the twelve-fifty train at Paddington, which means that
-she should arrive at Market Blandings at about three.”
-
-“Who,” asked Miss Peavey, in a low, thrilling voice, ceasing for a
-moment to peck at her plate of kedgeree, “is Miss Halliday?”
-
-“The exact question I was about to ask myself,” said Lord Emsworth.
-“Baxter, my dear fellow, who is Miss Halliday?”
-
-Baxter, with a stifled sigh, was about to refresh his employer’s
-memory, when Psmith anticipated him. Psmith had been consuming toast
-and marmalade with his customary languid grace and up till now had
-firmly checked all attempts to engage him in conversation.
-
-“Miss Halliday,” he said, “is a very old and valued friend of mine. We
-two have, so to speak, pulled the gowans fine. I had been hoping to
-hear that she had been sighted on the horizon.”
-
-The effect of these words on two of the company was somewhat
-remarkable. Baxter, hearing them, gave such a violent start that
-he spilled half the contents of his cup: and Freddie, who had been
-flitting like a butterfly among the dishes on the sideboard and had
-just decided to help himself to scrambled eggs, deposited a liberal
-spoonful on the carpet, where it was found and salvaged a moment later
-by Lady Constance’s spaniel.
-
-Psmith did not observe these phenomena, for he had returned to his
-toast and marmalade. He thus missed encountering perhaps the keenest
-glance that had ever come through Rupert Baxter’s spectacles. It was
-not a protracted glance, but while it lasted it was like the ray from
-an oxy-acetylene blowpipe.
-
-“A friend of yours?” said Lord Emsworth. “Indeed? Of course, Baxter,
-I remember now. Miss Halliday is the young lady who is coming to
-catalogue the library.”
-
-“What a delightful task!” cooed Miss Peavey. “To live among the
-stored-up thoughts of dead and gone genius!”
-
-“You had better go down and meet her, my dear fellow,” said Lord
-Emsworth. “At the station, you know,” he continued, clarifying his
-meaning. “She will be glad to see you.”
-
-“I was about to suggest it myself,” said Psmith.
-
-“Though why the library needs cataloguing,” said his lordship,
-returning to a problem which still vexed his soul when he had leisure
-to give a thought to it, “I can’t . . . However . . .”
-
-He finished his coffee and rose from the table. A stray shaft of
-sunlight had fallen provocatively on his bald head, and sunshine always
-made him restive.
-
-“Are you going to your flowers, Lord Emsworth?” asked Miss Peavey.
-
-“Eh? What? Yes. Oh, yes. Going to have a look at those lobelias.”
-
-“I will accompany you, if I may,” said Psmith.
-
-“Eh? Why, certainly, certainly.”
-
-“I have always held,” said Psmith, “that there is no finer tonic than a
-good look at a lobelia immediately after breakfast. Doctors, I believe,
-recommend it.”
-
-“Oh, I say,” said Freddie hastily, as he reached the door, “can I have
-a couple of words with you a bit later on?”
-
-“A thousand if you wish it,” said Psmith. “You will find me somewhere
-out there in the great open spaces where men are men.”
-
-He included the entire company in a benevolent smile, and left the room.
-
-“How charming he is!” sighed Miss Peavey. “Don’t you think so, Mr.
-Baxter?”
-
-The Efficient Baxter seemed for a moment to find some difficulty in
-replying.
-
-“Oh, very,” he said, but not heartily.
-
-“And such a _soul_! It shines on that wonderful brow of his, doesn’t
-it?”
-
-“He has a good forehead,” said Lady Constance. “But I wish he wouldn’t
-wear his hair so short. Somehow it makes him seem unlike a poet.”
-
-Freddie, alarmed, swallowed a mouthful of scrambled egg.
-
-“Oh, he’s a poet all right,” he said hastily.
-
-“Well, really, Freddie,” said Lady Constance, piqued, “I think we
-hardly need _you_ to tell us that.”
-
-“No, no, of course. But what I mean is, in spite of his wearing his
-hair short, you know.”
-
-“I ventured to speak to him of that yesterday,” said Miss Peavey, “and
-he said he rather expected to be wearing it even shorter very soon.”
-
-“Freddie!” cried Lady Constance with asperity. “What _are_ you doing?”
-
-A brown lake of tea was filling the portion of the tablecloth
-immediately opposite the Hon. Frederick Threepwood. Like the Efficient
-Baxter a few minutes before, sudden emotion had caused him to upset his
-cup.
-
-
-§ 2
-
-The scrutiny of his lordship’s lobelias had palled upon Psmith at
-a fairly early stage in the proceedings, and he was sitting on the
-terrace wall enjoying a meditative cigarette when Freddie found him.
-
-“Ah, Comrade Threepwood,” said Psmith, “welcome to Blandings Castle!
-You said something about wishing to have speech with me, if I remember
-rightly?”
-
-The Hon. Freddie shot a nervous glance about him, and seated himself on
-the wall.
-
-“I say,” he said, “I wish you wouldn’t say things like that.”
-
-“Like what, Comrade Threepwood?”
-
-“What you said to the Peavey woman.”
-
-“I recollect having a refreshing chat with Miss Peavey yesterday
-afternoon,” said Psmith, “but I cannot recall saying anything
-calculated to bring the blush of shame to the cheek of modesty. What
-observation of mine was it that meets with your censure?”
-
-“Why, that stuff about expecting to wear your hair shorter. If you’re
-going to go about saying that sort of thing--well, dash it, you might
-just as well give the whole bally show away at once and have done with
-it.”
-
-Psmith nodded gravely.
-
-“Your generous heat, Comrade Threepwood, is not unjustified. It was
-undoubtedly an error of judgment. If I have a fault--which I am not
-prepared to admit--it is a perhaps ungentlemanly desire to pull that
-curious female’s leg. A stronger man than myself might well find it
-hard to battle against the temptation. However, now that you have
-called it to my notice, it shall not occur again. In future I will
-moderate the persiflage. Cheer up, therefore, Comrade Threepwood,
-and let us see that merry smile of yours, of which I hear such good
-reports.”
-
-The appeal failed to alleviate Freddie’s gloom. He smote morosely at a
-fly which had settled on his furrowed brow.
-
-“I’m getting as jumpy as a cat,” he said.
-
-“Fight against this unmanly weakness,” urged Psmith. “As far as I can
-see, everything is going along nicely.”
-
-“I’m not so sure. I believe that blighter Baxter suspects something.”
-
-“What do you think he suspects?”
-
-“Why, that there’s something fishy about you.”
-
-Psmith winced.
-
-“I would be infinitely obliged to you, Comrade Threepwood, if you would
-not use that particular adjective. It awakens old memories, all very
-painful. But let us go more deeply into this matter, for you interest
-me strangely. Why do you think that cheery old Baxter, a delightful
-personality if ever I met one, suspects me?”
-
-“It’s the way he looks at you.”
-
-“I know what you mean, but I attribute no importance to it. As far
-as I have been able to ascertain during my brief visit, he looks at
-everybody and everything in precisely the same way. Only last night at
-dinner I observed him glaring with keen mistrust at about as blameless
-and innocent a plate of clear soup as was ever dished up. He then
-proceeded to shovel it down with quite undisguised relish. So possibly
-you are all wrong about his motive for looking at me like that. It may
-be admiration.”
-
-“Well, I don’t like it.”
-
-“Nor, from an æsthetic point of view, do I. But we must bear these
-things manfully. We must remind ourselves that it is Baxter’s
-misfortune rather than his fault that he looks like a dyspeptic lizard.”
-
-Freddie was not to be consoled. His gloom deepened.
-
-“And it isn’t only Baxter.”
-
-“What else is on your mind?”
-
-“The whole atmosphere of the place is getting rummy, if you know what I
-mean.” He bent towards Psmith and whispered pallidly. “I say, I believe
-that new housemaid is a detective!”
-
-Psmith eyed him patiently.
-
-“Which new housemaid, Comrade Threepwood? Brooding, as I do, pretty
-tensely all the time on deep and wonderful subjects, I have little
-leisure to keep tab on the domestic staff. _Is_ there a new housemaid?”
-
-“Yes. Susan, her name is.”
-
-“Susan? Susan? That sounds all right. Just the name a real housemaid
-would have.”
-
-“Did you ever,” demanded Freddie earnestly, “see a real housemaid sweep
-under a bureau?”
-
-“Does she?”
-
-“Caught her at it in my room this morning.”
-
-“But isn’t it a trifle far-fetched to imagine that she is a detective?
-Why should she be a detective?”
-
-“Well, I’ve seen such a dashed lot of films where the housemaid or the
-parlourmaid or what not were detectives. Makes a fellow uneasy.”
-
-“Fortunately,” said Psmith, “there is no necessity to remain in a state
-of doubt. I can give you an unfailing method by means of which you may
-discover if she is what she would have us believe her.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“Kiss her.”
-
-“Kiss her!”
-
-“Precisely. Go to her and say, ‘Susan, you’re a very pretty girl . . .’”
-
-“But she isn’t.”
-
-“We will assume, for purposes of argument, that she is. Go to her and
-say, ‘Susan, you are a very pretty girl. What would you do if I were
-to kiss you?’ If she is a detective, she will reply, ‘How dare you,
-sir!’ or, possibly, more simply, ‘Sir!’ Whereas if she is the genuine
-housemaid I believe her to be and only sweeps under bureaux out of
-pure zeal, she will giggle and remark, ‘Oh, don’t be silly, sir!’ You
-appreciate the distinction?”
-
-“How do you know?”
-
-“My grandmother told me, Comrade Threepwood. My advice to you, if the
-state of doubt you are in is affecting your enjoyment of life, is to
-put the matter to the test at the earliest convenient opportunity.”
-
-“I’ll think it over,” said Freddie dubiously.
-
-Silence fell upon him for a space, and Psmith was well content to have
-it so. He had no specific need of Freddie’s prattle to help him enjoy
-the pleasant sunshine and the scent of Angus McAllister’s innumerable
-flowers. Presently, however, his companion was off again. But now there
-was a different note in his voice. Alarm seemed to have given place to
-something which appeared to be embarrassment. He coughed several times,
-and his neatly-shod feet, writhing in self-conscious circles, scraped
-against the wall.
-
-“I say!”
-
-“You have our ear once more, Comrade Threepwood,” said Psmith politely.
-
-“I say, what I really came out here to talk about was something else.
-I say, are you really a pal of Miss Halliday’s?”
-
-“Assuredly. Why?”
-
-“I say!” A rosy blush mantled the Hon. Freddie’s young cheek. “I say, I
-wish you would put in a word for me, then.”
-
-“Put in a word for you?”
-
-Freddie gulped.
-
-“I love her, dash it!”
-
-“A noble emotion,” said Psmith courteously. “When did you feel it
-coming on?”
-
-“I’ve been in love with her for months. But she won’t look at me.”
-
-“That, of course,” agreed Psmith, “must be a disadvantage. Yes, I
-should imagine that that would stick the gaff into the course of true
-love to no small extent.”
-
-“I mean, won’t take me seriously, and all that. Laughs at me, don’t you
-know, when I propose. What would you do?”
-
-“I should stop proposing,” said Psmith, having given the matter thought.
-
-“But I can’t.”
-
-“Tut, tut!” said Psmith severely. “And, in case the expression is new
-to you, what I mean is ‘Pooh, pooh!’ Just say to yourself, ‘From now on
-I will not start proposing until after lunch.’ That done, it will be an
-easy step to do no proposing during the afternoon. And by degrees you
-will find that you can give it up altogether. Once you have conquered
-the impulse for the after-breakfast proposal, the rest will be easy.
-The first one of the day is always the hardest to drop.”
-
-“I believe she thinks me a mere butterfly,” said Freddie, who had not
-been listening to this most valuable homily.
-
-Psmith slid down from the wall and stretched himself.
-
-“Why,” he said, “are butterflies so often described as ‘mere’? I
-have heard them so called a hundred times, and I cannot understand
-the reason. . . . Well, it would, no doubt, be both interesting
-and improving to go into the problem, but at this point, Comrade
-Threepwood, I leave you. I would brood.”
-
-“Yes, but, I say, will you?”
-
-“Will I what?”
-
-“Put in a word for me?”
-
-“If,” said Psmith, “the subject crops up in the course of the
-chit-chat, I shall be delighted to spread myself with no little vim on
-the theme of your fine qualities.”
-
-He melted away into the shrubbery, just in time to avoid Miss Peavey,
-who broke in on Freddie’s meditations a moment later and kept him
-company till lunch.
-
-
-§ 3
-
-The twelve-fifty train drew up with a grinding of brakes at the
-platform of Market Blandings, and Psmith, who had been whiling away the
-time of waiting by squandering money which he could ill afford on the
-slot-machine which supplied butter-scotch, turned and submitted it to a
-grave scrutiny. Eve Halliday got out of a third-class compartment.
-
-“Welcome to our village, Miss Halliday,” said Psmith, advancing.
-
-Eve regarded him with frank astonishment.
-
-“What are you doing here?” she asked.
-
-“Lord Emsworth was kind enough to suggest that, as we were such old
-friends, I should come down in the car and meet you.”
-
-“Are we old friends?”
-
-“Surely. Have you forgotten all those happy days in London?”
-
-“There was only one.”
-
-“True. But think how many meetings we crammed into it.”
-
-“Are you staying at the castle?”
-
-“Yes. And what is more, I am the life and soul of the party. Have you
-anything in the shape of luggage?”
-
-“I nearly always take luggage when I am going to stay a month or so in
-the country. It’s at the back somewhere.”
-
-“I will look after it. You will find the car outside. If you care to go
-and sit in it, I will join you in a moment. And, lest the time hangs
-heavy on your hands, take this. Butter-scotch. Delicious, and, so I
-understand, wholesome. I bought it specially for you.”
-
-A few minutes later, having arranged for the trunk to be taken to the
-castle, Psmith emerged from the station and found Eve drinking in the
-beauties of the town of Market Blandings.
-
-“What a delightful old place,” she said as they drove off. “I almost
-wish I lived here.”
-
-“During the brief period of my stay at the castle,” said Psmith, “the
-same thought has occurred to me. It is the sort of place where one
-feels that one could gladly settle down into a peaceful retirement and
-grow a honey-coloured beard.” He looked at her with solemn admiration.
-“Women are wonderful,” he said.
-
-“And why, Mr. Bones, are women wonderful?” asked Eve.
-
-“I was thinking at the moment of your appearance. You have just stepped
-off the train after a four-hour journey, and you are as fresh and
-blooming as--if I may coin a simile--a rose. How do you do it? When I
-arrived I was deep in alluvial deposits, and have only just managed to
-scrape them off.”
-
-“When did you arrive?”
-
-“On the evening of the day on which I met you.”
-
-“But it’s so extraordinary. That you should be here, I mean. I was
-wondering if I should ever see you again.” Eve coloured a little, and
-went on rather hurriedly. “I mean, it seems so strange that we should
-always be meeting like this.”
-
-“Fate, probably,” said Psmith. “I hope it isn’t going to spoil your
-visit?”
-
-“Oh, no.”
-
-“I could have done with a trifle more emphasis on the last word,”
-said Psmith gently. “Forgive me for criticising your methods of voice
-production, but surely you can see how much better it would have
-sounded spoken thus: ‘Oh, _no_!’”
-
-Eve laughed.
-
-“Very well, then,” she said. “Oh, _no_!”
-
-“Much better,” said Psmith. “Much better.”
-
-He began to see that it was going to be difficult to introduce a eulogy
-of the Hon. Freddie Threepwood into this conversation.
-
-“I’m very glad you’re here,” said Eve, resuming the talk after a slight
-pause. “Because, as a matter of fact, I’m feeling just the least bit
-nervous.”
-
-“Nervous? Why?”
-
-“This is my first visit to a place of this size.” The car had turned
-in at the big stone gates, and they were bowling smoothly up the
-winding drive. Through an avenue of trees to the right the great bulk
-of the castle had just appeared, grey and imposing against the sky.
-The afternoon sun glittered on the lake beyond it. “Is everything very
-stately?”
-
-“Not at all. We are very homely folk, we of Blandings Castle. We go
-about, simple and unaffected, dropping gracious words all over the
-place. Lord Emsworth didn’t overawe you, did he?”
-
-“Oh, he’s a dear. And, of course, I know Freddie quite well.”
-
-Psmith nodded. If she knew Freddie quite well, there was naturally no
-need to talk about him. He did not talk about him, therefore.
-
-“Have you known Lord Emsworth long?” asked Eve.
-
-“I met him for the first time the day I met you.”
-
-“Good gracious!” Eve stared. “And he invited you to the castle?”
-
-Psmith smoothed his waistcoat.
-
-“Strange, I agree. One can only account for it, can one not, by
-supposing that I radiate some extraordinary attraction. Have you
-noticed it?”
-
-“No!”
-
-“No?” said Psmith, surprised. “Ah, well,” he went on tolerantly, “no
-doubt it will flash upon you quite unexpectedly sooner or later. Like a
-thunderbolt or something.”
-
-“I think you’re terribly conceited.”
-
-“Not at all,” said Psmith. “Conceited? No, no. Success has not spoiled
-me.”
-
-“Have you had any success?”
-
-“None whatever.” The car stopped. “We get down here,” said Psmith,
-opening the door.
-
-“Here? Why?”
-
-“Because, if we go up to the house, you will infallibly be pounced on
-and set to work by one Baxter--a delightful fellow, but a whale for
-toil. I propose to conduct you on a tour round the grounds, and then we
-will go for a row on the lake. You will enjoy that.”
-
-“You seem to have mapped out my future for me.”
-
-“I have,” said Psmith with emphasis, and in the monocled eye that met
-hers Eve detected so beaming a glance of esteem and admiration that she
-retreated warily into herself and endeavoured to be frigid.
-
-“I’m afraid I haven’t time to wander about the grounds,” she said
-aloofly. “I must be going and seeing Mr. Baxter.”
-
-“Baxter,” said Psmith, “is not one of the natural beauties of the
-place. Time enough to see him when you are compelled to . . . We are
-now in the southern pleasaunce or the west home-park or something. Note
-the refined way the deer are cropping the grass. All the ground on
-which we are now standing is of historic interest. Oliver Cromwell went
-through here in 1550. The record has since been lowered.”
-
-“I haven’t time . . .”
-
-“Leaving the pleasaunce on our left, we proceed to the northern
-messuage. The dandelions were imported from Egypt by the ninth Earl.”
-
-“Well, anyhow,” said Eve mutinously, “I won’t come on the lake.”
-
-“You will enjoy the lake,” said Psmith. “The newts are of the famous
-old Blandings strain. They were introduced, together with the
-water-beetles, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth. Lord Emsworth, of
-course, holds manorial rights over the mosquito-swatting.”
-
-Eve was a girl of high and haughty spirit, and as such strongly
-resented being appropriated and having her movements directed by one
-who, in spite of his specious claims, was almost a stranger. But
-somehow she found her companion’s placid assumption of authority
-hard to resist. Almost meekly she accompanied him through meadow and
-shrubbery, over velvet lawns and past gleaming flower-beds, and her
-indignation evaporated as her eyes absorbed the beauty of it all. She
-gave a little sigh. If Market Blandings had seemed a place in which one
-might dwell happily, Blandings Castle was a paradise.
-
-“Before us now,” said Psmith, “lies the celebrated Yew Alley, so called
-from the yews which hem it in. Speaking in my capacity of guide to the
-estate, I may say that when we have turned this next corner you will
-see a most remarkable sight.”
-
-And they did. Before them, as they passed in under the boughs of an
-aged tree lay a green vista, faintly dappled with stray shafts of
-sunshine. In the middle of this vista the Hon. Frederick Threepwood was
-embracing a young woman in the dress of a housemaid.
-
-
-§ 4
-
-Psmith was the first of the little group to recover from the shock of
-this unexpected encounter, the Hon. Freddie the last. That unfortunate
-youth, meeting Eve’s astonished eye as he raised his head, froze where
-he stood and remained with his mouth open until she had disappeared,
-which she did a few moments later, led away by Psmith, who, as he
-went, directed at his young friend a look in which surprise, pain, and
-reproof were so nicely blended that it would have been hard to say
-which predominated. All that a spectator could have said with certainty
-was that Psmith’s finer feelings had suffered a severe blow.
-
-“A painful scene,” he remarked to Eve, as he drew her away in the
-direction of the house. “But we must always strive to be charitable. He
-may have been taking a fly out of her eye, or teaching her jiu-jitsu.”
-
-He looked at her searchingly.
-
-“You seem less revolted,” he said, “than one might have expected.
-This argues a sweet, shall we say angelic disposition and confirms my
-already high opinion of you.”
-
-“Thank you.”
-
-“Not at all. Mark you,” said Psmith, “I don’t think that this sort of
-thing is a hobby of Comrade Threepwood’s. He probably has many other
-ways of passing his spare time. Remember that before you pass judgment
-upon him. Also--Young Blood, and all that sort of thing.”
-
-“I haven’t any intention of passing judgment upon him. It doesn’t
-interest me what Mr. Threepwood does, either in his spare time or out
-of it.”
-
-“His interest in you, on the other hand, is vast. I forgot to tell you
-before, but he loves you. He asked me to mention it if the conversation
-happened to veer round in that direction.”
-
-“I know he does,” said Eve ruefully.
-
-“And does the fact stir no chord in you?”
-
-“I think he’s a nuisance.”
-
-“That,” said Psmith cordially, “is the right spirit. I like to see
-it. Very well, then, we will discard the topic of Freddie, and I will
-try to find others that may interest, elevate, and amuse you. We are
-now approaching the main buildings. I am no expert in architecture,
-so cannot tell you all I could wish about the façade, but you can see
-there _is_ a façade, and in my opinion--for what it is worth--a jolly
-good one. We approach by a sweeping gravel walk.”
-
-“I am going in to report to Mr. Baxter,” said Eve with decision. “It’s
-too absurd. I mustn’t spend my time strolling about the grounds. I must
-see Mr. Baxter at once.”
-
-Psmith inclined his head courteously.
-
-“Nothing easier. That big, open window there is the library. Doubtless
-Comrade Baxter is somewhere inside, toiling away among the archives.”
-
-“Yes, but I can’t announce myself by shouting to him.”
-
-“Assuredly not,” said Psmith. “No need for that at all. Leave it to
-me.” He stooped and picked up a large flower-pot which stood under
-the terrace wall, and before Eve could intervene had tossed it
-lightly through the open window. A muffled thud, followed by a sharp
-exclamation from within, caused a faint smile of gratification to
-illumine his solemn countenance. “He _is_ in. I thought he would be.
-Ah, Baxter,” he said graciously, as the upper half of a body surmounted
-by a spectacled face framed itself suddenly in the window, “a pleasant,
-sunny afternoon. How is everything?”
-
-The Efficient Baxter struggled for utterance.
-
-“You look like the Blessed Damozel gazing down from the gold bar of
-Heaven,” said Psmith genially. “Baxter, I want to introduce you to Miss
-Halliday. She arrived safely after a somewhat fatiguing journey. You
-will like Miss Halliday. If I had a library, I could not wish for a
-more courteous, obliging, and capable cataloguist.”
-
-This striking and unsolicited testimonial made no appeal to the
-Efficient Baxter. His mind seemed occupied with other matters.
-
-“Did you throw that flower-pot?” he demanded coldly.
-
-“You will no doubt,” said Psmith, “wish on some later occasion to have
-a nice long talk with Miss Halliday in order to give her an outline of
-her duties. I have been showing her the grounds and am about to take
-her for a row on the lake. But after that she will--and I know I may
-speak for Miss Halliday in this matter--be entirely at your disposal.”
-
-“Did you throw that flower-pot?”
-
-“I look forward confidently to the pleasantest of associations between
-you and Miss Halliday. You will find her,” said Psmith warmly, “a
-willing assistant, a tireless worker.”
-
-“Did you . . . ?”
-
-“But now,” said Psmith, “I must be tearing myself away. In order to
-impress Miss Halliday, I put on my best suit when I went to meet her.
-For a row upon the lake something simpler in pale flannel is indicated.
-I shall only be a few minutes,” he said to Eve. “Would you mind meeting
-me at the boat-house?”
-
-“I am not coming on the lake with you.”
-
-“At the boat-house in--say--six and a quarter minutes,” said Psmith
-with a gentle smile, and pranced into the house like a long-legged
-mustang.
-
-Eve remained where she stood, struggling between laughter and
-embarrassment. The Efficient Baxter was still leaning wrathfully out of
-the library window, and it began to seem a little difficult to carry on
-an ordinary conversation. The problem of what she was to say in order
-to continue the scene in an agreeable manner was solved by the arrival
-of Lord Emsworth, who pottered out from the bushes with a rake in his
-hand. He stood eyeing Eve for a moment, then memory seemed to wake.
-Eve’s appearance was easier to remember, possibly, than some of the
-things which his lordship was wont to forget. He came forward beamingly.
-
-“Ah, there you are, Miss . . . Dear me, I’m really afraid I have
-forgotten your name. My memory is excellent as a rule, but I cannot
-remember names . . . Miss Halliday! Of course, of course. Baxter, my
-dear fellow,” he proceeded, sighting the watcher at the window, “this
-is Miss Halliday.”
-
-“Mr. McTodd,” said the Efficient One sourly, “has already introduced me
-to Miss Halliday.”
-
-“Has he? Deuced civil of him, deuced civil of him. But where _is_ he?”
-inquired his lordship, scanning the surrounding scenery with a vague
-eye.
-
-“He went into the house. After,” said Baxter in a cold voice, “throwing
-a flower-pot at me.”
-
-“Doing what?”
-
-“He threw a flower-pot at me,” said Baxter, and vanished moodily.
-
-Lord Emsworth stared at the open window, then turned to Eve for
-enlightenment.
-
-“_Why_ did Baxter throw a flower-pot at McTodd?” he said. “And,” he
-went on, ventilating an even deeper question, “where the deuce did he
-get a flower-pot? There are no flower-pots in the library.”
-
-Eve, on her side, was also seeking information.
-
-“Did you say his name was McTodd, Lord Emsworth?”
-
-“No, no. Baxter. That was Baxter, my secretary.”
-
-“No, I mean the one who met me at the station.”
-
-“Baxter did not meet you at the station. The man who met you at the
-station,” said Lord Emsworth, speaking slowly, for women are so apt to
-get things muddled, “was McTodd. He’s staying here. Constance asked
-him, and I’m bound to say when I first heard of it I was not any too
-well pleased. I don’t like poets as a rule. But this fellow’s so
-different from the other poets I’ve met. Different altogether. And,”
-said Lord Emsworth with not a little heat, “I strongly object to Baxter
-throwing flower-pots at him. I won’t _have_ Baxter throwing flower-pots
-at my guests,” he said firmly; for Lord Emsworth, though occasionally a
-little vague, was keenly alive to the ancient traditions of his family
-regarding hospitality.
-
-“Is Mr. McTodd a poet?” said Eve, her heart beating.
-
-“Eh? Oh yes, yes. There seems to be no doubt about that. A Canadian
-poet. Apparently they have poets out there. And,” demanded his
-lordship, ever a fair-minded man, “why not? A remarkably growing
-country. I was there in the year ’98. Or was it,” he added,
-thoughtfully passing a muddy hand over his chin and leaving a rich
-brown stain, “’99? I forget. My memory isn’t good for dates. . . . If
-you will excuse me, Miss--Miss Halliday, of course--if you will excuse
-me, I must be leaving you. I have to see McAllister, my head gardener.
-An obstinate man. A Scotchman. If you go into the house, my sister
-Constance will give you a cup of tea. I don’t know what the time is,
-but I suppose there will be tea soon. Never take it myself.”
-
-“Mr. McTodd asked me to go for a row on the lake.”
-
-“On the lake, eh? On the _lake_?” said his lordship, as if this was
-the last place in the neighbourhood where he would have expected to
-hear of people proposing to row. Then he brightened. “Of course, yes,
-on the lake. I think you will like the lake. I take a dip there myself
-every morning before breakfast. I find it good for the health and
-appetite. I plunge in and swim perhaps fifty yards, and then return.”
-Lord Emsworth suspended the gossip from the training-camp in order to
-look at his watch. “Dear me,” he said, “I must be going. McAllister
-has been waiting fully ten minutes. Good-bye, then, for the present,
-Miss--er--good-bye.”
-
-And Lord Emsworth ambled off, on his face that look of tense
-concentration which it always wore when interviews with Angus
-McAllister were in prospect--the look which stern warriors wear when
-about to meet a foeman worthy of their steel.
-
-
-§ 5
-
-There was a cold expression in Eve’s eyes as she made her way slowly
-to the boat-house. The information which she had just received had
-come as a shock, and she was trying to adjust her mind to it. When
-Miss Clarkson had told her of the unhappy conclusion to her old school
-friend’s marriage to Ralston McTodd, she had immediately, without
-knowing anything of the facts, arrayed herself loyally on Cynthia’s
-side and condemned the unknown McTodd uncompromisingly and without
-hesitation. It was many years since she had seen Cynthia, and their
-friendship might almost have been said to have lapsed; but Eve’s
-affection, when she had once given it, was a durable thing, capable of
-surviving long separation. She had loved Cynthia at school, and she
-could feel nothing but animosity towards anyone who had treated her
-badly. She eyed the glittering water of the lake from under lowered
-brows, and prepared to be frigid and hostile when the villain of the
-piece should arrive. It was only when she heard footsteps behind her
-and turned to perceive Psmith hurrying up, radiant in gleaming flannel,
-that it occurred to her for the first time that there might have been
-faults on both sides. She had not known Psmith long, it was true, but
-already his personality had made a somewhat deep impression on her,
-and she was loath to believe that he could be the callous scoundrel
-of her imagination. She decided to suspend judgment until they should
-be out in mid-water and in a position to discuss the matter without
-interruption.
-
-“I am a little late,” said Psmith, as he came up. “I was detained by
-our young friend Freddie. He came into my room and started talking
-about himself at the very moment when I was tying my tie and needed
-every ounce of concentration for that delicate task. The recent painful
-episode appeared to be weighing on his mind to some extent.” He helped
-Eve into the boat and started to row. “I consoled him as best I could
-by telling him that it would probably have made you think all the more
-highly of him. I ventured the suggestion that girls worship the strong,
-rough, dashing type of man. And, after I had done my best to convince
-him that he was a strong, rough, dashing man, I came away. By now, of
-course, he may have had a relapse into despair; so, if you happen to
-see a body bobbing about in the water as we row along, it will probably
-be Freddie’s.”
-
-“Never mind about Freddie.”
-
-“I don’t if you don’t,” said Psmith agreeably. “Very well, then, if we
-see a body, we will ignore it.” He rowed on a few strokes. “Correct me
-if I am wrong,” he said, resting on his oars and leaning forward, “but
-you appear to be brooding about something. If you will give me a clue,
-I will endeavour to assist you to grapple with any little problem which
-is troubling you. What is the matter?”
-
-Eve, questioned thus directly, found it difficult to open the subject.
-She hesitated a moment, and let the water ripple through her fingers.
-
-“I have only just found out your name, Mr. McTodd,” she said at length.
-
-Psmith nodded.
-
-“It is always thus,” he said. “Passing through this life, we meet a
-fellow-mortal, chat awhile, and part; and the last thing we think of
-doing is to ask him in a manly and direct way what his label is. There
-is something oddly furtive and shamefaced in one’s attitude towards
-people’s names. It is as if we shrank from probing some hideous secret.
-We say to ourselves ‘This pleasant stranger may be a Snooks or a
-Buggins. Better not inquire.’ But in my case . . .”
-
-“It was a great shock to me.”
-
-“Now there,” said Psmith, “I cannot follow you. I wouldn’t call McTodd
-a bad name, as names go. Don’t you think there is a sort of Highland
-strength about it? It sounds to me like something out of ‘The Lady of
-the Lake’ or ‘The Lay of the Last Minstrel.’ ‘The stag at eve had drunk
-its fill adoon the glen beyint the hill, and welcomed with a friendly
-nod old Scotland’s pride, young Laird McTodd.’ You don’t think it has a
-sort of wild romantic ring?”
-
-“I ought to tell you, Mr. McTodd,” said Eve, “that I was at school with
-Cynthia.”
-
-Psmith was not a young man who often found himself at a loss, but this
-remark gave him a bewildered feeling such as comes in dreams. It was
-plain to him that this delightful girl thought she had said something
-serious, even impressive; but for the moment it did not seem to him to
-make sense. He sparred warily for time.
-
-“Indeed? With Cynthia? That must have been jolly.”
-
-The harmless observation appeared to have the worst effect upon his
-companion. The frown came back to her face.
-
-“Oh, don’t speak in that flippant, sneering way,” she said. “It’s so
-cheap.”
-
-Psmith, having nothing to say, remained silent, and the boat drifted
-on. Eve’s face was delicately pink, for she was feeling extraordinarily
-embarrassed. There was something in the solemn gaze of the man
-before her which made it difficult for her to go on. But, with the
-stout-heartedness which was one of her characteristics, she stuck to
-her task.
-
-“After all,” she said, “however you may feel about her now, you must
-have been fond of poor Cynthia at one time, or I don’t see why you
-should have married her.”
-
-Psmith, for want of conversation, had begun rowing again. The start he
-gave at these remarkable words caused him to skim the surface of the
-water with the left oar in such a manner as to send a liberal pint into
-Eve’s lap. He started forward with apologies.
-
-“Oh, never mind about that,” said Eve impatiently. “It doesn’t
-matter. . . . Mr. McTodd,” she said, and there was a note of gentleness
-in her voice, “I do wish you would tell me what the trouble was.”
-
-Psmith stared at the floor of the boat in silence. He was wrestling
-with a feeling of injury. True, he had not during their brief
-conversation at the Senior Conservative Club specifically inquired of
-Mr. McTodd whether he was a bachelor, but somehow he felt that the man
-should have dropped some hint as to his married state. True, again,
-Mr. McTodd had not asked him to impersonate him at Blandings Castle.
-And yet, undeniably, he felt that he had a grievance. Psmith’s was
-an orderly mind. He had proposed to continue the pleasant relations
-which had begun between Eve and himself, seeing to it that every day
-they became a little pleasanter, until eventually, in due season, they
-should reach the point where it would become possible to lay heart and
-hand at her feet. For there was no doubt in his mind that in a world
-congested to overflowing with girls Eve Halliday stood entirely alone.
-And now this infernal Cynthia had risen from nowhere to stand between
-them. Even a young man as liberally endowed with calm assurance as he
-was might find it awkward to conduct his wooing with such a handicap as
-a wife in the background.
-
-Eve misinterpreted his silence.
-
-“I suppose you are thinking that it is no business of mine?”
-
-Psmith came out of his thoughts with a start.
-
-“No, no. Not at all.”
-
-“You see, I’m devoted to Cynthia--and I like you.”
-
-She smiled for the first time. Her embarrassment was passing.
-
-“That is the whole point,” she said. “I do like you. And I’m quite sure
-that if you were really the sort of man I thought you when I first
-heard about all this, I shouldn’t. The friend who told me about you
-and Cynthia made it seem as if the whole fault had been yours. I got
-the impression that you had been very unkind to Cynthia. I thought
-you must be a brute. And when Lord Emsworth told me who you were, my
-first impulse was to hate you. I think if you had come along just then
-I should have been rather horrid to you. But you were late, and that
-gave me time to think it over. And then I remembered how nice you had
-been to me and I felt somehow that--that you must really be quite
-nice, and it occurred to me that there might be some explanation. And
-I thought that--perhaps--if you would let me interfere in your private
-affairs--and if things hadn’t gone too far--I might do something to
-help--try to bring you together, you know.”
-
-She broke off, a little confused, for now that the words were out she
-was conscious of a return of her former shyness. Even though she was
-an old friend of Cynthia’s, there did seem something insufferably
-officious in this meddling. And when she saw the look of pain on her
-companion’s face, she regretted that she had spoken. Naturally, she
-thought, he was offended.
-
-In supposing that Psmith was offended she was mistaken. Internally he
-was glowing with a renewed admiration for all those beautiful qualities
-in her which he had detected, before they had ever met, at several
-yards’ range across the street from the window of the Drones Club
-smoking-room. His look of pain was due to the fact that, having now
-had time to grapple with the problem, he had decided to dispose of
-this Cynthia once and for all. He proposed to eliminate her for ever
-from his life. And the elimination of even such a comparative stranger
-seemed to him to call for a pained look. So he assumed one.
-
-“That,” he said gravely, “would, I fear, be impossible. It is like you
-to suggest it, and I cannot tell you how much I appreciate the kindness
-which has made you interest yourself in my troubles, but it is too late
-for any reconciliation. Cynthia and I are divorced.”
-
-For a moment the temptation had come to him to kill the woman off with
-some wasting sickness, but this he resisted as tending towards possible
-future complications. He was resolved, however, that there should be no
-question of bringing them together again.
-
-He was disturbed to find Eve staring at him in amazement.
-
-“Divorced? But how can you be divorced? It’s only a few days since you
-and she were in London together.”
-
-Psmith ceased to wonder that Mr. McTodd had had trouble with his wife.
-The woman was a perfect pest.
-
-“I used the term in a spiritual rather than a legal sense,” he replied.
-“True, there has been no actual decree, but we are separated beyond
-hope of reunion.” He saw the distress in Eve’s eyes and hurried on.
-“There are things,” he said, “which it is impossible for a man to
-overlook, however broad-minded he may be. Love, Miss Halliday, is a
-delicate plant. It needs tending, nursing, assiduous fostering. This
-cannot be done by throwing the breakfast bacon at a husband’s head.”
-
-“What!” Eve’s astonishment was such that the word came out in a
-startled squeak.
-
-“_In_ the dish,” said Psmith sadly.
-
-Eve’s blue eyes opened wide.
-
-“_Cynthia_ did that!”
-
-“On more than one occasion. Her temper in the mornings was terrible. I
-have known her lift the cat over two chairs and a settee with a single
-kick. And all because there were no mushrooms.”
-
-“But--but I can’t believe it!”
-
-“Come over to Canada,” said Psmith, “and I will show you the cat.”
-
-“Cynthia did that!--Cynthia--why, she was always the gentlest little
-creature.”
-
-“At school, you mean?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“That,” said Psmith, “would, I suppose, be before she had taken to
-drink.”
-
-“Taken to drink!”
-
-Psmith was feeling happier. A passing thought did come to him that all
-this was perhaps a trifle rough on the absent Cynthia, but he mastered
-the unmanly weakness. It was necessary that Cynthia should suffer in
-the good cause. Already he had begun to detect in Eve’s eyes the faint
-dawnings of an angelic pity, and pity is recognised by all the best
-authorities as one of the most valuable emotions which your wooer can
-awaken.
-
-“Drink!” Eve repeated, with a little shudder.
-
-“We lived in one of the dry provinces of Canada, and, as so often
-happens, that started the trouble. From the moment when she installed
-a private still her downfall was swift. I have seen her, under the
-influence of home-brew, rage through the house like a devastating
-cyclone . . . I hate speaking like this of one who was your friend,”
-said Psmith, in a low, vibrating voice. “I would not tell these things
-to anyone but you. The world, of course, supposes that the entire blame
-for the collapse of our home was mine. I took care that it should be
-so. The opinion of the world matters little to me. But with you it is
-different. I should not like you to think badly of me, Miss Halliday.
-I do not make friends easily--I am a lonely man--but somehow it has
-seemed to me since we met that you and I might be friends.”
-
-Eve stretched her hand out impulsively.
-
-“Why, of course!”
-
-Psmith took her hand and held it far longer than was strictly speaking
-necessary.
-
-“Thank you,” he said. “Thank you.”
-
-He turned the nose of the boat to the shore, and rowed slowly back.
-
-“I have suffered,” said Psmith gravely, as he helped her ashore. “But,
-if you will be my friend, I think that I may forget.”
-
-They walked in silence up the winding path to the castle.
-
-
-§ 6
-
-To Psmith five minutes later, as he sat in his room smoking a cigarette
-and looking dreamily out at the distant hills, there entered the Hon.
-Frederick Threepwood, who, having closed the door behind him, tottered
-to the bed and uttered a deep and discordant groan. Psmith, his mind
-thus rudely wrenched from pleasant meditations, turned and regarded the
-gloomy youth with disfavour.
-
-“At any other time, Comrade Threepwood,” he said politely but with
-firmness, “certainly. But not now. I am not in the vein.”
-
-“What?” said the Hon. Freddie vacantly.
-
-“I say that at any other time I shall be delighted to listen to your
-farmyard imitations, but not now. At the moment I am deep in thoughts
-of my own, and I may say frankly that I regard you as more or less of
-an excrescence. I want solitude, solitude. I am in a beautiful reverie,
-and your presence jars upon me somewhat profoundly.”
-
-The Hon. Freddie ruined the symmetry of his hair by passing his fingers
-feverishly through it.
-
-“Don’t _talk_ so much! I never met a fellow like you for talking.”
-Having rumpled his hair to the left, he went through it again and
-rumpled it to the right. “I say, do you know what? You’ve jolly well
-got to clear out of here quick!” He got up from the bed, and approached
-the window. Having done which, he bent towards Psmith and whispered in
-his ear. “The game’s up!”
-
-Psmith withdrew his ear with a touch of hauteur, but he looked at
-his companion with a little more interest. He had feared, when he
-saw Freddie stagger in with such melodramatic despair and emit so
-hollow a groan, that the topic on which he wished to converse was the
-already exhausted one of his broken heart. It now began to appear that
-weightier matters were on his mind.
-
-“I fail to understand you, Comrade Threepwood,” he said. “The last time
-I had the privilege of conversing with you, you informed me that Susan,
-or whatever her name is, merely giggled and told you not to be silly
-when you embraced her. In other words, she is _not_ a detective. What
-has happened since then to get you all worked up?”
-
-“Baxter!”
-
-“What has Baxter been doing?”
-
-“Only giving the whole bally show away to me, that’s all,” said
-Freddie feverishly. He clutched Psmith’s arm violently, causing that
-exquisite to utter a slight moan and smooth out the wrinkles thus
-created in his sleeve. “Listen! I’ve just been talking to the blighter.
-I was passing the library just now, when he popped out of the door and
-hauled me in. And, dash it, he hadn’t been talking two seconds before
-I realised that he has seen through the whole dam’ thing practically
-from the moment you got here. Though he doesn’t seem to know that I’ve
-anything to do with it, thank goodness.”
-
-“I should imagine not, if he makes you his confidant. Why did he do
-that, by the way? What made him select you as the recipient of his
-secrets?”
-
-“As far as I can make out, his idea was to form a gang, if you know
-what I mean. He said a lot of stuff about him and me being the only
-two able-bodied young men in the place, and we ought to be prepared to
-tackle you if you started anything.”
-
-“I see. And now tell me how our delightful friend ever happened
-to begin suspecting that I was not all I seemed to be. I had been
-flattering myself that I had put the little deception over with
-complete success.”
-
-“Well, in the first place, dash it, that dam’ fellow McTodd--the real
-one, you know--sent a telegram saying that he wasn’t coming. So it
-seemed rummy to Baxter bang from the start when you blew in all merry
-and bright.”
-
-“Ah! That was what they all meant by saying they were glad I had come
-‘after all.’ A phrase which at the moment, I confess, rather mystified
-me.”
-
-“And then you went and wrote in the Peavey female’s autograph-book.”
-
-“In what way was that a false move?”
-
-“Why, that was the biggest bloomer on record, as it has turned out,”
-said Freddie vehemently. “Baxter apparently keeps every letter that
-comes to the place on a file, and he’d skewered McTodd’s original
-letter with the rest. I mean, the one he wrote accepting the invitation
-to come here. And Baxter compared his handwriting with what you wrote
-in the Peavey’s album, and, of course, they weren’t a dam’ bit alike.
-And that put the lid on it.”
-
-Psmith lit another cigarette and drew at it thoughtfully. He realised
-that he had made a tactical error in underestimating the antagonism of
-the Efficient One.
-
-“Does he seem to have any idea why I have come to the castle?” he asked.
-
-“Any idea? Why, dash it, the very first thing he said to me was that
-you must have come to sneak Aunt Connie’s necklace.”
-
-“In that case, why has he made no move till to-day? I should have
-supposed that he would long since have denounced me before as large an
-audience as he could assemble. Why this reticence on the part of genial
-old Baxter?”
-
-A crimson flush of chivalrous indignation spread itself over Freddie’s
-face.
-
-“He told me that, too.”
-
-“There seems to have been no reserves between Comrade Baxter and
-yourself. And very healthy, too, this spirit of confidence. What was
-his reason for abstaining from loosing the bomb?”
-
-“He said he was pretty sure you wouldn’t try to do anything on your
-own. He thought you would wait till your accomplice arrived. And, damn
-him,” cried Freddie heatedly, “do you know who he’s got the infernal
-gall to think is your accomplice? Miss Halliday! Dash him!”
-
-Psmith smoked in thoughtful silence.
-
-“Well, of course, now that this has happened,” said Freddie, “I suppose
-it’s no good thinking of going on with the thing. You’d better pop off,
-what? If I were you, I’d leg it to-day and have your luggage sent on
-after you.”
-
-Psmith threw away his cigarette and stretched himself. During the last
-few moments he had been thinking with some tenseness.
-
-“Comrade Threepwood,” he said reprovingly, “you suggest a cowardly and
-weak-minded action. I admit that the outlook would be distinctly rosier
-if no such person as Baxter were on the premises, but nevertheless the
-thing must be seen through to a finish. At least we have this advantage
-over our spectacled friend, that we know he suspects me and he doesn’t
-know we know. I think that with a little resource and ingenuity we may
-yet win through.” He turned to the window and looked out. “Sad,” he
-sighed, “that these idyllic surroundings should have become oppressed
-with a cloud of sinister menace. One thinks one sees a faun popping
-about in the undergrowth, and on looking more closely perceives that
-it is in reality a detective with a notebook. What one fancied was the
-piping of Pan turns out to be a police-whistle, summoning assistance.
-Still, we must bear these things without wincing. They are our cross.
-What you have told me will render me, if possible, warier and more
-snake-like than ever, but my purpose remains firm. The cry goes round
-the castle battlements ‘Psmith intends to keep the old flag flying!’
-So charge off and soothe your quivering ganglions with a couple of
-aspirins, Comrade Threepwood, and leave me to my thoughts. All will
-doubtless come right in the future.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-PSMITH ENGAGES A VALET
-
-
-§ 1
-
-From out of the scented shade of the big cedar on the lawn in front of
-the castle Psmith looked at the flower-beds, jaunty and gleaming in the
-afternoon sun; then he looked back at Eve, incredulity in every feature.
-
-“I must have misunderstood you. Surely,” he said in a voice vibrant
-with reproach, “you do not seriously intend to _work_ in weather like
-this?”
-
-“I must. I’ve got a conscience. They aren’t paying me a handsome
-salary--a fairly handsome salary--to sit about in deck-chairs.”
-
-“But you only came yesterday.”
-
-“Well, I ought to have worked yesterday.”
-
-“It seems to me,” said Psmith, “the nearest thing to slavery that I
-have ever struck. I had hoped, seeing that everybody had gone off and
-left us alone, that we were going to spend a happy and instructive
-afternoon together under the shade of this noble tree, talking of this
-and that. Is it not to be?”
-
-“No, it is not. It’s lucky you’re not the one who’s supposed to be
-cataloguing this library. It would never get finished.”
-
-“And why, as your employer would say, should it? He has expressed
-the opinion several times in my hearing that the library has jogged
-along quite comfortably for a great number of years without being
-catalogued. Why shouldn’t it go on like that indefinitely?”
-
-“It’s no good trying to tempt me. There’s nothing I should like better
-than to loaf here for hours and hours, but what would Mr. Baxter say
-when he got back and found out?”
-
-“It is becoming increasingly clear to me each day that I stay in this
-place,” said Psmith moodily, “that Comrade Baxter is little short of a
-blister on the community. Tell me, how do you get on with him?”
-
-“I don’t like him much.”
-
-“Nor do I. It is on these communities of taste that life-long
-attachments are built. Sit down and let us exchange confidences on the
-subject of Baxter.”
-
-Eve laughed.
-
-“I won’t. You’re simply trying to lure me into staying out here and
-neglecting my duty. I really must be off now. You have no idea what a
-lot of work there is to be done.”
-
-“You are entirely spoiling my afternoon.”
-
-“No, I’m not. You’ve got a book. What is it?”
-
-Psmith picked up the brightly-jacketed volume and glanced at it.
-
-“_The Man With The Missing Toe._ Comrade Threepwood lent it to me. He
-has a vast store of this type of narrative. I expect he will be wanting
-you to catalogue his library next.”
-
-“Well, it looks interesting.”
-
-“Ah, but what does it _teach_? How long do you propose to shut yourself
-up in that evil-smelling library?”
-
-“An hour or so.”
-
-“Then I shall rely on your society at the end of that period. We might
-go for another saunter on the lake.”
-
-“All right. I’ll come and find you when I’ve finished.”
-
-Psmith watched her disappear into the house, then seated himself once
-more in the long chair under the cedar. A sense of loneliness oppressed
-him. He gave one look at _The Man With The Missing Toe_, and, having
-rejected the entertainment it offered, gave himself up to meditation.
-
-Blandings Castle dozed in the midsummer heat like a Palace of Sleep.
-There had been an exodus of its inmates shortly after lunch, when Lord
-Emsworth, Lady Constance, Mr. Keeble, Miss Peavey, and the Efficient
-Baxter had left for the neighbouring town of Bridgeford in the big
-car, with the Hon. Freddie puffing in its wake in a natty two-seater.
-Psmith, who had been invited to accompany them, had declined on the
-plea that he wished to write a poem. He felt but a tepid interest
-in the afternoon’s programme, which was to consist of the unveiling
-by his lordship of the recently completed memorial to the late
-Hartley Reddish, Esq., J.P., for so many years Member of Parliament
-for the Bridgeford and Shifley Division of Shropshire. Not even the
-prospect of hearing Lord Emsworth--clad, not without vain protest
-and weak grumbling, in a silk hat, morning coat, and sponge-bag
-trousers--deliver a speech, had been sufficient to lure him from the
-castle grounds.
-
-But at the moment when he had uttered his refusal, thereby incurring
-the ill-concealed envy both of Lord Emsworth and his son Freddie, the
-latter also an unwilling celebrant, he had supposed that his solitude
-would be shared by Eve. This deplorable conscientiousness of hers, this
-morbid craving for work, had left him at a loose end. The time and the
-place were both above criticism, but, as so often happens in this life
-of ours, he had been let down by the girl.
-
-But, though he chafed for awhile, it was not long before the dreamy
-peace of the afternoon began to exercise a soothing effect upon him.
-With the exception of the bees that worked with their usual misguided
-energy among the flowers and an occasional butterfly which flitted past
-in the sunshine, all nature seemed to be taking a siesta. Somewhere
-out of sight a lawn-mower had begun to emphasise the stillness with
-its musical whir. A telegraph-boy on a red bicycle passed up the drive
-to the front door, and seemed to have some difficulty in establishing
-communication with the domestic staff--from which Psmith deduced that
-Beach, the butler, like a good opportunist, was taking advantage of
-the absence of authority to enjoy a nap in some distant lair of his
-own. Eventually a parlourmaid appeared, accepted the telegram and
-(apparently) a rebuke from the boy, and the bicycle passed out of
-sight, leaving silence and peace once more.
-
-The noblest minds are not proof against atmospheric conditions of this
-kind. Psmith’s eyes closed, opened, closed again. And presently his
-regular breathing, varied by an occasional snore, was added to the rest
-of the small sounds of the summer afternoon.
-
-The shadow of the cedar was appreciably longer when he awoke with that
-sudden start which generally terminates sleep in a garden-chair. A
-glance at his watch told him that it was close on five o’clock, a fact
-which was confirmed a moment later by the arrival of the parlourmaid
-who had answered the summons of the telegraph-boy. She appeared to
-be the sole survivor of the little world that had its centre in the
-servants’ hall. A sort of female Casabianca.
-
-“I have put your tea in the hall, sir.”
-
-“You could have performed no nobler or more charitable task,” Psmith
-assured her; and, having corrected a certain stiffness of limb by
-means of massage, went in. It occurred to him that Eve, assiduous
-worker though she was, might have knocked off in order to keep him
-company.
-
-The hope proved vain. A single cup stood bleakly on the tray. Either
-Eve was superior to the feminine passion for tea or she was having hers
-up in the library. Filled with something of the sadness which he had
-felt at the sight of the toiling bees, Psmith embarked on his solitary
-meal, wondering sorrowfully at the perverseness which made girls work
-when there was no one to watch them.
-
-It was very agreeable here in the coolness of the hall. The great door
-of the castle was open, and through it he had a view of lawns bathed in
-a thirst-provoking sunlight. Through the green-baize door to his left,
-which led to the servants’ quarters, an occasional sharp giggle gave
-evidence of the presence of humanity, but apart from that he might have
-been alone in the world. Once again he fell into a dreamy meditation,
-and there is little reason to doubt that he would shortly have
-disgraced himself by falling asleep for the second time in a single
-afternoon, when he was restored to alertness by the sudden appearance
-of a foreign body in the open doorway. Against the background of golden
-light a black figure had abruptly manifested itself.
-
-The sharp pang of apprehension which ran through Psmith’s consciousness
-like an electric shock, causing him to stiffen like some wild creature
-surprised in the woods, was due to the momentary belief that the
-new-comer was the local vicar, of whose conversational powers he had
-had experience on the second day of his visit. Another glance showed
-him that he had been too pessimistic. This was not the vicar. It was
-someone whom he had never seen before--a slim and graceful young man
-with a dark, intelligent face, who stood blinking in the subdued light
-of the hall with eyes not yet accustomed to the absence of strong
-sunshine. Greatly relieved, Psmith rose and approached him.
-
-“Hallo!” said the new-comer. “I didn’t see you. It’s quite dark in here
-after outside.”
-
-“The light is pleasantly dim,” agreed Psmith.
-
-“Is Lord Emsworth anywhere about?”
-
-“I fear not. He has legged it, accompanied by the entire household, to
-superintend the unveiling of a memorial at Bridgeford to--if my memory
-serves me rightly--the late Hartley Reddish, Esq., J.P., M.P. Is there
-anything I can do?”
-
-“Well, I’ve come to stay, you know.”
-
-“Indeed?”
-
-“Lady Constance invited me to pay a visit as soon as I reached England.”
-
-“Ah! Then you have come from foreign parts?”
-
-“Canada.”
-
-Psmith started slightly. This, he perceived, was going to complicate
-matters. The last thing he desired was the addition to the Blandings
-circle of one familiar with Canada. Nothing would militate against his
-peace of mind more than the society of a man who would want to exchange
-with him views on that growing country.
-
-“Oh, Canada?” he said.
-
-“I wired,” proceeded the other, “but I suppose it came after everybody
-had left. Ah, that must be my telegram on that table over there. I
-walked up from the station.” He was rambling idly about the hall after
-the fashion of one breaking new ground. He paused at an occasional
-table, the one where, when taking after-dinner coffee, Miss Peavey was
-wont to sit. He picked up a book, and uttered a gratified laugh. “One
-of my little things,” he said.
-
-“One of what?” said Psmith.
-
-“This book. _Songs of Squalor._ I wrote it.”
-
-“You wrote it!”
-
-“Yes. My name’s McTodd. Ralston McTodd. I expect you have heard them
-speak of me?”
-
-
-§ 2
-
-The mind of a man who has undertaken a mission as delicate as Psmith’s
-at Blandings Castle is necessarily alert. Ever since he had stepped
-into the five o’clock train at Paddington, when his adventure might
-have been said formally to have started, Psmith had walked warily,
-like one in a jungle on whom sudden and unexpected things might pounce
-out at any moment. This calm announcement from the slim young man,
-therefore, though it undoubtedly startled him, did not deprive him of
-his faculties. On the contrary, it quickened them. His first action
-was to step nimbly to the table on which the telegram lay awaiting the
-return of Lord Emsworth, his second was to slip the envelope into his
-pocket. It was imperative that telegrams signed McTodd should not lie
-about loose while he was enjoying the hospitality of the castle.
-
-This done, he confronted the young man.
-
-“Come, come!” he said with quiet severity.
-
-He was extremely grateful to a kindly Providence which had arranged
-that this interview should take place at a time when nobody but himself
-was in the house.
-
-“You say that you are Ralston McTodd, the author of these poems?”
-
-“Yes, I do.”
-
-“Then what,” said Psmith incisively, “is a pale parabola of Joy?”
-
-“Er--what?” said the new-comer in an enfeebled voice. There was
-manifest in his demeanour now a marked nervousness.
-
-“And here is another,” said Psmith. “‘The----’ Wait a minute, I’ll get
-it soon. Yes. ‘The sibilant, scented silence that shimmered where we
-sat.’ Could you oblige me with a diagram of that one?”
-
-“I--I---- What are you talking about?”
-
-Psmith stretched out a long arm and patted him almost affectionately on
-the shoulder.
-
-“It’s lucky you met me before you had to face the others,” he said.
-“I fear that you undertook this little venture without thoroughly
-equipping yourself. They would have detected your imposture in the
-first minute.”
-
-“What do you mean--imposture? I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
-
-Psmith waggled his forefinger at him reproachfully.
-
-“My dear Comrade, I may as well tell you at once that the genuine
-McTodd is an old and dear friend of mine. I had a long and entertaining
-conversation with him only a few days ago. So that, I think we may
-confidently assert, is that. Or am I wrong?”
-
-“Oh, hell!” said the young man. And, flopping bonelessly into a chair,
-he mopped his forehead in undisguised and abject collapse.
-
-Silence reigned for awhile.
-
-“What,” inquired the visitor, raising a damp face that shone pallidly
-in the dim light, “are you going to do about it?”
-
-“Nothing, Comrade--by the way, what is your name?”
-
-“Cootes.”
-
-“Nothing, Comrade Cootes. Nothing whatever. You are free to leg it
-hence whenever you feel disposed. In fact, the sooner you do so, the
-better I shall be pleased.”
-
-“Say! That’s darned good of you.”
-
-“Not at all, not at all.”
-
-“You’re an ace----”
-
-“Oh, hush!” interrupted Psmith modestly. “But before you go tell me one
-or two things. I take it that your object in coming here was to have a
-pop at Lady Constance’s necklace?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I thought as much. And what made you suppose that the real McTodd
-would not be here when you arrived?”
-
-“Oh, that was all right. I travelled over with that guy McTodd on the
-boat, and saw a good deal of him when we got to London. He was full of
-how he’d been invited here, and I got it out of him that no one here
-knew him by sight. And then one afternoon I met him in the Strand, all
-worked up. Madder than a hornet. Said he’d been insulted and wouldn’t
-come down to this place if they came and begged him on their bended
-knees. I couldn’t make out what it was all about, but apparently he
-had met Lord Emsworth and hadn’t been treated right. He told me he was
-going straight off to Paris.”
-
-“And did he?”
-
-“Sure. I saw him off myself at Charing Cross. That’s why it seemed such
-a cinch coming here instead of him. It’s just my darned luck that the
-first man I run into is a friend of his. How was I to know that he had
-any friends this side? He told me he’d never been in England before.”
-
-“In this life, Comrade Cootes,” said Psmith, “we must always
-distinguish between the Unlikely and the Impossible. It was unlikely,
-as you say, that you would meet any friend of McTodd’s in this
-out-of-the-way spot; and you rashly ordered your movements on the
-assumption that it was impossible. With what result? The cry goes round
-the Underworld, ‘Poor old Cootes has made a bloomer!’”
-
-“You needn’t rub it in.”
-
-“I am only doing so for your good. It is my earnest hope that you
-will lay this lesson to heart and profit by it. Who knows that it may
-not be the turning-point in your career? Years hence, when you are
-a white-haired and opulent man of leisure, having retired from the
-crook business with a comfortable fortune, you may look back on your
-experience of to-day and realise that it was the means of starting
-you on the road to Success. You will lay stress on it when you are
-interviewed for the _Weekly Burglar_ on ‘How I Began’ . . . But,
-talking of starting on roads, I think that perhaps it would be as well
-if you now had a dash at the one leading to the railway-station. The
-household may be returning at any moment now.”
-
-“That’s right,” agreed the visitor.
-
-“I think so,” said Psmith. “I think so. You will be happier when you
-are away from here. Once outside the castle precincts, a great weight
-will roll off your mind. A little fresh air will put the roses in your
-cheeks. You know your way out?”
-
-He shepherded the young man to the door and with a cordial push started
-him on his way. Then with long strides he ran upstairs to the library
-to find Eve.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At about the same moment, on the platform of Market Blandings station,
-Miss Aileen Peavey was alighting from the train which had left
-Bridgeford some half an hour earlier. A headache, the fruit of standing
-about in the hot sun, had caused her to forgo the pleasure of hearing
-Lord Emsworth deliver his speech: and she had slipped back on a
-convenient train with the intention of lying down and resting. Finding,
-on reaching Market Blandings, that her head was much better, and the
-heat of the afternoon being now over, she started to walk to the
-castle, greatly refreshed by a cool breeze which had sprung up from the
-west. She left the town at almost the exact time when the disconsolate
-Mr. Cootes was passing out of the big gates at the end of the castle
-drive.
-
-
-§ 3
-
-The grey melancholy which accompanied Mr. Cootes like a diligent
-spectre as he began his walk back to the town of Market Blandings, and
-which not even the delightful evening could dispel, was due primarily,
-of course, to that sickening sense of defeat which afflicts a man whose
-high hopes have been wrecked at the very instant when success has
-seemed in sight. Once or twice in the life of every man there falls to
-his lot something which can only be described as a soft snap, and it
-had seemed to Mr. Cootes that this venture of his to Blandings Castle
-came into that category. He had, like most members of his profession,
-had his ups and downs in the past, but at last, he told himself, the
-goddess Fortune had handed him something on a plate with watercress
-round it. Once established in the castle, there would have been a
-hundred opportunities of achieving the capture of Lady Constance’s
-necklace: and it had looked as though all he had to do was to walk in,
-announce himself, and be treated as the honoured guest. As he slouched
-moodily between the dusty hedges that fringed the road to Market
-Blandings, Edward Cootes tasted the bitterness that only those know
-whose plans have been upset by the hundredth chance.
-
-But this was not all. In addition to the sadness of frustrated hope, he
-was also experiencing the anguish of troubled memories. Not only was
-the Present torturing him, but the Past had come to life and jumped
-out and bitten him. A sorrow’s crown of sorrow is remembering happier
-things, and this was what Edward Cootes was doing now. It is at moments
-like this that a man needs a woman’s tender care, and Mr. Cootes had
-lost the only woman in whom he could have confided his grief, the only
-woman who would have understood and sympathised.
-
-We have been introduced to Mr. Cootes at a point in his career when he
-was practising upon dry land; but that was not his chosen environment.
-Until a few months back his business had lain upon deep waters. The
-salt scent of the sea was in his blood. To put it more exactly, he had
-been by profession a card-sharper on the Atlantic liners; and it was
-during this period that he had loved and lost. For three years and
-more he had worked in perfect harmony with the lady who, though she
-adopted a variety of names for purposes of travel, was known to her
-immediate circle as Smooth Lizzie. He had been the practitioner, she
-the decoy, and theirs had been one of those ideal business partnerships
-which one so seldom meets with in a world of cynicism and mistrust.
-Comradeship had ripened into something deeper and more sacred, and it
-was all settled between them that when they next touched New York, Mr.
-Cootes, if still at liberty, should proceed to the City Hall for a
-marriage-licence; when they had quarrelled--quarrelled irrevocably over
-one of those trifling points over which lovers do quarrel. Some absurd
-dispute as to the proper division of the quite meagre sum obtained
-from a cattle millionaire on their last voyage had marred their golden
-dreams. One word had led to another. The lady, after woman’s habit,
-had the last of the series, and even Mr. Cootes was forced to admit
-that it was a pippin. She had spoken it on the pier at New York, and
-then passed out of his life. And with her had gone all his luck. It
-was as if her going had brought a curse upon him. On the very next
-trip he had had an unfortunate misunderstanding with an irritable
-gentleman from the Middle West, who, piqued at what he considered--not
-unreasonably--the undue proportion of kings and aces in the hands
-which Mr. Cootes had been dealing himself, expressed his displeasure
-by biting off the first joint of the other’s right index finger--thus
-putting an abrupt end to a brilliant career. For it was on this finger
-that Mr. Cootes principally relied for the almost magical effects
-which he was wont to produce with a pack of cards after a little quiet
-shuffling.
-
-With an aching sense of what might have been he thought now of his lost
-Lizzie. Regretfully he admitted to himself that she had always been
-the brains of the firm. A certain manual dexterity he had no doubt
-possessed, but it was ever Lizzie who had been responsible for the
-finer work. If they had still been partners, he really believed that
-she could have discovered some way of getting round the obstacles which
-had reared themselves now between himself and the necklace of Lady
-Constance Keeble. It was in a humble and contrite spirit that Edward
-Cootes proceeded on his way to Market Blandings.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Miss Peavey, meanwhile, who, it will be remembered, was moving slowly
-along the road from the Market Blandings end, was finding her walk both
-restful and enjoyable. There were moments, it has to be recorded, when
-the society of her hostess and her hostess’s relations was something of
-a strain to Miss Peavey; and she was glad to be alone. Her headache had
-disappeared, and she revelled in the quiet evening hush. About now, if
-she had not had the sense to detach herself from the castle platoon,
-she would, she reflected, be listening to Lord Emsworth’s speech on the
-subject of the late Hartley Reddish, J.P., M.P.: a topic which even the
-noblest of orators might have failed to render really gripping. And
-what she knew of her host gave her little confidence in his powers of
-oratory.
-
-Yes, she was well out of it. The gentle breeze played soothingly upon
-her face. Her delicately modelled nostrils drank in gratefully the
-scent from the hedgerows. Somewhere out of sight a thrush was singing.
-And so moved was Miss Peavey by the peace and sweetness of it all that
-she, too, began to sing.
-
-Had those who enjoyed the privilege of her acquaintance at Blandings
-Castle been informed that Miss Peavey was about to sing, they would
-doubtless have considered themselves on firm ground if called upon
-to make a conjecture as to the type of song which she would select.
-Something quaint, dreamy, a little wistful . . . that would have been
-the universal guess . . . some old-world ballad, possibly . . .
-
-What Miss Peavey actually sang--in a soft, meditative voice like that
-of a linnet waking to greet a new dawn--was that curious composition
-known as “The Beale Street Blues.”
-
-As she reached the last line, she broke off abruptly. She was, she
-perceived, no longer alone. Down the road toward her, walking
-pensively like one with a secret sorrow, a man was approaching; and
-for an instant, as she turned the corner, something in his appearance
-seemed to catch her by the throat and her breath came sharply.
-
-“Gee!” said Miss Peavey.
-
-She was herself again the next moment. A chance resemblance had misled
-her. She could not see the man’s face, for his head was bent, but how
-was it possible . . .
-
-And then, when he was quite close, he raised his head, and the county
-of Shropshire, as far as it was visible to her amazed eyes, executed
-a sudden and eccentric dance. Trees bobbed up and down, hedgerows
-shimmied like a Broadway chorus; and from out of the midst of the
-whirling country-side a voice spoke.
-
-“Liz!”
-
-“Eddie!” ejaculated Miss Peavey faintly, and sat down in a heap on a
-grassy bank.
-
-
-§ 4
-
-“Well, for goodness’ sake!” said Miss Peavey.
-
-Shropshire had become static once more. She stared at him, wide-eyed.
-
-“Can you tie it!” said Miss Peavey.
-
-She ran her gaze over him once again from head to foot.
-
-“Well, if this ain’t the cat’s whiskers!” said Miss Peavey. And with
-this final pronouncement she rose from her bank, somewhat restored, and
-addressed herself to the task of picking up old threads.
-
-“Wherever,” she inquired, “did you spring from, Ed?”
-
-There was nothing but affection in her voice. Her gaze was that of a
-mother contemplating her long-lost child. The past was past and a new
-era had begun. In the past she had been compelled to describe this man
-as a hunk of cheese and to express the opinion that his crookedness
-was such as to enable him to hide at will behind a spiral staircase;
-but now, in the joy of this unexpected reunion, all these harsh views
-were forgotten. This was Eddie Cootes, her old side-kick, come back to
-her after many days, and only now was it borne in upon her what a gap
-in her life his going had made. She flung herself into his arms with a
-glad cry.
-
-Mr. Cootes, who had not been expecting this demonstration of esteem,
-staggered a trifle at the impact, but recovered himself sufficiently
-to return the embrace with something of his ancient warmth. He was
-delighted at this cordiality, but also surprised. The memory of the
-lady’s parting words on the occasion of their last meeting was still
-green, and he had not realised how quickly women forget and forgive,
-and how a sensitive girl, stirred by some fancied injury, may address a
-man as a pie-faced plugugly and yet retain in her inmost heart all the
-old love and affection. He kissed Miss Peavey fondly.
-
-“Liz,” he said with fervour, “you’re prettier than ever.”
-
-“Now you behave,” responded Miss Peavey coyly.
-
-The arrival of a baaing flock of sheep, escorted by a priggish dog and
-followed by a couple of the local peasantry, caused an intermission in
-these tender exchanges; and by the time the procession had moved off
-down the road they were in a more suitable frame of mind to converse
-quietly and in a practical spirit, to compare notes, and to fill up the
-blanks.
-
-“Wherever,” inquired Miss Peavey again, “did you spring from, Ed? You
-could of knocked me down with a feather when I saw you coming along the
-road. I couldn’t have believed it was you, this far from the ocean.
-What are you doing inland like this? Taking a vacation, or aren’t you
-working the boats any more?”
-
-“No, Liz,” said Mr. Cootes sadly. “I’ve had to give that up.”
-
-And he exhibited the hiatus where an important section of his finger
-had been and told his painful tale. His companion’s sympathy was balm
-to his wounded soul.
-
-“The risks of the profession, of course,” said Mr. Cootes moodily,
-removing the exhibit in order to place his arm about her slender waist.
-“Still, it’s done me in. I tried once or twice, but I couldn’t seem to
-make the cards behave no more, so I quit. Ah, Liz,” said Mr. Cootes
-with feeling, “you can take it from me that I’ve had no luck since
-you left me. Regular hoodoo there’s been on me. If I’d walked under a
-ladder on a Friday to smash a mirror over the dome of a black cat I
-couldn’t have had it tougher.”
-
-“You poor boy!”
-
-Mr. Cootes nodded sombrely.
-
-“Tough,” he agreed, “but there it is. Only this afternoon my jinx
-gummed the game for me and threw a spanner into the prettiest little
-scenario you ever thought of . . . But let’s not talk about my
-troubles. What are you doing now, Liz?”
-
-“Me? Oh, I’m living near here.”
-
-Mr. Cootes started.
-
-“Not married?” he exclaimed in alarm.
-
-“No!” cried Miss Peavey with vehemence, and shot a tender glance up at
-his face. “And I guess you know why, Ed.”
-
-“You don’t mean . . . you hadn’t forgotten me?”
-
-“As if I could ever forget you, Eddie! There’s only one tintype on _my_
-mantelpiece.”
-
-“But it struck me . . . it sort of occurred to me as a passing thought
-that, when we saw each other last, you were a mite peeved with your
-Eddie . . .”
-
-It was the first allusion either of them had made to the past
-unpleasantness, and it caused a faint blush to dye Miss Peavey’s soft
-cheek.
-
-“Oh, shucks!” she said. “I’d forgotten all about that next day. I was
-good and mad at the time, I’ll allow, but if only you’d called me up
-next morning, Ed . . .”
-
-There was a silence, as they mused on what might have been.
-
-“What are you doing, living here?” asked Mr. Cootes after a pregnant
-pause. “Have you retired?”
-
-“No, _sir_. I’m sitting in at a game with real worthwhile stakes. But,
-darn it,” said Miss Peavey regretfully, “I’m wondering if it isn’t too
-big for me to put through alone. Oh, Eddie, if only there was some way
-you and me could work it together like in the old days.”
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“Diamonds, Eddie. A necklace. I’ve only had one look at it so far, but
-that was enough. Some of the best ice I’ve saw in years, Ed. Worth
-every cent of a hundred thousand berries.”
-
-The coincidence drew from Mr. Cootes a sharp exclamation.
-
-“A necklace!”
-
-“Listen, Ed, while I slip you the low-down. And, say, if you knew the
-relief it was to me talking good United States again! Like taking off
-a pair of tight shoes. I’m doing the high-toned stuff for the moment.
-Soulful. _You_ remember, like I used to pull once or twice in the old
-days. Just after you and me had that little spat of ours I thought I’d
-take another trip in the old _Atlantic_--force of habit or something,
-I guess. Anyway, I sailed, and we weren’t two days out from New York
-when I made the biggest kind of a hit with the dame this necklace
-belongs to. Seemed to take a shine to me right away . . .”
-
-“I don’t blame her!” murmured Mr. Cootes devotedly.
-
-“Now don’t you interrupt,” said Miss Peavey, administering a gratified
-slap. “Where was I? Oh yes. This here now Lady Constance Keeble I’m
-telling you about . . .”
-
-“What!”
-
-“What’s the matter now?”
-
-“Lady Constance Keeble?”
-
-“That’s the name. She’s Lord Emsworth’s sister, who lives at a big
-place up the road. Blandings Castle it’s called. She didn’t seem like
-she was able to let me out of her sight, and I’ve been with her off and
-on ever since we landed. I’m visiting at the castle now.”
-
-A deep sigh, like the groan of some great spirit in travail, forced
-itself from between Mr. Cootes’s lips.
-
-“Well, wouldn’t that jar you!” he demanded of circumambient space. “Of
-all the lucky ones! getting into the place like that, with the band
-playing and a red carpet laid down for you to walk on! Gee, if you
-fell down a well, Liz, you’d come up with the bucket. You’re a human
-horseshoe, that’s what you are. Say, listen. Lemme-tell-ya-sumf’n. Do
-you know what _I’ve_ been doing this afternoon? Only trying to edge
-into the dam’ place myself and getting the air two minutes after I was
-past the front door.”
-
-“What! _You_, Ed?”
-
-“Sure. You’re not the only one that’s heard of that collection of ice.”
-
-“Oh, Ed!” Bitter disappointment rang in Miss Peavey’s voice. “If only
-you could have worked it! Me and you partners again! It hurts to think
-of it. What was the stuff you pulled to get you in?”
-
-Mr. Cootes so far forgot himself in his agony of spirit as to
-expectorate disgustedly at a passing frog. And even in this trivial
-enterprise failure dogged him. He missed the frog, which withdrew into
-the grass with a cold look of disapproval.
-
-“Me?” said Mr. Cootes. “I thought I’d got it smooth. I’d chummed up
-with a fellow who had been invited down to the place and had thought it
-over and decided not to go, so I said to myself what’s the matter with
-going there instead of him. A gink called McTodd this was, a poet, and
-none of the folks had ever set eyes on him, except the old man, who’s
-too short-sighted to see anyone, so . . .”
-
-Miss Peavey interrupted.
-
-“You don’t mean to tell me, Ed Cootes, that you thought you could get
-into the castle by pretending to be Ralston McTodd?”
-
-“Sure I did. Why not? It didn’t seem like there was anything to it.
-A cinch, that’s what it looked like. And the first guy I meet in the
-joint is a mutt who knows this McTodd well. We had a couple of words,
-and I beat it. I know when I’m not wanted.”
-
-“But, Ed! Ed! What do you mean? Ralston McTodd is at the castle now,
-this very moment.”
-
-“How’s that?”
-
-“Sure. Been there coupla days and more. Long, thin bird with an
-eyeglass.”
-
-Mr. Cootes’s mind was in a whirl. He could make nothing of this matter.
-
-“Nothing like it! McTodd’s not so darned tall or so thin, if it comes
-to that. And he didn’t wear no eyeglass all the time I was with him.
-This . . .” He broke off sharply. “My gosh! I wonder!” he cried. “Liz!
-How many men are there in the joint right now?”
-
-“Only four besides Lord Emsworth. There’s a big party coming down for
-the County Ball, but that’s all there is at present. There’s Lord
-Emsworth’s son, Freddie . . .”
-
-“What does he look like?”
-
-“Sort of a dude with blond hair slicked back. Then there’s Mr. Keeble.
-He’s short with a red face.”
-
-“And?”
-
-“And Baxter. He’s Lord Emsworth’s secretary. Wears spectacles.”
-
-“And that’s the lot?”
-
-“That’s all there is, not counting this here McTodd and the help.”
-
-Mr. Cootes brought his hand down with a resounding report on his leg.
-The mildly pleasant look which had been a feature of his appearance
-during his interview with Psmith had vanished now, its place taken by
-one of an extremely sinister malevolence.
-
-“And I let him shoo me out as if I was a stray pup!” he muttered
-through clenched teeth. “Of all the bunk games!”
-
-“What _are_ you talking about, Ed?”
-
-“And I thanked him! _Thanked_ him!” moaned Edward Cootes, writhing at
-the memory. “I thanked him for letting me go!”
-
-“Eddie Cootes, whatever are you . . . ?”
-
-“Listen, Liz.” Mr. Cootes mastered his emotion with a strong effort. “I
-blew into that joint and met this fellow with the eyeglass, and he told
-me he knew McTodd well and that I wasn’t him. And, from what you tell
-me, this must be the very guy that’s passing himself off as McTodd!
-Don’t you see? This baby must have started working on the same lines
-I did. Got to know McTodd, found he wasn’t coming to the castle, and
-came down instead of him, same as me. Only he got there first, damn
-him! Wouldn’t that give you a pain in the neck!”
-
-Amazement held Miss Peavey dumb for an instant. Then she spoke.
-
-“The big stiff!” said Miss Peavey.
-
-Mr. Cootes, regardless of a lady’s presence, went even further in his
-censure.
-
-“I had a feeling from the first that there was something not on the
-level about that guy!” said Miss Peavey. “Gee! He must be after that
-necklace too.”
-
-“Sure he’s after the necklace,” said Mr. Cootes impatiently. “What did
-you think he’d come down for? A change of air?”
-
-“But, Ed! Say! Are you going to let him get away with it?”
-
-“Am _I_ going to let him get away with it!” said Mr. Cootes, annoyed by
-the foolish question. “Wake me up in the night and ask me!”
-
-“But what are you going to do?”
-
-“Do!” said Mr. Cootes. “Do! I’ll tell you what I’m going to . . .” He
-paused, and the stern resolve that shone in his face seemed to flicker.
-“Say, what the hell _am_ I going to do?” he went on somewhat weakly.
-
-“You won’t get anything by putting the folks wise that he’s a fake.
-That would be the finish of him, but it wouldn’t get _you_ anywhere.”
-
-“No,” said Mr. Cootes.
-
-“Wait a minute while I think,” said Miss Peavey.
-
-There was a pause. Miss Peavey sat with knit brows.
-
-“How would it be . . . ?” ventured Mr. Cootes.
-
-“Cheese it!” said Miss Peavey.
-
-Mr. Cootes cheesed it. The minutes ticked on.
-
-“I’ve got it,” said Miss Peavey. “This guy’s ace-high with Lady
-Constance. You’ve got to get him alone right away and tell him he’s got
-to get you invited to the place as a friend of his.”
-
-“I knew you’d think of something, Liz,” said Mr. Cootes, almost humbly.
-“You always were a wonder like that. How am I to get him alone?”
-
-“I can fix that. I’ll ask him to come for a stroll with me. He’s not
-what you’d call crazy about me, but he can’t very well duck if I keep
-after him. We’ll go down the drive. You’ll be in the bushes--I’ll show
-you the place. Then I’ll send him to fetch me a wrap or something, and
-while I walk on he’ll come back past where you’re hiding, and you jump
-out at him.”
-
-“Liz,” said Mr. Cootes, lost in admiration, “when it comes to doping
-out a scheme, you’re the snake’s eyebrows!”
-
-“But what are you going to do if he just turns you down?”
-
-Mr. Cootes uttered a bleak laugh, and from the recesses of his costume
-produced a neat little revolver.
-
-“_He_ won’t turn me down!” he said.
-
-
-§ 5
-
-“Fancy!” said Miss Peavey. “If I had not had a headache and come back
-early, we should never have had this little chat!”
-
-She gazed up at Psmith in her gentle, wistful way as they started
-together down the broad gravel drive. A timid, soulful little thing she
-looked.
-
-“No,” said Psmith.
-
-It was not a gushing reply, but he was not feeling at his sunniest.
-The idea that Miss Peavey might return from Bridgeford in advance of
-the main body had not occurred to him. As he would have said himself,
-he had confused the Unlikely with the Impossible. And the result had
-been that she had caught him beyond hope of retreat as he sat in his
-garden-chair and thought of Eve Halliday, who on their return from the
-lake had been seized with a fresh spasm of conscience and had gone back
-to the library to put in another hour’s work before dinner. To decline
-Miss Peavey’s invitation to accompany her down the drive in order to
-see if there were any signs of those who had been doing honour to the
-late Hartley Reddish, M.P., had been out of the question. But Psmith,
-though he went, went without pleasure. Every moment he spent in her
-society tended to confirm him more and more in the opinion that Miss
-Peavey was the curse of the species.
-
-“And I have been so longing,” continued his companion, “to have a nice,
-long talk. All these days I have felt that I haven’t been able to get
-as _near_ you as I should wish.”
-
-“Well, of course, with the others always about . . .”
-
-“I meant in a spiritual sense, of course.”
-
-“I see.”
-
-“I wanted so much to discuss your wonderful poetry with you. You
-haven’t so much as _mentioned_ your work since you came here. _Have_
-you!”
-
-“Ah, but, you see, I am trying to keep my mind off it.”
-
-“Really? Why?”
-
-“My medical adviser warned me that I had been concentrating a trifle
-too much. He offered me the choice, in fact, between a complete rest
-and the loony-bin.”
-
-“The _what_, Mr. McTodd?”
-
-“The lunatic asylum, he meant. These medical men express themselves
-oddly.”
-
-“But surely, then, you ought not to _dream_ of trying to compose if it
-is as bad as that? And you told Lord Emsworth that you wished to stay
-at home this afternoon to write a poem.”
-
-Her glance showed nothing but tender solicitude, but inwardly Miss
-Peavey was telling herself that _that_ would hold him for awhile.
-
-“True,” said Psmith, “true. But you know what Art is. An inexorable
-mistress. The inspiration came, and I felt that I must take the risk.
-But it has left me weak, weak.”
-
-“You BIG STIFF!” said Miss Peavey. But not aloud.
-
-They walked on a few steps.
-
-“In fact,” said Psmith, with another inspiration, “I’m not sure I ought
-not to be going back and resting now.”
-
-Miss Peavey eyed a clump of bushes some dozen yards farther down the
-drive. They were quivering slightly, as though they sheltered some
-alien body; and Miss Peavey, whose temper was apt to be impatient,
-registered a resolve to tell Edward Cootes that, if he couldn’t hide
-behind a bush without dancing about like a cat on hot bricks, he had
-better give up his profession and take to selling jellied eels. In
-which, it may be mentioned, she wronged her old friend. He had been as
-still as a statue until a moment before, when a large and excitable
-beetle had fallen down the space between his collar and his neck, an
-experience which might well have tried the subtlest woodsman.
-
-“Oh, please don’t go in yet,” said Miss Peavey. “It is such a lovely
-evening. Hark to the music of the breeze in the tree-tops. So soothing.
-Like a far-away harp. I wonder if it is whispering secrets to the
-birds.”
-
-Psmith forbore to follow her into this region of speculation, and they
-walked past the bushes in silence.
-
-Some little distance farther on, however, Miss Peavey seemed to relent.
-
-“You _are_ looking tired, Mr. McTodd,” she said anxiously. “I am afraid
-you really have been overtaxing your strength. Perhaps after all you
-had better go back and lie down.”
-
-“You think so?”
-
-“I am sure of it. I will just stroll on to the gates and see if the car
-is in sight.”
-
-“I feel that I am deserting you.”
-
-“Oh, please!” said Miss Peavey deprecatingly.
-
-With something of the feelings of a long-sentence convict unexpectedly
-released immediately on his arrival in jail, Psmith retraced his steps.
-Glancing over his shoulder, he saw that Miss Peavey had disappeared
-round a bend in the drive; and he paused to light a cigarette. He had
-just thrown away the match and was walking on, well content with life,
-when a voice behind him said “Hey!” and the well-remembered form of Mr.
-Edward Cootes stepped out of the bushes.
-
-“See this?” said Mr. Cootes, exhibiting his revolver.
-
-“I do indeed, Comrade Cootes,” replied Psmith. “And, if it is not an
-untimely question, what is the idea?”
-
-“That,” said Mr. Cootes, “is just in case you try any funny business.”
-And, replacing the weapon in a handy pocket, he proceeded to slap
-vigorously at the region between his shoulder blades. He also wriggled
-with not a little animation.
-
-Psmith watched these manœuvres gravely.
-
-“You did not stop me at the pistol’s point merely to watch you go
-through your Swedish exercises?” he said.
-
-Mr. Cootes paused for an instant.
-
-“Got a beetle or something down my back,” he explained curtly.
-
-“Ah? Then, as you will naturally wish to be alone in such a sad moment,
-I will be bidding you a cordial good evening and strolling on.”
-
-“No, you don’t!”
-
-“Don’t I?” said Psmith resignedly. “Perhaps you are right, perhaps you
-are right.” Mr. Cootes replaced the revolver once more. “I take it,
-then, Comrade Cootes, that you would have speech with me. Carry on, old
-friend, and get it off your diaphragm. What seems to be on your mind?”
-
-A lucky blow appeared to have stunned Mr. Cootes’s beetle, and he was
-able to give his full attention to the matter in hand. He stared at
-Psmith with considerable distaste.
-
-“I’m on to you, Bill!” he said.
-
-“My name is not Bill,” said Psmith.
-
-“No,” snapped Mr. Cootes, his annoyance by this time very manifest.
-“And it’s not McTodd.”
-
-Psmith looked at his companion thoughtfully. This was an unforeseen
-complication, and for the moment he would readily have admitted that he
-saw no way of overcoming it. That the other was in no genial frame of
-mind towards him the expression on his face would have showed, even if
-his actions had not been sufficient indication of the fact. Mr. Cootes,
-having disposed of his beetle and being now at leisure to concentrate
-his whole attention on Psmith, was eyeing that immaculate young man
-with a dislike which he did not attempt to conceal.
-
-“Shall we be strolling on?” suggested Psmith. “Walking may assist
-thought. At the moment I am free to confess that you have opened up
-a subject which causes me some perplexity. I think, Comrade Cootes,
-having given the position of affairs a careful examination, that we may
-say that the next move is with you. What do you propose to do about it?”
-
-“I’d like,” said Mr. Cootes with asperity, “to beat your block off.”
-
-“No doubt. But . . .”
-
-“I’d like to knock you for a goal!”
-
-Psmith discouraged these Utopian dreams with a deprecating wave of the
-hand.
-
-“I can readily understand it,” he said courteously. “But, to keep
-within the sphere of practical politics, what is the actual move which
-you contemplate? You could expose me, no doubt, to my host, but I
-cannot see how that would profit you.”
-
-“I know that. But you can remember I’ve got that up my sleeve in case
-you try any funny business.”
-
-“You persist in harping on that possibility, Comrade Cootes. The idea
-seems to be an obsession with you. I can assure you that I contemplate
-no such thing. What, to return to the point, do you intend to do?”
-
-They had reached the broad expanse opposite the front door, where the
-drive, from being a river, spread out into a lake of gravel. Psmith
-stopped.
-
-“You’ve got to get me into this joint,” said Mr. Cootes.
-
-“I feared that that was what you were about to suggest. In my peculiar
-position I have naturally no choice but to endeavour to carry out your
-wishes. Any attempt not to do so would, I imagine, infallibly strike so
-keen a critic as yourself as ‘funny business.’ But how can I get you
-into what you breezily describe as ‘this joint’?”
-
-“You can say I’m a friend of yours and ask them to invite me.”
-
-Psmith shook his head gently.
-
-“Not one of your brightest suggestions, Comrade Cootes. Tactfully
-refraining from stressing the point that an instant lowering of my
-prestige would inevitably ensue should it be supposed that you were a
-friend of mine, I will merely mention that, being myself merely a guest
-in this stately home of England, I can hardly go about inviting my
-chums here for indefinite visits. No, we must find another way. . . .
-You’re sure you want to stay? Quite so, quite so, I merely asked. . . .
-Now, let us think.”
-
-Through the belt of rhododendrons which jutted out from one side of the
-castle a portly form at this point made itself visible, moving high and
-disposedly in the direction of the back premises. It was Beach, the
-butler, returning from the pleasant ramble in which he had indulged
-himself on the departure of his employer and the rest of the party.
-Revived by some gracious hours in the open air, Beach was returning to
-duty. And with the sight of him there came to Psmith a neat solution of
-the problem confronting him.
-
-“Oh, Beach,” he called.
-
-“Sir?” responded a fruity voice. There was a brief pause while the
-butler navigated into the open. He removed the straw hat which he had
-donned for his excursion, and enfolded Psmith in a pop-eyed but not
-unkindly gaze. A thoughtful critic of country-house humanity, he had
-long since decided that he approved of Psmith. Since Lady Constance had
-first begun to offer the hospitality of the castle to the literary and
-artistic world, he had been profoundly shocked by some of the rare and
-curious specimens who had nodded their disordered locks and flaunted
-their ill-cut evening clothes at the dinner-table over which he
-presided; and Psmith had come as a pleasant surprise.
-
-“Sorry to trouble you, Beach.”
-
-“Not at all, sir.”
-
-“This,” said Psmith, indicating Mr. Cootes, who was viewing the scene
-with a wary and suspicious eye, an eye obviously alert for any signs
-of funny business, “is my man. My valet, you know. He has just arrived
-from town. I had to leave him behind to attend the bedside of a sick
-aunt. Your aunt was better when you came away, Cootes?” he inquired
-graciously.
-
-Mr. Cootes correctly interpreted this question as a feeler with regard
-to his views on this new development, and decided to accept the
-situation. True, he had hoped to enter the castle in a slightly higher
-capacity than that of a gentleman’s personal gentleman, but he was an
-old campaigner. Once in, as he put it to himself with admirable common
-sense, he would be in.
-
-“Yes, sir,” he replied.
-
-“Capital,” said Psmith. “Capital. Then will you look after Cootes,
-Beach.”
-
-“Very good, sir,” said the butler in a voice of cordial approval. The
-only point he had found to cavil at in Psmith had been removed; for it
-had hitherto pained him a little that a gentleman with so nice a taste
-in clothes as that dignified guest should have embarked on a visit to
-such a place as Blandings Castle without a personal attendant. Now
-all was explained and, as far as Beach was concerned, forgiven. He
-proceeded to escort Mr. Cootes to the rear. They disappeared behind the
-rhododendrons.
-
-They had hardly gone when a sudden thought came to Psmith as he sat
-once more in the coolness of the hall. He pressed the bell. Strange,
-he reflected, how one overlooked these obvious things. That was how
-generals lost battles.
-
-“Sir?” said Beach, appearing through the green baize door.
-
-“Sorry to trouble you again, Beach.”
-
-“Not at all, sir.”
-
-“I hope you will make Cootes comfortable. I think you will like him.
-His, when you get to know him, is a very winning personality.”
-
-“He seems a nice young fellow, sir.”
-
-“Oh, by the way, Beach. You might ask him if he brought my revolver
-from town with him.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” said Beach, who would have scorned to betray emotion if it
-had been a Lewis gun.
-
-“I think I saw it sticking out of his pocket. You might bring it to me,
-will you?”
-
-“Very good, sir.”
-
-Beach retired, to return a moment later. On the silver salver which he
-carried the lethal weapon was duly reposing.
-
-“Your revolver, sir,” said Beach.
-
-“Thank you,” said Psmith.
-
-
-§ 6
-
-For some moments after the butler had withdrawn in his stately
-pigeon-toed way through the green baize door, Psmith lay back in his
-chair with the feeling that something attempted, something done, had
-earned a night’s repose. He was not so sanguine as to suppose that he
-had actually checkmated an adversary of Mr. Cootes’s strenuousness
-by the simple act of removing a revolver from his possession; but
-there was no denying the fact that the feel of the thing in his
-pocket engendered a certain cosy satisfaction. The little he had seen
-of Mr. Cootes had been enough to convince him that the other was a
-man who was far better off without an automatic pistol. There was
-an impulsiveness about his character which did not go well with the
-possession of fire-arms.
-
-Psmith’s meditations had taken him thus far when they were interrupted
-by an imperative voice.
-
-“Hey!”
-
-Only one person of Psmith’s acquaintance was in the habit of opening
-his remarks in this manner. It was consequently no surprise to him to
-find Mr. Edward Cootes standing at his elbow.
-
-“Hey!”
-
-“All right, Comrade Cootes,” said Psmith with a touch of austerity,
-“I heard you the first time. And may I remind you that this habit of
-yours of popping out from unexpected places and saying ‘Hey!’ is one
-which should be overcome. Valets are supposed to wait till rung for. At
-least, I think so. I must confess that until this moment I have never
-had a valet.”
-
-“And you wouldn’t have one now if I could help it,” responded Mr.
-Cootes.
-
-Psmith raised his eyebrows.
-
-“Why,” he inquired, surprised, “this peevishness? Don’t you like being
-a valet?”
-
-“No, I don’t.”
-
-“You astonish me. I should have thought you would have gone singing
-about the house. Have you considered that the tenancy of such a
-position throws you into the constant society of Comrade Beach, than
-whom it would be difficult to imagine a more delightful companion?”
-
-“Old stiff!” said Mr. Cootes sourly. “If there’s one thing that makes
-me tired, it’s a guy that talks about his darned stomach all the time.”
-
-“I beg your pardon?”
-
-“The Beach gook,” explained Mr. Cootes, “has got something wrong with
-the lining of his stomach, and if I hadn’t made my getaway he’d be
-talking about it yet.”
-
-“If you fail to find entertainment and uplift in first-hand information
-about Comrade Beach’s stomach, you must indeed be hard to please. I
-am to take it, then, that you came snorting out here, interrupting my
-daydreams, merely in order to seek my sympathy?”
-
-Mr. Cootes gazed upon him with a smouldering eye.
-
-“I came to tell you I suppose you think you’re darned smart.”
-
-“And very nice of you, too,” said Psmith, touched. “A pretty
-compliment, for which I am not ungrateful.”
-
-“You got that gun away from me mighty smoothly, didn’t you?”
-
-“Since you mention it, yes.”
-
-“And now I suppose you think you’re going to slip in ahead of me and
-get away with that necklace? Well, say, listen, lemme tell you it’ll
-take someone better than a half-baked string-bean like you to put one
-over on me.”
-
-“I seem,” said Psmith, pained, “to detect a certain animus creeping
-into your tone. Surely we can be trade rivals without this spirit of
-hostility. My attitude towards you is one of kindly tolerance.”
-
-“Even if you get it, where do you think you’re going to hide it? And,
-believe me, it’ll take some hiding. Say, lemme tell you something.
-I’m your valet, ain’t I? Well, then, I can come into your room and
-be tidying up whenever I darn please, can’t I? Sure I can. I’ll tell
-the world I can do just that little thing. And you take it from me,
-Bill . . .”
-
-“You persist in the delusion that my name is William . . .”
-
-“You take it from me, Bill, that if ever that necklace disappears and
-it isn’t me that’s done the disappearing, you’ll find me tidying up in
-a way that’ll make you dizzy. I’ll go through that room of yours with a
-fine-tooth comb. So chew on that, will you?”
-
-And Edward Cootes, moving sombrely across the hall, made a sinister
-exit. The mood of cool reflection was still to come, when he would
-realise that, in his desire to administer what he would have described
-as a hot one, he had acted a little rashly in putting his enemy on
-his guard. All he was thinking now was that his brief sketch of the
-position of affairs would have the effect of diminishing Psmith’s
-complacency a trifle. He had, he flattered himself, slipped over
-something that could be classed as a jolt.
-
-Nor was he unjustified in this view. The aspect of the matter on which
-he had touched was one that had not previously presented itself to
-Psmith: and, musing on it as he resettled himself in his chair, he
-could see that it afforded food for thought. As regarded the disposal
-of the necklace, should it ever come into his possession, he had formed
-no definite plan. He had assumed that he would conceal it somewhere
-until the first excitement of the chase slackened, and it was only now
-that he realised the difficulty of finding a suitable hiding-place
-outside his bedroom. Yes, it was certainly a matter on which, as Mr.
-Cootes had suggested, he would do well to chew. For ten minutes,
-accordingly, he did so. And--it being practically impossible to keep a
-good man down--at the end of that period he was rewarded with an idea.
-He rose from his chair and pressed the bell.
-
-“Ah, Beach,” he said affably, as the green baize door swung open, “I
-must apologise once more for troubling you. I keep ringing, don’t I?”
-
-“No trouble at all, sir,” responded the butler paternally. “But if
-you were ringing to summon your personal attendant, I fear he is not
-immediately available. He left me somewhat abruptly a few moments ago.
-I was not aware that you would be requiring his services until the
-dressing-gong sounded, or I would have detained him.”
-
-“Never mind. It was you I wished to see. Beach,” said Psmith, “I am
-concerned about you. I learn from my man that the lining of your
-stomach is not all it should be.”
-
-“That is true, sir,” replied Beach, an excited gleam coming into his
-dull eyes. He shivered slightly, as might a war-horse at the sound of
-the bugle. “I do have trouble with the lining of my stomach.”
-
-“Every stomach has a silver lining.”
-
-“Sir?”
-
-“I said, tell me all about it.”
-
-“Well, really, sir . . .” said Beach wistfully.
-
-“To please me,” urged Psmith.
-
-“Well, sir, it is extremely kind of you to take an interest. It
-generally starts with a dull shooting pain on the right side of the
-abdomen from twenty minutes to half an hour after the conclusion of a
-meal. The symptoms . . .”
-
-There was nothing but courteous sympathy in Psmith’s gaze as he
-listened to what sounded like an eyewitness’s account of the San
-Francisco earthquake, but inwardly he was wishing that his companion
-could see his way to making it a bit briefer and snappier. However, all
-things come to an end. Even the weariest river winds somewhere to the
-sea. With a moving period, the butler finally concluded his narrative.
-
-“Parks’ Pepsinine,” said Psmith promptly.
-
-“Sir?”
-
-“That’s what you want. Parks’ Pepsinine. It would set you right in no
-time.”
-
-“I will make a note of the name, sir. The specific has not come to my
-notice until now. And, if I may say so,” added Beach, with a glassy but
-adoring look at his benefactor, “I should like to express my gratitude
-for your kindness.”
-
-“Not at all, Beach, not at all. Oh, Beach,” he said, as the other
-started to manœuvre towards the door, “I’ve just remembered. There was
-something else I wanted to talk to you about.”
-
-“Yes, sir?”
-
-“I thought it might be as well to speak to you about it before
-approaching Lady Constance. The fact is, Beach, I am feeling cramped.”
-
-“Indeed, sir? I forgot to mention that one of the symptoms from which I
-suffer is a sharp cramp.”
-
-“Too bad. But let us, if you do not mind, shelve for the moment the
-subject of your interior organism and its ailments. When I say I am
-feeling cramped, I mean spiritually. Have you ever written poetry,
-Beach?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“Ah! Then it may be a little difficult for you to understand my
-feelings. My trouble is this. Out in Canada, Beach, I grew accustomed
-to doing my work in the most solitary surroundings. You remember that
-passage in my _Songs of Squalor_ which begins ‘Across the pale parabola
-of Joy . . .’?”
-
-“I fear, sir . . .”
-
-“You missed it? Tough luck. Try to get hold of it some time. It’s a
-bird. Well, that passage was written in a lonely hut on the banks of
-the Saskatchewan, miles away from human habitation. I am like that,
-Beach. I need the stimulus of the great open spaces. When I am
-surrounded by my fellows, inspiration slackens and dies. You know how
-it is when there are people about. Just as you are starting in to write
-a nifty, someone comes and sits down on the desk and begins talking
-about himself. Every time you get going nicely, in barges some alien
-influence and the Muse goes blooey. You see what I mean?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” said Beach, gaping slightly.
-
-“Well, that is why for a man like me existence in Blandings Castle
-has its drawbacks. I have got to get a place where I can be alone,
-Beach--alone with my dreams and visions. Some little eyrie perched
-on the cliffs of Time. . . . In other words, do you know of an empty
-cottage somewhere on the estate where I could betake myself when in the
-mood and swing a nib without any possibility of being interrupted?”
-
-“A little cottage, sir?”
-
-“A little cottage. With honeysuckle over the door, and Old Mister Moon
-climbing up above the trees. A cottage, Beach, where I can meditate,
-where I can turn the key in the door and bid the world go by. Now that
-the castle is going to be full of all these people who are coming
-for the County Ball, it is imperative that I wangle such a haven.
-Otherwise, a considerable slab of priceless poetry will be lost to
-humanity for ever.”
-
-“You desire,” said Beach, feeling his way cautiously, “a small cottage
-where you can write poetry, sir?”
-
-“You follow me like a leopard. Do you know of such a one?”
-
-“There is an unoccupied gamekeeper’s cottage in the west wood, sir, but
-it is an extremely humble place.”
-
-“Be it never so humble, it will do for me. Do you think Lady Constance
-would be offended if I were to ask for the loan of it for a few days?”
-
-“I fancy that her ladyship would receive the request with equanimity,
-sir. She is used to . . . She is not unaccustomed . . . Well, I can
-only say, sir, that there was a literary gentleman visiting the castle
-last summer who expressed a desire to take sun-baths in the garden each
-morning before breakfast. In the nood, sir. And, beyond instructing me
-to warn the maids, her ladyship placed no obstacle in the way of the
-fulfilment of his wishes. So . . .”
-
-“So a modest request like mine isn’t likely to cause a heart-attack?
-Admirable! You don’t know what it means to me to feel that I shall
-soon have a little refuge of my own, to which I can retreat and be in
-solitude.”
-
-“I can imagine that it must be extremely gratifying, sir.”
-
-“Then I will put the motion before the Board directly Lady Constance
-returns.”
-
-“Very good, sir.”
-
-“I should like to splash it on the record once more, Beach, that I am
-much obliged to you for your sympathy and advice in this matter. I knew
-you would not fail me.”
-
-“Not at all, sir. I am only too glad to have been able to be of
-assistance.”
-
-“Oh, and, Beach . . .”
-
-“Sir?”
-
-“Just one other thing. Will you be seeing Cootes, my valet, again
-shortly?”
-
-“Quite shortly, sir, I should imagine.”
-
-“Then would you mind just prodding him smartly in the lower ribs . . .”
-
-“Sir?” cried Beach, startled out of his butlerian calm. He swallowed
-a little convulsively. For eighteen months and more, ever since Lady
-Constance Keeble had first begun to cast her fly and hook over the
-murky water of the artistic world and jerk its denizens on to the pile
-carpets of Blandings Castle, Beach had had his fill of eccentricity.
-But until this moment he had hoped that Psmith was going to prove an
-agreeable change from the stream of literary lunatics which had been
-coming and going all that weary time. And lo! Psmith’s name led all the
-rest. Even the man who had come for a week in April and had wanted to
-eat jam with his fish paled in comparison.
-
-“Prod him in the ribs, sir?” he quavered.
-
-“Prod him in the ribs,” said Psmith firmly. “And at the same time
-whisper in his ear the word ‘Aha!’” Beach licked his dry lips.
-
-“Aha, sir?”
-
-“Aha! And say it came from me.”
-
-“Very good, sir. The matter shall be attended to,” said Beach. And with
-a muffled sound that was half a sigh, half a death-rattle, he tottered
-through the green-baize door.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-SENSATIONAL OCCURRENCE AT A POETRY READING
-
-
-§ 1
-
-Breakfast was over, and the guests of Blandings had scattered to their
-morning occupations. Some were writing letters, some were in the
-billiard-room: some had gone to the stables, some to the links: Lady
-Constance was interviewing the housekeeper, Lord Emsworth harrying
-head-gardener McAllister among the flower-beds: and in the Yew Alley,
-the dappled sunlight falling upon her graceful head, Miss Peavey walked
-pensively up and down.
-
-She was alone. It is a sad but indisputable fact that in this imperfect
-world Genius is too often condemned to walk alone--if the earthier
-members of the community see it coming and have time to duck. Not one
-of the horde of visitors who had arrived overnight for the County Ball
-had shown any disposition whatever to court Miss Peavey’s society.
-
-One regrets this. Except for that slight bias towards dishonesty
-which led her to steal everything she could lay her hands on that was
-not nailed down, Aileen Peavey’s was an admirable character; and,
-oddly enough, it was the noble side of her nature to which these
-coarse-fibred critics objected. Of Miss Peavey, the purloiner of
-other people’s goods, they knew nothing; the woman they were dodging
-was Miss Peavey, the poetess. And it may be mentioned that, however
-much she might unbend in the presence of a congenial friend like Mr.
-Edward Cootes, she was a perfectly genuine poetess. Those six volumes
-under her name in the British Museum catalogue were her own genuine
-and unaided work: and, though she had been compelled to pay for the
-production of the first of the series, the other five had been brought
-out at her publisher’s own risk, and had even made a little money.
-
-Miss Peavey, however, was not sorry to be alone: for she had that on
-her mind which called for solitary thinking. The matter engaging her
-attention was the problem of what on earth had happened to Mr. Edward
-Cootes. Two days had passed since he had left her to go and force
-Psmith at the pistol’s point to introduce him into the castle: and
-since that moment he had vanished completely. Miss Peavey could not
-understand it.
-
-His non-appearance was all the more galling in that her superb brain
-had just completed in every detail a scheme for the seizure of Lady
-Constance Keeble’s diamond necklace; and to the success of this plot
-his aid was an indispensable adjunct. She was in the position of a
-general who comes from his tent with a plan of battle all mapped out,
-and finds that his army has strolled off somewhere and left him. Little
-wonder that, as she paced the Yew Alley, there was a frown on Miss
-Peavey’s fair forehead.
-
-The Yew Alley, as Lord Emsworth had indicated in his extremely
-interesting lecture to Mr. Ralston McTodd at the Senior Conservative
-Club, contained among other noteworthy features certain yews which rose
-in solid blocks with rounded roof and stemless mushroom finials, the
-majority possessing arched recesses, forming arbors. As Miss Peavey was
-passing one of these, a voice suddenly addressed her.
-
-“Hey!”
-
-Miss Peavey started violently.
-
-“Anyone about?”
-
-A damp face with twigs sticking to it was protruding from a near-by
-yew. It rolled its eyes in an ineffectual effort to see round the
-corner.
-
-Miss Peavey drew nearer, breathing heavily. The question as to the
-whereabouts of her wandering boy was solved; but the abruptness of his
-return had caused her to bite her tongue; and joy, as she confronted
-him, was blended with other emotions.
-
-“You dish-faced gazooni!” she exclaimed heatedly, her voice trembling
-with a sense of ill-usage, “where do you get that stuff, hiding in
-trees, and barking a girl’s head off?”
-
-“Sorry, Liz. I . . .”
-
-“And where,” proceeded Miss Peavey, ventilating another grievance,
-“have you been all this darned time? Gosh-dingit, you leave me a coupla
-days back saying you’re going to stick up this bozo that calls himself
-McTodd with a gat and make him get you into the house, and that’s the
-last I see of you. What’s the big idea?”
-
-“It’s all right, Liz. He did get me into the house. I’m his valet.
-That’s why I couldn’t get at you before. The way the help has to keep
-itself to itself in this joint, we might as well have been in different
-counties. If I hadn’t happened to see you snooping off by yourself this
-morning . . .”
-
-Miss Peavey’s keen mind grasped the position of affairs.
-
-“All right, all right,” she interrupted, ever impatient of long
-speeches from others. “I understand. Well, this is good, Ed. It
-couldn’t have worked out better. I’ve got a scheme all doped out, and
-now you’re here we can get busy.”
-
-“A scheme?”
-
-“A pippin,” assented Miss Peavey.
-
-“It’ll need to be,” said Mr. Cootes, on whom the events of the last few
-days had caused pessimism to set its seal. “I tell you that McTodd gook
-is smooth. He somehow,” said Mr. Cootes prudently, for he feared harsh
-criticisms from his lady-love should he reveal the whole truth, “he
-somehow got wise to the notion that, as I was his valet, I could go and
-snoop round in his room, where he’d be wanting to hide the stuff if he
-ever got it, and now he’s gone and got them to let him have a kind of
-shack in the woods.”
-
-“H’m!” said Miss Peavey. “Well,” she resumed after a thoughtful pause,
-“I’m not worrying about him. Let him go and roost in the woods all he
-wants to. I’ve got a scheme all ready, and it’s gilt-edged. And, unless
-you ball up your end of it, Ed, it can’t fail to drag home the gravy.”
-
-“Am I in it?”
-
-“You bet you’re in it. I can’t work it without you. That’s what’s been
-making me so darned mad when you didn’t show up all this time.”
-
-“Spill it, Liz,” said Mr. Cootes humbly. As always in the presence of
-this dynamic woman, he was suffering from an inferiority complex. From
-the very start of their combined activities she had been the brains of
-the firm, he merely the instrument to carry into effect the plans she
-dictated.
-
-Miss Peavey glanced swiftly up and down the Yew Alley. It was still the
-same peaceful, lonely spot. She turned to Mr. Cootes again, and spoke
-with brisk decision.
-
-“Now, listen, Ed, and get this straight, because maybe I shan’t have
-another chance of talking to you.”
-
-“I’m listening,” said Mr. Cootes obsequiously.
-
-“Well, to begin with, now that the house is full, Her Nibs is wearing
-that necklace every night. And you can take it from me, Ed, that you
-want to put on your smoked glasses before you look at it. It’s a
-lalapaloosa.”
-
-“As good as that?”
-
-“Ask me! You don’t know the half of it.”
-
-“Where does she keep it, Liz? Have you found that out?” asked Mr.
-Cootes, a gleam of optimism playing across his sad face for an instant.
-
-“No, I haven’t. And I don’t want to. I’ve not got time to waste
-monkeying about with safes and maybe having the whole bunch pile on the
-back of my neck. I believe in getting things easy. Well, to-night this
-bimbo that calls himself McTodd is going to give a reading of his poems
-in the big drawing-room. You know where that is?”
-
-“I can find out.”
-
-“And you better had find out,” said Miss Peavey vehemently. “And before
-to-night at that. Well, there you are. Do you begin to get wise?”
-
-Mr. Cootes, his head protruding unhappily from the yew tree, would have
-given much to have been able to make the demanded claim to wisdom,
-for he knew of old the store his alert partner set upon quickness
-of intellect. He was compelled, however, to disturb the branches by
-shaking his head.
-
-“You always were pretty dumb,” said Miss Peavey with scorn. “I’ll say
-that you’ve got good solid qualities, Ed--from the neck up. Why, I’m
-going to sit behind Lady Constance while that goof is shooting his fool
-head off, and I’m going to reach out and grab that necklace off of her.
-See?”
-
-“But, Liz”--Mr. Cootes diffidently summoned up courage to point out
-what appeared to him to be a flaw in the scheme--“if you start any
-strong-arm work in front of everybody like the way you say, won’t
-they . . . ?”
-
-“No, they won’t. And I’ll tell you why they won’t. They aren’t going to
-see me do it, because when I do it it’s going to be good and dark in
-that room. And it’s going to be dark because you’ll be somewheres out
-at the back of the house, wherever they keep the main electric-light
-works, turning the switch as hard as you can go. See? That’s your end
-of it, and pretty soft for you at that. All you have to do is to find
-out where the thing is and what you have to do to it to put out all the
-lights in the joint. I guess I can trust you not to bungle that?”
-
-“Liz,” said Mr. Cootes, and there was reverence in his voice, “you can
-do just that little thing. But what . . . ?”
-
-“All right, I know what you’re going to say. What happens after that,
-and how do I get away with the stuff? Well, the window’ll be open, and
-I’ll just get to it and fling the necklace out. See? There’ll be a big
-fuss going on in the room on account of the darkness and all that, and
-while everybody’s cutting up and what-the-helling, you’ll pick up your
-dogs and run round as quick as you can make it and pouch the thing. I
-guess it won’t be hard for you to locate it. The window’s just over the
-terrace, all smooth turf, and it isn’t real dark nights now, and you
-ought to have plenty of time to hunt around before they can get the
-lights going again. . . . Well, what do you think of it?” There was a
-brief silence.
-
-“Liz,” said Mr. Cootes at length.
-
-“Is it or is it not,” demanded Miss Peavey, “a ball of fire?”
-
-“Liz,” said Mr. Cootes, and his voice was husky with such awe as some
-young officer of Napoleon’s staff might have felt on hearing the
-details of the latest plan of campaign, “Liz, I’ve said it before, and
-I’ll say it again. When it comes to the smooth stuff, old girl, you’re
-the oyster’s eye-tooth!”
-
-And, reaching out an arm from the recesses of the yew, he took Miss
-Peavey’s hand in his and gave it a tender squeeze. A dreamy look came
-into the poetess’s fine eyes, and she giggled a little. Dumb-bell
-though he was, she loved this man.
-
-
-§ 2
-
-“Mr. Baxter!”
-
-“Yes, Miss Halliday?”
-
-The Brains of Blandings looked abstractedly up from his desk. It was
-only some half-hour since luncheon had finished, but already he was in
-the library surrounded by large books like a sea-beast among rocks.
-Most of his time was spent in the library when the castle was full of
-guests, for his lofty mind was ill-attuned to the frivolous babblings
-of Society butterflies.
-
-“I wonder if you could spare me this afternoon?” said Eve.
-
-Baxter directed the glare of his spectacles upon her inquisitorially.
-
-“The whole afternoon?”
-
-“If you don’t mind. You see, I had a letter by the second post from a
-great friend of mine, saying that she will be in Market Blandings this
-afternoon and asking me to meet her there. I must see her, Mr. Baxter,
-_please_. You’ve no notion how important it is.”
-
-Eve’s manner was excited, and her eyes as they met Baxter’s sparkled in
-a fashion that might have disturbed a man made of less stern stuff. If
-it had been the Hon. Freddie Threepwood, for instance, who had been
-gazing into their blue depths, that impulsive youth would have tied
-himself into knots and yapped like a dog. Baxter, the superman, felt
-no urge towards any such display. He reviewed her request calmly and
-judicially, and decided that it was a reasonable one.
-
-“Very well, Miss Halliday.”
-
-“Thank you ever so much. I’ll make up for it by working twice as hard
-to-morrow.”
-
-Eve flitted to the door, pausing there to bestow a grateful smile upon
-him before going out; and Baxter returned to his reading. For a moment
-he was conscious of a feeling of regret that this quite attractive and
-uniformly respectful girl should be the partner in crime of a man of
-whom he disapproved even more than he disapproved of most malefactors.
-Then he crushed down the weak emotion and was himself again.
-
-Eve trotted downstairs, humming happily to herself. She had expected
-a longer and more strenuous struggle before she obtained her order of
-release, and told herself that, despite a manner which seldom deviated
-from the forbidding, Baxter was really quite nice. In short, it seemed
-to her that nothing could possibly occur to mar the joyfulness of this
-admirable afternoon; and it was only when a voice hailed her as she was
-going through the hall a few minutes later that she realised that she
-was mistaken. The voice, which trembled throatily, was that of the Hon.
-Freddie; and her first look at him told Eve, an expert diagnostician,
-that he was going to propose to her again.
-
-“Well, Freddie?” said Eve resignedly.
-
-The Hon. Frederick Threepwood was a young man who was used to hearing
-people say “Well, Freddie?” resignedly when he appeared. His father
-said it; his Aunt Constance said it; all his other aunts and uncles
-said it. Widely differing personalities in every other respect, they
-all said “Well, Freddie?” resignedly directly they caught sight of him.
-Eve’s words, therefore, and the tone in which they were spoken, did not
-damp him as they might have damped another. His only feeling was one of
-solemn gladness at the thought that at last he had managed to get her
-alone for half a minute.
-
-The fact that this was the first time he had been able to get her
-alone since her arrival at the castle had caused Freddie a good deal
-of sorrow. Bad luck was what he attributed it to, thereby giving the
-object of his affections less credit than was her due for a masterly
-policy of evasion. He sidled up, looking like a well-dressed sheep.
-
-“Going anywhere?” he inquired.
-
-“Yes. I’m going to Market Blandings. Isn’t it a lovely afternoon?
-I suppose you are busy all the time now that the house is full?
-Good-bye,” said Eve.
-
-“Eh?” said Freddie, blinking.
-
-“Good-bye. I must be hurrying.”
-
-“Where did you say you were going?”
-
-“Market Blandings.”
-
-“I’ll come with you.”
-
-“No, I want to be alone. I’ve got to meet someone there.”
-
-“Come with you as far as the gates,” said Freddie, the human limpet.
-
-The afternoon sun seemed to Eve to be shining a little less brightly as
-they started down the drive. She was a kind-hearted girl, and it irked
-her to have to be continually acting as a black frost in Freddie’s
-garden of dreams. There appeared, however, to be but two ways out of
-the thing: either she must accept him or he must stop proposing. The
-first of these alternatives she resolutely declined to consider, and,
-as far as was ascertainable from his actions, Freddie declined just
-as resolutely to consider the second. The result was that solitary
-interviews between them were seldom wholly free from embarrassing
-developments.
-
-They walked for a while in silence. Then:
-
-“You’re dashed hard on a fellow,” said Freddie.
-
-“How’s your putting coming on?” asked Eve.
-
-“Eh?”
-
-“Your putting. You told me you had so much trouble with it.”
-
-She was not looking at him, for she had developed a habit of not
-looking at him on these occasions; but she assumed that the odd sound
-which greeted her remark was a hollow, mirthless laugh.
-
-“My putting!”
-
-“Well, you told me yourself it’s the most important part of golf.”
-
-“Golf! Do you think I have time to worry about golf these days?”
-
-“Oh, how splendid, Freddie! Are you really doing some work of some
-kind? It’s quite time, you know. Think how pleased your father will be.”
-
-“I say,” said Freddie, “I do think you might marry a chap.”
-
-“I suppose I shall some day,” said Eve, “if I meet the right one.”
-
-“No, no!” said Freddie despairingly. She was not usually so dense as
-this. He had always looked on her as a dashed clever girl. “I mean
-_me_.”
-
-Eve sighed. She had hoped to avert the inevitable.
-
-“Oh, Freddie!” she exclaimed, exasperated. She was still sorry for
-him, but she could not help being irritated. It was such a splendid
-afternoon and she had been feeling so happy. And now he had spoiled
-everything. It always took her at least half an hour to get over the
-nervous strain of refusing his proposals.
-
-“I love you, dash it!” said Freddie.
-
-“Well, do stop loving me,” said Eve. “I’m an awful girl, really. I’d
-make you miserable.”
-
-“Happiest man in the world,” corrected Freddie devoutly.
-
-“I’ve got a frightful temper.”
-
-“You’re an angel.”
-
-Eve’s exasperation increased. She always had a curious fear that one of
-these days, if he went on proposing, she might say “Yes” by mistake.
-She wished that there was some way known to science of stopping him
-once and for all. And in her desperation she thought of a line of
-argument which she had not yet employed.
-
-“It’s so absurd, Freddie,” she said. “Really, it is. Apart from the
-fact that I don’t want to marry you, how can you marry anyone--anyone,
-I mean, who hasn’t plenty of money?”
-
-“Wouldn’t dream of marrying for money.”
-
-“No, of course not, but . . .”
-
-“Cupid,” said Freddie woodenly, “pines and sickens in a gilded cage.”
-
-Eve had not expected to be surprised by anything her companion might
-say, it being her experience that he possessed a vocabulary of about
-forty-three words and a sum-total of ideas that hardly ran into two
-figures; but this poetic remark took her back.
-
-“What!”
-
-Freddie repeated the observation. When it had been flashed on the
-screen as a spoken sub-title in the six-reel wonder film, “Love or
-Mammon” (Beatrice Comely and Brian Fraser), he had approved and made a
-note of it.
-
-“Oh!” said Eve, and was silent. As Miss Peavey would have put it, it
-held her for a while. “What I meant,” she went on after a moment, “was
-that you can’t possibly marry a girl without money unless you’ve some
-money of your own.”
-
-“I say, dash it!” A strange note of jubilation had come into the
-wooer’s voice. “I say, is that really all that stands between us?
-Because . . .”
-
-“No, it isn’t!”
-
-“Because, look here, I’m going to have quite a good deal of money at
-any moment. It’s more or less of a secret, you know--in fact a pretty
-deadish secret--so keep it dark, but Uncle Joe is going to give me a
-couple of thousand quid. He promised me. Two thousand of the crispest.
-Absolutely!”
-
-“Uncle Joe?”
-
-“_You_ know. Old Keeble. He’s going to give me a couple of thousand
-quid, and then I’m going to buy a partnership in a bookie’s business
-and simply coin money. Stands to reason, I mean. You can’t help making
-your bally fortune. Look at all the mugs who are losing money all the
-time at the races. It’s the bookies that get the stuff. A pal of mine
-who was up at Oxford with me is in a bookie’s office, and they’re going
-to let me in if I . . .”
-
-The momentous nature of his information had caused Eve to deviate now
-from her policy of keeping her eyes off Freddie when in emotional vein.
-And, if she had desired to check his lecture on finance, she could
-have chosen no better method than to look at him; for, meeting her
-gaze, Freddie immediately lost the thread of his discourse and stood
-yammering. A direct hit from Eve’s eyes always affected him in this
-way.
-
-“Mr. Keeble is going to give you two thousand pounds!”
-
-A wave of mortification swept over Eve. If there was one thing on which
-she prided herself, it was the belief that she was a loyal friend,
-a staunch pal; and now for the first time she found herself facing
-the unpleasant truth that she had been neglecting Phyllis Jackson’s
-interests in the most abominable way ever since she had come to
-Blandings. She had definitely promised Phyllis that she would tackle
-this stepfather of hers and shame him with burning words into yielding
-up the three thousand pounds which Phyllis needed so desperately for
-her Lincolnshire farm. And what had she done? Nothing.
-
-Eve was honest to the core, even in her dealings with herself. A less
-conscientious girl might have argued that she had had no opportunity
-of a private interview with Mr. Keeble. She scorned to soothe herself
-with this specious plea. If she had given her mind to it she could have
-brought about a dozen private interviews, and she knew it. No. She
-had allowed the pleasant persistence of Psmith to take up her time,
-and Phyllis and her troubles had been thrust into the background. She
-confessed, despising herself, that she had hardly given Phyllis a
-thought.
-
-And all the while this Mr. Keeble had been in a position to scatter
-largess, thousands of pounds of it, to undeserving people like Freddie.
-Why, a word from her about Phyllis would have . . .
-
-“Two thousand pounds?” she repeated dizzily. “Mr. Keeble!”
-
-“Absolutely!” cried Freddie radiantly. The first shock of looking into
-her eyes had passed, and he was now revelling in that occupation.
-
-“What for?”
-
-Freddie’s rapt gaze flickered. Love, he perceived, had nearly caused
-him to be indiscreet.
-
-“Oh, I don’t know,” he mumbled. “He’s just giving it me, you know,
-don’t you know.”
-
-“Did you simply go to him and ask him for it?”
-
-“Well--er--well, yes. That was about the strength of it.”
-
-“And he didn’t object?”
-
-“No. He seemed rather pleased.”
-
-“Pleased!” Eve found breathing difficult. She was feeling rather like a
-man who suddenly discovers that the hole in his back yard which he has
-been passing nonchalantly for months is a goldmine. If the operation of
-extracting money from Mr. Keeble was not only easy but also agreeable
-to the victim . . . She became aware of a sudden imperative need for
-Freddie’s absence. She wanted to think this thing over.
-
-“Well, then,” said Freddie, “coming back to it, will you?”
-
-“What?” said Eve, distrait.
-
-“Marry me, you know. What I mean to say is, I worship the very
-ground you walk on, and all that sort of rot . . . I mean, and all
-that. And now that you realise that I’m going to get this couple of
-thousand . . . and the bookie’s business . . . and what not, I mean to
-say . . .”
-
-“Freddie,” said Eve tensely, expressing her harassed nerves in a voice
-that came hotly through clenched teeth, “go away!”
-
-“Eh?”
-
-“I don’t want to marry you, and I’m sick of having to keep on telling
-you so. Will you please go away and leave me alone?” She stopped. Her
-sense of fairness told her that she was working off on her hapless
-suitor venom which should have been expended on herself. “I’m sorry,
-Freddie,” she said, softening; “I didn’t mean to be such a beast as
-that. I know you’re awfully fond of me, but really, really I can’t
-marry you. You don’t want to marry a girl who doesn’t love you, do you?”
-
-“Yes, I do,” said Freddie stoutly. “If it’s you, I mean. Love is a
-tiny seed that coldness can wither, but if tended and nurtured in the
-fostering warmth of an honest heart . . .”
-
-“But, Freddie.”
-
-“Blossoms into a flower,” concluded Freddie rapidly. “What I mean to
-say is, love would come after marriage.”
-
-“Nonsense!”
-
-“Well, that’s the way it happened in ‘A Society Mating.’”
-
-“Freddie,” said Eve, “I really don’t want to talk any more. Will you be
-a dear and just go away? I’ve got a lot of thinking to do.”
-
-“Oh, thinking?” said Freddie, impressed. “Right ho!”
-
-“Thank you so much.”
-
-“Oh--er--not at all. Well, pip-pip.”
-
-“Good-bye.”
-
-“See you later, what?”
-
-“Of course, of course.”
-
-“Fine! Well, toodle-oo!”
-
-And the Hon. Freddie, not ill-pleased--for it seemed to him that at
-long last he detected signs of melting in the party of the second
-part--swivelled round on his long legs and started for home.
-
-
-§ 3
-
-The little town of Market Blandings was a peaceful sight as it slept
-in the sun. For the first time since Freddie had left her, Eve became
-conscious of a certain tranquillity as she entered the old grey High
-Street, which was the centre of the place’s life and thought. Market
-Blandings had a comforting air of having been exactly the same for
-centuries. Troubles might vex the generations it housed, but they did
-not worry that lichened church with its sturdy four-square tower, nor
-those red-roofed shops, nor the age-old inns whose second stories
-bulged so comfortably out over the pavements. As Eve walked in slow
-meditation towards the “Emsworth Arms,” the intensely respectable
-hostelry which was her objective, archways met her gaze, opening with a
-picturesque unexpectedness to show heartening glimpses of ancient nooks
-all cool and green. There was about the High Street of Market Blandings
-a suggestion of a slumbering cathedral close. Nothing was modern in
-it except the moving-picture house--and even that called itself an
-Electric Theatre, and was ivy-covered and surmounted by stone gables.
-
-On second thoughts, that statement is too sweeping. There was one other
-modern building in the High Street--Jno. Banks, Hairdresser, to wit,
-and Eve was just coming abreast of Mr. Banks’s emporium now.
-
-In any ordinary surroundings these premises would have been a tolerably
-attractive sight, but in Market Blandings they were almost an eyesore;
-and Eve, finding herself at the door, was jarred out of her reverie as
-if she had heard a false note in a solemn anthem. She was on the point
-of hurrying past, when the door opened and a short, solid figure came
-out. And at the sight of this short, solid figure Eve stopped abruptly.
-
-It was with the object of getting his grizzled locks clipped in
-preparation for the County Ball that Joseph Keeble had come to Mr.
-Banks’s shop as soon as he had finished lunch. As he emerged now into
-the High Street he was wondering why he had permitted Mr. Banks to
-finish off the job with a heliotrope-scented hair-wash. It seemed to
-Mr. Keeble that the air was heavy with heliotrope, and it came to him
-suddenly that heliotrope was a scent which he always found particularly
-objectionable.
-
-Ordinarily Joseph Keeble was accustomed to show an iron front to
-hairdressers who tried to inflict lotions upon him; and the reason his
-vigilance had relaxed under the ministrations of Jno. Banks was that
-the second post, which arrived at the castle at the luncheon hour,
-had brought him a plaintive letter from his stepdaughter Phyllis--the
-second he had had from her since the one which had caused him to
-tackle his masterful wife in the smoking-room. Immediately after
-the conclusion of his business deal with the Hon. Freddie, he had
-written to Phyllis in a vein of optimism rendered glowing by Freddie’s
-promises, assuring her that at any moment he would be in a position to
-send her the three thousand pounds which she required to clinch the
-purchase of that dream-farm in Lincolnshire. To this she had replied
-with thanks. And after that there had been a lapse of days and still
-he had not made good. Phyllis was becoming worried, and said so in six
-closely-written pages.
-
-Mr. Keeble, as he sat in the barber’s chair going over this letter in
-his mind, had groaned in spirit, while Jno. Banks with gleaming eyes
-did practically what he liked with the heliotrope bottle. Not for the
-first time since the formation of their partnership, Joseph Keeble was
-tormented with doubts as to his wisdom in entrusting a commission so
-delicate as the purloining of his wife’s diamond necklace to one of his
-nephew Freddie’s known feebleness of intellect. Here, he told himself
-unhappily, was a job of work which would have tested the combined
-abilities of a syndicate consisting of Charles Peace and the James
-Brothers, and he had put it in the hands of a young man who in all
-his life had only once shown genuine inspiration and initiative--on
-the occasion when he had parted his hair in the middle at a time when
-all the other members of the Bachelors’ Club were brushing it straight
-back. The more Mr. Keeble thought of Freddie’s chances, the slimmer
-they appeared. By the time Jno. Banks had released him from the spotted
-apron he was thoroughly pessimistic, and as he passed out of the door,
-“so perfumed that the winds were love-sick with him,” his estimate of
-his colleague’s abilities was reduced to a point where he began to
-doubt whether the stealing of a mere milk-can was not beyond his scope.
-So deeply immersed was he in these gloomy thoughts that Eve had to call
-his name twice before he came out of them.
-
-“Miss Halliday?” he said apologetically. “I beg your pardon. I was
-thinking.”
-
-Eve, though they had hardly exchanged a word since her arrival at the
-castle, had taken a liking to Mr. Keeble; and she felt in consequence
-none of the embarrassment which might have handicapped her in the
-discussion of an extremely delicate matter with another man. By nature
-direct and straightforward, she came to the point at once.
-
-“Can you spare me a moment or two, Mr. Keeble?” she said. She glanced
-at the clock on the church tower and saw that she had ample time before
-her own appointment. “I want to talk to you about Phyllis.” Mr. Keeble
-jerked his head back in astonishment, and the world became noisome with
-heliotrope. It was as if the Voice of Conscience had suddenly addressed
-him.
-
-“Phyllis!” he gasped, and the letter crackled in his breast-pocket.
-
-“Your stepdaughter Phyllis.”
-
-“Do you know her?”
-
-“She was my best friend at school. I had tea with her just before I
-came to the castle.”
-
-“Extraordinary!” said Mr. Keeble.
-
-A customer in quest of a shave thrust himself between them and went
-into the shop. They moved away a few paces.
-
-“Of course if you say it is none of my business . . .”
-
-“My dear young lady . . .”
-
-“Well, it _is_ my business, because she’s my friend,” said Eve firmly.
-“Mr. Keeble, Phyllis told me she had written to you about buying that
-farm. Why don’t you help her?”
-
-The afternoon was warm, but not warm enough to account for the
-moistness of Mr. Keeble’s brow. He drew out a large handkerchief and
-mopped his forehead. A hunted look was in his eyes. The hand which was
-not occupied with the handkerchief had sought his pocket and was busy
-rattling keys.
-
-“I want to help her. I would do anything in the world to help her.”
-
-“Then why don’t you?”
-
-“I--I am curiously situated.”
-
-“Yes, Phyllis told me something about that. I can see that it is a
-difficult position for you. But, Mr. Keeble, surely, surely if you
-can manage to give Freddie Threepwood two thousand pounds to start a
-bookmaker’s business . . .”
-
-Her words were cut short by a strangled cry from her companion. Sheer
-panic was in his eyes now, and in his heart an overwhelming regret that
-he had ever been fool enough to dabble in crime in the company of a
-mere animated talking-machine like his nephew Freddie. This girl knew!
-And if she knew, how many others knew? The young imbecile had probably
-babbled his hideous secret into the ears of every human being in the
-place who would listen to him.
-
-“He told you!” he stammered. “He t-told you!”
-
-“Yes. Just now.”
-
-“Goosh!” muttered Mr. Keeble brokenly.
-
-Eve stared at him in surprise. She could not understand this emotion.
-The handkerchief, after a busy session, was lowered now, and he was
-looking at her imploringly.
-
-“You haven’t told anyone?” he croaked hoarsely.
-
-“Of course not. I said I had only heard of it just now.”
-
-“You wouldn’t tell anyone?”
-
-“Why should I?”
-
-Mr. Keeble’s breath, which had seemed to him for a moment gone for
-ever, began to return timidly. Relief for a space held him dumb. What
-nonsense, he reflected, these newspapers and people talked about the
-modern girl. It was this very broad-mindedness of hers, to which they
-objected so absurdly, that made her a creature of such charm. She
-might behave in certain ways in a fashion that would have shocked her
-grandmother, but how comforting it was to find her calm and unmoved in
-the contemplation of another’s crime. His heart warmed to Eve.
-
-“You’re wonderful!” he said.
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“Of course,” argued Mr. Keeble, “it isn’t really stealing.”
-
-“What!”
-
-“I shall buy my wife another necklace.”
-
-“You will--what?”
-
-“So everything will be all right. Constance will be perfectly happy,
-and Phyllis will have her money, and . . .”
-
-Something in Eve’s astonished gaze seemed to smite Mr. Keeble.
-
-“Don’t you _know_?” he broke off.
-
-“Know? Know what?”
-
-Mr. Keeble perceived that he had wronged Freddie. The young ass had
-been a fool even to mention the money to this girl, but he had at
-least, it seemed, stopped short of disclosing the entire plot. An
-oyster-like reserve came upon him.
-
-“Nothing, nothing,” he said hastily. “Forget what I was going to say.
-Well, I must be going, I must be going.”
-
-Eve clutched wildly at his retreating sleeve. Unintelligible though
-his words had been, one sentence had come home to her, the one about
-Phyllis having her money. It was no time for half-measures. She grabbed
-him.
-
-“Mr. Keeble,” she cried urgently. “I don’t know what you mean, but you
-were just going to say something which sounded . . . Mr. Keeble, do
-trust me. I’m Phyllis’s best friend, and if you’ve thought out any way
-of helping her I wish you would tell me . . . You must tell me. I might
-be able to help . . .”
-
-Mr. Keeble, as she began her broken speech, had been endeavouring with
-deprecatory tugs to disengage his coat from her grasp. But now he
-ceased to struggle. Those doubts of Freddie’s efficiency, which had
-troubled him in Jno. Banks’s chair, still lingered. His opinion that
-Freddie was but a broken reed had not changed. Indeed, it had grown.
-He looked at Eve. He looked at her searchingly. Into her pleading
-eyes he directed a stare that sought to probe her soul, and saw there
-honesty, sympathy, and--better still--intelligence. He might have stood
-and gazed into Freddie’s fishy eyes for weeks without discovering a
-tithe of such intelligence. His mind was made up. This girl was an
-ally. A girl of dash and vigour. A girl worth a thousand Freddies--not,
-however, reflected Mr. Keeble, that that was saying much. He hesitated
-no longer.
-
-“It’s like this,” said Mr. Keeble.
-
-
-§ 4
-
-The information, authoritatively conveyed to him during breakfast
-by Lady Constance, that he was scheduled that night to read select
-passages from Ralston McTodd’s _Songs of Squalor_ to the entire
-house-party assembled in the big drawing-room, had come as a complete
-surprise to Psmith, and to his fellow-guests--such of them as were
-young and of the soulless sex--as a shock from which they found it
-hard to rally. True, they had before now gathered in a vague sort
-of way that he was one of those literary fellows, but so normal and
-engaging had they found his whole manner and appearance that it had
-never occurred to them that he concealed anything up his sleeve as
-lethal as _Songs of Squalor_. Among these members of the younger set
-the consensus of opinion was that it was a bit thick, and that at such
-a price even the lavish hospitality of Blandings was scarcely worth
-having. Only those who had visited the castle before during the era
-of her ladyship’s flirtation with Art could have been described as
-resigned. These stout hearts argued that while this latest blister was
-probably going to be pretty bad, he could hardly be worse than the
-chappie who had lectured on Theosophy last November, and must almost of
-necessity be better than the bird who during the Shifley race-week had
-attempted in a two-hour discourse to convert them to vegetarianism.
-
-Psmith himself regarded the coming ordeal with equanimity. He was not
-one of those whom the prospect of speaking in public afflicts with
-nervous horror. He liked the sound of his own voice, and night, when it
-came, found him calmly cheerful. He listened contentedly to the murmur
-of the drawing-room filling up as he strolled on the star-lit terrace,
-smoking a last cigarette before duty called him elsewhere. And when,
-some few yards away, seated on the terrace wall gazing out into the
-velvet darkness, he perceived Eve Halliday, his sense of well-being
-became acute.
-
-All day he had been conscious of a growing desire for another of those
-cosy chats with Eve which had done so much to make life agreeable for
-him during his stay at Blandings. Her prejudice--which he deplored--in
-favour of doing a certain amount of work to justify her salary, had
-kept him during the morning away from the little room off the library
-where she was wont to sit cataloguing books; and when he had gone there
-after lunch he had found it empty. As he approached her now, he was
-thinking pleasantly of all those delightful walks, those excellent
-driftings on the lake, and those cheery conversations which had gone
-to cement his conviction that of all possible girls she was the only
-possible one. It seemed to him that in addition to being beautiful she
-brought out all that was best in him of intellect and soul. That is
-to say, she let him talk oftener and longer than any girl he had ever
-known.
-
-It struck him as a little curious that she made no move to greet him.
-She remained apparently unaware of his approach. And yet the summer
-night was not of such density as to hide him from view--and, even
-if she could not see him, she must undoubtedly have heard him; for
-only a moment before he had tripped with some violence over a large
-flower-pot, one of a row of sixteen which Angus McAllister, doubtless
-for some good purpose, had placed in the fairway that afternoon.
-
-“A pleasant night,” he said, seating himself gracefully beside her on
-the wall.
-
-She turned her head for a brief instant, and, having turned it, looked
-away again.
-
-“Yes,” she said.
-
-Her manner was not effusive, but Psmith persevered.
-
-“The stars,” he proceeded, indicating them with a kindly yet not
-patronising wave of the hand. “Bright, twinkling, and--if I may say
-so--rather neatly arranged. When I was a mere lad, someone whose name
-I cannot recollect taught me which was Orion. Also Mars, Venus, and
-Jupiter. This thoroughly useless chunk of knowledge has, I am happy to
-say, long since passed from my mind. However, I am in a position to
-state that that wiggly thing up there a little to the right is King
-Charles’s Wain.”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“Yes, indeed, I assure you.” It struck Psmith that Astronomy was not
-gripping his audience, so he tried Travel. “I hear,” he said, “you went
-to Market Blandings this afternoon.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“An attractive settlement.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-There was a pause. Psmith removed his monocle and polished it
-thoughtfully. The summer night seemed to him to have taken on a touch
-of chill.
-
-“What I like about the English rural districts,” he went on, “is
-that when the authorities have finished building a place they stop.
-Somewhere about the reign of Henry the Eighth, I imagine that the
-master-mason gave the final house a pat with his trowel and said,
-‘Well, boys, that’s Market Blandings.’ To which his assistants no doubt
-assented with many a hearty ‘Grammercy!’ and ‘I’fackins!’ these being
-expletives to which they were much addicted. And they went away and
-left it, and nobody has touched it since. And I, for one, thoroughly
-approve. I think it makes the place soothing. Don’t you?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-As far as the darkness would permit, Psmith subjected Eve to an
-inquiring glance through his monocle. This was a strange new
-mood in which he had found her. Hitherto, though she had always
-endeared herself to him by permitting him the major portion of
-the dialogue, they had usually split conversations on at least a
-seventy-five--twenty-five basis. And though it gratified Psmith to be
-allowed to deliver a monologue when talking with most people, he found
-Eve more companionable when in a slightly chattier vein.
-
-“Are you coming in to hear me read?” he asked.
-
-“No.”
-
-It was a change from “Yes,” but that was the best that could be said of
-it. A good deal of discouragement was always required to damp Psmith,
-but he could not help feeling a slight diminution of buoyancy. However,
-he kept on trying.
-
-“You show your usual sterling good sense,” he said approvingly. “A
-scalier method of passing the scented summer night could hardly be
-hit upon.” He abandoned the topic of the reading. It did not grip.
-That was manifest. It lacked appeal. “I went to Market Blandings this
-afternoon, too,” he said. “Comrade Baxter informed me that you had gone
-thither, so I went after you. Not being able to find you, I turned in
-for half an hour at the local moving-picture palace. They were showing
-Episode Eleven of a serial. It concluded with the heroine, kidnapped by
-Indians, stretched on the sacrificial altar with the high-priest making
-passes at her with a knife. The hero meanwhile had started to climb a
-rather nasty precipice on his way to the rescue. The final picture was
-a close-up of his fingers slipping slowly off a rock. Episode Twelve
-next week.”
-
-Eve looked out into the night without speaking.
-
-“I’m afraid it won’t end happily,” said Psmith with a sigh. “I think
-he’ll save her.”
-
-Eve turned on him with a menacing abruptness.
-
-“Shall I tell you why I went to Market Blandings this afternoon?” she
-said.
-
-“Do,” said Psmith cordially. “It is not for me to criticise, but as
-a matter of fact I was rather wondering when you were going to begin
-telling me all about your adventures. I have been monopolising the
-conversation.”
-
-“I went to meet Cynthia.”
-
-Psmith’s monocle fell out of his eye and swung jerkily on its cord. He
-was not easily disconcerted, but this unexpected piece of information,
-coming on top of her peculiar manner, undoubtedly jarred him. He
-foresaw difficulties, and once again found himself thinking hard
-thoughts of this confounded female who kept bobbing up when least
-expected. How simple life would have been, he mused wistfully, had
-Ralston McTodd only had the good sense to remain a bachelor.
-
-“Oh, Cynthia?” he said.
-
-“Yes, Cynthia,” said Eve. The inconvenient Mrs. McTodd possessed a
-Christian name admirably adapted for being hissed between clenched
-teeth, and Eve hissed it in this fashion now. It became evident to
-Psmith that the dear girl was in a condition of hardly suppressed fury
-and that trouble was coming his way. He braced himself to meet it.
-
-“Directly after we had that talk on the lake, the day I arrived,”
-continued Eve tersely, “I wrote to Cynthia, telling her to come here at
-once and meet me at the ‘Emsworth Arms’ . . .”
-
-“In the High Street,” said Psmith. “I know it. Good beer.”
-
-“What!”
-
-“I said they sell good beer . . .”
-
-“Never mind about the beer,” cried Eve.
-
-“No, no. I merely mentioned it in passing.”
-
-“At lunch to-day I got a letter from her saying that she would be there
-this afternoon. So I hurried off. I wanted----” Eve laughed a hollow,
-mirthless laugh of a calibre which even the Hon. Freddie Threepwood
-would have found beyond his powers, and he was a specialist--“I wanted
-to try to bring you two together. I thought that if I could see her and
-have a talk with her that you might become reconciled.”
-
-Psmith, though obsessed with a disquieting feeling that he was fighting
-in the last ditch, pulled himself together sufficiently to pat her hand
-as it lay beside him on the wall like some white and fragile flower.
-
-“That was like you,” he murmured. “That was an act worthy of your great
-heart. But I fear that the rift between Cynthia and myself has reached
-such dimensions . . .”
-
-Eve drew her hand away. She swung round, and the battery of her
-indignant gaze raked him furiously.
-
-“I saw Cynthia,” she said, “and she told me that her husband was in
-Paris.”
-
-“Now, how in the world,” said Psmith, struggling bravely but with a
-growing sense that they were coming over the plate a bit too fast for
-him, “how in the world did she get an idea like that?”
-
-“Do you really want to know?”
-
-“I do, indeed.”
-
-“Then I’ll tell you. She got the idea because she had had a letter from
-him, begging her to join him there. She had just finished telling me
-this, when I caught sight of you from the inn window, walking along
-the High Street. I pointed you out to Cynthia, and she said she had
-never seen you before in her life.”
-
-“Women soon forget,” sighed Psmith.
-
-“The only excuse I can find for you,” stormed Eve in a vibrant
-undertone necessitated by the fact that somebody had just emerged from
-the castle door and they no longer had the terrace to themselves, “is
-that you’re mad. When I think of all you said to me about poor Cynthia
-on the lake that afternoon, when I think of all the sympathy I wasted
-on you . . .”
-
-“Not wasted,” corrected Psmith firmly. “It was by no means wasted. It
-made me love you--if possible--even more.”
-
-Eve had supposed that she had embarked on a tirade which would last
-until she had worked off her indignation and felt composed again, but
-this extraordinary remark scattered the thread of her harangue so
-hopelessly that all she could do was to stare at him in amazed silence.
-
-“Womanly intuition,” proceeded Psmith gravely, “will have told you long
-ere this that I love you with a fervour which with my poor vocabulary
-I cannot hope to express. True, as you are about to say, we have known
-each other but a short time, as time is measured. But what of that?”
-
-Eve raised her eyebrows. Her voice was cold and hostile.
-
-“After what has happened,” she said, “I suppose I ought not to be
-surprised at finding you capable of anything, but--are you really
-choosing this moment to--to propose to me?”
-
-“To employ a favourite word of your own--yes.”
-
-“And you expect me to take you seriously?”
-
-“Assuredly not. I look upon the present disclosure purely as a sighting
-shot. You may regard it, if you will, as a kind of formal proclamation.
-I wish simply to go on record as an aspirant to your hand. I want you,
-if you will be so good, to make a note of my words and give them a
-thought from time to time. As Comrade Cootes--a young friend of mine
-whom you have not yet met--would say, ‘Chew on them.’”
-
-“I . . .”
-
-“It is possible,” continued Psmith, “that black moments will come to
-you--for they come to all of us, even the sunniest--when you will find
-yourself saying, ‘Nobody loves me!’ On such occasions I should like
-you to add, ‘No, I am wrong. There _is_ somebody who loves me.’ At
-first, it may be, that reflection will bring but scant balm. Gradually,
-however, as the days go by and we are constantly together and my nature
-unfolds itself before you like the petals of some timid flower beneath
-the rays of the sun . . .”
-
-Eve’s eyes opened wider. She had supposed herself incapable of further
-astonishment, but she saw that she had been mistaken.
-
-“You surely aren’t dreaming of staying on here _now_?” she gasped.
-
-“Most decidedly. Why not?”
-
-“But--but what is to prevent me telling everybody that you are not Mr.
-McTodd?”
-
-“Your sweet, generous nature,” said Psmith. “Your big heart. Your
-angelic forbearance.”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-“Considering that I only came here as McTodd--and if you had seen
-him you would realise that he is not a person for whom the man
-of sensibility and refinement would lightly allow himself to be
-mistaken--I say considering that I only took on the job of understudy
-so as to get to the castle and be near you, I hardly think that you
-will be able to bring yourself to get me slung out. You must try to
-understand what happened. When Lord Emsworth started chatting with
-me under the impression that I was Comrade McTodd, I encouraged the
-mistake purely with the kindly intention of putting him at his ease.
-Even when he informed me that he was expecting me to come down to
-Blandings with him on the five o’clock train, it never occurred to
-me to do so. It was only when I saw you talking to him in the street
-and he revealed the fact that you were about to enjoy his hospitality
-that I decided that there was no other course open to the man of
-spirit. Consider! Twice that day you had passed out of my life--may I
-say taking the sunshine with you?--and I began to fear you might pass
-out of it for ever. So, loath though I was to commit the solecism of
-planting myself in this happy home under false pretences, I could see
-no other way. And here I am!”
-
-“You _must_ be mad!”
-
-“Well, as I was saying, the days will go by, you will have ample
-opportunity of studying my personality, and it is quite possible that
-in due season the love of an honest heart may impress you as worth
-having. I may add that I have loved you since the moment when I saw
-you sheltering from the rain under that awning in Dover Street, and I
-recall saying as much to Comrade Walderwick when he was chatting with
-me some short time later on the subject of his umbrella. I do not press
-you for an answer now . . .”
-
-“I should hope not!”
-
-“I merely say ‘Think it over.’ It is nothing to cause you mental
-distress. Other men love you. Freddie Threepwood loves you. Just add me
-to the list. That is all I ask. Muse on me from time to time. Reflect
-that I may be an acquired taste. You probably did not like olives the
-first time you tasted them. Now you probably do. Give me the same
-chance you would an olive. Consider, also, how little you actually have
-against me. What, indeed, does it amount to, when you come to examine
-it narrowly? All you have against me is the fact that I am not Ralston
-McTodd. Think how comparatively few people _are_ Ralston McTodd. Let
-your meditations proceed along these lines and . . .”
-
-He broke off, for at this moment the individual who had come out of
-the front door a short while back loomed beside them, and the glint of
-starlight on glass revealed him as the Efficient Baxter.
-
-“Everybody is waiting, Mr. McTodd,” said the Efficient Baxter. He spoke
-the name, as always, with a certain sardonic emphasis.
-
-“Of course,” said Psmith affably, “of course. I was forgetting. I will
-get to work at once. You are quite sure you do not wish to hear a
-scuttleful of modern poetry, Miss Halliday?”
-
-“Quite sure.”
-
-“And yet even now, so our genial friend here informs us, a bevy of
-youth and beauty is crowding the drawing-room, agog for the treat.
-Well, well! It is these strange clashings of personal taste which
-constitute what we call Life. I think I will write a poem about it
-some day. Come, Comrade Baxter, let us be up and doing. I must not
-disappoint my public.”
-
-For some moments after the two had left her--Baxter silent and chilly,
-Psmith, all debonair chumminess, kneading the other’s arm and pointing
-out as they went objects of interest by the wayside--Eve remained
-on the terrace wall, thinking. She was laughing now, but behind her
-amusement there was another feeling, and one that perplexed her. A good
-many men had proposed to her in the course of her career, but none of
-them had ever left her with this odd feeling of exhilaration. Psmith
-was different from any other man who had come her way, and difference
-was a quality which Eve esteemed. . . .
-
-She had just reached the conclusion that life for whatever girl might
-eventually decide to risk it in Psmith’s company would never be dull,
-when strange doings in her immediate neighbourhood roused her from her
-meditations.
-
-The thing happened as she rose from her seat on the wall and started to
-cross the terrace on her way to the front door. She had stopped for an
-instant beneath the huge open window of the drawing-room to listen to
-what was going on inside. Faintly, with something of the quality of a
-far-off phonograph, the sound of Psmith reading came to her; and even
-at this distance there was a composed blandness about his voice which
-brought a smile to her lips.
-
-And then, with a startling abruptness, the lighted window was dark. And
-she was aware that all the lighted windows on that side of the castle
-had suddenly become dark. The lamp that shone over the great door
-ceased to shine. And above the hubbub of voices in the drawing-room she
-heard Psmith’s patient drawl.
-
-“Ladies and gentlemen, I think the lights have gone out.”
-
-The night air was rent by a single piercing scream. Something flashed
-like a shooting star and fell at her feet; and, stooping, Eve found in
-her hands Lady Constance Keeble’s diamond necklace.
-
-
-§ 5
-
-To be prepared is everything in this life. Ever since her talk with Mr.
-Joseph Keeble in the High Street of Market Blandings that afternoon
-Eve’s mind had been flitting nimbly from one scheme to another, all
-designed to end in this very act of seizing the necklace in her hands
-and each rendered impracticable by some annoying flaw. And now that
-Fate in its impulsive way had achieved for her what she had begun to
-feel she could never accomplish for herself, she wasted no time in
-bewildered inaction. The miracle found her ready for it.
-
-For an instant she debated with herself the chances of a dash through
-the darkened hall up the stairs to her room. But the lights might go
-on again, and she might meet someone. Memories of sensational novels
-read in the past told her that on occasions such as this people were
-detained and searched. . . .
-
-Suddenly, as she stood there, she found the way. Close beside her,
-lying on its side, was the flower-pot which Psmith had overturned as he
-came to join her on the terrace wall. It might have defects as a cache,
-but at the moment she could perceive none. Most flower-pots are alike,
-but this was a particularly easily-remembered flower-pot: for in its
-journeying from the potting shed to the terrace it had acquired on its
-side a splash of white paint. She would be able to distinguish it from
-its fellows when, late that night, she crept out to retrieve the spoil.
-And surely nobody would ever think of suspecting . . .
-
-She plunged her fingers into the soft mould, and straightened herself,
-breathing quickly. It was not an ideal piece of work, but it would
-serve.
-
-She rubbed her fingers on the turf, put the flower-pot back in the row
-with the others, and then, like a flying white phantom, darted across
-the terrace and into the house. And so with beating heart, groping her
-way, to the bathroom to wash her hands.
-
-The twenty-thousand-pound flower-pot looked placidly up at the winking
-stars.
-
-
-§ 6
-
-It was perhaps two minutes later that Mr. Cootes, sprinting lustily,
-rounded the corner of the house and burst on to the terrace. Late as
-usual.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-ALMOST ENTIRELY ABOUT FLOWER-POTS
-
-
-§ 1
-
-The Efficient Baxter prowled feverishly up and down the yielding carpet
-of the big drawing-room. His eyes gleamed behind their spectacles, his
-dome-like brow was corrugated. Except for himself, the room was empty.
-As far as the scene of the disaster was concerned, the tumult and the
-shouting had died. It was going on vigorously in practically every
-other part of the house, but in the drawing-room there was stillness,
-if not peace.
-
-Baxter paused, came to a decision, went to the wall and pressed the
-bell.
-
-“Thomas,” he said when that footman presented himself a few moments
-later.
-
-“Sir?”
-
-“Send Susan to me.”
-
-“Susan, sir?”
-
-“Yes, Susan,” snapped the Efficient One, who had always a short
-way with the domestic staff. “Susan, Susan, Susan. . . . The new
-parlourmaid.”
-
-“Oh, yes, sir. Very good, sir.”
-
-Thomas withdrew, outwardly all grave respectfulness, inwardly piqued,
-as was his wont, at the airy manner in which the secretary flung his
-orders about at the castle. The domestic staff at Blandings lived in a
-perpetual state of smouldering discontent under Baxter’s rule.
-
-“Susan,” said Thomas when he arrived in the lower regions, “you’re to
-go up to the drawing-room. Nosey Parker wants you.”
-
-The pleasant-faced young woman whom he addressed laid down her knitting.
-
-“Who?” she asked.
-
-“Mister Blooming Baxter. When you’ve been here a little longer you’ll
-know that he’s the feller that owns the place. How he got it I don’t
-know. Found it,” said Thomas satirically, “in his Christmas stocking, I
-expect. Anyhow, you’re to go up.”
-
-Thomas’s fellow-footman, Stokes, a serious-looking man with a bald
-forehead, shook that forehead solemnly.
-
-“Something’s the matter,” he asserted. “You can’t tell me that wasn’t a
-scream we heard when them lights was out. Or,” he added weightily, for
-he was a man who looked at every side of a question, “a shriek. It was
-a shriek or scream. I said so at the time. ‘There,’ I said, ‘listen!’ I
-said. ‘That’s somebody screaming,’ I said. ‘Or shrieking.’ Something’s
-up.”
-
-“Well, Baxter hasn’t been murdered, worse luck,” said Thomas. “He’s up
-there screaming or shrieking for Susan. ‘Send Susan to me!’” proceeded
-Thomas, giving an always popular imitation. “‘Susan, Susan, Susan.’ So
-you’d best go, my girl, and see what he wants.”
-
-“Very well.”
-
-“And, Susan,” said Thomas, a tender note creeping into his voice, for
-already, brief as had been her sojourn at Blandings, he had found the
-new parlourmaid making a deep impression on him, “if it’s a row of any
-kind . . .”
-
-“Or description,” interjected Stokes.
-
-“Or description,” continued Thomas, accepting the word, “if ’e’s ’arsh
-with you for some reason or other, you come right back to me and sob
-out your troubles on my chest, see? Lay your little ’ead on my shoulder
-and tell me all about it.”
-
-The new parlourmaid, primly declining to reply to this alluring
-invitation, started on her journey upstairs; and Thomas, with a not
-unmanly sigh, resumed his interrupted game of halfpenny nap with
-colleague Stokes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Efficient Baxter had gone to the open window and was gazing out
-into the night when Susan entered the drawing-room.
-
-“You wished to see me, Mr. Baxter?”
-
-The secretary spun round. So softly had she opened the door, and
-so noiselessly had she moved when inside the room, that it was not
-until she spoke that he had become aware of her arrival. It was a
-characteristic of this girl Susan that she was always apt to be among
-those present some time before the latter became cognisant of the fact.
-
-“Oh, good evening, Miss Simmons. You came in very quietly.”
-
-“Habit,” said the parlourmaid.
-
-“You gave me quite a start.”
-
-“I’m sorry. What was it,” she asked, dismissing in a positively
-unfeeling manner the subject of her companion’s jarred nerves, “that
-you wished to see me about?”
-
-“Shut that door.”
-
-“I have. I always shut doors.”
-
-“Please sit down.”
-
-“No, thank you, Mr. Baxter. It might look odd if anyone should come
-in.”
-
-“Of course. You think of everything.”
-
-“I always do.”
-
-Baxter stood for a moment, frowning.
-
-“Miss Simmons,” he said, “when I thought it expedient to install a
-private detective in this house, I insisted on Wragge’s sending you. We
-had worked together before . . .”
-
-“Sixteenth of December, 1918, to January twelve, 1919, when you were
-secretary to Mr. Horace Jevons, the American millionaire,” said Miss
-Simmons as promptly as if he had touched a spring. It was her hobby to
-remember dates with precision.
-
-“Exactly. I insisted upon your being sent because I knew from
-experience that you were reliable. At that time I looked on your
-presence here merely as a precautionary measure. Now, I am sorry to
-say . . .”
-
-“Did someone steal Lady Constance’s necklace to-night?”
-
-“Yes!”
-
-“When the lights went out just now?”
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“Well, why couldn’t you say so at once? Good gracious, man, you don’t
-have to break the thing gently to me.”
-
-The Efficient Baxter, though he strongly objected to being addressed as
-“man,” decided to overlook the solecism.
-
-“The lights suddenly went out,” he said. “There was a certain amount of
-laughter and confusion. Then a piercing shriek . . .”
-
-“I heard it.”
-
-“And immediately after Lady Constance’s voice crying that her jewels
-had been snatched from her neck.”
-
-“Then what happened?”
-
-“Still greater confusion, which lasted until one of the maids arrived
-with a candle. Eventually the lights went on again, but of the necklace
-there was no sign whatever.”
-
-“Well? Were you expecting the thief to wear it as a watch-chain or hang
-it from his teeth?”
-
-Baxter was finding his companion’s manner more trying every minute, but
-he preserved his calm.
-
-“Naturally the doors were barred and a complete search instituted.
-And extremely embarrassing it was. With the single exception of the
-scoundrel who has been palming himself off as McTodd, all those present
-were well-known members of Society.”
-
-“Well-known members of Society might not object to getting hold of
-a twenty-thousand pound necklace. But still, with the McTodd fellow
-there, you oughtn’t to have had far to look. What had he to say about
-it?”
-
-“He was among the first to empty his pockets.”
-
-“Well, then, he must have hidden the thing somewhere.”
-
-“Not in this room. I have searched assiduously.”
-
-“H’m.”
-
-There was a silence.
-
-“It is baffling,” said Baxter, “baffling.”
-
-“It is nothing of the kind,” replied Miss Simmons tartly. “This wasn’t
-a one-man job. How could it have been? I should be inclined to call
-it a three-man job. One to switch off the lights, one to snatch the
-necklace, and one to--was that window open all the time? I thought
-so--and one to pick up the necklace when the second fellow threw it out
-on to the terrace.”
-
-“Terrace!”
-
-The word shot from Baxter’s lips with explosive force. Miss Simmons
-looked at him curiously.
-
-“Thought of something?”
-
-“Miss Simmons,” said the Efficient One impressively, “everybody
-was assembled in here waiting for the reading to begin, but the
-pseudo-McTodd was nowhere to be found. I discovered him eventually on
-the terrace in close talk with the Halliday girl.”
-
-“His partner,” said Miss Simmons, nodding. “We thought so all along.
-And let me add my little bit. There’s a fellow down in the servants’
-hall that calls himself a valet, and I’ll bet he didn’t know what a
-valet was till he came here. I thought he was a crook the moment I set
-eyes on him. I can tell ’em in the dark. Now, do you know whose valet
-he is? This McTodd fellow’s!”
-
-Baxter bounded to and fro like a caged tiger.
-
-“And with my own ears,” he cried excitedly, “I heard the Halliday girl
-refuse to come to the drawing-room to listen to the reading. She was
-out on the terrace throughout the whole affair. Miss Simmons, we must
-act! We must act!”
-
-“Yes, but not like idiots,” replied the detective frostily.
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“Well, you can’t charge out, as you looked as if you wanted to just
-then, and denounce these crooks where they sit. We’ve got to go
-carefully.”
-
-“But meanwhile they will smuggle the necklace away!”
-
-“They won’t smuggle any necklace away, not while I’m around.
-Suspicion’s no good. We’ve made out a nice little case against the
-three of them, but it’s no use unless we catch them with the goods.
-The first thing we have to do is to find out where they’ve hidden the
-stuff. And that’ll take patience. I’ll start by searching that girl’s
-room. Then I’ll search the valet fellow’s room. And if the stuff isn’t
-there, it’ll mean they’ve hidden it out in the open somewhere.”
-
-“But this McTodd fellow. This fellow who poses as McTodd. He may have
-it all the while.”
-
-“No. I’ll search his room, too, but the stuff won’t be there. He’s the
-fellow who’s going to get it in the end, because he’s got that place
-out in the woods to hide it in. But they wouldn’t have had time to slip
-it to him yet. That necklace is somewhere right here. And if,” said
-Miss Simmons with grim facetiousness, “they can hide it from me, they
-may keep it as a birthday present.”
-
-
-§ 2
-
-How wonderful, if we pause to examine it, is Nature’s inexorable law of
-compensation. Instead of wasting time in envy of our mental superiors,
-we would do well to reflect that these gifts of theirs which excite our
-wistful jealousy are ever attended by corresponding penalties. To take
-an example that lies to hand, it was the very fact that he possessed a
-brain like a buzz-saw that rendered the Efficient Baxter a bad sleeper.
-Just as he would be dropping off, bing! would go that brain of his,
-melting the mists of sleep like snow in a furnace.
-
-This was so even when life was running calmly for him and without
-excitement. To-night, his mind, bearing the load it did, firmly
-declined even to consider the question of slumber. The hour of two,
-chiming from the clock over the stables, found him as wide awake as
-ever he was at high noon.
-
-Lying in bed in the darkness, he reviewed the situation as far as he
-had the data. Shortly before he retired, Miss Simmons had made her
-report about the bedrooms. Though subjected to the severest scrutiny,
-neither Psmith’s boudoir nor Cootes’s attic nor Eve’s little nook on
-the third floor had yielded up treasure of any description. And this,
-Miss Simmons held, confirmed her original view that the necklace must
-be lying concealed in what might almost be called a public spot--on
-some window-ledge, maybe, or somewhere in the hall. . . .
-
-Baxter lay considering this theory. It did appear to be the only
-tenable one; but it offended him by giving the search a frivolous
-suggestion of being some sort of round game like Hunt the Slipper or
-Find the Thimble. As a child he had held austerely aloof from these
-silly pastimes, and he resented being compelled to play them now.
-Still . . .
-
-He sat up, thinking. He had heard a noise.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The attitude of the majority of people towards noises in the night is
-one of cautious non-interference. But Rupert Baxter was made of sterner
-stuff. The sound had seemed to come from downstairs somewhere--perhaps
-from that very hall where, according to Miss Simmons, the stolen
-necklace might even now be lying hid. Whatever it was, it must
-certainly not be ignored. He reached for the spectacles which lay
-ever ready to his hand on the table beside him: then climbed out of
-bed, and, having put on a pair of slippers and opened the door, crept
-forth into the darkness. As far as he could ascertain by holding his
-breath and straining his ears, all was still from cellar to roof; but
-nevertheless he was not satisfied. He continued to listen. His room
-was on the second floor, one of a series that ran along a balcony
-overlooking the hall; and he stood, leaning over the balcony rail, a
-silent statue of Vigilance.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The noise which had acted so electrically upon the Efficient Baxter
-had been a particularly noisy noise; and only the intervening distance
-and the fact that his door was closed had prevented it sounding to him
-like an explosion. It had been caused by the crashing downfall of a
-small table containing a vase, a jar of potpourri, an Indian sandalwood
-box of curious workmanship, and a cabinet-size photograph of the Earl
-of Emsworth’s eldest son, Lord Bosham; and the table had fallen because
-Eve, _en route_ across the hall in quest of her precious flower-pot,
-had collided with it while making for the front door. Of all indoor
-sports--and Eve, as she stood pallidly among the ruins, would have been
-the first to endorse this dictum--the one which offers the minimum
-of pleasure to the participant is that of roaming in pitch darkness
-through the hall of a country-house. Easily navigable in the daytime,
-these places become at night mere traps for the unwary.
-
-Eve paused breathlessly. So terrific had the noise sounded to her
-guilty ears that every moment she was expecting doors to open all over
-the castle, belching forth shouting men with pistols. But as nothing
-happened, courage returned to her, and she resumed her journey. She
-found the great door, ran her fingers along its surface, and drew the
-chain. The shooting back of the bolts occupied but another instant, and
-then she was out on the terrace running her hardest towards the row of
-flower-pots.
-
-Up on his balcony, meanwhile, the Efficient Baxter was stopping,
-looking, and listening. The looking brought no results, for all below
-was black as pitch; but the listening proved more fruitful. Faintly
-from down in the well of the hall there floated up to him a peculiar
-sound like something rustling in the darkness. Had he reached the
-balcony a moment earlier, he would have heard the rattle of the chain
-and the click of the bolts; but these noises had occurred just before
-he came out of his room. Now all that was audible was this rustling.
-
-He could not analyse the sound, but the fact that there was any sound
-at all in such a place at such an hour increased his suspicions that
-dark doings were toward which would pay for investigation. With
-stealthy steps he crept to the head of the stairs and descended.
-
-One uses the verb “descend” advisedly, for what is required is some
-word suggesting instantaneous activity. About Baxter’s progress from
-the second floor to the first there was nothing halting or hesitating.
-He, so to speak, did it now. Planting his foot firmly on a golf-ball
-which the Hon. Freddie Threepwood, who had been practising putting in
-the corridor before retiring to bed, had left in his casual fashion
-just where the steps began, he took the entire staircase in one
-majestic, volplaning sweep. There were eleven stairs in all separating
-his landing from the landing below, and the only ones he hit were the
-third and tenth. He came to rest with a squattering thud on the lower
-landing, and for a moment or two the fever of the chase left him.
-
-The fact that many writers in their time have commented at some length
-on the mysterious manner in which Fate is apt to perform its work must
-not deter us now from a brief survey of this latest manifestation of
-its ingenious methods. Had not his interview with Eve that afternoon so
-stimulated the Hon. Freddie as to revive in him a faint yet definite
-desire to putt, there would have been no golf-ball waiting for Baxter
-on the stairs. And had he been permitted to negotiate the stairs in a
-less impetuous manner, Baxter would not at this juncture have switched
-on the light.
-
-It had not been his original intention to illuminate the theatre of
-action, but after that Lucifer-like descent from the second floor to
-the first he was taking no more chances. “Safety First” was Baxter’s
-slogan. As soon, therefore, as he had shaken off a dazed sensation of
-mental and moral collapse, akin to that which comes to the man who
-steps on the teeth of a rake and is smitten on the forehead by the
-handle, he rose with infinite caution to his feet and, feeling his way
-down by the banisters, groped for the switch and pressed it. And so it
-came about that Eve, heading for home with her precious flower-pot in
-her arms, was stopped when at the very door by a sudden warning flood
-of light. Another instant, and she would have been across the threshold
-of disaster.
-
-For a moment paralysis gripped her. The light had affected her like
-someone shouting loudly and unexpectedly in her ear. Her heart gave
-one convulsive bound, and she stood frozen. Then, filled with a blind
-desire for flight, she dashed like a hunted rabbit into the friendly
-shelter of a clump of bushes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Baxter stood blinking. Gradually his eyes adjusted themselves to the
-light, and immediately they had done so he was seized by a fresh frenzy
-of zeal. Now that all things were made visible to him he could see that
-that faint rustling sound had been caused by a curtain flapping in the
-breeze, and that the breeze which made the curtain flap was coming in
-through the open front door.
-
-Baxter wasted no time in abstract thought. He acted swiftly and with
-decision. Straightening his spectacles on his nose, he girded up his
-pyjamas and galloped out into the night.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The smooth terrace slept under the stars. To a more poetic man than
-Baxter it would have seemed to wear that faintly reproachful air which
-a garden always assumes when invaded at unseemly hours by people who
-ought to be in bed. Baxter, never fanciful, was blind to this. He was
-thinking, thinking. That shaking-up on the stairs had churned into
-activity the very depths of his brain and he was at the fever-point
-of his reasoning powers. A thought had come like a full-blown rose,
-flushing his brow. Miss Simmons, arguing plausibly, had suggested that
-the stolen necklace might be concealed in the hall. Baxter, inspired,
-fancied not. Whoever it was that had been at work in the hall just now
-had been making for the garden. It was not the desire to escape which
-had led him--or her--to open the front door, for the opening had been
-done before he, Baxter, had come out on to the balcony--otherwise he
-must have heard the shooting of the bolts. No. The enemy’s objective
-had been the garden. In other words, the terrace. And why? Because
-somewhere on the terrace was the stolen necklace.
-
-Standing there in the starlight, the Efficient Baxter endeavoured to
-reconstruct the scene, and did so with remarkable accuracy. He saw the
-jewels flashing down. He saw them picked up. But there he stopped. Try
-as he might, he could not see them hidden. And yet that they had been
-hidden--and that within a few feet of where he was now standing--he
-felt convinced.
-
-He moved from his position near the door and began to roam restlessly.
-His slippered feet padded over the soft turf.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Eve peered out from her clump of bushes. It was not easy to see any
-great distance, but Fate, her friend, was still with her. There had
-been a moment that night when Baxter, disrobing for bed, had wavered
-absently between his brown and his lemon-coloured pyjamas, little
-recking of what hung upon the choice. Fate had directed his hand to the
-lemon-coloured, and he had put them on; with the result that he shone
-now in the dim light like the white plume of Navarre. Eve could follow
-his movements perfectly, and, when he was far enough away from his base
-to make the enterprise prudent, she slipped out and raced for home and
-safety. Baxter at the moment was leaning on the terrace wall, thinking,
-thinking, thinking.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was possibly the cool air, playing about his bare ankles, that at
-last chilled the secretary’s dashing mood and brought the disquieting
-thought that he was doing something distinctly dangerous in remaining
-out here in the open like this. A gang of thieves are ugly customers,
-likely to stick at little when a valuable necklace is at stake, and
-it came to the Efficient Baxter that in his light pyjamas he must
-be offering a tempting mark for any marauder lurking--say in those
-bushes. And at the thought, the summer night, though pleasantly mild,
-grew suddenly chilly. With an almost convulsive rapidity he turned to
-re-enter the house. Zeal was well enough, but it was silly to be rash.
-He covered the last few yards of his journey at a rare burst of speed.
-
-It was at this point that he discovered that the lights in the hall had
-been switched off and that the front door was closed and bolted.
-
-
-§ 3
-
-It is the opinion of most thoughtful students of life that happiness
-in this world depends chiefly on the ability to take things as they
-come. An instance of one who may be said to have perfected this
-attitude is to be found in the writings of a certain eminent Arabian
-author who tells of a traveller who, sinking to sleep one afternoon
-upon a patch of turf containing an acorn, discovered when he woke that
-the warmth of his body had caused the acorn to germinate and that he
-was now some sixty feet above the ground in the upper branches of a
-massive oak. Unable to descend, he faced the situation equably. “I
-cannot,” he observed, “adapt circumstances to my will: therefore I
-shall adapt my will to circumstances. I decide to remain here.” Which
-he did.
-
-Rupert Baxter, as he stood before the barred door of Blandings Castle,
-was very far from imitating this admirable philosopher. To find oneself
-locked out of a country-house at half-past two in the morning in
-lemon-coloured pyjamas can never be an unmixedly agreeable experience,
-and Baxter was a man less fitted by nature to endure it with equanimity
-than most men. His was a fiery and an arrogant soul, and he seethed in
-furious rebellion against the intolerable position into which Fate had
-manœuvred him. He even went so far as to give the front door a petulant
-kick. Finding, however, that this hurt his toes and accomplished no
-useful end, he addressed himself to the task of ascertaining whether
-there was any way of getting in--short of banging the knocker and
-rousing the house, a line of action which did not commend itself to
-him. He made a practice of avoiding as far as possible the ribald type
-of young man of which the castle was now full, and he had no desire to
-meet them at this hour in his present costume. He left the front door
-and proceeded to make a circuit of the castle walls; and his spirits
-sank even lower. In the Middle Ages, during that stormy period of
-England’s history when walls were built six feet thick and a window was
-not so much a window as a handy place for pouring molten lead on the
-heads of visitors, Blandings had been an impregnable fortress. But in
-all its career it can seldom have looked more of a fortress to anyone
-than it did now to the Efficient Baxter.
-
-One of the disadvantages of being a man of action, impervious to the
-softer emotions, is that in moments of trial the beauties of Nature are
-powerless to soothe the anguished heart. Had Baxter been of a dreamy
-and poetic temperament he might now have been drawing all sorts of
-balm from the loveliness of his surroundings. The air was full of the
-scent of growing things; strange, shy creatures came and went about him
-as he walked; down in the woods a nightingale had begun to sing; and
-there was something grandly majestic in the huge bulk of the castle
-as it towered against the sky. But Baxter had temporarily lost his
-sense of smell; he feared and disliked the strange, shy creatures; the
-nightingale left him cold; and the only thought the towering castle
-inspired in him was that it looked as if a fellow would need half a ton
-of dynamite to get into it.
-
-Baxter paused. He was back now near the spot from which he had
-started, having completed two laps without finding any solution of his
-difficulties. The idea in his mind had been to stand under somebody’s
-window and attract the sleeper’s attention with soft, significant
-whistles. But the first whistle he emitted had sounded to him in the
-stillness of early morn so like a steam syren that thereafter he had
-merely uttered timid, mouse-like sounds which the breezes had carried
-away the moment they crept out. He proposed now to halt for awhile
-and rest his lips before making another attempt. He proceeded to the
-terrace wall and sat down. The clock over the stables struck three.
-
-To the restless type of thinker like Rupert Baxter, the act of sitting
-down is nearly always the signal for the brain to begin working with
-even more than its customary energy. The relaxed body seems to invite
-thought. And Baxter, having suspended for the moment his physical
-activities--and glad to do so, for his slippers hurt him--gave himself
-up to tense speculation as to the hiding-place of Lady Constance
-Keeble’s necklace. From the spot where he now sat he was probably, he
-reflected, actually in a position to see that hiding-place--if only,
-when he saw it, he were able to recognise it for what it was. Somewhere
-out here--in yonder bushes or in some unsuspected hole in yonder
-tree--the jewels must have been placed. Or . . .
-
-Something seemed to go off inside Baxter like a touched spring. One
-moment, he was sitting limply, keenly conscious of a blister on the
-sole of his left foot; the next, regardless of the blister, he was
-off the wall and racing madly along the terrace in a flurry of flying
-slippers. Inspiration had come to him.
-
-Day dawns early in the summer months, and already a sort of unhealthy
-pallor had begun to manifest itself in the sky. It was still far from
-light, but objects hitherto hidden in the gloom had begun to take
-on uncertain shape. And among these there had come into the line of
-Baxter’s vision a row of fifteen flower-pots.
-
-There they stood, side by side, round and inviting, each with a
-geranium in its bed of mould. Fifteen flower-pots. There had originally
-been sixteen, but Baxter knew nothing of that. All he knew was that he
-was on the trail.
-
-The quest for buried treasure is one which right through the ages
-has exercised an irresistible spell over humanity. Confronted with a
-spot where buried treasure may lurk, men do not stand upon the order
-of their digging; they go at it with both hands. No solicitude for his
-employer’s geraniums came to hamper Rupert Baxter’s researches. To
-grasp the first flower-pot and tilt out its contents was with him the
-work of a moment. He scrabbled his fingers through the little pile of
-mould . . .
-
-Nothing.
-
-A second geranium lay broken on the ground . . .
-
-Nothing.
-
-A third . . .
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Efficient Baxter straightened himself painfully. He was unused to
-stooping, and his back ached. But physical discomfort was forgotten in
-the agony of hope frustrated. As he stood there, wiping his forehead
-with an earth-stained hand, fifteen geranium corpses gazed up at him in
-the growing light, it seemed with reproach. But Baxter felt no remorse.
-He included all geraniums, all thieves, and most of the human race in
-one comprehensive black hatred.
-
-All that Rupert Baxter wanted in this world now was bed. The clock over
-the stables had just struck four, and he was aware of an overpowering
-fatigue. Somehow or other, if he had to dig through the walls with his
-bare hands, he must get into the house. He dragged himself painfully
-from the scene of carnage and blinked up at the row of silent windows
-above him. He was past whistling now. He stooped for a pebble, and
-tossed it up at the nearest window.
-
-Nothing happened. Whoever was sleeping up there continued to sleep. The
-sky had turned pink, birds were twittering in the ivy, other birds had
-begun to sing in the bushes. All Nature, in short, was waking--except
-the unseen sluggard up in that room.
-
-He threw another pebble . . .
-
- * * * * *
-
-It seemed to Rupert Baxter that he had been standing there throwing
-pebbles through a nightmare eternity. The whole universe had now become
-concentrated in his efforts to rouse that log-like sleeper; and for a
-brief instant fatigue left him, driven away by a sort of Berserk fury.
-And there floated into his mind, as if from some previous existence,
-a memory of somebody once standing near where he was standing now and
-throwing a flower-pot in at a window at someone. Who it was that had
-thrown the thing at whom, he could not at the moment recall; but the
-outstanding point on which his mind focused itself was the fact that
-the man had had the right idea. This was no time for pebbles. Pebbles
-were feeble and inadequate. With one voice the birds, the breezes, the
-grasshoppers, the whole chorus of Nature waking to another day seemed
-to shout to him, “Say it with flower-pots!”
-
-
-§ 4
-
-The ability to sleep soundly and deeply is the prerogative, as has been
-pointed out earlier in this straightforward narrative of the simple
-home-life of the English upper classes, of those who do not think
-quickly. The Earl of Emsworth, who had not thought quickly since the
-occasion in the summer of 1874 when he had heard his father’s footsteps
-approaching the stable-loft in which he, a lad of fifteen, sat smoking
-his first cigar, was an excellent sleeper. He started early and
-finished late. It was his gentle boast that for more than twenty years
-he had never missed his full eight hours. Generally he managed to get
-something nearer ten.
-
-But then, as a rule, people did not fling flower-pots through his
-window at four in the morning.
-
-Even under this unusual handicap, however, he struggled bravely to
-preserve his record. The first of Baxter’s missiles, falling on a
-settee, produced no change in his regular breathing. The second, which
-struck the carpet, caused him to stir. It was the third, colliding
-sharply with his humped back, that definitely woke him. He sat up in
-bed and stared at the thing.
-
-In the first moment of his waking, relief was, oddly enough, his chief
-emotion. The blow had roused him from a disquieting dream in which he
-had been arguing with Angus McAllister about early spring bulbs, and
-McAllister, worsted verbally, had hit him in the ribs with a spud. Even
-in his dream Lord Emsworth had been perplexed as to what his next move
-ought to be; and when he found himself awake and in his bedroom he
-was at first merely thankful that the necessity for making a decision
-had at any rate been postponed. Angus McAllister might on some future
-occasion smite him with a spud, but he had not done it yet.
-
-There followed a period of vague bewilderment. He looked at the
-flower-pot. It held no message for him. He had not put it there. He
-never took flower-pots to bed. Once, as a child, he had taken a dead
-pet rabbit, but never a flower-pot. The whole affair was completely
-inscrutable; and his lordship, unable to solve the mystery, was on the
-point of taking the statesmanlike course of going to sleep again, when
-something large and solid whizzed through the open window and crashed
-against the wall, where it broke, but not into such small fragments
-that he could not perceive that in its prime it, too, had been a
-flower-pot. And at this moment his eyes fell on the carpet and then on
-the settee; and the affair passed still farther into the realm of the
-inexplicable. The Hon. Freddie Threepwood, who had a poor singing-voice
-but was a game trier, had been annoying his father of late by crooning
-a ballad ending in the words:
-
- “_It is not raining rain at all:_
- _It’s raining vi-o-lets._”
-
-It seemed to Lord Emsworth now that matters had gone a step farther. It
-was raining flower-pots.
-
-The customary attitude of the Earl of Emsworth towards all mundane
-affairs was one of vague detachment; but this phenomenon was so
-remarkable that he found himself stirred to quite a little flutter
-of excitement and interest. His brain still refused to cope with the
-problem of why anybody should be throwing flower-pots into his room at
-this hour--or, indeed, at any hour; but it seemed a good idea to go and
-ascertain who this peculiar person was.
-
-He put on his glasses and hopped out of bed and trotted to the window.
-And it was while he was on his way there that memory stirred in him, as
-some minutes ago it had stirred in the Efficient Baxter. He recalled
-that odd episode of a few days back, when that delightful girl, Miss
-What’s-her-name, had informed him that his secretary had been throwing
-flower-pots at that poet fellow, McTodd. He had been annoyed, he
-remembered, that Baxter should so far have forgotten himself. Now,
-he found himself more frightened than annoyed. Just as every dog is
-permitted one bite without having its sanity questioned, so, if you
-consider it in a broad-minded way, may every man be allowed to throw
-one flower-pot. But let the thing become a habit, and we look askance.
-This strange hobby of his appeared to be growing on Baxter like a
-drug, and Lord Emsworth did not like it at all. He had never before
-suspected his secretary of an unbalanced mind, but now he mused, as
-he tiptoed cautiously to the window, that the Baxter sort of man, the
-energetic restless type, was just the kind that does go off his head.
-Just some such calamity as this, his lordship felt, he might have
-foreseen. Day in, day out, Rupert Baxter had been exercising his brain
-ever since he had come to the castle--and now he had gone and sprained
-it. Lord Emsworth peeped timidly out from behind a curtain.
-
-His worst fears were realised. It was Baxter, sure enough; and a
-tousled, wild-eyed Baxter incredibly clad in lemon-coloured pyjamas.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Lord Emsworth stepped back from the window. He had seen sufficient. The
-pyjamas had in some curious way set the coping-stone on his dismay,
-and he was now in a condition approximating to panic. That Baxter
-should be so irresistibly impelled by his strange mania as actually
-to omit to attire himself decently before going out on one of these
-flower-pot-hurling expeditions of his seemed to make it all so sad and
-hopeless. The dreamy peer was no poltroon, but he was past his first
-youth, and it came to him very forcibly that the interviewing and
-pacifying of secretaries who ran amok was young man’s work. He stole
-across the room and opened the door. It was his purpose to put this
-matter into the hands of an agent. And so it came about that Psmith was
-aroused some few minutes later from slumber by a touch on the arm and
-sat up to find his host’s pale face peering at him in the weird light
-of early morning.
-
-“My dear fellow,” quavered Lord Emsworth.
-
-Psmith, like Baxter, was a light sleeper; and it was only a moment
-before he was wide awake and exerting himself to do the courtesies.
-
-“Good morning,” he said pleasantly. “Will you take a seat.”
-
-“I am extremely sorry to be obliged to wake you, my dear fellow,” said
-his lordship, “but the fact of the matter is, my secretary, Baxter, has
-gone off his head.”
-
-“Much?” inquired Psmith, interested.
-
-“He is out in the garden in his pyjamas, throwing flower-pots through
-my window.”
-
-“Flower-pots?”
-
-“Flower-pots!”
-
-“Oh, flower-pots!” said Psmith, frowning thoughtfully, as if he had
-expected it would be something else. “And what steps are you proposing
-to take? That is to say,” he went on, “unless you wish him to continue
-throwing flower-pots.”
-
-“My dear fellow . . . !”
-
-“Some people like it,” explained Psmith. “But you do not? Quite so,
-quite so. I understand perfectly. We all have our likes and dislikes.
-Well, what would you suggest?”
-
-“I was hoping that you might consent to go down--er--having possibly
-armed yourself with a good stout stick--and induce him to desist and
-return to bed.”
-
-“A sound suggestion in which I can see no flaw,” said Psmith
-approvingly. “If you will make yourself at home in here--pardon me for
-issuing invitations to you in your own house--I will see what can be
-done. I have always found Comrade Baxter a reasonable man, ready to
-welcome suggestions from outside sources, and I have no doubt that we
-shall easily be able to reach some arrangement.”
-
-He got out of bed, and, having put on his slippers, and his monocle,
-paused before the mirror to brush his hair.
-
-“For,” he explained, “one must be natty when entering the presence of a
-Baxter.”
-
-He went to the closet and took from among a number of hats a neat
-Homburg. Then, having selected from a bowl of flowers on the
-mantelpiece a simple white rose, he pinned it in the coat of his
-pyjama-suit and announced himself ready.
-
-
-§ 5
-
-The sudden freshet of vicious energy which had spurred the Efficient
-Baxter on to his recent exhibition of marksmanship had not lasted.
-Lethargy was creeping back on him even as he stooped to pick up the
-flower-pot which had found its billet on Lord Emsworth’s spine. And, as
-he stood there after hurling that final missile, he had realised that
-that was his last shot. If that produced no results, he was finished.
-
-And, as far as he could gather, it had produced no results whatever.
-No head had popped inquiringly out of the window. No sound of anybody
-stirring had reached his ears. The place was as still as if he had been
-throwing marsh-mallows. A weary sigh escaped from Baxter’s lips. And
-a moment later he was reclining on the ground with his head propped
-against the terrace wall, a beaten man.
-
-His eyes closed. Sleep, which he had been denying to himself for so
-long, would be denied no more. When Psmith arrived, daintily swinging
-the Hon. Freddie Threepwood’s niblick like a clouded cane, he had just
-begun to snore.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Psmith was a kindly soul. He did not like Rupert Baxter, but that was
-no reason why he should allow him to continue lying on turf wet with
-the morning dew, thus courting lumbago and sciatica. He prodded Baxter
-in the stomach with the niblick, and the secretary sat up, blinking.
-And with returning consciousness came a burning sense of grievance.
-
-“Well, you’ve been long enough,” he growled. Then, as he rubbed his
-red-rimmed eyes and was able to see more clearly, he perceived who it
-was that had come to his rescue. The spectacle of Psmith of all people
-beaming benignly down at him was an added offence. “Oh, it’s you?” he
-said morosely.
-
-“I in person,” said Psmith genially. “Awake, beloved! Awake, for
-morning in the bowl of night has flung the stone that puts the stars to
-flight; and lo! the hunter of the East has caught the Sultan’s turret
-in a noose of light. The Sultan himself,” he added, “you will find
-behind yonder window, speculating idly on your motives for bunging
-flower-pots at him. Why, if I may venture the question, _did_ you?”
-
-Baxter was in no confiding mood. Without replying, he rose to his feet
-and started to trudge wearily along the terrace to the front door.
-Psmith fell into step beside him.
-
-“If I were you,” said Psmith, “and I offer the suggestion in the most
-cordial spirit of goodwill, I would use every effort to prevent this
-passion for flinging flower-pots from growing upon me. I know you
-will say that you can take it or leave it alone; that just one more
-pot won’t hurt you; but can you stop at one? Isn’t it just that first
-insidious flower-pot that does all the mischief? Be a man, Comrade
-Baxter!” He laid his hand appealingly on the secretary’s shoulder.
-“The next time the craving comes on you, fight it. Fight it! Are you,
-the heir of the ages, going to become a slave to a habit? Tush! You
-know and I know that there is better stuff in you than that. Use your
-will-power, man, use your will-power.”
-
-Whatever reply Baxter might have intended to make to this powerful
-harangue--and his attitude as he turned on his companion suggested that
-he had much to say--was checked by a voice from above.
-
-“Baxter! My dear fellow!”
-
-The Earl of Emsworth, having observed the secretary’s awakening from
-the safe observation-post of Psmith’s bedroom, and having noted that he
-seemed to be exhibiting no signs of violence, had decided to make his
-presence known. His panic had passed, and he wanted to go into first
-causes.
-
-Baxter gazed wanly up at the window.
-
-“I can explain everything, Lord Emsworth.”
-
-“What?” said his lordship, leaning farther out.
-
-“I can explain everything,” bellowed Baxter.
-
-“It turns out after all,” said Psmith pleasantly, “to be very simple.
-He was practising for the Jerking The Geranium event at the next
-Olympic Games.”
-
-Lord Emsworth adjusted his glasses.
-
-“Your face is dirty,” he said, peering down at his dishevelled
-secretary. “Baxter, my dear fellow, your face is dirty.”
-
-“I was digging,” replied Baxter sullenly.
-
-“What?”
-
-“Digging!”
-
-“The terrier complex,” explained Psmith. “What,” he asked kindly,
-turning to his companion, “were you digging for? Forgive me if the
-question seems an impertinent one, but we are naturally curious.”
-
-Baxter hesitated.
-
-“What were you digging for?” asked Lord Emsworth.
-
-“You see,” said Psmith. “_He_ wants to know.”
-
-Not for the first time since they had become associated, a mad feeling
-of irritation at his employer’s woolly persistence flared up in
-Rupert Baxter’s bosom. The old ass was always pottering about asking
-questions. Fury and want of sleep combined to dull the secretary’s
-normal prudence. Dimly he realised that he was imparting Psmith, the
-scoundrel who he was convinced was the ringleader of last night’s
-outrage, valuable information; but anything was better than to have to
-stand here shouting up at Lord Emsworth. He wanted to get it over and
-go to bed.
-
-“I thought Lady Constance’s necklace was in one of the flower-pots,” he
-shrilled.
-
-“What?”
-
-The secretary’s powers of endurance gave out. This maddening
-inquisition, coming on top of the restless night he had had, was too
-much for him. With a low moan he made one agonised leap for the front
-door and passed through it to where beyond these voices there was peace.
-
-Psmith, deprived thus abruptly of his stimulating society, remained
-for some moments standing near the front door, drinking in with grave
-approval the fresh scents of the summer morning. It was many years
-since he had been up and about as early as this, and he had forgotten
-how delightful the first beginnings of a July day can be. Unlike
-Baxter, on whose self-centred soul these things had been lost, he
-revelled in the soft breezes, the singing birds, the growing pinkness
-of the eastern sky. He awoke at length from his reverie to find that
-Lord Emsworth had toddled down and was tapping him on the arm.
-
-“_What_ did he say?” inquired his lordship. He was feeling like a
-man who has been cut off in the midst of an absorbing telephone
-conversation.
-
-“Say?” said Psmith. “Oh, Comrade Baxter? Now, let me think. What _did_
-he say?”
-
-“Something about something being in a flower-pot,” prompted his
-lordship.
-
-“Ah, yes. He said he thought that Lady Constance’s necklace was in one
-of the flower-pots.”
-
-“What!”
-
-Lord Emsworth, it should be mentioned, was not completely in touch with
-recent happenings in his home. His habit of going early to bed had
-caused him to miss the sensational events in the drawing-room: and,
-as he was a sound sleeper, the subsequent screams--or, as Stokes the
-footman would have said, shrieks--had not disturbed him. He stared at
-Psmith, aghast. For a while the apparent placidity of Baxter had lulled
-his first suspicions, but now they returned with renewed force.
-
-“Baxter thought my sister’s necklace was in a flower-pot?” he gasped.
-
-“So I understood him to say.”
-
-“But why should my sister keep her necklace in a flower-pot?”
-
-“Ah, there you take me into deep waters.”
-
-“The man’s mad,” cried Lord Emsworth, his last doubts removed. “Stark,
-staring mad! I thought so before, and now I’m convinced of it.”
-
-His lordship was no novice in the symptoms of insanity. Several of
-his best friends were residing in those palatial establishments set
-in pleasant parks and surrounded by high walls with broken bottles on
-them, to which the wealthy and aristocratic are wont to retire when
-the strain of modern life becomes too great. And one of his uncles by
-marriage, who believed that he was a loaf of bread, had made his first
-public statement on the matter in the smoking-room of this very castle.
-What Lord Emsworth did not know about lunatics was not worth knowing.
-
-“I must get rid of him,” he said. And at the thought the fair morning
-seemed to Lord Emsworth to take on a sudden new beauty. Many a time
-had he toyed wistfully with the idea of dismissing his efficient but
-tyrannical secretary, but never before had that sickeningly competent
-young man given him any reasonable cause to act. Hitherto, moreover, he
-had feared his sister’s wrath should he take the plunge. But now . . .
-Surely even Connie, pig-headed as she was, could not blame him for
-dispensing with the services of a secretary who thought she kept her
-necklaces in flower-pots, and went out into the garden in the early
-dawn to hurl them at his bedroom window.
-
-His demeanour took on a sudden buoyancy. He hummed a gay air.
-
-“Get rid of him,” he murmured, rolling the blessed words round his
-tongue. He patted Psmith genially on the shoulder. “Well, my dear
-fellow,” he said, “I suppose we had better be getting back to bed and
-seeing if we can’t get a little sleep.”
-
-Psmith gave a little start. He had been somewhat deeply immersed in
-thought.
-
-“Do not,” he said courteously, “let me keep you from the hay if you
-wish to retire. To me--you know what we poets are--this lovely morning
-has brought inspiration. I think I will push off to my little nook in
-the woods, and write a poem about something.”
-
-He accompanied his host up the silent stairs, and they parted with
-mutual good will at their respective doors. Psmith, having cleared his
-brain with a hurried cold bath, began to dress.
-
-As a rule, the donning of his clothes was a solemn ceremony over
-which he dwelt lovingly; but this morning he abandoned his customary
-leisurely habit. He climbed into his trousers with animation, and
-lingered but a moment over the tying of his tie. He was convinced that
-there was that before him which would pay for haste.
-
-Nothing in this world is sadder than the frequency with which we
-suspect our fellows without just cause. In the happenings of the night
-before, Psmith had seen the hand of Edward Cootes. Edward Cootes, he
-considered, had been indulging in what--in another--he would certainly
-have described as funny business. Like Miss Simmons, Psmith had quickly
-arrived at the conclusion that the necklace had been thrown out of
-the drawing-room window by one of those who made up the audience at
-his reading: and it was his firm belief that it had been picked up
-and hidden by Mr. Cootes. He had been trying to think ever since
-where that persevering man could have concealed it, and Baxter had
-provided the clue. But Psmith saw clearer than Baxter. The secretary,
-having disembowelled fifteen flower-pots and found nothing, had
-abandoned his theory. Psmith went further, and suspected the existence
-of a sixteenth. And he proposed as soon as he was dressed to sally
-downstairs in search of it.
-
-He put on his shoes, and left the room, buttoning his waistcoat as he
-went.
-
-
-§ 6
-
-The hands of the clock over the stables were pointing to half-past
-five when Eve Halliday, tiptoeing furtively, made another descent of
-the stairs. Her feelings as she went were very different from those
-which had caused her to jump at every sound when she had started on
-this same journey three hours earlier. Then, she had been a prowler
-in the darkness and, as such, a fitting object of suspicion: now, if
-she happened to run into anybody, she was merely a girl who, unable
-to sleep, had risen early to take a stroll in the garden. It was a
-distinction that made all the difference.
-
-Moreover, it covered the facts. She had not been able to sleep--except
-for an hour when she had dozed off in a chair by her window; and she
-certainly proposed to take a stroll in the garden. It was her intention
-to recover the necklace from the place where she had deposited it, and
-bury it somewhere where no one could possibly find it. There it could
-lie until she had a chance of meeting and talking to Mr. Keeble, and
-ascertaining what was the next step he wished taken.
-
-Two reasons had led Eve, after making her panic dash back into the
-house after lurking in the bushes while Baxter patrolled the terrace,
-to leave her precious flower-pot on the sill of the window beside the
-front door. She had read in stories of sensation that for purposes
-of concealment the most open place is the best place: and, secondly,
-the nearer the front door she put the flower-pot, the less distance
-would she have to carry it when the time came for its removal. In
-the present excited condition of the household, with every guest an
-amateur detective, the spectacle of a girl tripping downstairs with a
-flower-pot in her arms would excite remark.
-
-Eve felt exhilarated. She was not used to getting only one hour’s sleep
-in the course of a night, but excitement and the reflection that she
-had played a difficult game and won it against odds bore her up so
-strongly that she was not conscious of fatigue: and so uplifted did she
-feel that as she reached the landing above the hall she abandoned her
-cautious mode of progress and ran down the remaining stairs. She had
-the sensation of being in the last few yards of a winning race.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The hall was quite light now. Every object in it was plainly visible.
-There was the huge dinner-gong: there was the long leather settee:
-there was the table which she had upset in the darkness. And there was
-the sill of the window by the front door. But the flower-pot which had
-been on it was gone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-MORE ON THE FLOWER-POT THEME
-
-
-In any community in which a sensational crime has recently been
-committed, the feelings of the individuals who go to make up that
-community must of necessity vary somewhat sharply according to the
-degree in which the personal fortunes of each are affected by the
-outrage. Vivid in their own way as may be the emotions of one who sees
-a fellow-citizen sandbagged in a quiet street, they differ in kind from
-those experienced by the victim himself. And so, though the theft of
-Lady Constance Keeble’s diamond necklace had stirred Blandings Castle
-to its depths, it had not affected all those present in quite the
-same way. It left the house-party divided into two distinct schools
-of thought--the one finding in the occurrence material for gloom and
-despondency, the other deriving from it nothing but joyful excitement.
-
-To this latter section belonged those free young spirits who had
-chafed at the prospect of being herded into the drawing-room on the
-eventful night to listen to Psmith’s reading of _Songs of Squalor_.
-It made them tremble now to think of what they would have missed, had
-Lady Constance’s vigilance relaxed sufficiently to enable them to
-execute the quiet sneak for the billiard-room of which even at the
-eleventh hour they had thought so wistfully. As far as the Reggies,
-Berties, Claudes, and Archies at that moment enjoying Lord Emsworth’s
-hospitality were concerned the thing was top-hole, priceless, and
-indisputably what the doctor ordered. They spent a great deal of their
-time going from one country-house to another, and as a rule found the
-routine a little monotonous. A happening like that of the previous
-night gave a splendid zip to rural life. And when they reflected that,
-right on top of this binge, there was coming the County Ball, it seemed
-to them that God was in His heaven and all right with the world. They
-stuck cigarettes in long holders, and collected in groups, chattering
-like starlings.
-
-The gloomy brigade, those with hearts bowed down, listened to their
-effervescent babbling with wan distaste. These last were a small body
-numerically, but very select. Lady Constance might have been described
-as their head and patroness. Morning found her still in a state
-bordering on collapse. After breakfast, however, which she took in her
-room, and which was sweetened by an interview with Mr. Joseph Keeble,
-her husband, she brightened considerably. Mr. Keeble, thought Lady
-Constance, behaved magnificently. She had always loved him dearly, but
-never so much as when, abstaining from the slightest reproach of her
-obstinacy in refusing to allow the jewels to be placed in the bank, he
-spaciously informed her that he would buy her another necklace, just
-as good and costing every penny as much as the old one. It was at this
-point that Lady Constance almost seceded from the ranks of gloom. She
-kissed Mr. Keeble gratefully, and attacked with something approaching
-animation the boiled egg at which she had been pecking when he came in.
-
-But a few minutes later the average of despair was restored by the
-enrolment of Mr. Keeble in the ranks of the despondent. He had
-gladsomely assumed overnight that one of his agents, either Eve or
-Freddie, had been responsible for the disappearance of the necklace.
-The fact that Freddie, interviewed by stealth in his room, gapingly
-disclaimed any share in the matter had not damped him. He had never
-expected results from Freddie. But when, after leaving Lady Constance,
-he encountered Eve and was given a short outline of history, beginning
-with her acquisition of the necklace, and ending--like a modern
-novel--on the sombre note of her finding the flower-pot gone, he too
-sat him down and mourned as deeply as anyone.
-
-Passing with a brief mention over Freddie, whose morose bearing was
-the subject of considerable comment among the younger set; over Lord
-Emsworth, who woke at twelve o’clock disgusted to find that he had
-missed several hours among his beloved flower-beds; and over the
-Efficient Baxter, who was roused from sleep at twelve-fifteen by Thomas
-the footman knocking on his door in order to hand him a note from his
-employer enclosing a cheque, and dispensing with his services; we come
-to Miss Peavey.
-
-At twenty minutes past eleven on this morning when so much was
-happening to so many people, Miss Peavey stood in the Yew Alley gazing
-belligerently at the stemless mushroom finial of a tree about half-way
-between the entrance and the point where the alley merged into the
-west wood. She appeared to be soliloquising. For, though words were
-proceeding from her with considerable rapidity, there seemed to be no
-one in sight to whom they were being addressed. Only an exceptionally
-keen observer would have noted a slight significant quivering among the
-tree’s tightly-woven branches.
-
-“You poor bone-headed fish,” the poetess was saying with that
-strained tenseness which results from the churning up of a generous
-and emotional nature, “isn’t there anything in this world you can do
-without tumbling over your feet and making a mess of it? All I ask of
-you is to stroll under a window and pick up a few jewels, and now you
-come and tell me . . .”
-
-“But, Liz!” said the tree plaintively.
-
-“I do all the difficult part of the job. All that there was left for
-you to handle was something a child of three could have done on its
-ear. And now . . .”
-
-“But, Liz! I’m telling you I couldn’t find the stuff. I was down there
-all right, but I couldn’t find it.”
-
-“You couldn’t find it!” Miss Peavey pawed restlessly at the soft turf
-with a shapely shoe. “You’re the sort of dumb Isaac that couldn’t find
-a bass-drum in a telephone-booth. You didn’t _look_.”
-
-“I did look. Honest, I did.”
-
-“Well, the stuff was there. I threw it down the moment the lights went
-out.”
-
-“Somebody must have got there first, and swiped it.”
-
-“Who could have got there first? Everybody was up in the room where I
-was.
-
-“Am I sure? Am I . . .” The poetess’s voice trailed off. She was
-staring down the Yew Alley at a couple who had just entered. She hissed
-a warning in a sharp undertone. “Hsst! Cheese it, Ed. There’s someone
-coming.”
-
-The two intruders who had caused Miss Peavey to suspend her remarks to
-her erring lieutenant were of opposite sexes--a tall girl with fair
-hair, and a taller young man irreproachably clad in white flannels
-who beamed down at his companion through a single eyeglass. Miss
-Peavey gazed at them searchingly as they approached. A sudden thought
-had come to her at the sight of them. Mistrusting Psmith as she had
-done ever since Mr. Cootes had unmasked him for the impostor that he
-was, the fact that they were so often together had led her to extend
-her suspicion to Eve. It might, of course, be nothing but a casual
-friendship, begun here at the castle; but Miss Peavey had always felt
-that Eve would bear watching. And now, seeing them together again this
-morning, it had suddenly come to her that she did not recall having
-observed Eve among the gathering in the drawing-room last night. True,
-there had been many people present, but Eve’s appearance was striking,
-and she was sure that she would have noticed her, if she had been
-there. And, if she had not been there, why should she not have been
-on the terrace? Somebody had been on the terrace last night, that was
-certain. For all her censorious attitude in their recent conversation,
-Miss Peavey had not really in her heart believed that even a dumb-bell
-like Eddie Cootes would not have found the necklace if it had been
-lying under the window on his arrival.
-
-“Oh, good morning, Mr. McTodd,” she cooed. “I’m feeling _so_ upset
-about this terrible affair. Aren’t _you_, Miss Halliday?”
-
-“Yes,” said Eve, and she had never said a more truthful word.
-
-Psmith, for his part, was in more debonair and cheerful mood even than
-was his wont. He had examined the position of affairs and found life
-good. He was particularly pleased with the fact that he had persuaded
-Eve to stroll with him this morning and inspect his cottage in the
-woods. Buoyant as was his temperament, he had been half afraid that
-last night’s interview on the terrace might have had disastrous effects
-on their intimacy. He was now feeling full of kindliness and goodwill
-towards all mankind--even Miss Peavey; and he bestowed on the poetess
-a dazzling smile.
-
-“We must always,” he said, “endeavour to look on the bright side. It
-was a pity, no doubt, that my reading last night had to be stopped at
-a cost of about twenty thousand pounds to the Keeble coffers, but let
-us not forget that but for that timely interruption I should have gone
-on for about another hour. I am like that. My friends have frequently
-told me that when once I start talking it requires something in the
-nature of a cataclysm to stop me. But, of course, there are drawbacks
-to everything, and last night’s rannygazoo perhaps shook your nervous
-system to some extent?”
-
-“I was dreadfully frightened,” said Miss Peavey. She turned to Eve with
-a delicate shiver. “Weren’t _you_, Miss Halliday?”
-
-“I wasn’t there,” said Eve absently.
-
-“Miss Halliday,” explained Psmith, “has had in the last few days
-some little experience of myself as orator, and with her usual good
-sense decided not to go out of her way to get more of me than was
-absolutely necessary. I was perhaps a trifle wounded at the moment,
-but on thinking it over came to the conclusion that she was perfectly
-justified in her attitude. I endeavour always in my conversation to
-instruct, elevate, and entertain, but there is no gainsaying the fact
-that a purist might consider enough of my chit-chat to be sufficient.
-Such, at any rate, was Miss Halliday’s view, and I honour her for it.
-But here I am, rambling on again just when I can see that you wish to
-be alone. We will leave you, therefore, to muse. No doubt we have been
-interrupting a train of thought which would have resulted but for my
-arrival in a rondel or a ballade or some other poetic morceau. Come,
-Miss Halliday. A weird and repellent female,” he said to Eve as they
-drew out of hearing, “created for some purpose which I cannot fathom.
-Everything in this world, I like to think, is placed there for some
-useful end: but why the authorities unleashed Miss Peavey on us is
-beyond me. It is not too much to say that she gives me a pain in the
-gizzard.”
-
-Miss Peavey, unaware of these harsh views, had watched them out of
-sight, and now she turned excitedly to the tree which sheltered her
-ally.
-
-“Ed!”
-
-“Hello?” replied the muffled voice of Mr. Cootes.
-
-“Did you hear?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Oh, my heavens!” cried his overwrought partner. “He’s gone deaf now!
-That girl--you didn’t hear what she was saying? She said that she
-wasn’t in the drawing-room when those lights went out. Ed, she was down
-below on the terrace, that’s where she was, picking up the stuff. And
-if it isn’t hidden somewheres in that McTodd’s shack down there in the
-woods I’ll eat my Sunday rubbers.”
-
-Eve, with Psmith prattling amiably at her side, pursued her way
-through the wood. She was wondering why she had come. She ought, she
-felt, to have been very cold and distant to this young man after what
-had occurred between them last night. But somehow it was difficult
-to be cold and distant with Psmith. He cheered her stricken soul. By
-the time they reached the little clearing and came in sight of the
-squat, shed-like building with its funny windows and stained door, her
-spirits, always mercurial, had risen to a point where she found herself
-almost able to forget her troubles.
-
-“What a horrible-looking place!” she exclaimed. “Whatever did you want
-it for?”
-
-“Purely as a nook,” said Psmith, taking out his key. “You know how the
-man of sensibility and refinement needs a nook. In this rushing age
-it is imperative that the thinker shall have a place, however humble,
-where he can be alone.”
-
-“But you aren’t a thinker.”
-
-“You wrong me. For the last few days I have been doing some extremely
-brisk thinking. And the strain has taken its toll. The fierce whirl of
-life at Blandings is wearing me away. There are dark circles under my
-eyes and I see floating spots.” He opened the door. “Well, here we are.
-Will you pop in for a moment?”
-
-Eve went in. The single sitting-room of the cottage certainly bore out
-the promise of the exterior. It contained a table with a red cloth, a
-chair, three stuffed birds in a glass case on the wall, and a small
-horsehair sofa. A depressing musty scent pervaded the place, as if a
-cheese had recently died there in painful circumstances. Eve gave a
-little shiver of distaste.
-
-“I understand your silent criticism,” said Psmith. “You are saying to
-yourself that plain living and high thinking is evidently the ideal of
-the gamekeepers on the Blandings estate. They are strong, rugged men
-who care little for the refinements of interior decoration. But shall
-we blame them? If I had to spend most of the day and night chivvying
-poachers and keeping an eye on the local rabbits, I imagine that in my
-off-hours practically anything with a roof would satisfy me. It was in
-the hope that you might be able to offer some hints and suggestions
-for small improvements here and there that I invited you to inspect
-my little place. There is no doubt that it wants doing up a bit, by
-a woman’s gentle hand. Will you take a look round and give out a few
-ideas? The wall-paper is, I fear, a fixture, but in every other
-direction consider yourself untrammelled.”
-
-Eve looked about her.
-
-“Well,” she began dubiously, “I don’t think . . .”
-
-She stopped abruptly, tingling all over. A second glance had shown
-her something which her first careless inspection had overlooked.
-Half hidden by a ragged curtain, there stood on the window-sill a
-large flower-pot containing a geranium. And across the surface of the
-flower-pot was a broad splash of white paint.
-
-“You were saying . . . ?” said Psmith courteously.
-
-Eve did not reply. She hardly heard him. Her mind was in a confused
-whirl. A monstrous suspicion was forming itself in her brain.
-
-“You are admiring the shrub?” said Psmith. “I found it lying about up
-at the castle this morning and pinched it. I thought it would add a
-touch of colour to the place.”
-
-Eve, looking at him keenly as his gaze shifted to the flower-pot, told
-herself that her suspicion had been absurd. Surely this blandness could
-not be a cloak for guilt.
-
-“Where did you find it?”
-
-“By one of the windows in the hall, more or less wasting its sweetness.
-I am bound to say I am a little disappointed in the thing. I had a sort
-of idea it would turn the old homestead into a floral bower, but it
-doesn’t seem to.”
-
-“It’s a beautiful geranium.”
-
-“There,” said Psmith, “I cannot agree with you. It seems to me to have
-the glanders or something.”
-
-“It only wants watering.”
-
-“And unfortunately this cosy little place appears to possess no water
-supply. I take it that the late proprietor when in residence used to
-trudge to the back door of the castle and fetch what he needed in a
-bucket. If this moribund plant fancies that I am going to spend my time
-racing to and fro with refreshments, it is vastly mistaken. To-morrow
-it goes into the dustbin.”
-
-Eve shut her eyes. She was awed by a sense of having arrived at a
-supreme moment. She had the sensations of a gambler who risks all on a
-single throw.
-
-“What a shame!” she said, and her voice, though she tried to control
-it, shook. “You had better give it to me. I’ll take care of it. It’s
-just what I want for my room.”
-
-“Pray take it,” said Psmith. “It isn’t mine, but pray take it. And very
-encouraging it is, let me add, that you should be accepting gifts from
-me in this hearty fashion; for it is well known that there is no surer
-sign of the dawning of the divine emotion--love,” he explained, “than
-this willingness to receive presents from the hands of the adorer. I
-make progress, I make progress.”
-
-“You don’t do anything of the kind,” said Eve. Her eyes were sparkling
-and her heart sang within her. In the revulsion of feeling which had
-come to her on finding her suspicions unfounded she was aware of a warm
-friendliness towards this absurd young man.
-
-“Pardon me,” said Psmith firmly. “I am quoting an established
-authority--Auntie Belle of _Home Gossip_.”
-
-“I must be going,” said Eve. She took the flower-pot and hugged it to
-her. “I’ve got work to do.”
-
-“Work, work, always work!” sighed Psmith. “The curse of the age. Well,
-I will escort you back to your cell.”
-
-“No, you won’t,” said Eve. “I mean, thank you for your polite offer,
-but I want to be alone.”
-
-“Alone?” Psmith looked at her, astonished. “When you have the chance
-of being with _me_? This is a strange attitude.”
-
-“Good-bye,” said Eve. “Thank you for being so hospitable and lavish.
-I’ll try to find some cushions and muslin and stuff to brighten up this
-place.”
-
-“Your presence does that adequately,” said Psmith, accompanying her to
-the door. “By the way, returning to the subject we were discussing last
-night, I forgot to mention, when asking you to marry me, that I can do
-card-tricks.”
-
-“Really?”
-
-“And also a passable imitation of a cat calling to her young. Has this
-no weight with you? Think! These things come in very handy in the long
-winter evenings.”
-
-“But I shan’t be there when you are imitating cats in the long winter
-evenings.”
-
-“I think you are wrong. As I visualise my little home, I can see you
-there very clearly, sitting before the fire. Your maid has put you into
-something loose. The light of the flickering flames reflects itself
-in your lovely eyes. You are pleasantly tired after an afternoon’s
-shopping, but not so tired as to be unable to select a card--_any_
-card--from the pack which I offer . . .”
-
-“Good-bye,” said Eve.
-
-“If it must be so--good-bye. For the present. I shall see you anon?”
-
-“I expect so.”
-
-“Good! I will count the minutes.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Eve walked rapidly away. As she snuggled the flower-pot under her arm
-she was feeling like a child about to open its Christmas stocking.
-Before she had gone far, a shout stopped her and she perceived Psmith
-galloping gracefully in her wake.
-
-“Can you spare me a moment?” said Psmith.
-
-“Certainly.”
-
-“I should have added that I can also recite ‘Gunga-Din.’ Will you think
-that over?”
-
-“I will.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Psmith. “Thank you. I have a feeling that it may just
-turn the scale.”
-
-He raised his hat ambassadorially and galloped away again.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Eve found herself unable to wait any longer. Psmith was out of sight
-now, and the wood was very still and empty. Birds twittered in the
-branches, and the sun made little pools of gold upon the ground. She
-cast a swift glance about her and crouched down in the shelter of a
-tree.
-
-The birds stopped singing. The sun no longer shone. The wood had become
-cold and sinister. For Eve, with a heart of lead, was staring blankly
-at a little pile of mould at her feet; mould which she had sifted again
-and again in a frenzied, fruitless effort to find a necklace which was
-not there.
-
-The empty flower-pot seemed to leer up at her in mockery.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-PSMITH RECEIVES GUESTS
-
-
-§ 1
-
-Blandings Castle was astir from roof to hall. Lights blazed, voices
-shouted, bells rang. All over the huge building there prevailed a vast
-activity like that of a barracks on the eve of the regiment’s departure
-for abroad. Dinner was over, and the Expeditionary Force was making
-its final preparations before starting off in many motor-cars for
-the County Ball at Shifley. In the bedrooms on every floor, Reggies,
-doubtful at the last moment about their white ties, were feverishly
-arranging new ones; Berties brushed their already glistening hair; and
-Claudes shouted to Archies along the passages insulting inquiries as to
-whether they had been sneaking their handkerchiefs. Valets skimmed like
-swallows up and down corridors, maids fluttered in and out of rooms in
-aid of Beauty in distress. The noise penetrated into every nook and
-corner of the house. It vexed the Efficient Baxter, going through his
-papers in the library preparatory to leaving Blandings on the morrow
-for ever. It disturbed Lord Emsworth, who stoutly declining to go
-within ten miles of the County Ball, had retired to his room with a
-book on Herbaceous Borders. It troubled the peace of Beach the butler,
-refreshing himself after his activities around the dinner table with a
-glass of sound port in the housekeeper’s room. The only person in the
-place who paid no attention to it was Eve Halliday.
-
-Eve was too furious to pay attention to anything but her deleterious
-thoughts. As she walked on the terrace, to which she had fled in quest
-of solitude, her teeth were set and her blue eyes glowed belligerently.
-As Miss Peavey would have put it in one of her colloquial moods, she
-was mad clear through. For Eve was a girl of spirit, and there is
-nothing your girl of spirit so keenly resents as being made a fool of,
-whether it be by Fate or by a fellow human creature. Eve was in the
-uncomfortable position of having had this indignity put upon her by
-both. But, while as far as Fate was concerned she merely smouldered
-rebelliously, her animosity towards Psmith was vivid in the extreme.
-
-A hot wave of humiliation made her writhe as she remembered the
-infantile guilelessness with which she had accepted the preposterous
-story he had told her in explanation of his presence at Blandings in
-another man’s name. He had been playing with her all the time--fooling
-her--and, most unforgivable crime of all, he had dared to pretend
-that he was fond of her and--Eve’s face burned again--to make
-her--almost--fond of him. How he must have laughed . . .
-
-Well, she was not beaten yet. Her chin went up and she began to walk
-quicker. He was clever, but she would be cleverer. The game was not
-over . . .
-
-“Hallo!”
-
-A white waistcoat was gleaming at her side. Polished shoes shuffled on
-the turf. Light hair, brushed and brilliantined to the last possible
-pitch of perfection, shone in the light of the stars. The Hon. Freddie
-Threepwood was in her midst.
-
-“Well, Freddie?” said Eve resignedly.
-
-“I say,” said Freddie in a voice in which self-pity fought with
-commiseration for her. “Beastly shame you aren’t coming to the hop.”
-
-“I don’t mind.”
-
-“But I do, dash it! The thing won’t be anything without you. A bally
-wash-out. And I’ve been trying out some new steps with the Victrola.”
-
-“Well, there will be plenty of other girls there for you to step on.”
-
-“I don’t _want_ other girls, dash them. I want you.”
-
-“That’s very nice of you,” said Eve. The first truculence of her manner
-had softened. She reminded herself, as she had so often been obliged
-to remind herself before, that Freddie meant well. “But it can’t be
-helped. I’m only an employée here, not a guest. I’m not invited.”
-
-“I know,” said Freddie. “And that’s what makes it so dashed sickening.
-It’s like that picture I saw once, ‘A Modern Cinderella.’ Only there
-the girl nipped off to the dance--disguised, you know--and had a most
-topping time. I wish life was a bit more like the movies.”
-
-“Well, it was enough like the movies last night when . . . Oh!”
-
-Eve stopped. Her heart gave a sudden jump. Somehow the presence of
-Freddie was so inextricably associated in her mind with limp proposals
-of marriage that she had completely forgotten that there was another
-and a more dashing side to his nature, that side which Mr. Keeble had
-revealed to her at their meeting in Market Blandings on the previous
-afternoon. She looked at him with new eyes.
-
-“Anything up?” said Freddie.
-
-Eve took him excitedly by the sleeve and drew him farther away from
-the house. Not that there was any need to do so, for the bustle within
-continued unabated.
-
-“Freddie,” she whispered, “listen! I met Mr. Keeble yesterday after I
-had left you, and he told me all about how you and he had planned to
-steal Lady Constance’s necklace.”
-
-“Good Lord!” cried Freddie, and leaped like a stranded fish.
-
-“And I’ve got an idea,” said Eve.
-
-She had, and it was one which had only in this instant come to her.
-Until now, though she had tilted her chin bravely and assured herself
-that the game was not over and that she was not yet beaten, a small
-discouraging voice had whispered to her all the while that this was
-mere bravado. What, the voice had asked, are you going to do? And she
-had not been able to answer it. But now, with Freddie as an ally, she
-could act.
-
-“Told you all about it?” Freddie was muttering pallidly. He had never
-had a very high opinion of his Uncle Joseph’s mentality, but he had
-supposed him capable of keeping a thing like that to himself. He was,
-indeed, thinking of Mr. Keeble almost the identical thoughts which
-Mr. Keeble in the first moments of his interview with Eve in Market
-Blandings had thought of him. And these reflections brought much the
-same qualms which they had brought to the elder conspirator. Once these
-things got talked about, mused Freddie agitatedly, you never knew where
-they would stop. Before his mental eye there swam a painful picture of
-his Aunt Constance, informed of the plot, tackling him and demanding
-the return of her necklace. “Told you all about it?” he bleated, and,
-like Mr. Keeble, mopped his brow.
-
-“It’s all right,” said Eve impatiently. “It’s quite all right. He asked
-me to steal the necklace, too.”
-
-“You?” said Freddie, gaping.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“My Gosh!” cried Freddie, electrified. “Then was it you who got the
-thing last night?”
-
-“Yes it was. But . . .”
-
-For a moment Freddie had to wrestle with something that was almost a
-sordid envy. Then better feelings prevailed. He quivered with manly
-generosity. He gave Eve’s hand a tender pat. It was too dark for her to
-see it, but he was registering renunciation.
-
-“Little girl,” he murmured, “there’s no one I’d rather got that
-thousand quid than you. If I couldn’t have it myself, I mean to say.
-Little girl . . .”
-
-“Oh, be quiet!” cried Eve. “I wasn’t doing it for any thousand pounds.
-I didn’t want Mr. Keeble to give me money . . .”
-
-“You didn’t want him to give you money!” repeated Freddie wonderingly.
-
-“I just wanted to help Phyllis. She’s my friend.”
-
-“Pals, pardner, pals! Pals till hell freezes!” cried Freddie, deeply
-moved.
-
-“What _are_ you talking about?”
-
-“Sorry. That was a sub-title from a thing called ‘Prairie Nell,’ you
-know. Just happened to cross my mind. It was in the second reel where
-the two fellows are . . .”
-
-“Yes, yes; never mind.”
-
-“Thought I’d mention it.”
-
-“Tell me . . .”
-
-“It seemed to fit in.”
-
-“Do _stop_, Freddie!”
-
-“Right-ho!”
-
-“Tell me,” resumed Eve, “is Mr. McTodd going to the ball?”
-
-“Eh? Why, yes, I suppose so.”
-
-“Then, listen. You know that little cottage your father has let him
-have?”
-
-“Little cottage?”
-
-“Yes. In the wood past the Yew Alley.”
-
-“Little cottage? I never heard of any little cottage.”
-
-“Well, he’s got one,” said Eve. “And as soon as everybody has gone to
-the ball you and I are going to burgle it.”
-
-“What!”
-
-“Burgle it!”
-
-“Burgle it?”
-
-“Yes, _burgle_ it!”
-
-Freddie gulped.
-
-“Look here, old thing,” he said plaintively. “This is a bit beyond me.
-It doesn’t seem to me to make sense.”
-
-Eve forced herself to be patient. After all, she reflected, perhaps
-she had been approaching the matter a little rapidly. The desire to
-beat Freddie violently over the head passed, and she began to speak
-slowly, and, as far as she could manage it, in words of one syllable.
-
-“I can make it quite clear if you will listen and not say a word till
-I’ve done. This man who calls himself McTodd is not Mr. McTodd at all.
-He is a thief who got into the place by saying that he was McTodd. He
-stole the jewels from me last night and hid them in his cottage.”
-
-“But, I say!”
-
-“Don’t interrupt. I know he has them there, so when he has gone to the
-ball and the coast is clear you and I will go and search till we find
-them.”
-
-“But, I say!”
-
-Eve crushed down her impatience once more.
-
-“Well?”
-
-“Do you really think this cove has got the necklace?”
-
-“I know he has.”
-
-“Well, then, it’s jolly well the best thing that could possibly have
-happened, because I got him here to pinch it for Uncle Joseph.”
-
-“What!”
-
-“Absolutely. You see, I began to have a doubt or two as to whether I
-was quite equal to the contract, so I roped in this bird by way of a
-gang.”
-
-“You got him here? You mean you sent for him and arranged that he
-should pass himself off as Mr. McTodd?”
-
-“Well, no, not exactly that. He was coming here as McTodd anyway, as
-far as I can gather. But I’d talked it over with him, you know, before
-that and asked him to pinch the necklace.”
-
-“Then you know him quite well? He is a friend of yours?”
-
-“I wouldn’t say that exactly. But he said he was a great pal of Phyllis
-and her husband.”
-
-“Did he tell you that?”
-
-“Absolutely!”
-
-“When?”
-
-“In the train.”
-
-“I mean, was it before or after you had told him why you wanted the
-necklace stolen?”
-
-“Eh? Let me think. After.”
-
-“You’re sure?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Tell me exactly what happened,” said Eve. “I can’t understand it at
-all at present.”
-
-Freddie marshalled his thoughts.
-
-“Well, let’s see. Well, to start with, I told Uncle Joe I would pinch
-the necklace and slip it to him, and he said if I did he’d give me a
-thousand quid. As a matter of fact, he made it two thousand, and very
-decent of him, I thought it. Is that straight?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then I sort of got cold feet. Began to wonder, don’t you know, if I
-hadn’t bitten off rather more than I could chew.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“And then I saw this advertisement in the paper.”
-
-“Advertisement? What advertisement?”
-
-“There was an advertisement in the paper saying if anybody wanted
-anything done simply apply to this chap. So I wrote him a letter
-and went up and had a talk with him in the lobby of the Piccadilly
-Palace. Only, unfortunately, I’d promised the guv’nor I’d catch the
-twelve-fifty home, so I had to dash off in the middle. Must have
-thought me rather an ass, it’s sometimes occurred to me since. I mean,
-practically all I said was, ‘Will you pinch my aunt’s necklace?’
-and then buzzed off to catch the train. Never thought I’d see the
-man again, but when I got into the five o’clock train--I missed the
-twelve-fifty--there he was, as large as life, and the guv’nor suddenly
-trickled in from another compartment and introduced him to me as McTodd
-the poet. Then the guv’nor legged it, and this chap told me he wasn’t
-really McTodd, only pretending to be McTodd.”
-
-“Didn’t that strike you as strange?”
-
-“Yes, rather rummy.”
-
-“Did you ask him why he was doing such an extraordinary thing?”
-
-“Oh, yes. But he wouldn’t tell me. And then he asked me why I wanted
-him to pinch Aunt Connie’s necklace, and it suddenly occurred to me
-that everything was working rather smoothly--I mean, him being on his
-way to the castle like that. Right on the spot, don’t you know. So I
-told him all about Phyllis, and it was then that he said that he had
-been a pal of hers and her husband’s for years. So we fixed it up that
-he was to get the necklace and hand it over. I must say I was rather
-drawn to the chappie. He said he didn’t want any money for swiping the
-thing.”
-
-Eve laughed bitterly.
-
-“Why should he, when he was going to get twenty thousand pounds’ worth
-of diamonds and keep them? Oh, Freddie, I should have thought that even
-you would have seen through him. You go to this perfect stranger and
-tell him that there is a valuable necklace waiting here to be stolen,
-you find him on his way to steal it, and you trust him implicitly just
-because he tells you he knows Phyllis--whom he had never heard of in
-his life till you mentioned her. Freddie, really!”
-
-The Hon. Freddie scratched his beautifully shaven chin.
-
-“Well, when you put it like that,” he said, “I must own it does sound a
-bit off. But he seemed such a dashed matey sort of bird. Cheery and all
-that. I liked the feller.”
-
-“What nonsense!”
-
-“Well, but you liked him, too. I mean to say, you were about with him a
-goodish lot.”
-
-“I hate him!” said Eve angrily. “I wish I had never seen him. And if I
-let him get away with that necklace and cheat poor little Phyllis out
-of her money, I’ll--I’ll . . .”
-
-She raised a grimly determined chin to the stars. Freddie watched her
-admiringly.
-
-“I say, you know, you are a wonderful girl,” he said.
-
-“He _shan’t_ get away with it, if I have to pull the place down.”
-
-“When you chuck your head up like that you remind me a bit of
-What’s-her-name, the Famous Players star--you know, girl who was in
-‘Wed To A Satyr.’ Only,” added Freddie hurriedly, “she isn’t half so
-pretty. I say, I was rather looking forward to that County Ball, but
-now this has happened I don’t mind missing it a bit. I mean, it seems
-to draw us closer together somehow, if you follow me. I say, honestly,
-all kidding aside, you think that love might some day awaken in . . .”
-
-“We shall want a lamp, of course,” said Eve.
-
-“Eh?”
-
-“A lamp--to see with when we are in the cottage. Can you get one?”
-
-Freddie reluctantly perceived that the moment for sentiment had not
-arrived.
-
-“A lamp? Oh, yes, of course. Rather.”
-
-“Better get two,” said Eve. “And meet me here about half an hour after
-everybody has gone to the ball.”
-
-
-§ 2
-
-The tiny sitting-room of Psmith’s haven of rest in the woods had never
-reached a high standard of decorativeness even in its best days; but
-as Eve paused from her labours and looked at it in the light of her
-lamp about an hour after her conversation with Freddie on the terrace,
-it presented a picture of desolation which would have startled the
-plain-living game-keeper to whom it had once been a home. Even Freddie,
-though normally an unobservant youth, seemed awed by the ruin he had
-helped to create.
-
-“Golly!” he observed. “I say, we’ve rather mucked the place up a bit!”
-
-It was no over-statement. Eve had come to the cottage to search, and
-she had searched thoroughly. The torn carpet lay in a untidy heap
-against the wall. The table was overturned. Boards had been wrenched
-from the floor, bricks from the chimney-place. The horsehair sofa was
-in ribbons, and the one small cushion in the room lay limply in a
-corner, its stuffing distributed north, south, east and west. There was
-soot everywhere--on the walls, on the floor, on the fire-place, and
-on Freddie. A brace of dead bats, the further result of the latter’s
-groping in a chimney which had not been swept for seven months, reposed
-in the fender. The sitting-room had never been luxurious; it was now
-not even cosy.
-
-Eve did not reply. She was struggling with what she was fair-minded
-enough to see was an entirely unjust fever of irritation, with her
-courteous and obliging assistant as its object. It was wrong, she
-knew, to feel like this. That she should be furious at her failure to
-find the jewels was excusable, but she had no possible right to be
-furious with Freddie. It was not his fault that soot had poured from
-the chimney in lieu of diamonds. If he had asked for a necklace and
-been given a dead bat, he was surely more to be pitied than censured.
-Yet Eve, eyeing his grimy face, would have given very much to have
-been able to scream loudly and throw something at him. The fact was,
-the Hon. Freddie belonged to that unfortunate type of humanity which
-automatically gets blamed for everything in moments of stress.
-
-“Well, the bally thing isn’t here,” said Freddie. He spoke thickly, as
-a man will whose mouth is covered with soot.
-
-“I know it isn’t,” said Eve. “But this isn’t the only room in the
-house.”
-
-“Think he might have hidden the stuff upstairs?”
-
-“Or downstairs.”
-
-Freddie shook his head, dislodging a portion of a third bat.
-
-“Must be upstairs, if it’s anywhere. Mean to say, there isn’t any
-downstairs.”
-
-“There’s the cellar,” said Eve. “Take your lamp and go and have a look.”
-
-For the first time in the proceedings a spirit of disaffection seemed
-to manifest itself in the bosom of her assistant. Up till this moment
-Freddie had taken his orders placidly and executed them with promptness
-and civility. Even when the first shower of soot had driven him choking
-from the fire-place, his manly spirit had not been crushed; he had
-merely uttered a startled “Oh, I say!” and returned gallantly to the
-attack. But now he obviously hesitated.
-
-“Go on,” said Eve impatiently.
-
-“Yes, but, I say, you know . . .”
-
-“What’s the matter?”
-
-“I don’t think the chap would be likely to hide a necklace in the
-cellar. I vote we give it a miss and try upstairs.”
-
-“Don’t be silly, Freddie. He may have hidden it anywhere.”
-
-“Well, to be absolutely honest, I’d much rather not go into any bally
-cellar, if it’s all the same to you.”
-
-“Why ever not?”
-
-“Beetles. Always had a horror of beetles. Ever since I was a kid.”
-
-Eve bit her lip. She was feeling, as Miss Peavey had so often felt
-when associated in some delicate undertaking with Edward Cootes, that
-exasperating sense of man’s inadequacy which comes to high-spirited
-girls at moments such as these. To achieve the end for which she
-had started out that night she would have waded waist-high through
-a sea of beetles. But, divining with that sixth sense which tells
-women when the male has been pushed just so far and can be pushed no
-farther, that Freddie, wax though he might be in her hands in any other
-circumstances, was on this one point adamant, she made no further
-effort to bend him to her will.
-
-“All right,” she said. “I’ll go down into the cellar. You go and look
-upstairs.”
-
-“No. I say, sure you don’t mind?”
-
-Eve took up her lamp and left the craven.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For a girl of iron resolution and unswerving purpose, Eve’s inspection
-of the cellar was decidedly cursory. A distinct feeling of relief came
-over her as she stood at the top of the steps and saw by the light of
-the lamp how small and bare it was. For, impervious as she might be
-to the intimidation of beetles, her armour still contained a chink.
-She was terribly afraid of rats. And even when the rays of the lamp
-disclosed no scuttling horrors, she still lingered for a moment before
-descending. You never knew with rats. They pretended not to be there
-just to lure you on, and then came out and whizzed about your ankles.
-However, the memory of her scorn for Freddie’s pusillanimity forced her
-on, and she went down.
-
-The word “cellar” is an elastic one. It can be applied equally to the
-acres of bottle-fringed vaults which lie beneath a great pile like
-Blandings Castle and to a hole in the ground like the one in which she
-now found herself. This cellar was easily searched. She stamped on its
-stone flags with an ear strained to detect any note of hollowness, but
-none came. She moved the lamp so that it shone into every corner, but
-there was not even a crack in which a diamond necklace could have been
-concealed. Satisfied that the place contained nothing but a little
-coal-dust and a smell of damp decay, Eve passed thankfully out.
-
-The law of elimination was doing its remorseless work. It had ruled
-out the cellar, the kitchen, and the living-room--that is to say, the
-whole of the lower of the two floors which made up the cottage. There
-now remained only the rooms upstairs. There were probably not more than
-two, and Freddie must already have searched one of these. The quest
-seemed to be nearing its end. As Eve made for the narrow staircase that
-led to the second floor, the lamp shook in her hand and cast weird
-shadows. Now that success was in sight, the strain was beginning to
-affect her nerves.
-
-It was to nerves that in the first instant of hearing it she attributed
-what sounded like a soft cough in the sitting-room, a few feet from
-where she stood. Then a chill feeling of dismay gripped her. It could
-only, she thought, be Freddie, returned from his search; and if Freddie
-had returned from his search already, what could it mean except that
-those upstairs rooms, on which she had counted so confidently, had
-proved as empty as the others? Freddie was not one of your restrained,
-unemotional men. If he had found the necklace he would have been
-downstairs in two bounds, shouting. His silence was ominous. She opened
-the door and went quickly in.
-
-“Freddie,” she began, and broke off with a gasp.
-
-It was not Freddie who had coughed. It was Psmith. He was seated on
-the remains of the horsehair sofa, toying with an automatic pistol and
-gravely surveying through his monocle the ruins of a home.
-
-
-§ 3
-
-“Good evening,” said Psmith.
-
-It was not for a philosopher like himself to display astonishment. He
-was, however, undeniably feeling it. When, a few minutes before, he
-had encountered Freddie in this same room, he had received a distinct
-shock; but a rough theory which would account for Freddie’s presence in
-his home-from-home he had been able to work out. He groped in vain for
-one which would explain Eve.
-
-Mere surprise, however, was never enough to prevent Psmith talking. He
-began at once.
-
-“It was nice of you,” he said, rising courteously, “to look in. Won’t
-you sit down? On the sofa, perhaps? Or would you prefer a brick?”
-
-Eve was not yet equal to speech. She had been so firmly convinced
-that he was ten miles away at Shifley that his presence here in the
-sitting-room of the cottage had something of the breath-taking quality
-of a miracle. The explanation, if she could have known it, was simple.
-Two excellent reasons had kept Psmith from gracing the County Ball
-with his dignified support. In the first place, as Shifley was only
-four miles from the village where he had spent most of his life,
-he had regarded it as probable, if not certain, that he would have
-encountered there old friends to whom it would have been both tedious
-and embarrassing to explain why he had changed his name to McTodd.
-And secondly, though he had not actually anticipated a nocturnal raid
-on his little nook, he had thought it well to be on the premises that
-evening in case Mr. Edward Cootes should have been getting ideas into
-his head. As soon, therefore, as the castle had emptied itself and the
-wheels of the last car had passed away down the drive, he had pocketed
-Mr. Cootes’s revolver and proceeded to the cottage.
-
-Eve recovered her self-possession. She was not a girl given to collapse
-in moments of crisis. The first shock of amazement had passed; a
-humiliating feeling of extreme foolishness, which came directly after,
-had also passed; she was now grimly ready for battle.
-
-“Where is Mr. Threepwood?” she asked.
-
-“Upstairs. I have put him in storage for a while. Do not worry about
-Comrade Threepwood. He has lots to think about. He is under the
-impression that if he stirs out he will be instantly shot.”
-
-“Oh? Well, I want to put this lamp down. Will you please pick up that
-table?”
-
-“By all means. But--I am a novice in these matters--ought I not first
-to say ‘Hands up!’ or something?”
-
-“Will you please pick up that table?”
-
-“A friend of mine--one Cootes--you must meet him some time--generally
-remarks ‘Hey!’ in a sharp, arresting voice on these occasions.
-Personally I consider the expression too abrupt. Still, he has had
-great experience . . .”
-
-“Will you please pick up that table?”
-
-“Most certainly. I take it, then, that you would prefer to dispense
-with the usual formalities. In that case, I will park this revolver on
-the mantelpiece while we chat. I have taken a curious dislike to the
-thing. It makes me feel like Dangerous Dan McGrew.”
-
-Eve put down the lamp, and there was silence for a moment. Psmith
-looked about him thoughtfully. He picked up one of the dead bats and
-covered it with his handkerchief.
-
-“Somebody’s mother,” he murmured reverently.
-
-Eve sat down on the sofa.
-
-“Mr. . . .” She stopped. “I can’t call you Mr. McTodd. Will you please
-tell me your name?”
-
-“Ronald,” said Psmith. “Ronald Eustace.”
-
-“I suppose you have a surname?” snapped Eve. “Or an alias?”
-
-Psmith eyed her with a pained expression.
-
-“I may be hyper-sensitive,” he said, “but that last remark sounded
-to me like a dirty dig. You seem to imply that I am some sort of a
-criminal.”
-
-Eve laughed shortly.
-
-“I’m sorry if I hurt your feelings. There’s not much sense in
-pretending now, is there? What is your name?”
-
-“Psmith. The p is silent.”
-
-“Well, Mr. Smith, I imagine you understand why I am here?”
-
-“I took it for granted that you had come to fulfil your kindly promise
-of doing the place up a bit. Will you be wounded if I say frankly that
-I preferred it the way it was before? All this may be the last word in
-ultra-modern interior decoration, but I suppose I am old-fashioned.
-The whisper flies round Shropshire and adjoining counties, ‘Psmith
-is hide-bound. He is not attuned to up-to-date methods.’ Honestly,
-don’t you think you have rather unduly stressed the bizarre note? This
-soot . . . these dead bats . . .”
-
-“I have come to get that necklace.”
-
-“Ah! The necklace!”
-
-“I’m going to get it, too.”
-
-Psmith shook his head gently.
-
-“There,” he said, “if you will pardon me, I take issue with you. There
-is nobody to whom I would rather give that necklace than you, but there
-are special circumstances connected with it which render such an action
-impossible. I fancy, Miss Halliday, that you have been misled by your
-young friend upstairs. No; let me speak,” he said, raising a hand.
-“You know what a treat it is to me. The way I envisage the matter is
-thus. I still cannot understand as completely as I could wish how you
-come to be mixed up in the affair, but it is plain that in some way or
-other Comrade Threepwood has enlisted your services, and I regret to be
-obliged to inform you that the motives animating him in this quest are
-not pure. To put it crisply, he is engaged in what Comrade Cootes, to
-whom I alluded just now, would call ‘funny business’.”
-
-“I . . .”
-
-“Pardon me,” said Psmith. “If you will be patient for a few minutes
-more, I shall have finished and shall then be delighted to lend an
-attentive ear to any remarks you may wish to make. As it occurs to
-me--indeed, you hinted as much yourself just now--that my own position
-in this little matter has an appearance which to the uninitiated might
-seem tolerably rummy, I had better explain how I come to be guarding a
-diamond necklace which does not belong to me. I rely on your womanly
-discretion to let the thing go no further.”
-
-“Will you please . . .”
-
-“In one moment. The facts are as follows. Our mutual friend Mr. Keeble,
-Miss Halliday, has a stepdaughter who is married to one Comrade Jackson
-who, if he had no other claim to fame, would go ringing down through
-history for this reason, that he and I were at school together and that
-he is my best friend. We two have sported on the green--ooh, a lot of
-times. Well, owing to one thing and another, the Jackson family is
-rather badly up against it at the present . . .”
-
-Eve jumped up angrily.
-
-“I don’t believe a word of it,” she cried. “What is the use of trying
-to fool me like this? You had never heard of Phyllis before Freddie
-spoke about her in the train . . .”
-
-“Believe me . . .”
-
-“I won’t. Freddie got you down here to help him steal that necklace and
-give it to Mr. Keeble so that he could help Phyllis, and now you’ve got
-it and are trying to keep it for yourself.”
-
-Psmith started slightly. His monocle fell from its place.
-
-“Is _everybody_ in this little plot! Are you also one of Comrade
-Keeble’s corps of assistants?”
-
-“Mr. Keeble asked me to try to get the necklace for him.”
-
-Psmith replaced his monocle thoughtfully.
-
-“This,” he said, “opens up a new line of thought. Can it be that I
-have been wronging Comrade Threepwood all this time? I must confess
-that, when I found him here just now standing like Marius among the
-ruins of Carthage (the allusion is a classical one, and the fruit of an
-expensive education), I jumped--I may say, sprang--to the conclusion
-that he was endeavouring to double-cross both myself and the boss by
-getting hold of the necklace with a view to retaining it for his own
-benefit. It never occurred to me that he might be crediting me with the
-same sinful guile.”
-
-Eve ran to him and clutched his arm.
-
-“Mr. Smith, is this really true? Are you really a friend of Phyllis?”
-
-“She looks on me as a grandfather. Are _you_ a friend of hers?”
-
-“We were at school together.”
-
-“This,” said Psmith cordially, “is one of the most gratifying moments
-of my life. It makes us all seem like one great big family.”
-
-“But I never heard Phyllis speak about you.”
-
-“Strange!” said Psmith. “Strange. Surely she was not ashamed of her
-humble friend?”
-
-“Her what?”
-
-“I must explain,” said Psmith, “that until recently I was earning a
-difficult livelihood by slinging fish about in Billingsgate Market. It
-is possible that some snobbish strain in Comrade Jackson’s bride, which
-I confess I had not suspected, kept her from admitting that she was
-accustomed to hob-nob with one in the fish business.”
-
-“Good gracious!” cried Eve.
-
-“I beg your pardon?”
-
-“Smith . . . Fish business . . . Why, it was you who called at
-Phyllis’s house while I was there. Just before I came down here. I
-remember Phyllis saying how sorry she was that we had not met. She said
-you were just my sort of . . . I mean, she said she wanted me to meet
-you.”
-
-“This,” said Psmith, “is becoming more and more gratifying every
-moment. It seems to me that you and I were made for each other. I am
-your best friend’s best friend and we both have a taste for stealing
-other people’s jewellery. I cannot see how you can very well resist the
-conclusion that we are twin-souls.”
-
-“Don’t be silly.”
-
-“We shall get into that series of ‘Husbands and Wives Who Work
-Together.’”
-
-“Where is the necklace?”
-
-Psmith sighed.
-
-“The business note. Always the business note. Can’t we keep all that
-till later?”
-
-“No. We can’t.”
-
-“Ah, well!”
-
-Psmith crossed the room, and took down from the wall the case of
-stuffed birds.
-
-“The one place,” said Eve, with mortification, “where we didn’t think
-of looking!”
-
-Psmith opened the case and removed the centre bird, a depressed-looking
-fowl with glass eyes which stared with a haunting pathos. He felt in
-its interior and pulled out something that glittered and sparkled in
-the lamp-light.
-
-“Oh!”
-
-Eve ran her fingers almost lovingly through the jewels as they lay
-before her on the little table.
-
-“Aren’t they beautiful!”
-
-“Distinctly. I think I may say that of all the jewels I have ever
-stolen . . .”
-
-“HEY!”
-
-Eve let the necklace fall with a cry. Psmith spun round. In the doorway
-stood Mr. Edward Cootes, pointing a pistol.
-
-
-§ 4
-
-“Hands up!” said Mr. Cootes with the uncouth curtness of one who has
-not had the advantages of a refined home and a nice upbringing. He
-advanced warily, preceded by the revolver. It was a dainty, miniature
-weapon, such as might have been the property of some gentle lady. Mr.
-Cootes had, in fact, borrowed it from Miss Peavey, who at this juncture
-entered the room in a black and silver dinner-dress surmounted by a
-Rose du Barri wrap, her spiritual face glowing softly in the subdued
-light.
-
-“Attaboy, Ed,” observed Miss Peavey crisply.
-
-She swooped on the table and gathered up the necklace. Mr. Cootes,
-though probably gratified by the tribute, made no acknowledgment of it,
-but continued to direct an austere gaze at Eve and Psmith.
-
-“No funny business,” he advised.
-
-“I would be the last person,” said Psmith agreeably, “to advocate
-anything of the sort. This,” he said to Eve, “is Comrade Cootes, of
-whom you have heard so much.”
-
-Eve was staring, bewildered, at the poetess, who, satisfied with the
-manner in which the preliminaries had been conducted, had begun looking
-about her with idle curiosity.
-
-“Miss Peavey!” cried Eve. Of all the events of this eventful night the
-appearance of Lady Constance’s emotional friend in the rôle of criminal
-was the most disconcerting. “Miss _Peavey_!”
-
-“Hallo?” responded that lady agreeably.
-
-“I . . . I . . .”
-
-“What, I think, Miss Halliday is trying to say,” cut in Psmith, “is
-that she is finding it a little difficult to adjust her mind to the
-present development. I, too, must confess myself somewhat at a loss. I
-knew, of course, that Comrade Cootes had--shall I say an acquisitive
-streak in him, but you I had always supposed to be one hundred per
-cent. soul--and snowy white at that.”
-
-“Yeah?” said Miss Peavey, but faintly interested.
-
-“I imagined that you were a poetess.”
-
-“So I am a poetess,” retorted Miss Peavey hotly. “Just you start in
-joshing my poems and see how quick I’ll bean you with a brick. Well,
-Ed, no sense in sticking around here. Let’s go.”
-
-“We’ll have to tie these birds up,” said Mr. Cootes. “Otherwise we’ll
-have them squealing before I can make a getaway.”
-
-“Ed,” said Miss Peavey with the scorn which her colleague so often
-excited in her, “try to remember sometimes that that thing balanced
-on your collar is a head, not a hubbard squash. And be careful what
-you’re doing with that gat! Waving it about like it was a bouquet or
-something. How are they going to squeal? They can’t say a thing without
-telling everyone they snitched the stuff first.”
-
-“That’s right,” admitted Mr. Cootes.
-
-“Well, then, don’t come butting in.”
-
-The silence into which this rebuke plunged Mr. Cootes gave Psmith the
-opportunity to resume speech. An opportunity of which he was glad,
-for, while he had nothing of definitely vital import to say, he was
-optimist enough to feel that his only hope of recovering the necklace
-was to keep the conversation going on the chance of something turning
-up. Affable though his manner was, he had never lost sight of the fact
-that one leap would take him across the space of floor separating
-him from Mr. Cootes. At present, that small but effective revolver
-precluded anything in the nature of leaps, however short, but if in the
-near future anything occurred to divert his adversary’s vigilance even
-momentarily. . . . He pursued a policy of watchful waiting, and in the
-meantime started to talk again.
-
-“If, before you go,” he said, “you can spare us a moment of your
-valuable time, I should be glad of a few words. And, first, may I say
-that I cordially agree with your condemnation of Comrade Cootes’s
-recent suggestion. The man is an ass.”
-
-“Say!” cried Mr. Cootes, coming to life again, “that’ll be about all
-from you. If there wasn’t ladies present, I’d bust you one.”
-
-“Ed,” said Miss Peavey with quiet authority, “shut your trap!”
-
-Mr. Cootes subsided once more. Psmith gazed at him through his monocle,
-interested.
-
-“Pardon me,” he said, “but--if it is not a rude question--are you two
-married?”
-
-“Eh?”
-
-“You seemed to me to talk to him like a wife. Am I addressing Mrs.
-Cootes?”
-
-“You will be if you stick around a while.”
-
-“A thousand congratulations to Comrade Cootes. Not quite so many to
-you, possibly, but fully that number of good wishes.” He moved towards
-the poetess with extended hand. “I am thinking of getting married
-myself shortly.”
-
-“Keep those hands up,” said Mr. Cootes.
-
-“Surely,” said Psmith reproachfully, “these conventions need not be
-observed among friends? You will find the only revolver I have ever
-possessed over there on the mantelpiece. Go and look at it.”
-
-“Yes, and have you jumping on my back the moment I took my eyes off
-you!”
-
-“There is a suspicious vein in your nature, Comrade Cootes,” sighed
-Psmith, “which I do not like to see. Fight against it.” He turned to
-Miss Peavey once more. “To resume a pleasanter topic, you will let me
-know where to send the plated fish-slice, won’t you?”
-
-“Huh?” said the lady.
-
-“I was hoping,” proceeded Psmith, “if you do not think it a liberty
-on the part of one who has known you but a short time, to be allowed
-to send you a small wedding-present in due season. And one of these
-days, perhaps, when I too am married, you and Comrade Cootes will come
-and visit us in our little home. You will receive a hearty, unaffected
-welcome. You must not be offended if, just before you say good-bye, we
-count the spoons.”
-
-One would scarcely have supposed Miss Peavey a sensitive woman, yet at
-this remark an ominous frown clouded her white forehead. Her careless
-amiability seemed to wane. She raked Psmith with a glittering eye.
-
-“You’re talking a dam’ lot,” she observed coldly.
-
-“An old failing of mine,” said Psmith apologetically, “and one
-concerning which there have been numerous complaints. I see now
-that I have been boring you, and I hope that you will allow me to
-express. . . .”
-
-He broke off abruptly, not because he had reached the end of his
-remarks, but because at this moment there came from above their heads
-a sudden sharp cracking sound, and almost simultaneously a shower of
-plaster fell from the ceiling, followed by the startling appearance
-of a long, shapely leg, which remained waggling in space. And from
-somewhere out of sight there filtered down a sharp and agonised oath.
-
-Time and neglect had done their work with the flooring of the room in
-which Psmith had bestowed the Hon. Freddie Threepwood, and, creeping
-cautiously about in the dark, he had had the misfortune to go through.
-
-But, as so often happens in this life, the misfortune of one is the
-good fortune of another. Badly as the accident had shaken Freddie, from
-the point of view of Psmith it was almost ideal. The sudden appearance
-of a human leg through the ceiling at a moment of nervous tension is
-enough to unman the stoutest-hearted, and Edward Cootes made no attempt
-to conceal his perturbation. Leaping a clear six inches from the floor,
-he jerked up his head and quite unintentionally pulled the trigger of
-his revolver. A bullet ripped through the plaster.
-
-The leg disappeared. Not for an instant since he had been shut in that
-upper room had Freddie Threepwood ceased to be mindful of Psmith’s
-parting statement that he would be shot if he tried to escape, and Mr.
-Cootes’ bullet seemed to him a dramatic fulfilment of that promise.
-Wrenching his leg with painful energy out of the abyss, he proceeded
-to execute a backward spring which took him to the far wall--at which
-point, as it was impossible to get any farther away from the centre of
-events, he was compelled to halt his retreat. Having rolled himself
-up into as small a ball as he could manage, he sat where he was,
-trying not to breathe. His momentary intention of explaining through
-the hole that the entire thing had been a regrettable accident, he
-prudently abandoned. Unintelligent though he had often proved himself
-in other crises of his life, he had the sagacity now to realise that
-the neighbourhood of the hole was unhealthy and should be avoided. So,
-preserving a complete and unbroken silence, he crouched there in the
-darkness, only asking to be left alone.
-
-And it seemed, as the moments slipped by, that this modest wish was
-to be gratified. Noises and the sound of voices came up to him from
-the room below, but no more bullets. It would be paltering with the
-truth to say that this put him completely at his ease, but still it was
-something. Freddie’s pulse began to return to the normal.
-
-Mr. Cootes’, on the other hand, was beating with a dangerous quickness.
-Swift and objectionable things had been happening to Edward Cootes in
-that lower room. His first impression was that the rift in the plaster
-above him had been instantly followed by the collapse of the entire
-ceiling, but this was a mistaken idea. All that had occurred was that
-Psmith, finding Mr. Cootes’ eye and pistol functioning in another
-direction, had sprung forward, snatched up a chair, hit the unfortunate
-man over the head with it, relieved him of his pistol, leaped to the
-mantelpiece, removed the revolver which lay there, and now, holding
-both weapons in an attitude of menace, was regarding him censoriously
-through a gleaming eyeglass.
-
-“No funny business, Comrade Cootes,” said Psmith.
-
-Mr. Cootes picked himself up painfully. His head was singing. He
-looked at the revolvers, blinked, opened his mouth and shut it again.
-He was oppressed with a sense of defeat. Nature had not built him for
-a man of violence. Peaceful manipulation of a pack of cards in the
-smoke-room of an Atlantic liner was a thing he understood and enjoyed:
-rough-and-tumble encounters were alien to him and distasteful. As far
-as Mr. Cootes was concerned, the war was over.
-
-But Miss Peavey was a woman of spirit. Her hat was still in the ring.
-She clutched the necklace in a grasp of steel, and her fine eyes glared
-defiance.
-
-“You think yourself smart, don’t you?” she said.
-
-Psmith eyed her commiseratingly. Her valorous attitude appealed to him.
-Nevertheless, business was business.
-
-“I am afraid,” he said regretfully, “that I must trouble you to hand
-over that necklace.”
-
-“Try and get it,” said Miss Peavey.
-
-Psmith looked hurt.
-
-“I am a child in these matters,” he said, “but I had always gathered
-that on these occasions the wishes of the man behind the gun were
-automatically respected.”
-
-“I’ll call your bluff,” said Miss Peavey firmly. “I’m going to walk
-straight out of here with this collection of ice right now, and I’ll
-bet you won’t have the nerve to start any shooting. Shoot a woman? Not
-you!”
-
-Psmith nodded gravely.
-
-“Your knowledge of psychology is absolutely correct. Your trust in my
-sense of chivalry rests on solid ground. But,” he proceeded, cheering
-up, “I fancy that I see a way out of the difficulty. An idea has been
-vouchsafed to me. I shall shoot--not you, but Comrade Cootes. This will
-dispose of all unpleasantness. If you attempt to edge out through that
-door I shall immediately proceed to plug Comrade Cootes in the leg. At
-least, I shall try. I am a poor shot and may hit him in some more vital
-spot, but at least he will have the consolation of knowing that I did
-my best and meant well.”
-
-“Hey!” cried Mr. Cootes. And never, in a life liberally embellished
-with this favourite ejaculation of his, had he uttered it more
-feelingly. He shot a feverish glance at Miss Peavey; and, reading in
-her face indecision rather than that instant acquiescence which he had
-hoped to see, cast off his customary attitude of respectful humility
-and asserted himself. He was no cave-man, but this was one occasion
-when he meant to have his own way. With an agonised bound he reached
-Miss Peavey’s side, wrenched the necklace from her grasp and flung it
-into the enemy’s camp. Eve stooped and picked it up.
-
-“I thank you,” said Psmith with a brief bow in her direction.
-
-Miss Peavey breathed heavily. Her strong hands clenched and unclenched.
-Between her parted lips her teeth showed in a thin white line. Suddenly
-she swallowed quickly, as if draining a glass of unpalatable medicine.
-
-“Well,” she said in a low, even voice, “that seems to be about all.
-Guess we’ll be going. Come along, Ed, pick up the Henries.”
-
-“Coming, Liz,” replied Mr. Cootes humbly.
-
-They passed together into the night.
-
-
-§ 5
-
-Silence followed their departure. Eve, weak with the reaction from
-the complex emotions which she had undergone since her arrival at the
-cottage, sat on the battered sofa, her chin resting in her hands. She
-looked at Psmith, who, humming a light air, was delicately piling with
-the toe of his shoe a funeral mound over the second of the dead bats.
-
-“So that’s that!” she said.
-
-Psmith looked up with a bright and friendly smile.
-
-“You have a very happy gift of phrase,” he said. “That, as you sensibly
-say, is that.”
-
-Eve was silent for awhile. Psmith completed the obsequies and stepped
-back with the air of a man who has done what he can for a fallen friend.
-
-“Fancy Miss Peavey being a thief!” said Eve. She was somehow feeling
-a disinclination to allow the conversation to die down, and yet she
-had an idea that, unless it was permitted to die down, it might
-become embarrassingly intimate. Subconsciously, she was endeavouring
-to analyse her views on this long, calm person who had so recently
-added himself to the list of those who claimed to look upon her with
-affection.
-
-“I confess it came as something of a shock to me also,” said Psmith.
-“In fact, the revelation that there was this other, deeper side to her
-nature materially altered the opinion I had formed of her. I found
-myself warming to Miss Peavey. Something that was akin to respect began
-to stir within me. Indeed, I almost wish that we had not been compelled
-to deprive her of the jewels.”
-
-“‘We’?” said Eve. “I’m afraid I didn’t do much.”
-
-“Your attitude was exactly right,” Psmith assured her. “You afforded
-just the moral support which a man needs in such a crisis.”
-
-Silence fell once more. Eve returned to her thoughts. And then, with a
-suddenness which surprised her, she found that she had made up her mind.
-
-“So you’re going to be married?” she said.
-
-Psmith polished his monocle thoughtfully.
-
-“I think so,” he said. “I think so. What do _you_ think?”
-
-Eve regarded him steadfastly. Then she gave a little laugh.
-
-“Yes,” she said, “I think so, too.” She paused. “Shall I tell you
-something?”
-
-“You could tell me nothing more wonderful than that.”
-
-“When I met Cynthia in Market Blandings, she told me what the trouble
-was which made her husband leave her. What do you suppose it was?”
-
-“From my brief acquaintance with Comrade McTodd, I would hazard the
-guess that he tried to stab her with the bread-knife. He struck me as a
-murderous-looking specimen.”
-
-“They had some people to dinner, and there was chicken, and Cynthia
-gave all the giblets to the guests, and her husband bounded out of his
-seat with a wild cry, and, shouting ‘You _know_ I love those things
-better than anything in the world!’ rushed from the house, never to
-return!”
-
-“Precisely how I would have wished him to rush, had I been Mrs. McTodd.”
-
-“Cynthia told me that he had rushed from the house, never to return,
-six times since they were married.”
-
-“May I mention--in passing--” said Psmith, “that I do not like chicken
-giblets?”
-
-“Cynthia advised me,” proceeded Eve, “if ever I married, to marry
-someone eccentric. She said it was such fun. Well, I don’t suppose I am
-ever likely to meet anyone more eccentric than you, am I?”
-
-“I think you would be unwise to wait on the chance.”
-
-“The only thing is . . .,” said Eve reflectively. “‘Mrs. Smith’ . . .
-It doesn’t _sound_ much, does it?”
-
-Psmith beamed encouragingly.
-
-“We must look into the future,” he said. “We must remember that I am
-only at the beginning of what I am convinced is to be a singularly
-illustrious career. ‘Lady Psmith’ is better . . . ‘Baroness Psmith’
-better still . . . And--who knows?--‘The Duchess of Psmith’ . . .”
-
-“Well, anyhow,” said Eve, “you were wonderful just now, simply
-wonderful. The way you made one spring . . .”
-
-“Your words,” said Psmith, “are music to my ears, but we must not
-forget that the foundations of the success of the manœuvre were laid
-by Comrade Threepwood. Had it not been for the timely incursion of his
-leg . . .”
-
-“Good gracious!” cried Eve. “Freddie! I had forgotten all about him!”
-
-“The right spirit,” said Psmith. “Quite the right spirit.”
-
-“We must go and let him out.”
-
-“Just as you say. And then he can come with us on the stroll I was
-about to propose that we should take through the woods. It is a lovely
-night, and what could be jollier than to have Comrade Threepwood
-prattling at our side? I will go and let him out at once.”
-
-“No, don’t bother,” said Eve.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-PSMITH ACCEPTS EMPLOYMENT
-
-
-The golden stillness of a perfect summer morning brooded over Blandings
-Castle and its adjacent pleasure-grounds. From a sky of unbroken blue
-the sun poured down its heartening rays on all those roses, pinks,
-pansies, carnations, hollyhocks, columbines, larkspurs, London pride
-and Canterbury bells which made the gardens so rarely beautiful.
-Flannelled youths and maidens in white serge sported in the shade; gay
-cries arose from the tennis-courts behind the shrubbery; and birds,
-bees, and butterflies went about their business with a new energy and
-zip. In short, the casual observer, assuming that he was addicted to
-trite phrases, would have said that happiness reigned supreme.
-
-But happiness, even on the finest mornings, is seldom universal. The
-strolling youths and maidens were happy; the tennis-players were happy;
-the birds, bees, and butterflies were happy. Eve, walking in pleasant
-meditation on the terrace, was happy. Freddie Threepwood was happy
-as he lounged in the smoking-room and gloated over the information,
-received from Psmith in the small hours, that his thousand pounds
-was safe. Mr. Keeble, writing to Phyllis to inform her that she
-might clinch the purchase of the Lincolnshire farm, was happy. Even
-Head-gardener Angus McAllister was as happy as a Scotsman can ever be.
-But Lord Emsworth, drooping out of the library window, felt only a
-nervous irritation more in keeping with the blizzards of winter than
-with the only fine July that England had known in the last ten years.
-
-We have seen his lordship in a similar attitude and a like frame of
-mind on a previous occasion; but then his melancholy had been due to
-the loss of his glasses. This morning these were perched firmly on his
-nose and he saw all things clearly. What was causing his gloom now
-was the fact that some ten minutes earlier his sister Constance had
-trapped him in the library, full of jarring rebuke on the subject of
-the dismissal of Rupert Baxter, the world’s most efficient secretary.
-It was to avoid her compelling eye that Lord Emsworth had turned to the
-window. And what he saw from that window thrust him even deeper into
-the abyss of gloom. The sun, the birds, the bees, the butterflies, and
-the flowers called to him to come out and have the time of his life,
-but he just lacked the nerve to make a dash for it.
-
-“I think you must be mad,” said Lady Constance bitterly, resuming her
-remarks and starting at the point where she had begun before.
-
-“Baxter’s mad,” retorted his lordship, also re-treading old ground.
-
-“You are too absurd!”
-
-“He threw flower-pots at me.”
-
-“Do please stop talking about those flower-pots. Mr. Baxter has
-explained the whole thing to me, and surely even you can see that his
-behaviour was perfectly excusable.”
-
-“I don’t like the fellow,” cried Lord Emsworth, once more retreating to
-his last line of trenches--the one line from which all Lady Constance’s
-eloquence had been unable to dislodge him.
-
-There was a silence, as there had been a short while before when the
-discussion had reached this same point.
-
-“You will be helpless without him,” said Lady Constance.
-
-“Nothing of the kind,” said his lordship.
-
-“You know you will. Where will you ever get another secretary capable
-of looking after everything like Mr. Baxter? You know you are a perfect
-child, and unless you have someone whom you can trust to manage your
-affairs I cannot see what will happen.”
-
-Lord Emsworth made no reply. He merely gazed wanly from the window.
-
-“Chaos,” moaned Lady Constance.
-
-His lordship remained mute, but now there was a gleam of something
-approaching pleasure in his pale eyes; for at this moment a car rounded
-the corner of the house from the direction of the stables and stood
-purring at the door. There was a trunk on the car and a suit-case. And
-almost simultaneously the Efficient Baxter entered the library, clothed
-and spatted for travel.
-
-“I have come to say good-bye, Lady Constance,” said Baxter coldly and
-precisely, flashing at his late employer through his spectacles a look
-of stern reproach. “The car which is taking me to the station is at the
-door.”
-
-“Oh, Mr. Baxter.” Lady Constance, strong woman though she was,
-fluttered with distress. “Oh, Mr. Baxter.”
-
-“Good-bye.” He gripped her hand in brief farewell and directed his
-spectacles for another tense instant upon the sagging figure at the
-window. “Good-bye, Lord Emsworth.”
-
-“Eh? What? Oh! Ah, yes. Good-bye, my dear fel----, I mean, good-bye.
-I--er--hope you will have a pleasant journey.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Baxter.
-
-“But, Mr. Baxter,” said Lady Constance.
-
-“Lord Emsworth,” said the ex-secretary icily, “I am no longer in your
-employment . . .”
-
-“But, Mr. Baxter,” moaned Lady Constance, “surely . . . even now . . .
-misunderstanding . . . talk it all over quietly . . .”
-
-Lord Emsworth started violently.
-
-“Here!” he protested, in much the same manner as that in which the
-recent Mr. Cootes had been wont to say “Hey!”
-
-“I fear it is too late,” said Baxter, to his infinite relief, “to
-talk things over. My arrangements are already made and cannot be
-altered. Ever since I came here to work for Lord Emsworth, my former
-employer--an American millionaire named Jevons--has been making me
-flattering offers to return to him. Until now a mistaken sense of
-loyalty has kept me from accepting these offers, but this morning I
-telegraphed to Mr. Jevons to say that I was at liberty and could join
-him at once. It is too late now to cancel this promise.”
-
-“Quite, quite, oh certainly, quite, mustn’t dream of it, my dear
-fellow. No, no, no, indeed no,” said Lord Emsworth with an effervescent
-cordiality which struck both his hearers as in the most dubious taste.
-
-Baxter merely stiffened haughtily, but Lady Constance was so poignantly
-affected by the words and the joyous tone in which they were uttered
-that she could endure her brother’s loathly society no longer. Shaking
-Baxter’s hand once more and gazing stonily for a moment at the worm by
-the window, she left the room.
-
-For some seconds after she had gone, there was silence--a silence which
-Lord Emsworth found embarrassing. He turned to the window again and
-took in with one wistful glance the roses, the pinks, the pansies, the
-carnations, the hollyhocks, the columbines, the larkspurs, the London
-pride and the Canterbury bells. And then suddenly there came to him
-the realisation that with Lady Constance gone there no longer existed
-any reason why he should stay cooped up in this stuffy library on the
-finest morning that had ever been sent to gladden the heart of man. He
-shivered ecstatically from the top of his bald head to the soles of his
-roomy shoes, and, bounding gleefully from the window, started to amble
-across the room.
-
-“Lord Emsworth!”
-
-His lordship halted. His was a one-track mind, capable of accommodating
-only one thought at a time--if that, and he had almost forgotten that
-Baxter was still there. He eyed his late secretary peevishly.
-
-“Yes, yes? Is there anything . . . ?”
-
-“I should like to speak to you for a moment.”
-
-“I have a most important conference with McAllister . . .”
-
-“I will not detain you long. Lord Emsworth, I am no longer in your
-employment, but I think it my duty to say before I go . . .”
-
-“No, no, my dear fellow, I quite understand. Quite, quite, quite.
-Constance has been going over all that. I know what you are trying to
-say. That matter of the flower-pots. Please do not apologise. It is
-quite all right. I was startled at the time, I own, but no doubt you
-had excellent motives. Let us forget the whole affair.”
-
-Baxter ground an impatient heel into the carpet.
-
-“I had no intention of referring to the matter to which you allude,” he
-said. “I merely wished . . .”
-
-“Yes, yes, of course.” A vagrant breeze floated in at the window,
-languid with summer scents, and Lord Emsworth, sniffing, shuffled
-restlessly. “Of course, of course, of course. Some other time, eh?
-Yes, yes, that will be capital. Capital, capital, cap----”
-
-The Efficient Baxter uttered a sound that was partly a cry, partly a
-snort. Its quality was so arresting that Lord Emsworth paused, his
-fingers on the door-handle, and peered back at him, startled.
-
-“Very well,” said Baxter shortly. “Pray do not let me keep you. If you
-are not interested in the fact that Blandings Castle is sheltering a
-criminal . . .”
-
-It was not easy to divert Lord Emsworth when in quest of Angus
-McAllister, but this remark succeeded in doing so. He let go of the
-door-handle and came back a step or two into the room.
-
-“Sheltering a criminal?”
-
-“Yes.” Baxter glanced at his watch. “I must go now or I shall miss
-my train,” he said curtly. “I was merely going to tell you that this
-fellow who calls himself Ralston McTodd is not Ralston McTodd at all.”
-
-“Not Ralston McTodd?” repeated his lordship blankly. “But----” He
-suddenly perceived a flaw in the argument. “But he _said_ he was,”
-he pointed out cleverly. “Yes, I remember distinctly. He said he was
-McTodd.”
-
-“He is an impostor. And I imagine that if you investigate you will find
-that it is he and his accomplices who stole Lady Constance’s necklace.”
-
-“But, my dear fellow . . .”
-
-Baxter walked briskly to the door.
-
-“You need not take my word for it,” he said. “What I say can easily be
-proved. Get this so-called McTodd to write his name on a piece of paper
-and then compare it with the signature to the letter which the real
-McTodd wrote when accepting Lady Constance’s invitation to the castle.
-You will find it filed away in the drawer of that desk there.”
-
-Lord Emsworth adjusted his glasses and stared at the desk as if he
-expected it to do a conjuring-trick.
-
-“I will leave you to take what steps you please,” said Baxter. “Now
-that I am no longer in your employment, the thing does not concern me
-one way or another. But I thought you might be glad to hear the facts.”
-
-“Oh, I _am_!” responded his lordship, still peering vaguely. “Oh, I
-_am_! Oh, yes, yes, yes. Oh, yes, yes . . .”
-
-“Good-bye.”
-
-“But, Baxter . . .”
-
-Lord Emsworth trotted out on to the landing, but Baxter had got off to
-a good start and was almost out of sight round the bend of the stairs.
-
-“But, my dear fellow . . .” bleated his lordship plaintively over the
-banisters.
-
-From below, out on the drive, came the sound of an automobile getting
-into gear and moving off, than which no sound is more final. The great
-door of the castle closed with a soft but significant bang--as doors
-close when handled by an untipped butler. Lord Emsworth returned to the
-library to wrestle with his problem unaided.
-
-He was greatly disturbed. Apart from the fact that he disliked
-criminals and impostors as a class, it was a shock to him to learn that
-the particular criminal and impostor then in residence at Blandings was
-the man for whom, brief as had been the duration of their acquaintance,
-he had conceived a warm affection. He was fond of Psmith. Psmith
-soothed him. If he had had to choose any member of his immediate circle
-for the rôle of criminal and impostor, he would have chosen Psmith last.
-
-He went to the window again and looked out. There was the sunshine,
-there were the birds, there were the hollyhocks, carnations, and
-Canterbury bells, all present and correct; but now they failed to
-cheer him. He was wondering dismally what on earth he was going to do.
-What _did_ one do with criminals and impostors? Had ’em arrested, he
-supposed. But he shrank from the thought of arresting Psmith. It seemed
-so deuced unfriendly.
-
-He was still meditating gloomily when a voice spoke behind him.
-
-“Good morning. I am looking for Miss Halliday. You have not seen her by
-any chance? Ah, there she is down there on the terrace.”
-
-Lord Emsworth was aware of Psmith beside him at the window, waving
-cordially to Eve, who waved back.
-
-“I thought possibly,” continued Psmith, “that Miss Halliday would be in
-her little room yonder”--he indicated the dummy book-shelves through
-which he had entered. “But I am glad to see that the morning is so fine
-that she has given toil the miss-in-baulk. It is the right spirit,”
-said Psmith. “I like to see it.”
-
-Lord Emsworth peered at him nervously through his glasses. His
-embarrassment and his distaste for the task that lay before him
-increased as he scanned his companion in vain for those signs of
-villainy which all well-regulated criminals and impostors ought to
-exhibit to the eye of discernment.
-
-“I am surprised to find you indoors,” said Psmith, “on so glorious a
-morning. I should have supposed that you would have been down there
-among the shrubs, taking a good sniff at a hollyhock or something.”
-
-Lord Emsworth braced himself for the ordeal.
-
-“Er, my dear fellow . . . that is to say . . .” He paused. Psmith was
-regarding him almost lovingly through his monocle, and it was becoming
-increasingly difficult to warm up to the work of denouncing him.
-
-“You were observing . . . ?” said Psmith.
-
-Lord Emsworth uttered curious buzzing noises.
-
-“I have just parted from Baxter,” he said at length, deciding to
-approach the subject in more roundabout fashion.
-
-“Indeed?” said Psmith courteously.
-
-“Yes. Baxter has gone.”
-
-“For ever?”
-
-“Er--yes.”
-
-“Splendid!” said Psmith. “Splendid, splendid.”
-
-Lord Emsworth removed his glasses, twiddled them on their cord, and
-replaced them on his nose.
-
-“He made . . . He--er--the fact is, he made . . . Before he went Baxter
-made a most remarkable statement . . . a charge . . . Well, in short,
-he made a very strange statement about you.”
-
-Psmith nodded gravely.
-
-“I had been expecting something of the kind,” he said. “He said, no
-doubt, that I was not really Ralston McTodd?”
-
-His lordship’s mouth opened feebly.
-
-“Er--yes,” he said.
-
-“I’ve been meaning to tell you about that,” said Psmith amiably. “It is
-quite true. I am not Ralston McTodd.”
-
-“You--you admit it!”
-
-“I am proud of it.”
-
-Lord Emsworth drew himself up. He endeavoured to assume the attitude of
-stern censure which came so naturally to him in interviews with his son
-Frederick. But he met Psmith’s eye and sagged again. Beneath the solemn
-friendliness of Psmith’s gaze hauteur was impossible.
-
-“Then what the deuce are you doing here under his name?” he asked,
-placing his finger in statesmanlike fashion on the very nub of the
-problem. “I mean to say,” he went on, making his meaning clearer, “if
-you aren’t McTodd, why did you come here saying you were McTodd?”
-
-Psmith nodded slowly.
-
-“The point is well taken,” he said. “I was expecting you to ask that
-question. Primarily--I want no thanks, but primarily I did it to save
-you embarrassment.”
-
-“Save me embarrassment?”
-
-“Precisely. When I came into the smoking-room of our mutual club that
-afternoon when you had been entertaining Comrade McTodd at lunch, I
-found him on the point of passing out of your life for ever. It seems
-that he had taken umbrage to some slight extent because you had buzzed
-off to chat with the florist across the way instead of remaining with
-him. And, after we had exchanged a pleasant word or two, he legged it,
-leaving you short one modern poet. On your return I stepped into the
-breach to save you from the inconvenience of having to return here
-without a McTodd of any description. No one, of course, could have been
-more alive than myself to the fact that I was merely a poor substitute,
-a sort of synthetic McTodd, but still I considered that I was better
-than nothing, so I came along.”
-
-His lordship digested this explanation in silence. Then he seized on a
-magnificent point.
-
-“Are you a member of the Senior Conservative Club?”
-
-“Most certainly.”
-
-“Why, then, dash it,” cried his lordship, paying to that august
-stronghold of respectability as striking a tribute as it had ever
-received, “if you’re a member of the Senior Conservative, you can’t be
-a criminal. Baxter’s an ass!”
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“Baxter would have it that you had stolen my sister’s necklace.”
-
-“I can assure you that I have not got Lady Constance’s necklace.”
-
-“Of course not, of course not, my dear fellow. I’m only telling you
-what that idiot Baxter said. Thank goodness I’ve got rid of the
-fellow.” A cloud passed over his now sunny face. “Though, confound it,
-Connie was right about one thing.” He relapsed into a somewhat moody
-silence.
-
-“Yes?” said Psmith.
-
-“Eh?” said his lordship.
-
-“You were saying that Lady Constance had been right about one thing.”
-
-“Oh, yes. She was saying that I should have a hard time finding another
-secretary as capable as Baxter.”
-
-Psmith permitted himself to bestow an encouraging pat on his host’s
-shoulder.
-
-“You have touched on a matter,” he said, “which I had intended to
-broach to you at some convenient moment when you were at leisure. If
-you would care to accept my services, they are at your disposal.”
-
-“Eh?”
-
-“The fact is,” said Psmith, “I am shortly about to be married, and it
-is more or less imperative that I connect with some job which will
-ensure a moderate competence. Why should I not become your secretary?”
-
-“You want to be my secretary?”
-
-“You have unravelled my meaning exactly.”
-
-“But I’ve never had a married secretary.”
-
-“I think that you would find a steady married man an improvement
-on these wild, flower-pot-throwing bachelors. If it would help to
-influence your decision, I may say that my bride-to-be is Miss
-Halliday, probably the finest library-cataloguist in the United
-Kingdom.”
-
-“Eh? Miss Halliday? That girl down there?”
-
-“No other,” said Psmith, waving fondly at Eve as she passed underneath
-the window. “In fact, the same.”
-
-“But I like her,” said Lord Emsworth, as if stating an insuperable
-objection.
-
-“Excellent.”
-
-“She’s a nice girl.”
-
-“I quite agree with you.”
-
-“Do you think you could really look after things here like Baxter?”
-
-“I am convinced of it.”
-
-“Then, my dear fellow--well, really I must say . . . I must say . . .
-well, I mean, why shouldn’t you?”
-
-“Precisely,” said Psmith. “You have put in a nutshell the very thing I
-have been trying to express.”
-
-“But have you had any experience as a secretary?”
-
-“I must admit that I have not. You see, until recently I was more or
-less one of the idle rich. I toiled not, neither did I--except once,
-after a bump-supper at Cambridge--spin. My name, perhaps I ought to
-reveal to you, is Psmith--the p is silent--and until very recently I
-lived in affluence not far from the village of Much Middlefold in this
-county. My name is probably unfamiliar to you, but you may have heard
-of the house which was for many years the Psmith head-quarters--Corfby
-Hall.”
-
-Lord Emsworth jerked his glasses off his nose.
-
-“Corfby Hall! Are you the son of the Smith who used to own Corfby Hall?
-Why, bless my soul, I knew your father well.”
-
-“Really?”
-
-“Yes. That is to say, I never met him.”
-
-“No?”
-
-“But I won the first prize for roses at the Shrewsbury Flower Show the
-year he won the prize for tulips.”
-
-“It seems to draw us very close together,” said Psmith.
-
-“Why, my dear boy,” cried Lord Emsworth jubilantly, “if you are really
-looking for a position of some kind and would care to be my secretary,
-nothing could suit me better. Nothing, nothing, nothing. Why, bless my
-soul . . .”
-
-“I am extremely obliged,” said Psmith. “And I shall endeavour to give
-satisfaction. And surely, if a mere Baxter could hold down the job, it
-should be well within the scope of a Shropshire Psmith. I think so, I
-think so. . . . And now, if you will excuse me, I think I will go down
-and tell the glad news to the little woman, if I may so describe her.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Psmith made his way down the broad staircase at an even better pace
-than that recently achieved by the departing Baxter, for he rightly
-considered each moment of this excellent day wasted that was not spent
-in the company of Eve. He crooned blithely to himself as he passed
-through the hall, only pausing when, as he passed the door of the
-smoking-room, the Hon. Freddie Threepwood suddenly emerged.
-
-“Oh, I say!” said Freddie. “Just the fellow I wanted to see. I was
-going off to look for you.”
-
-Freddie’s tone was cordiality itself. As far as Freddie was concerned,
-all that had passed between them in the cottage in the west wood last
-night was forgiven and forgotten.
-
-“Say on, Comrade Threepwood,” replied Psmith; “and, if I may offer the
-suggestion, make it snappy, for I would be elsewhere. I have man’s work
-before me.”
-
-“Come over here.” Freddie drew him into a far corner of the hall and
-lowered his voice to a whisper. “I say, it’s all right, you know.”
-
-“Excellent!” said Psmith. “Splendid! This is great news. What is all
-right?”
-
-“I’ve just seen Uncle Joe. He’s going to cough up the money he promised
-me.”
-
-“I congratulate you.”
-
-“So now I shall be able to get into that bookie’s business and make a
-pile. And, I say, you remember my telling you about Miss Halliday?”
-
-“What was that?”
-
-“Why, that I loved her, I mean, and all that.”
-
-“Ah, yes.”
-
-“Well, look here, between ourselves,” said Freddie earnestly, “the
-whole trouble all along has been that she thought I hadn’t any money to
-get married on. She didn’t actually say so in so many words, but you
-know how it is with women--you can read between the lines, if you know
-what I mean. So now everything’s going to be all right. I shall simply
-go to her and say, ‘Well, what about it?’ and--well, and so on, don’t
-you know?”
-
-Psmith considered the point gravely.
-
-“I see your reasoning, Comrade Threepwood,” he said. “I can detect but
-one flaw in it.”
-
-“Flaw? What flaw?”
-
-“The fact that Miss Halliday is going to marry _me_.”
-
-The Hon. Freddie’s jaw dropped. His prominent eyes became more
-prawn-like.
-
-“What!”
-
-Psmith patted his shoulder commiseratingly.
-
-“Be a man, Comrade Threepwood, and bite the bullet. These things will
-happen to the best of us. Some day you will be thankful that this has
-occurred. Purged in the holocaust of a mighty love, you will wander out
-into the sunset, a finer, broader man. . . . And now I must reluctantly
-tear myself away. I have an important appointment.” He patted his
-shoulder once more. “If you would care to be a page at the wedding,
-Comrade Threepwood, I can honestly say that there is no one whom I
-would rather have in that capacity.”
-
-And with a stately gesture of farewell, Psmith passed out on to the
-terrace to join Eve.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
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-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Leave it to Psmith, by P. G. Wodehouse</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Leave it to Psmith</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: P. G. Wodehouse</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: August 6, 2019 [eBook #60067]</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Ramon Pajares Box, Jim Adcock and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team</div>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEAVE IT TO PSMITH ***</div>
-
-<div class="front">
- <hr class="full" />
- <p><a href="#tnote">Transcriber's note</a></p>
- <p><a href="#ToC">Table of Contents</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="screenonly">
- <hr class="chap" />
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img class="thin"
- src="images/cover.jpg"
- alt="Book cover" />
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="aftit pt6">
- <hr class="chap" />
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[p. 1]</span></p>
- <h1>LEAVE IT TO PSMITH</h1>
- <hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[p. 2]</span></p>
- <div class="caja">
- <p class="centra ws1">WHAT THIS STORY IS ABOUT</p>
- </div>
- <div class="caja">
- <p>Freddie Threepwood and his uncle are in difficulties. Freddie
- wants a thousand pounds to start a bookmaker’s business and to
- marry Eve, while his uncle wants to raise three thousand pounds,
- unbeknown to his wife, to help a runaway daughter. Freddie
- persuades his uncle to steal his wife’s necklace and sees Psmith’s
- advertisement in a daily paper.</p>
-
- <p>Freddie enlists the services of Psmith to steal the necklace.
- There are plots and counterplots. Psmith is not successful in
- stealing the necklace but succeeds in stealing the affections of
- Eve.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="caja">
- <p class="centra fs90 under ws1"><i>BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR</i></p>
-
- <table class="book" summary="List of other author's books">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">THE HEART OF A GOOF</td>
- <td class="tdrb">7s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">CARRY ON, JEEVES</td>
- <td class="tdrb">3s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">UKRIDGE</td>
- <td class="tdrb">3s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">THE INIMITABLE JEEVES</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">THE GIRL ON THE BOAT</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">JILL THE RECKLESS</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">A DAMSEL IN DISTRESS</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">LOVE AMONG THE CHICKENS</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">A GENTLEMAN OF LEISURE</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">INDISCRETIONS OF ARCHIE</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">PICCADILLY JIM</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">ADVENTURES OF SALLY</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">THE CLICKING OF CUTHBERT</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">THE COMING OF BILL</td>
- <td class="tdrb">2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[p. 3]</span></p>
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/title.jpg"
- alt="Title page" />
- </div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="tit pt3">
- <p class="fs300 lh100 ws1 g1">LEAVE IT</p>
- <p class="fs300 ws1">TO PSMITH</p>
-
- <p class="fs130 ws1 mt15">BY<br />
- P. G. WODEHOUSE</p>
-
- <p class="g1 mt4">HERBERT JENKINS LIMITED</p>
- <p class="ws1">3 YORK STREET LONDON S.W.1</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="aftit pt6">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[p. 4]</span></p>
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/logo.jpg"
- alt="Publisher's logo" />
- <p class="caption">A HERBERT JENKINS’ BOOK</p>
- </div>
- <p class="fs90 mt6"><i>Printed in Great Britain by Wyman &amp; Sons Ltd., London, Reading and Fakenham</i></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="ToC">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[p. 5]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="Table of contents">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><small>CHAPTER</small></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><small>PAGE</small></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">I</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_1">DARK PLOTTINGS AT BLANDINGS CASTLE</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">II</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_2">ENTER PSMITH</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">38</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">III</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_3">EVE BORROWS AN UMBRELLA</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">59</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">IV</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_4">PAINFUL SCENE AT THE DRONES CLUB</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">66</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">V</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_5">PSMITH APPLIES FOR EMPLOYMENT</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">70</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">VI</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_6">LORD EMSWORTH MEETS A POET</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">80</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">VII</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_7">BAXTER SUSPECTS</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">112</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">VIII</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_8">CONFIDENCES ON THE LAKE</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">135</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">IX</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_9">PSMITH ENGAGES A VALET</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">167</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">X</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_10">SENSATIONAL OCCURRENCE AT A POETRY READING</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">206</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">XI</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_11">ALMOST ENTIRELY ABOUT FLOWER-POTS</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">239</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">XII</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_12">MORE ON THE FLOWER-POT THEME</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">270</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">XIII</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_13">PSMITH RECEIVES GUESTS</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">282</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdru">XIV</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><a href="#Ch_14">PSMITH ACCEPTS EMPLOYMENT</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">313</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="aftit pt6">
- <hr class="chap" />
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[p. 6]</span></p>
- <p class="fs90 ws1">TO MY DAUGHTER LEONORA,</p>
- <p class="fs90 ws1">QUEEN OF HER SPECIES.</p>
- <hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[p. 7]</span></p>
- <p class="centra fs250 ws1">LEAVE IT TO PSMITH</p>
- <h2 class="nobreak mt15">CHAPTER I</h2>
- <p class="subh2">DARK PLOTTINGS AT BLANDINGS CASTLE</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ch_1_1">§ 1</h3>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">A</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap2"><span class="upc">At</span> the open window of the
-great library of Blandings Castle, drooping like a wet sock, as was
-his habit when he had nothing to prop his spine against, the Earl of
-Emsworth, that amiable and boneheaded peer, stood gazing out over his
-domain.</p>
-
-<p>It was a lovely morning and the air was fragrant with gentle
-summer scents. Yet in his lordship’s pale blue eyes there was a look
-of melancholy. His brow was furrowed, his mouth peevish. And this
-was all the more strange in that he was normally as happy as only a
-fluffy-minded man with excellent health and a large income can be. A
-writer, describing Blandings Castle in a magazine article, had once
-said: “Tiny mosses have grown in the cavities of the stones, until,
-viewed near at hand, the place seems shaggy with vegetation.” It
-would not have been a bad description of the proprietor. Fifty-odd
-years of serene and unruffled placidity had given Lord Emsworth<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[p. 8]</span> a curiously moss-covered
-look. Very few things had the power to disturb him. Even his younger
-son, the Hon. Freddie Threepwood, could only do it occasionally.</p>
-
-<p>Yet now he was sad. And—not to make a mystery of it any longer—the
-reason of his sorrow was the fact that he had mislaid his glasses and
-without them was as blind, to use his own neat simile, as a bat. He was
-keenly aware of the sunshine that poured down on his gardens, and was
-yearning to pop out and potter among the flowers he loved. But no man,
-pop he never so wisely, can hope to potter with any good result if the
-world is a mere blur.</p>
-
-<p>The door behind him opened, and Beach the butler entered, a
-dignified procession of one.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s that?” inquired Lord Emsworth, spinning on his axis.</p>
-
-<p>“It is I, your lordship—Beach.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you found them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet, your lordship,” sighed the butler.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t have looked.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have searched assiduously, your lordship, but without avail.
-Thomas and Charles also announce non-success. Stokes has not yet made
-his report.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am re-despatching Thomas and Charles to your lordship’s bedroom,”
-said the Master of the Hunt. “I trust that their efforts will be
-rewarded.”</p>
-
-<p>Beach withdrew, and Lord Emsworth turned to the window again. The
-scene that spread itself beneath him—though he was unfortunately not
-able to see it—was a singularly beautiful one, for the castle, which is
-one of the oldest inhabited houses in England, stands upon a knoll of
-rising ground at the southern end of the celebrated Vale of Blandings
-in the county of Shropshire. Away in the blue distance wooded hills
-ran down to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[p. 9]</span> where
-the Severn gleamed like an unsheathed sword; while up from the river
-rolling park-land, mounting and dipping, surged in a green wave almost
-to the castle walls, breaking on the terraces in a many-coloured
-flurry of flowers as it reached the spot where the province of Angus
-McAllister, his lordship’s head gardener, began. The day being June
-the thirtieth, which is the very high-tide time of summer flowers, the
-immediate neighbourhood of the castle was ablaze with roses, pinks,
-pansies, carnations, hollyhocks, columbines, larkspurs, London pride,
-Canterbury bells, and a multitude of other choice blooms of which only
-Angus could have told you the names. A conscientious man was Angus;
-and in spite of being a good deal hampered by Lord Emsworth’s amateur
-assistance, he showed excellent results in his department. In his
-beds there was much at which to point with pride, little to view with
-concern.</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had Beach removed himself when Lord Emsworth was called
-upon to turn again. The door had opened for the second time, and a
-young man in a beautifully-cut suit of grey flannel was standing in the
-doorway. He had a long and vacant face topped by shining hair brushed
-back and heavily brilliantined after the prevailing mode, and he was
-standing on one leg. For Freddie Threepwood was seldom completely at
-his ease in his parent’s presence.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo, guv’nor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Frederick?”</p>
-
-<p>It would be paltering with the truth to say that Lord Emsworth’s
-greeting was a warm one. It lacked the note of true affection. A
-few weeks before he had had to pay a matter of five hundred pounds
-to settle certain racing debts for his offspring; and, while this
-had not actually dealt an irretrievable blow<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_10">[p. 10]</span> at his bank account, it had undeniably
-tended to diminish Freddie’s charm in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Hear you’ve lost your glasses, guv’nor.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nuisance, what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Undeniably.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ought to have a spare pair.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have broken my spare pair.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tough luck! And lost the other?”</p>
-
-<p>“And, as you say, lost the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you looked for the bally things?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have.”</p>
-
-<p>“Must be somewhere, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite possibly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where,” asked Freddie, warming to his work, “did you see them
-last?”</p>
-
-<p>“Go away!” said Lord Emsworth, on whom his child’s conversation had
-begun to exercise an oppressive effect.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Go away!”</p>
-
-<p>“Go away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, go away!”</p>
-
-<p>“Right ho!”</p>
-
-<p>The door closed. His lordship returned to the window once more.</p>
-
-<p>He had been standing there some few minutes when one of those
-miracles occurred which happen in libraries. Without sound or warning
-a section of books started to move away from the parent body and,
-swinging out in a solid chunk into the room, showed a glimpse of a
-small, study-like apartment. A young man in spectacles came noiselessly
-through and the books returned to their place.</p>
-
-<p>The contrast between Lord Emsworth and the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_11">[p. 11]</span> new-comer, as they stood there, was
-striking, almost dramatic. Lord Emsworth was so acutely spectacle-less;
-Rupert Baxter, his secretary, so pronouncedly spectacled. It was his
-spectacles that struck you first as you saw the man. They gleamed
-efficiently at you. If you had a guilty conscience, they pierced you
-through and through; and even if your conscience was one hundred per
-cent. pure you could not ignore them. “Here,” you said to yourself, “is
-an efficient young man in spectacles.”</p>
-
-<p>In describing Rupert Baxter as efficient, you did not overestimate
-him. He was essentially that. Technically but a salaried subordinate,
-he had become by degrees, owing to the limp amiability of his employer,
-the real master of the house. He was the Brains of Blandings, the man
-at the switch, the person in charge, and the pilot, so to speak, who
-weathered the storm. Lord Emsworth left everything to Baxter, only
-asking to be allowed to potter in peace; and Baxter, more than equal to
-the task, shouldered it without wincing.</p>
-
-<p>Having got within range, Baxter coughed; and Lord Emsworth,
-recognising the sound, wheeled round with a faint flicker of hope. It
-might be that even this apparently insoluble problem of the missing
-pince-nez would yield before the other’s efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>“Baxter, my dear fellow, I’ve lost my glasses. My glasses. I have
-mislaid them. I cannot think where they can have gone to. You haven’t
-seen them anywhere by any chance?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Lord Emsworth,” replied the secretary, quietly equal to the
-crisis. “They are hanging down your back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Down my back? Why, bless my soul!” His lordship tested the
-statement and found it—like all Baxter’s statements—accurate. “Why,
-bless my soul,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[p. 12]</span> so
-they are! Do you know, Baxter, I really believe I must be growing
-absent-minded.” He hauled in the slack, secured the pince-nez, adjusted
-them beamingly. His irritability had vanished like the dew off one of
-his roses. “Thank you, Baxter, thank you. You are invaluable.”</p>
-
-<p>And with a radiant smile Lord Emsworth made buoyantly for the door,
-en route for God’s air and the society of McAllister. The movement drew
-from Baxter another cough—a sharp, peremptory cough this time; and
-his lordship paused, reluctantly, like a dog whistled back from the
-chase. A cloud fell over the sunniness of his mood. Admirable as Baxter
-was in so many respects, he had a tendency to worry him at times; and
-something told Lord Emsworth that he was going to worry him now.</p>
-
-<p>“The car will be at the door,” said Baxter with quiet firmness, “at
-two sharp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Car? What car?”</p>
-
-<p>“The car to take you to the station.”</p>
-
-<p>“Station? What station?”</p>
-
-<p>Rupert Baxter preserved his calm. There were times when he found his
-employer a little trying, but he never showed it.</p>
-
-<p>“You have perhaps forgotten, Lord Emsworth, that you arranged with
-Lady Constance to go to London this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go to London!” gasped Lord Emsworth, appalled. “In weather like
-this? With a thousand things to attend to in the garden? What a
-perfectly preposterous notion! Why should I go to London? I hate
-London.”</p>
-
-<p>“You arranged with Lady Constance that you would give Mr. McTodd
-lunch to-morrow at your club.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who the devil is Mr. McTodd?”</p>
-
-<p>“The well-known Canadian poet.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[p. 13]</span>“Never heard of
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Constance has long been a great admirer of his work. She
-wrote inviting him, should he ever come to England, to pay a visit to
-Blandings. He is now in London and is to come down to-morrow for two
-weeks. Lady Constance’s suggestion was that, as a compliment to Mr.
-McTodd’s eminence in the world of literature, you should meet him in
-London and bring him back here yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth remembered now. He also remembered that this
-positively infernal scheme had not been his sister Constance’s in the
-first place. It was Baxter who had made the suggestion, and Constance
-had approved. He made use of the recovered pince-nez to glower through
-them at his secretary; and not for the first time in recent months
-was aware of a feeling that this fellow Baxter was becoming a dashed
-infliction. Baxter was getting above himself, throwing his weight
-about, making himself a confounded nuisance. He wished he could get rid
-of the man. But where could he find an adequate successor? That was the
-trouble. With all his drawbacks, Baxter was efficient. Nevertheless,
-for a moment Lord Emsworth toyed with the pleasant dream of dismissing
-him. And it is possible, such was his exasperation, that he might on
-this occasion have done something practical in that direction, had not
-the library door at this moment opened for the third time, to admit
-yet another intruder—at the sight of whom his lordship’s militant mood
-faded weakly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh—hallo, Connie!” he said, guiltily, like a small boy caught
-in the jam cupboard. Somehow his sister always had this effect upon
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Of all those who had entered the library that morning the new
-arrival was the best worth looking at. Lord<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_14">[p. 14]</span> Emsworth was tall and lean and scraggy;
-Rupert Baxter thick-set and handicapped by that vaguely grubby
-appearance which is presented by swarthy young men of bad complexion;
-and even Beach, though dignified, and Freddie, though slim, would
-never have got far in a beauty competition. But Lady Constance Keeble
-really took the eye. She was a strikingly handsome woman in the middle
-forties. She had a fair, broad brow, teeth of a perfect even whiteness,
-and the carriage of an empress. Her eyes were large and grey, and
-gentle—and incidentally misleading, for gentle was hardly the adjective
-which anybody who knew her would have applied to Lady Constance. Though
-genial enough when she got her way, on the rare occasions when people
-attempted to thwart her she was apt to comport herself in a manner
-reminiscent of Cleopatra on one of the latter’s bad mornings.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope I am not disturbing you,” said Lady Constance with a bright
-smile. “I just came in to tell you to be sure not to forget, Clarence,
-that you are going to London this afternoon to meet Mr. McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was just telling Lord Emsworth,” said Baxter, “that the car would
-be at the door at two.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Mr. Baxter. Of course I might have known that you would
-not forget. You are so wonderfully capable. I don’t know what in the
-world we would do without you.”</p>
-
-<p>The Efficient Baxter bowed. But, though gratified, he was not
-overwhelmed by the tribute. The same thought had often occurred to him
-independently.</p>
-
-<p>“If you will excuse me,” he said, “I have one or two things to
-attend to&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, Mr. Baxter.”</p>
-
-<p>The Efficient One withdrew through the door in<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_15">[p. 15]</span> the bookshelf. He realised that his
-employer was in fractious mood, but knew that he was leaving him in
-capable hands.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth turned from the window, out of which he had been
-gazing with a plaintive detachment.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Connie,” he grumbled feebly. “You know I hate literary
-fellows. It’s bad enough having them in the house, but when it comes to
-going to London to fetch ’em&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>He shuffled morosely. It was a perpetual grievance of his, this
-practice of his sister’s of collecting literary celebrities and dumping
-them down in the home for indeterminate visits. You never knew when
-she was going to spring another on you. Already since the beginning of
-the year he had suffered from a round dozen of the species at brief
-intervals; and at this very moment his life was being poisoned by the
-fact that Blandings was sheltering a certain Miss Aileen Peavey, the
-mere thought of whom was enough to turn the sunshine off as with a
-tap.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t stand literary fellows,” proceeded his lordship. “Never
-could. And, by Jove, literary females are worse. Miss Peavey&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”
-Here words temporarily failed the owner of Blandings. “Miss
-Peavey&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he resumed after an eloquent pause. “Who is Miss
-Peavey?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Clarence,” replied Lady Constance tolerantly, for the fine
-morning had made her mild and amiable, “if you do not know that Aileen
-is one of the leading poetesses of the younger school, you must be very
-ignorant.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mean that. I know she writes poetry. I mean who <i>is</i> she?
-You suddenly produced her here like a rabbit out of a hat,” said his
-lordship, in a tone of strong resentment. “Where did you find her?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[p. 16]</span>“I first made
-Aileen’s acquaintance on an Atlantic liner when Joe and I were coming
-back from our trip round the world. She was very kind to me when I
-was feeling the motion of the vessel.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. If you mean what is her
-family, I think Aileen told me once that she was connected with the
-Rutlandshire Peaveys.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never heard of them!” snapped Lord Emsworth. “And, if they’re
-anything like Miss Peavey, God help Rutlandshire!”</p>
-
-<p>Tranquil as Lady Constance’s mood was this morning, an ominous
-stoniness came into her grey eyes at these words, and there is little
-doubt that in another instant she would have discharged at her mutinous
-brother one of those shattering come-backs for which she had been
-celebrated in the family from nursery days onward; but at this juncture
-the Efficient Baxter appeared again through the bookshelf.</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse me,” said Baxter, securing attention with a flash of
-his spectacles. “I forgot to mention, Lord Emsworth, that, to suit
-everybody’s convenience, I have arranged that Miss Halliday shall call
-to see you at your club to-morrow after lunch.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord, Baxter!” The harassed peer started as if he had
-been bitten in the leg. “Who’s Miss Halliday? Not another literary
-female?”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Halliday is the young lady who is coming to Blandings to
-catalogue the library.”</p>
-
-<p>“Catalogue the library? What does it want cataloguing for?”</p>
-
-<p>“It has not been done since the year 1885.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, and look how splendidly we’ve got along without it,” said
-Lord Emsworth acutely.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be so ridiculous, Clarence,” said Lady Constance, annoyed.
-“The catalogue of a great library like this must be brought up to
-date.” She moved<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[p. 17]</span> to
-the door. “I do wish you would try to wake up and take an interest
-in things. If it wasn’t for Mr. Baxter, I don’t know what would
-happen.”</p>
-
-<p>And with a beaming glance of approval at her ally she left the room.
-Baxter, coldly austere, returned to the subject under discussion.</p>
-
-<p>“I have written to Miss Halliday suggesting two-thirty as a suitable
-hour for the interview.”</p>
-
-<p>“But look here&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will wish to see her before definitely confirming the
-engagement.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but look here, I wish you wouldn’t go tying me up with all
-these appointments.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought that as you were going to London to meet Mr.
-McTodd&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m not going to London to meet Mr. McTodd,” cried Lord
-Emsworth with weak fury. “It’s out of the question. I can’t possibly
-leave Blandings. The weather may break at any moment. I don’t want to
-miss a day of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“The arrangements are all made.”</p>
-
-<p>“Send the fellow a wire&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ‘unavoidably detained.’”</p>
-
-<p>“I could not take the responsibility for such a course myself,” said
-Baxter coldly. “But possibly if you were to make the suggestion to Lady
-Constance&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dash it!” said Lord Emsworth unhappily, at once realising the
-impossibility of the scheme. “Oh, well, if I’ve got to go, I’ve got to
-go,” he said after a gloomy pause. “But to leave my garden and stew in
-London at this time of the year&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>There seemed nothing further to say on the subject. He took off his
-glasses, polished them, put them on again, and shuffled to the door.
-After all, he reflected, even though the car was coming for him at two,
-at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[p. 18]</span> least he had the
-morning, and he proposed to make the most of it. But his first careless
-rapture at the prospect of pottering among his flowers was dimmed, and
-would not be recaptured. He did not entertain any project so mad as
-the idea of defying his sister Constance, but he felt extremely bitter
-about the whole affair. Confound Constance!&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Dash Baxter!&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Miss Peavey&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>The door closed behind Lord Emsworth.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_1_2">§ 2</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Lady Constance meanwhile, proceeding downstairs, had reached the big
-hall, when the door of the smoking-room opened and a head popped out. A
-round, grizzled head with a healthy pink face attached to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Connie!” said the head.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Constance halted.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Joe?”</p>
-
-<p>“Come in here a minute,” said the head. “Want to speak to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Constance went into the smoking-room. It was large and cosily
-book-lined, and its window looked out on to an Italian garden. A wide
-fire-place occupied nearly the whole of one side of it, and in front
-of this, his legs spread to an invisible blaze, Mr. Joseph Keeble had
-already taken his stand. His manner was bluff, but an acute observer
-might have detected embarrassment in it.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Joe?” asked Lady Constance, and smiled pleasantly
-at her husband. When, two years previously, she had married this
-elderly widower, of whom the world knew nothing beyond the fact
-that he had amassed a large fortune in South African diamond mines,
-there had not been wanting cynics to set the match down as one of
-convenience, a purely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[p. 19]</span>
-business arrangement by which Mr. Keeble exchanged his money for Lady
-Constance’s social position. Such was not the case. It had been a
-genuine marriage of affection on both sides. Mr. Keeble worshipped his
-wife, and she was devoted to him, though never foolishly indulgent.
-They were a happy and united couple.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble cleared his throat. He seemed to find some difficulty
-in speaking. And when he spoke it was not on the subject which he
-had intended to open, but on one which had already been worn out in
-previous conversations.</p>
-
-<p>“Connie, I’ve been thinking about that necklace again.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Constance laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t be silly, Joe. You haven’t called me into this stuffy
-room on a lovely morning like this to talk about that for the hundredth
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you know, there’s no sense in taking risks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be absurd. What risks can there be?”</p>
-
-<p>“There was a burglary over at Winstone Court, not ten miles from
-here, only a day or two ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be so fussy, Joe.”</p>
-
-<p>“That necklace cost nearly twenty thousand pounds,” said Mr. Keeble,
-in the reverent voice in which men of business traditions speak of
-large sums.</p>
-
-<p>“I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“It ought to be in the bank.”</p>
-
-<p>“Once and for all, Joe,” said Lady Constance, losing her amiability
-and becoming suddenly imperious and Cleopatrine, “I will <i>not</i> keep
-that necklace in a bank. What on earth is the use of having a beautiful
-necklace if it is lying in the strong-room of a bank all the time?
-There is the County Ball coming on, and the Bachelors’ Ball after that,
-and&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. well, I <i>need</i> it. I will send the
-thing to the bank when we pass through London on our way to Scotland,
-but not till then.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[p. 20]</span>
-And I do wish you would stop worrying me about it.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a silence. Mr. Keeble was regretting now that his
-unfortunate poltroonery had stopped him from tackling in a
-straightforward and manly fashion the really important matter which
-was weighing on his mind: for he perceived that his remarks about the
-necklace, eminently sensible though they were, had marred the genial
-mood in which his wife had begun this interview. It was going to be
-more difficult now than ever to approach the main issue. Still, ruffled
-though she might be, the thing had to be done: for it involved a matter
-of finance, and in matters of finance Mr. Keeble was no longer a free
-agent. He and Lady Constance had a mutual banking account, and it
-was she who supervised the spending of it. This was an arrangement,
-subsequently regretted by Mr. Keeble, which had been come to in the
-early days of the honeymoon, when men are apt to do foolish things.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble coughed. Not the sharp, efficient cough which we have
-heard Rupert Baxter uttering in the library, but a feeble, strangled
-thing like the bleat of a diffident sheep.</p>
-
-<p>“Connie,” he said. “Er—Connie.”</p>
-
-<p>And at the words a sort of cold film seemed to come over Lady
-Constance’s eyes: for some sixth sense told her what subject it was
-that was now about to be introduced.</p>
-
-<p>“Connie, I—er—had a letter from Phyllis this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Constance said nothing. Her eyes gleamed for an instant, then
-became frozen again. Her intuition had not deceived her.</p>
-
-<p>Into the married life of this happy couple only one shadow
-had intruded itself up to the present. But<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_21">[p. 21]</span> unfortunately it was a shadow of
-considerable proportions, a kind of super-shadow; and its effect had
-been chilling. It was Phyllis, Mr. Keeble’s stepdaughter, who had
-caused it—by the simple process of jilting the rich and suitable young
-man whom Lady Constance had attached to her (rather in the manner
-of a conjurer forcing a card upon his victim) and running off and
-marrying a far from rich and quite unsuitable person of whom all that
-seemed to be known was that his name was Jackson. Mr. Keeble, whose
-simple creed was that Phyllis could do no wrong, had been prepared to
-accept the situation philosophically; but his wife’s wrath had been
-deep and enduring. So much so that the mere mentioning of the girl’s
-name must be accounted to him for a brave deed, Lady Constance having
-specifically stated that she never wished to hear it again.</p>
-
-<p>Keenly alive to this prejudice of hers, Mr. Keeble stopped after
-making his announcement, and had to rattle his keys in his pocket in
-order to acquire the necessary courage to continue. He was not looking
-at his wife, but he knew just how forbidding her expression must be.
-This task of his was no easy, congenial task for a pleasant summer
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>“She says in her letter,” proceeded Mr. Keeble, his eyes on the
-carpet and his cheeks a deeper pink, “that young Jackson has got
-the chance of buying a big farm&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. in
-Lincolnshire, I think she said&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. if he can
-raise three thousand pounds.”</p>
-
-<p>He paused, and stole a glance at his wife. It was as he had feared.
-She had congealed. Like some spell, the name Jackson had apparently
-turned her to marble. It was like the Pygmalion and Galatea business
-working the wrong way round. She was presumably breathing, but there
-was no sign of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[p. 22]</span>“So I was just
-thinking,” said Mr. Keeble, producing another <i>obbligato</i> on the
-keys, “it just crossed my mind&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. it isn’t as if the thing were a
-speculation&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the place is apparently coining money&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. present
-owner only selling because he wants to go abroad&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. it occurred to
-me&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and they would pay good interest on the loan&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“What loan?” inquired the statue icily, coming to life.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what I was thinking&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. just a suggestion, you know&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-what struck me was that if you were willing we might&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. good
-investment, you know, and nowadays it’s deuced hard to find good
-investments&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I was thinking that we might lend them the money.”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped. But he had got the thing out and felt happier. He
-rattled his keys again, and rubbed the back of his head against the
-mantelpiece. The friction seemed to give him confidence.</p>
-
-<p>“We had better settle this thing once and for all, Joe,” said Lady
-Constance. “As you know, when we were married, I was ready to do
-everything for Phyllis. I was prepared to be a mother to her. I gave
-her every chance, took her everywhere. And what happened?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know. But&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“She became engaged to a man with plenty of money&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shocking young ass,” interjected Mr. Keeble, perking up for a
-moment at the recollection of the late lamented, whom he had never
-liked. “And a rip, what’s more. I’ve heard stories.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense! If you are going to believe all the gossip you hear
-about people, nobody would be safe. He was a delightful young man
-and he would have made Phyllis perfectly happy. Instead of marrying
-him, she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[p. 23]</span> chose to
-go off with this—Jackson.” Lady Constance’s voice quivered. Greater
-scorn could hardly have been packed into two syllables. “After what
-has happened, I certainly intend to have nothing more to do with her.
-I shall not lend them a penny, so please do not let us continue this
-discussion any longer. I hope I am not an unjust woman, but I must say
-that I consider, after the way Phyllis behaved&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>The sudden opening of the door caused her to break off. Lord
-Emsworth, mould-stained and wearing a deplorable old jacket,
-pottered into the room. He peered benevolently at his sister and
-his brother-in-law, but seemed unaware that he was interrupting a
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Gardening As A Fine Art,’” he murmured. “Connie, have you seen a
-book called ‘Gardening As A Fine Art’? I was reading it in here last
-night. ‘Gardening As A Fine Art.’ That is the title. Now, where can
-it have got to?” His dreamy eye flitted to and fro. “I want to show
-it to McAllister. There is a passage in it that directly refutes his
-anarchistic views on&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is probably on one of the shelves,” said Lady Constance
-shortly.</p>
-
-<p>“On one of the shelves?” said Lord Emsworth, obviously impressed by
-this bright suggestion. “Why, of course, to be sure.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble was rattling his keys moodily. A mutinous expression
-was on his pink face. These moments of rebellion did not come to him
-very often, for he loved his wife with a dog-like affection and had
-grown accustomed to being ruled by her, but now resentment filled him.
-She was unreasonable, he considered. She ought to have realised how
-strongly he felt about poor little Phyllis. It was too infernally<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[p. 24]</span> cold-blooded to abandon the
-poor child like an old shoe simply because&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going?” he asked, observing his wife moving to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I am going into the garden,” said Lady Constance. “Why? Was
-there anything else you wanted to talk to me about?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Mr. Keeble despondently. “Oh, no.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Constance left the room, and a deep masculine silence fell.
-Mr. Keeble rubbed the back of his head meditatively against the
-mantelpiece, and Lord Emsworth scratched among the book-shelves.</p>
-
-<p>“Clarence!” said Mr. Keeble suddenly. An idea—one might almost say
-an inspiration—had come to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?” responded his lordship absently. He had found his book and was
-turning its pages, absorbed.</p>
-
-<p>“Clarence, can you&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Angus McAllister,” observed Lord Emsworth bitterly, “is an
-obstinate, stiff-necked son of Belial. The writer of this book
-distinctly states in so many words&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Clarence, can you lend me three thousand pounds on good security
-and keep it dark from Connie?”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth blinked.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep something dark from Connie?” He raised his eyes from his book
-in order to peer at this visionary with a gentle pity. “My dear fellow,
-it can’t be done.”</p>
-
-<p>“She would never know. I will tell you just why I want this
-money&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Money?” Lord Emsworth’s eye had become vacant again. He was reading
-once more. “Money? Money, my dear fellow? Money? Money? What money?
-If I have said once,” declared Lord Emsworth, “that Angus McAllister
-is all wrong on the subject of hollyhocks, I’ve said it a hundred
-times.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me explain. This three thousand pounds&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[p. 25]</span>“My dear fellow,
-no. No, no. It was like you,” said his lordship with a vague
-heartiness, “it was like you—good and generous—to make this offer,
-but I have ample, thank you, ample. I don’t <i>need</i> three thousand
-pounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t understand. I&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no. No, no. But I am very much obliged, all the same. It was
-kind of you, my dear fellow, to give me the opportunity. Very kind.
-Very, very, very kind,” proceeded his lordship, trailing to the door
-and reading as he went. “Oh, very, very, very&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>The door closed behind him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, <i>damn</i>!” said Mr. Keeble.</p>
-
-<p>He sank into a chair in a state of profound dejection. He thought of
-the letter he would have to write to Phyllis. Poor little Phyllis&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-he would have to tell her that what she asked could not be managed.
-And why, thought Mr. Keeble sourly, as he rose from his seat and went
-to the writing-table, could it not be managed? Simply because he was a
-weak-kneed, spineless creature who was afraid of a pair of grey eyes
-that had a tendency to freeze.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>My dear Phyllis</i>,” he wrote.</p>
-
-<p>Here he stopped. How on earth was he to put it? What a letter to
-have to write! Mr. Keeble placed his head between his hands and groaned
-aloud.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo, Uncle Joe!”</p>
-
-<p>The letter-writer, turning sharply, was aware—without pleasure—of
-his nephew Frederick, standing beside his chair. He eyed him
-resentfully, for he was not only exasperated but startled. He had not
-heard the door open. It was as if the smooth-haired youth had popped up
-out of a trap.</p>
-
-<p>“Came in through the window,” explained the Hon. Freddie. “I say,
-Uncle Joe.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[p. 26]</span>“Well, what is
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I say, Uncle Joe,” said Freddie, “can you lend me a thousand
-quid?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble uttered a yelp like a pinched Pomeranian.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_1_3">§ 3</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>As Mr. Keeble, red-eyed and overwrought, rose slowly from his chair
-and began to swell in ominous silence, his nephew raised his hand
-appealingly. It began to occur to the Hon. Freddie that he had perhaps
-not led up to his request with the maximum of smooth tact.</p>
-
-<p>“Half a jiffy!” he entreated. “I say, don’t go in off the deep end
-for just a second. I can explain.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble’s feelings expressed themselves in a loud snort.</p>
-
-<p>“Explain!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I can. Whole trouble was, I started at the wrong end.
-Shouldn’t have sprung it on you like that. The fact is, Uncle Joe,
-I’ve got a scheme. I give you my word that, if you’ll only put off
-having apoplexy for about three minutes,” said Freddie, scanning his
-fermenting relative with some anxiety, “I can shove you on to a good
-thing. Honestly I can. And all I say is, if this scheme I’m talking
-about is worth a thousand quid to you, will you slip it across? I’m
-game to spill it and leave it to your honesty to cash up if the thing
-looks good to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“A thousand pounds!”</p>
-
-<p>“Nice round sum,” urged Freddie ingratiatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” demanded Mr. Keeble, now somewhat recovered, “do you want a
-thousand pounds?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, who doesn’t, if it comes to that?” said Freddie. “But I don’t
-mind telling you my special<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[p.
-27]</span> reason for wanting it at just this moment, if you’ll swear
-to keep it under your hat as far as the guv’nor is concerned.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you mean that you wish me not to repeat to your father anything
-you may tell me in confidence, naturally I should not dream of doing
-such a thing.”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie looked puzzled. His was no lightning brain.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t quite work that out,” he confessed. “Do you mean you will
-tell him or you won’t?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will not tell him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good old Uncle Joe!” said Freddie, relieved. “A topper! I’ve always
-said so. Well, look here, you know all the trouble there’s been about
-my dropping a bit on the races lately?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Between ourselves, I dropped about five hundred of the best. And I
-just want to ask you one simple question. <i>Why</i> did I drop it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because you were an infernal young ass.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, yes,” agreed Freddie, having considered the point, “you might
-put it that way, of course. But why was I an ass?”</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” exclaimed the exasperated Mr. Keeble. “Am I a
-psycho-analyst?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean to say, if you come right down to it, I lost all that stuff
-simply because I was on the wrong side of the fence. It’s a mug’s game
-betting on horses. The only way to make money is to be a bookie, and
-that’s what I’m going to do if you’ll part with that thousand. Pal
-of mine, who was up at Oxford with me, is in a bookie’s office, and
-they’re game to take me in too if I can put up a thousand quid. Only I
-must let them know quick, because the offer’s not going to be open for
-ever. You’ve no notion what a deuce of a lot of competition there is
-for that sort of job.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[p. 28]</span>Mr. Keeble, who
-had been endeavouring with some energy to get a word in during this
-harangue, now contrived to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“And do you seriously suppose that I would&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But what’s the use
-of wasting time talking? I have no means of laying my hands on the sum
-you mention. If I had,” said Mr. Keeble wistfully. “If I had&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” And
-his eye strayed to the letter on the desk, the letter which had got as
-far as “My dear Phyllis” and stuck there.</p>
-
-<p>Freddie gazed upon him with cordial sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know how you’re situated, Uncle Joe, and I’m dashed sorry for
-you. I mean, Aunt Constance and all that.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” Irksome as Mr. Keeble sometimes found the peculiar condition
-of his financial arrangements, he had always had the consolation of
-supposing that they were a secret between his wife and himself. “What
-do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I know that Aunt Constance keeps an eye on the doubloons
-and checks the outgoings pretty narrowly. And I think it’s a dashed
-shame that she won’t unbuckle to help poor old Phyllis. A girl,” said
-Freddie, “I always liked. Bally shame! Why the dickens shouldn’t she
-marry that fellow Jackson? I mean, love’s love,” said Freddie, who felt
-strongly on this point.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble was making curious gulping noises.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I ought to explain,” said Freddie, “that I was having a
-quiet after-breakfast smoke outside the window there and heard the
-whole thing. I mean, you and Aunt Constance going to the mat about poor
-old Phyllis and you trying to bite the guv’nor’s ear and so forth.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble bubbled for awhile.</p>
-
-<p>“You—you listened!” he managed to ejaculate at length.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[p. 29]</span>“And dashed lucky
-for you,” said Freddie with a cordiality unimpaired by the frankly
-unfriendly stare under which a nicer-minded youth would have withered;
-“dashed lucky for you that I did. Because I’ve got a scheme.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble’s estimate of his young relative’s sagacity was not a
-high one, and it is doubtful whether, had the latter caught him in a
-less despondent mood, he would have wasted time in inquiring into the
-details of this scheme, the mention of which had been playing in and
-out of Freddie’s conversation like a will-o’-the-wisp. But such was his
-reduced state at the moment that a reluctant gleam of hope crept into
-his troubled eye.</p>
-
-<p>“A scheme? Do you mean a scheme to help me out of—out of my
-difficulty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely! You want the best seats, we have ’em. I mean,” Freddie
-went on in interpretation of these peculiar words, “you want three
-thousand quid, and I can show you how to get it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then kindly do so,” said Mr. Keeble; and, having opened the door,
-peered cautiously out, and closed it again, he crossed the room and
-shut the window.</p>
-
-<p>“Makes it a bit fuggy, but perhaps you’re right,” said Freddie,
-eyeing these manœuvres. “Well, it’s like this, Uncle Joe. You remember
-what you were saying to Aunt Constance about some bird being apt to
-sneak up and pinch her necklace?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean, why don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble regarded his nephew with unconcealed astonishment. He had
-been prepared for imbecility, but this exceeded his expectations.</p>
-
-<p>“Steal my wife’s necklace!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[p. 30]</span>“That’s it.
-Frightfully quick you are, getting on to an idea. Pinch Aunt Connie’s
-necklace. For, mark you,” continued Freddie, so far forgetting the
-respect due from a nephew as to tap his uncle sharply on the chest, “if
-a husband pinches anything from a wife, it isn’t stealing. That’s law.
-I found that out from a movie I saw in town.”</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Freddie was a great student of the movies. He could tell
-a super-film from a super-super-film at a glance, and what he did not
-know about erring wives and licentious clubmen could have been written
-in a sub-title.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you insane?” growled Mr. Keeble.</p>
-
-<p>“It wouldn’t be hard for you to get hold of it. And once you’d got
-it everybody would be happy. I mean, all you’d have to do would be to
-draw a cheque to pay for another one for Aunt Connie—which would make
-her perfectly chirpy, as well as putting you one up, if you follow
-me. Then you would have the other necklace, the pinched one, to play
-about with. See what I mean? You could sell it privily and by stealth,
-ship Phyllis her three thousand, push across my thousand, and what was
-left over would be a nice little private account for you to tuck away
-somewhere where Aunt Connie wouldn’t know anything about it. And a
-dashed useful thing,” said Freddie, “to have up your sleeve in case of
-emergencies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble was on the point of repeating his previous remark when
-suddenly there came the realisation that, despite all preconceived
-opinions, the young man was anything but insane. The scheme, at which
-he had been prepared to scoff, was so brilliant, yet simple, that it
-seemed almost incredible that its sponsor could have worked it out for
-himself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[p. 31]</span>“Not my own,” said
-Freddie modestly, as if in answer to the thought. “Saw much the same
-thing in a movie once. Only there the fellow, if I remember, wanted to
-do down an insurance company, and it wasn’t a necklace that he pinched
-but bonds. Still, the principle’s the same. Well, how do we go, Uncle
-Joe? How about it? Is that worth a thousand quid or not?”</p>
-
-<p>Even though he had seen in person to the closing of the door and the
-window, Mr. Keeble could not refrain from a conspirator-like glance
-about him. They had been speaking with lowered voices, but now words
-came from him in an almost inaudible whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“Could it really be done? Is it feasible?”</p>
-
-<p>“Feasible? Why, dash it, what the dickens is there to stop you? You
-could do it in a second. And the beauty of the whole thing is that, if
-you were copped, nobody could say a word, because husband pinching from
-wife isn’t stealing. Law.”</p>
-
-<p>The statement that in the circumstances indicated nobody could say
-a word seemed to Mr. Keeble so at variance with the facts that he was
-compelled to challenge it.</p>
-
-<p>“Your aunt would have a good deal to say,” he observed ruefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? Oh, yes, I see what you mean. Well, you would have to risk
-that. After all, the chances would be dead against her finding out.”</p>
-
-<p>“But she might.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, if you put it like that, I suppose she might.”</p>
-
-<p>“Freddie, my boy,” said Mr. Keeble weakly, “I daren’t do it!”</p>
-
-<p>The vision of his thousand pounds slipping from his grasp so wrought
-upon Freddie that he expressed himself in a manner far from fitting in
-one of his years towards an older man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[p. 32]</span>“Oh, I say, don’t
-be such a rabbit!”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he repeated, “I daren’t.”</p>
-
-<p>It might have seemed that the negotiations had reached a deadlock,
-but Freddie, with a thousand pounds in sight, was in far too stimulated
-a condition to permit so tame an ending to such a promising plot. As
-he stood there, chafing at his uncle’s pusillanimity, an idea was
-vouchsafed to him.</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove! I’ll tell you what!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>“Not so loud!” moaned the apprehensive Mr. Keeble. “Not so loud!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you what,” repeated Freddie in a hoarse whisper. “How
-would it be if <i>I</i> did the pinching?”</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>“How would it&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would you?” Hope, which had vanished from Mr. Keeble’s face, came
-flooding back. “My boy, would you really?”</p>
-
-<p>“For a thousand quid you bet I would.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble clutched at his young relative’s hand and gripped it
-feverishly.</p>
-
-<p>“Freddie,” he said, “the moment you place that necklace in my hands,
-I will give you not a thousand but two thousand pounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Joe,” said Freddie with equal intensity, “it’s a bet!”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble mopped at his forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“You think you can manage it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Manage it?” Freddie laughed a light laugh. “Just watch me!”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble grasped his hand again with the utmost warmth.</p>
-
-<p>“I must go out and get some air,” he said. “I’m all upset. May I
-really leave this matter to you, Freddie?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[p. 33]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Rather!”</p>
-
-<p>“Good! Then to-night I will write to Phyllis and say that I may be
-able to do what she wishes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say ‘may,’” cried Freddie buoyantly. “The word is ‘will.’
-Bally will! What ho!”</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_1_4">§ 4</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Exhilaration is a heady drug; but, like other drugs, it has the
-disadvantage that its stimulating effects seldom last for very
-long. For perhaps ten minutes after his uncle had left him, Freddie
-Threepwood lay back in his chair in a sort of ecstasy. He felt strong,
-vigorous, alert. Then by degrees, like a chilling wind, doubt began to
-creep upon him—faintly at first, then more and more insistently, till
-by the end of a quarter of an hour he was in a state of pronounced
-self-mistrust. Or, to put it with less elegance, he was suffering from
-an exceedingly severe attack of cold feet.</p>
-
-<p>The more he contemplated the venture which he had undertaken, the
-less alluring did it appear to him. His was not a keen imagination,
-but even he could shape with a gruesome clearness a vision of the
-frightful bust-up that would ensue should he be detected stealing his
-Aunt Constance’s diamond necklace. Common decency would in such an
-event seal his lips as regarded his Uncle Joseph’s share in the matter.
-And even if—as might conceivably happen—common decency failed at the
-crisis, reason told him that his Uncle Joseph would infallibly disclaim
-any knowledge of or connection with the rash act. And then where would
-he be? In the soup, undoubtedly. For Freddie could not conceal it from
-himself that there was nothing in his previous record to make it seem
-inconceivable to his nearest and dearest that he should steal the
-jewellery of a female relative for purely personal ends. The<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[p. 34]</span> verdict in the event of
-detection would be one of uncompromising condemnation.</p>
-
-<p>And yet he hated the idea of meekly allowing that two thousand
-pounds to escape from his clutch&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>A young man’s cross-roads.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>The agony of spirit into which these meditations cast him had
-brought him up with a bound from the comfortable depths of his
-arm-chair and had set him prowling restlessly about the room. His
-wanderings led him at this point to collide somewhat painfully with
-the long table on which Beach the butler, a tidy soul, was in the
-habit of arranging in a neat row the daily papers, weekly papers, and
-magazines which found their way into the castle. The shock had the
-effect of rousing him from his stupor, and in an absent way he clutched
-the nearest daily paper, which happened to be the <i>Morning Globe</i>,
-and returned to his chair in the hope of quieting his nerves with a
-perusal of the racing intelligence. For, though far removed now from
-any practical share in the doings of the racing world, he still took
-a faint melancholy interest in ascertaining what Captain Curb, the
-Head Lad, Little Brighteyes, and the rest of the newspaper experts
-fancied for the day’s big event. He lit a cigarette and unfolded the
-journal.</p>
-
-<p>The next moment, instead of passing directly, as was his usual
-practice, to the last page, which was devoted to sport, he was gazing
-with a strange dry feeling in his throat at a certain advertisement on
-page one.</p>
-
-<p>It was a well-displayed advertisement, and one that had caught
-the eye of many other readers of the paper that morning. It was
-worded to attract attention, and it had achieved its object. But
-where others who read it had merely smiled and marvelled idly how
-anybody<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[p. 35]</span> could
-spend good money putting nonsense like this in the paper, to Freddie
-its import was wholly serious. It read to him like the Real Thing.
-His motion-picture-trained mind accepted this advertisement at its
-face-value.</p>
-
-<p>It ran as follows:—</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt1"><i>LEAVE IT TO PSMITH!</i></p>
-
-<p class="centra">Psmith Will Help You</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Psmith Is Ready For Anything</p>
-
-<p class="centra">DO YOU WANT</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Someone To Manage Your Affairs?</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Someone To Handle Your Business?</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Someone To Take The Dog For A Run?</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Someone To Assassinate Your Aunt?</p>
-
-<p class="centra">PSMITH WILL DO IT</p>
-
-<p class="centra">CRIME NOT OBJECTED TO</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Whatever Job You Have To Offer</p>
-
-<p class="centra">(Provided It Has Nothing To Do With Fish)</p>
-
-<p class="centra"><i>LEAVE IT TO PSMITH!</i></p>
-
-<p class="centra">Address Applications To ‘R. Psmith, Box 365’</p>
-
-<p class="centra"><i>LEAVE IT TO PSMITH!</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="mt1">Freddie laid the paper down with a deep intake of
-breath. He picked it up again, and read the advertisement a second
-time. Yes, it sounded good.</p>
-
-<p>More, it had something of the quality of a direct answer to prayer.
-Very vividly now Freddie realised that what he had been wishing for
-was a partner to share the perils of this enterprise which he had
-so rashly undertaken. In fact, not so much to share them as to take
-them off his shoulders altogether. And such a partner he was now in a
-position to command. Uncle Joe was going to give him two thousand if he
-brought the thing off. This advertisement fellow<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_36">[p. 36]</span> would probably be charmed to come in for a
-few hundred&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Two minutes later, Freddie was at the writing-desk,
-scribbling a letter. From time to time he glanced
-furtively over his shoulder at the door. But the house
-was still. No footsteps came to interrupt him at his
-task.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_1_5">§ 5</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Freddie went out into the garden. He had not wandered far when
-from somewhere close at hand there was borne to him on the breeze a
-remark in a high voice about Scottish obstinacy, which could only have
-proceeded from one source. He quickened his steps.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo, guv’nor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Frederick?”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie shuffled.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, guv’nor, do you think I might go up to town with you this
-afternoon?”</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>“Fact is, I ought to see my dentist. Haven’t been to him for a deuce
-of a time.”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot see the necessity for you to visit a London dentist. There
-is an excellent man in Shrewsbury, and you know I have the strongest
-objection to your going to London.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see, this fellow understands my snappers. Always been to
-him, I mean to say. Anybody who knows anything about these things will
-tell you greatest mistake go buzzing about to different dentists.”</p>
-
-<p>Already Lord Emsworth’s attention was wandering back to the waiting
-McAllister.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[p. 37]</span>“Oh, very well,
-very well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks awfully, guv’nor.”</p>
-
-<p>“But on one thing I insist, Frederick. I cannot have you loafing
-about London the whole day. You must catch the twelve-fifty train
-back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right ho. That’ll be all right, guv’nor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, listen to reason, McAllister,” said his lordship. “That is all
-I ask you to do—listen to reason&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[p. 38]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II</h2>
- <p class="subh2">ENTER PSMITH</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ch_2_1">§ 1</h3>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">A</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap2"><span class="upc">At</span> about the hour when Lord
-Emsworth’s train, whirling him and his son Freddie to London, had
-reached the half-way point in its journey, a very tall, very thin, very
-solemn young man, gleaming in a speckless top hat and a morning-coat of
-irreproachable fit, mounted the steps of Number Eighteen, Wallingford
-Street, West Kensington, and rang the front-door bell. This done, he
-removed the hat; and having touched his forehead lightly with a silk
-handkerchief, for the afternoon sun was warm, gazed about him with a
-grave distaste.</p>
-
-<p>“A scaly neighbourhood!” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>The young man’s judgment was one at which few people with an eye for
-beauty would have cavilled. When the great revolution against London’s
-ugliness really starts and yelling hordes of artists and architects,
-maddened beyond endurance, finally take the law into their own hands
-and rage through the city burning and destroying, Wallingford Street,
-West Kensington, will surely not escape the torch. Long since it must
-have been marked down for destruction. For, though it possesses certain
-merits of a low practical kind, being inexpensive in the matter of
-rents and handy for the buses and the Underground, it is a peculiarly
-beastly little street. Situated in the middle of one of those<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[p. 39]</span> districts where London
-breaks out into a sort of eczema of red brick, it consists of two
-parallel rows of semi-detached villas, all exactly alike, each guarded
-by a ragged evergreen hedge, each with coloured glass of an extremely
-regrettable nature let into the panels of the front door; and sensitive
-young impressionists from the artists’ colony up Holland Park way may
-sometimes be seen stumbling through it with hands over their eyes,
-muttering between clenched teeth “How long? How long?”</p>
-
-<p>A small maid-of-all-work appeared in answer to the bell, and stood
-transfixed as the visitor, producing a monocle, placed it in his right
-eye and inspected her through it.</p>
-
-<p>“A warm afternoon,” he said cordially.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“But pleasant,” urged the young man. “Tell me, is Mrs. Jackson at
-home?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at home?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>The young man sighed.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah well,” he said, “we must always remember that these
-disappointments are sent to us for some good purpose. No doubt they
-make us more spiritual. Will you inform her that I called? The name is
-Psmith. P-smith.”</p>
-
-<p>“Peasmith, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no. P-s-m-i-t-h. I should explain to you that I started life
-without the initial letter, and my father always clung ruggedly to the
-plain Smith. But it seemed to me that there were so many Smiths in the
-world that a little variety might well be introduced. Smythe I look on
-as a cowardly evasion, nor do I approve of the too prevalent custom of
-tacking another name<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[p. 40]</span>
-on in front by means of a hyphen. So I decided to adopt the Psmith. The
-p, I should add for your guidance, is silent, as in phthisis, psychic,
-and ptarmigan. You follow me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Y-yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t think,” he said anxiously, “that I did wrong in pursuing
-this course?”</p>
-
-<p>“N-no, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Splendid!” said the young man, flicking a speck of dust from his
-coat-sleeve. “Splendid! Splendid!”</p>
-
-<p>And with a courteous bow he descended the steps and made his way
-down the street. The little maid, having followed him with bulging
-eyes till he was out of sight, closed the door and returned to her
-kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith strolled meditatively on. The genial warmth of the afternoon
-soothed him. He hummed lightly—only stopping when, as he reached the
-end of the street, a young man of his own age, rounding the corner
-rapidly, almost ran into him.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry,” said the young man. “Hallo, Smith.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith gazed upon him with benevolent affection.</p>
-
-<p>“Comrade Jackson,” he said, “this is well met. The one man of
-all others whom I would have wished to encounter. We will pop off
-somewhere, Comrade Jackson, should your engagements permit, and restore
-our tissues with a cup of tea. I had hoped to touch the Jackson family
-for some slight refreshment, but I was informed that your wife was
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>Mike Jackson laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Phyllis isn’t out. She&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not out? Then,” said Psmith, pained, “there has been dirty work
-done this day. For I was turned from the door. It would not be
-exaggerating to say that I was given the bird. Is this the boasted
-Jackson hospitality?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[p. 41]</span>“Phyllis is giving
-a tea to some of her old school pals,” explained Mike. “She told the
-maid to say she wasn’t at home to anybody else. I’m not allowed in
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Enough, Comrade Jackson!” said Psmith agreeably. “Say no more.
-If you yourself have been booted out in spite of all the loving,
-honouring, and obeying your wife promised at the altar, who am I to
-complain? And possibly, one can console oneself by reflecting, we are
-well out of it. These gatherings of old girls’-school chums are not
-the sort of function your man of affairs wants to get lugged into.
-Capital company as we are, Comrade Jackson, we should doubtless have
-been extremely in the way. I suppose the conversation would have dealt
-exclusively with reminiscences of the dear old school, of tales of
-surreptitious cocoa-drinking in the dormitories and what the deportment
-mistress said when Angela was found chewing tobacco in the shrubbery.
-Yes, I fancy we have not missed a lot.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. By the way, I don’t think
-much of the new home. True, I only saw it from the outside, but&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-no, I don’t think much of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Best we can afford.”</p>
-
-<p>“And who,” said Psmith, “am I to taunt my boyhood friend with his
-honest poverty? Especially as I myself am standing on the very brink of
-destitution.”</p>
-
-<p>“You?”</p>
-
-<p>“I in person. That low moaning sound you hear is the wolf bivouacked
-outside my door.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I thought your uncle gave you rather a good salary.”</p>
-
-<p>“So he did. But my uncle and I are about to part company. From now
-on he, so to speak, will take the high road and I’ll take the low road.
-I dine with him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[p. 42]</span>
-to-night, and over the nuts and wine I shall hand him the bad news
-that I propose to resign my position in the firm. I have no doubt
-that he supposed he was doing me a good turn by starting me in his
-fish business, but even what little experience I have had of it has
-convinced me that it is not my proper sphere. The whisper flies round
-the clubs ‘Psmith has not found his niche!’</p>
-
-<p>“I am not,” said Psmith, “an unreasonable man. I realise that
-humanity must be supplied with fish. I am not averse from a bit of fish
-myself. But to be professionally connected with a firm that handles
-the material in the raw is not my idea of a large life-work. Remind me
-to tell you some time what it feels like to sling yourself out of bed
-at four a.m. and go down to toil in Billingsgate Market. No, there is
-money in fish—my uncle has made a pot of it—but what I feel is that
-there must be other walks in life for a bright young man. I chuck it
-to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“That, Comrade Jackson, is more or less on the knees of the gods.
-To-morrow morning I think I will stroll round to an employment agency
-and see how the market for bright young men stands. Do you know a good
-one?”</p>
-
-<p>“Phyllis always goes to Miss Clarkson’s in Shaftesbury Avenue.
-But&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Clarkson’s in Shaftesbury Avenue. I will make a note of
-it&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Meanwhile, I wonder if you saw the <i>Morning Globe</i> to-day?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“I had an advertisement in it, in which I expressed myself as
-willing—indeed, eager—to tackle any undertaking that had nothing to
-do with fish. I am confidently expecting shoals of replies. I look
-forward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[p. 43]</span> to winnowing
-the heap and selecting the most desirable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty hard to get a job these days,” said Mike doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Not if you have something superlatively good to offer.”</p>
-
-<p>“What have you got to offer?”</p>
-
-<p>“My services,” said Psmith with faint reproach.</p>
-
-<p>“What as?”</p>
-
-<p>“As anything. I made no restrictions. Would you care to take a look
-at my manifesto? I have a copy in my pocket.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith produced from inside his immaculate waistcoat a folded
-clipping.</p>
-
-<p>“I should welcome your opinion of it, Comrade Jackson. I have
-frequently said that for sturdy common sense you stand alone. Your
-judgment should be invaluable.”</p>
-
-<p>The advertisement, which some hours earlier had so electrified the
-Hon. Freddie Threepwood in the smoking-room at Blandings Castle, seemed
-to affect Mike, whose mind was of the stolid and serious type, somewhat
-differently. He finished his perusal and stared speechlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Neat, don’t you think?” said Psmith. “Covers the ground adequately?
-I think so, I think so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean to say you’re going to put drivel like that in the
-paper?” asked Mike.</p>
-
-<p>“I <i>have</i> put it in the paper. As I told you, it appeared this
-morning. By this time to-morrow I shall no doubt have finished sorting
-out the first batch of replies.”</p>
-
-<p>Mike’s emotion took him back to the phraseology of school days.</p>
-
-<p>“You <i>are</i> an ass!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith restored the clipping to his waistcoat pocket.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[p. 44]</span>“You wound me,
-Comrade Jackson,” he said. “I had expected a broader outlook from you.
-In fact, I rather supposed that you would have rushed round instantly
-to the offices of the journal and shoved in a similar advertisement
-yourself. But nothing that you can say can damp my buoyant spirit.
-The cry goes round Kensington (and district) ‘Psmith is off!’ In what
-direction the cry omits to state: but that information the future
-will supply. And now, Comrade Jackson, let us trickle into yonder
-tea-shop and drink success to the venture in a cup of the steaming. I
-had a particularly hard morning to-day among the whitebait, and I need
-refreshment.”</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_2_2">§ 2</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>After Psmith had withdrawn his spectacular person from it, there was
-an interval of perhaps twenty minutes before anything else occurred to
-brighten the drabness of Wallingford Street. The lethargy of afternoon
-held the thoroughfare in its grip. Occasionally a tradesman’s cart
-would rattle round the corner, and from time to time cats appeared,
-stalking purposefully among the evergreens. But at ten minutes to five
-a girl ran up the steps of Number Eighteen and rang the bell.</p>
-
-<p>She was a girl of medium height, very straight and slim; and her
-fair hair, her cheerful smile, and the boyish suppleness of her body
-all contributed to a general effect of valiant gaiety, a sort of golden
-sunniness—accentuated by the fact that, like all girls who looked to
-Paris for inspiration in their dress that season, she was wearing
-black.</p>
-
-<p>The small maid appeared again.</p>
-
-<p>“Is Mrs. Jackson at home?” said the girl. “I think she’s expecting
-me. Miss Halliday.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[p. 45]</span>“Yes, miss?”</p>
-
-<p>A door at the end of the narrow hall had opened.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that you, Eve?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo, Phyl, darling.”</p>
-
-<p>Phyllis Jackson fluttered down the passage like a rose-leaf on the
-wind, and hurled herself into Eve’s arms. She was small and fragile,
-with great brown eyes under a cloud of dark hair. She had a wistful
-look, and most people who knew her wanted to pet her. Eve had always
-petted her, from their first days at school together.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I late or early?” asked Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re the first, but we won’t wait. Jane, will you bring tea into
-the drawing-room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes’m.”</p>
-
-<p>“And, remember, I don’t want to see anyone for the rest of the
-afternoon. If anybody calls, tell them I’m not at home. Except Miss
-Clarkson and Mrs. McTodd, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes’m.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is Mrs. McTodd?” inquired Eve. “Is that Cynthia?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Didn’t you know she had married Ralston McTodd, the Canadian
-poet? You knew she went out to Canada?”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew that, yes. But I hadn’t heard that she was married. Funny
-how out of touch one gets with girls who were one’s best friends at
-school. Do you realise it’s nearly two years since I saw you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know. Isn’t it awful! I got your address from Elsa Wentworth
-two or three days ago, and then Clarkie told me that Cynthia was over
-here on a visit with her husband, so I thought how jolly it would
-be to have a regular reunion. We three were such friends in the old
-days.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You remember Clarkie, of course? Miss<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_46">[p. 46]</span> Clarkson, who used to be English mistress
-at Wayland House.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course. Where did you run into her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I see a lot of her. She runs a Domestic Employment Agency in
-Shaftesbury Avenue now, and I have to go there about once a fortnight
-to get a new maid. She supplied Jane.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is Cynthia’s husband coming with her this afternoon?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I wanted it to be simply us four. Do you know him? But of
-course you don’t. This is his first visit to England.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know his poetry. He’s quite a celebrity. Cynthia’s lucky.”</p>
-
-<p>They had made their way into the drawing-room, a gruesome little
-apartment full of all those antimacassars, wax flowers, and china
-dogs inseparable from the cheaper type of London furnished house.
-Eve, though the exterior of Number Eighteen should have prepared her
-for all this, was unable to check a slight shudder as she caught the
-eye of the least prepossessing of the dogs, goggling at her from the
-mantelpiece.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t look at them,” recommended Phyllis, following her gaze. “I
-try not to. We’ve only just moved in here, so I haven’t had time to
-make the place nice. Here’s tea. All right, Jane, put it down there.
-Tea, Eve?”</p>
-
-<p>Eve sat down. She was puzzled and curious. She threw her mind back
-to the days at school and remembered the Phyllis of that epoch as
-almost indecently opulent. A millionaire stepfather there had been
-then, she recollected. What had become of him now, that he should allow
-Phyllis to stay in surroundings like this? Eve scented a mystery, and
-in her customary straightforward way went to the heart of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[p. 47]</span>“Tell me all about
-yourself,” she said, having achieved as much comfort as the peculiar
-structure of her chair would permit. “And remember that I haven’t seen
-you for two years, so don’t leave anything out.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so difficult to know where to start.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you signed your letter ‘Phyllis Jackson.’ Start with the
-mysterious Jackson. Where does he come in? The last I heard about you
-was an announcement in the <i>Morning Post</i> that you were engaged to—I’ve
-forgotten the name, but I’m certain it wasn’t Jackson.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rollo Mountford.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was it? Well, what has become of Rollo? You seem to have mislaid
-him. Did you break off the engagement?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it—sort of broke itself off. I mean, you see, I went and
-married Mike.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eloped with him, do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good heavens!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m awfully ashamed about that, Eve. I suppose I treated Rollo
-awfully badly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind. A man with a name like that was made for suffering.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never really cared for him. He had horrid swimmy eyes&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand. So you eloped with your Mike. Tell me about him. Who
-is he? What does he do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, at present he’s master at a school. But he doesn’t like it.
-He wants to get back to the country again. When I met him, he was agent
-on a place in the country belonging to some people named Smith. Mike
-had been at school and Cambridge with the son. They were very rich then
-and had a big estate. It was the next place to the Edgelows. I had gone
-to stay with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[p. 48]</span> Mary
-Edgelow—I don’t know if you remember her at school? I met Mike first at
-a dance, and then I met him out riding, and then—well, after that we
-used to meet every day. And we fell in love right from the start and we
-went and got married. Oh, Eve, I wish you could have seen our darling
-little house. It was all over ivy and roses, and we had horses and dogs
-and&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Phyllis’ narrative broke off with a gulp. Eve looked at her
-sympathetically. All her life she herself had been joyously
-impecunious, but it had never seemed to matter. She was strong and
-adventurous, and revelled in the perpetual excitement of trying to make
-both ends meet. But Phyllis was one of those sweet porcelain girls
-whom the roughnesses of life bruise instead of stimulating. She needed
-comfort and pleasant surroundings. Eve looked morosely at the china
-dog, which leered back at her with an insufferable good-fellowship.</p>
-
-<p>“We had hardly got married,” resumed Phyllis, blinking, “when poor
-Mr. Smith died and the whole place was broken up. He must have been
-speculating or something, I suppose, because he hardly left any money,
-and the estate had to be sold. And the people who bought it—they were
-coal people from Wolverhampton—had a nephew for whom they wanted the
-agent job, so Mike had to go. So here we are.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve put the question which she had been waiting to ask ever since
-she had entered the house.</p>
-
-<p>“But what about your stepfather? Surely, when we were at school,
-you had a rich stepfather in the background. Has he lost his money,
-too?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, why doesn’t he help you, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“He would, I know, if he was left to himself. But it’s Aunt
-Constance.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[p. 49]</span>“What’s Aunt
-Constance? And who <i>is</i> Aunt Constance?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I call her that, but she’s really my stepmother—sort of. I
-suppose she’s really my step-stepmother. My stepfather married again
-two years ago. It was Aunt Constance who was so furious when I married
-Mike. She wanted me to marry Rollo. She has never forgiven me, and she
-won’t let my stepfather do anything to help us.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the man must be a worm!” said Eve indignantly. “Why doesn’t he
-insist? You always used to tell me how fond he was of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“He isn’t a worm, Eve. He’s a dear. It’s just that he has let her
-boss him. She’s rather a terror, you know. She can be quite nice,
-and they’re awfully fond of each other, but she is as hard as nails
-sometimes.” Phyllis broke off. The front door had opened, and there
-were footsteps in the hall. “Here’s Clarkie. I hope she has brought
-Cynthia with her. She was to pick her up on her way. Don’t talk about
-what I’ve been telling you in front of her, Eve, there’s an angel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s so motherly about it. It’s sweet of her, but&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve understood.</p>
-
-<p>“All right. Later on.”</p>
-
-<p>The door opened to admit Miss Clarkson.</p>
-
-<p>The adjective which Phyllis had applied to her late schoolmistress
-was obviously well chosen. Miss Clarkson exuded motherliness. She was
-large, wholesome, and soft, and she swooped on Eve like a hen on its
-chicken almost before the door had closed.</p>
-
-<p>“Eve! How nice to see you after all this time! My dear, you’re
-looking perfectly lovely! And <i>so</i> prosperous. What a beautiful
-hat!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[p. 50]</span>“I’ve been envying
-it ever since you came, Eve,” said Phyllis. “Where did you get it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Madeleine Sœurs, in Regent Street.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Clarkson, having acquired and stirred a cup of tea, started
-to improve the occasion. Eve had always been a favourite of hers at
-school. She beamed affectionately upon her.</p>
-
-<p>“Now doesn’t this show—what I always used to say to you in the
-dear old days, Eve—that one must never despair, however black the
-outlook may seem? I remember you at school, dear, as poor as a
-church mouse, and with no prospects, none whatever. And yet here you
-are—rich&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve laughed. She got up and kissed Miss Clarkson. She regretted that
-she was compelled to strike a jarring note, but it had to be done.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m awfully sorry, Clarkie dear,” she said, “but I’m afraid I’ve
-misled you. I’m just as broke as I ever was. In fact, when Phyllis
-told me you were running an Employment Agency, I made a note to come
-and see you and ask if you had some attractive billet to dispose of.
-Governess to a thoroughly angelic child would do. Or isn’t there some
-nice cosy author or something who wants his letters answered and his
-press-clippings pasted in an album?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my dear!” Miss Clarkson was deeply concerned. “I did hope&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-That hat&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;!”</p>
-
-<p>“The hat’s the whole trouble. Of course I had no business even
-to think of it, but I saw it in the shop-window and coveted it for
-days, and finally fell. And then, you see, I had to live up to it—buy
-shoes and a dress to match. I tell you it was a perfect orgy, and I’m
-thoroughly ashamed of myself now. Too late, as usual.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear! You always were such a wild, impetuous<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[p. 51]</span> child, even at school. I
-remember how often I used to speak to you about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, when it was all over and I was sane again, I found I had only
-a few pounds left, not nearly enough to see me through till the relief
-expedition arrived. So I thought it over and decided to invest my
-little all.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you chose something safe?”</p>
-
-<p>“It ought to have been. The <i>Sporting Express</i> called it ‘To-day’s
-Safety Bet.’ It was Bounding Willie for the two-thirty race at Sandown
-last Wednesday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I said when poor old Willie came in sixth. But
-it’s no good worrying, is it? What it means is that I simply must
-find something to do that will carry me through till I get my next
-quarter’s allowance. And that won’t be till September.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But don’t
-let’s talk business here. I’ll come round to your office, Clarkie,
-to-morrow.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Where’s Cynthia? Didn’t you bring her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I thought you were going to pick Cynthia up on your way,
-Clarkie,” said Phyllis.</p>
-
-<p>If Eve’s information as to her financial affairs had caused Miss
-Clarkson to mourn, the mention of Cynthia plunged her into the very
-depths of woe. Her mouth quivered and a tear stole down her cheek. Eve
-and Phyllis exchanged bewildered glances.</p>
-
-<p>“I say,” said Eve after a moment’s pause and a silence broken only
-by a smothered sob from their late instructress, “we aren’t being very
-cheerful, are we, considering that this is supposed to be a joyous
-reunion? Is anything wrong with Cynthia?”</p>
-
-<p>So poignant was Miss Clarkson’s anguish that Phyllis, in a flutter
-of alarm, rose and left the room swiftly in search of the only remedy
-that suggested itself to her—her smelling-salts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[p. 52]</span>“Poor dear
-Cynthia!” moaned Miss Clarkson.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, what’s the matter with her?” asked Eve. She was not callous to
-Miss Clarkson’s grief, but she could not help the tiniest of smiles. In
-a flash she had been transported to her school-days, when the other’s
-habit of extracting the utmost tragedy out of the slimmest material had
-been a source of ever-fresh amusement to her. Not for an instant did
-she expect to hear any worse news of her old friend than that she was
-in bed with a cold or had twisted her ankle.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s married, you know,” said Miss Clarkson.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I see no harm in that, Clarkie. If a few more Safety Bets go
-wrong, I shall probably have to rush out and marry someone myself. Some
-nice, rich, indulgent man who will spoil me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Eve, my dear,” pleaded Miss Clarkson, bleating with alarm,
-“do please be careful whom you marry. I never hear of one of my girls
-marrying without feeling that the worst may happen and that, all
-unknowing, she may be stepping over a grim precipice!”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t <i>tell</i> them that, do you? Because I should think it would
-rather cast a damper on the wedding festivities. Has Cynthia gone
-stepping over grim precipices? I was just saying to Phyllis that I
-envied her, marrying a celebrity like Ralston McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Clarkson gulped.</p>
-
-<p>“The man must be a <i>fiend</i>!” she said brokenly. “I have just left
-poor dear Cynthia in floods of tears at the Cadogan Hotel—she has a
-very nice quiet room on the fourth floor, though the carpet does not
-harmonise with the wall-paper.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. She was broken-hearted, poor
-child. I did what I could to console her, but it was useless. She
-always was so highly strung. I must be getting back to her very soon.
-I only came on here<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[p. 53]</span>
-because I did not want to disappoint you two dear girls&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” said Eve with quiet intensity. She knew from experience that
-Miss Clarkson, unless firmly checked, would pirouette round and round
-the point for minutes without ever touching it.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” echoed Miss Clarkson, blinking as if the word was something
-solid that had struck her unexpectedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why was Cynthia in floods of tears?”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m telling you, my dear. That man has left her!”</p>
-
-<p>“Left her!”</p>
-
-<p>“They had a quarrel, and he walked straight out of the hotel. That
-was the day before yesterday, and he has not been back since. This
-afternoon the curtest note came from him to say that he never intended
-to return. He had secretly and in a most underhand way arranged for his
-luggage to be removed from the hotel to a District Messenger office,
-and from there he has taken it no one knows where. He has completely
-disappeared.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve stared. She had not been prepared for news of this momentous
-order.</p>
-
-<p>“But what did they quarrel about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cynthia, poor child, was too overwrought to tell me!”</p>
-
-<p>Eve clenched her teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“The beast!&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Poor old Cynthia.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Shall I come round with
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, my dear, better let me look after her alone. I will tell her to
-write and let you know when she can see you. I must be going, Phyllis
-dear,” she said, as her hostess re-entered, bearing a small bottle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[p. 54]</span>“But you’ve only
-just come!” said Phyllis, surprised.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor old Cynthia’s husband has left her,” explained Eve briefly.
-“And Clarkie’s going back to look after her. She’s in a pretty bad way,
-it seems.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed. And I really must be going at once,” said Miss
-Clarkson.</p>
-
-<p>Eve waited in the drawing-room till the front door banged and
-Phyllis came back to her. Phyllis was more wistful than ever. She
-had been looking forward to this tea-party, and it had not been the
-happy occasion she had anticipated. The two girls sat in silence for a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>“What brutes some men are!” said Eve at length.</p>
-
-<p>“Mike,” said Phyllis dreamily, “is an angel.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve welcomed the unspoken invitation to return to a more agreeable
-topic. She felt very deeply for the stricken Cynthia, but she hated
-aimless talk, and nothing could have been more aimless than for her
-and Phyllis to sit there exchanging lamentations concerning a tragedy
-of which neither knew more than the bare outlines. Phyllis had her
-tragedy, too, and it was one where Eve saw the possibility of doing
-something practical and helpful. She was a girl of action, and was glad
-to be able to attack a living issue.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, let’s go on talking about you and Mike,” she said. “At present
-I can’t understand the position at all. When Clarkie came in, you were
-just telling me about your stepfather and why he wouldn’t help you. And
-I thought you made out a very poor case for him. Tell me some more.
-I’ve forgotten his name, by the way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Keeble.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[p. 55]</span>“Oh? Well, I think
-you ought to write and tell him how hard-up you are. He may be under
-the impression that you are still living in luxury and don’t need any
-help. After all, he can’t know unless you tell him. And I should ask
-him straight out to come to the rescue. It isn’t as if it was your
-Mike’s fault that you’re broke. He married you on the strength of a
-very good position which looked like a permanency, and lost it through
-no fault of his own. I should write to him, Phyl. Pitch it strong.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have. I wrote to-day. Mike’s just been offered a wonderful
-opportunity. A sort of farm place in Lincolnshire. You know. Cows and
-things. Just what he would like and just what he would do awfully well.
-And we only need three thousand pounds to get it.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But I’m afraid
-nothing will come of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Because of Aunt Constance, you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must <i>make</i> something come of it.” Eve’s chin went up. She
-looked like a Goddess of Determination. “If I were you, I’d haunt their
-doorstep till they had to give you the money to get rid of you. The
-idea of anybody doing that absurd driving-into-the-snow business in
-these days! Why <i>shouldn’t</i> you marry the man you were in love with? If
-I were you, I’d go and chain myself to their railings and howl like a
-dog till they rushed out with cheque-books just to get some peace. Do
-they live in London?”</p>
-
-<p>“They are down in Shropshire at present at a place called Blandings
-Castle.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve started.</p>
-
-<p>“Blandings Castle? Good gracious!”</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Constance is Lord Emsworth’s sister.”</p>
-
-<p>“But this is the most extraordinary thing. I’m going to Blandings
-myself in a few days.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[p. 56]</span>“No!”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve engaged me to catalogue the castle library.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Eve, were you only joking when you asked Clarkie to find you
-something to do? She took you quite seriously.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I wasn’t joking. There’s a drawback to my going to Blandings. I
-suppose you know the place pretty well?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve often stayed there. It’s beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you know Lord Emsworth’s second son, Freddie Threepwood?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he’s the drawback. He wants to marry me, and I certainly
-don’t want to marry him. And what I’ve been wondering is whether a
-nice easy job like that, which would tide me over beautifully till
-September, is attractive enough to make up for the nuisance of having
-to be always squelching poor Freddie. I ought to have thought of
-it right at the beginning, of course, when he wrote and told me to
-apply for the position, but I was so delighted at the idea of regular
-work that it didn’t occur to me. Then I began to wonder. He’s such a
-persevering young man. He proposes early and often.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you meet Freddie?”</p>
-
-<p>“At a theatre party. About two months ago. He was living in London
-then, but he suddenly disappeared and I had a heart-broken letter
-from him, saying that he had been running up debts and things and his
-father had snatched him away to live at Blandings, which apparently is
-Freddie’s idea of the Inferno. The world seems full of hard-hearted
-relatives.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord Emsworth isn’t really hard-hearted.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_57">[p. 57]</span> You will love him. He’s so dreamy and
-absent-minded. He potters about the garden all the time. I don’t think
-you’ll like Aunt Constance much. But I suppose you won’t see a great
-deal of her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whom <i>shall</i> I see much of—except Freddie, of course?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Baxter, Lord Emsworth’s secretary, I expect. I don’t like him
-at all. He’s a sort of spectacled cave-man.”</p>
-
-<p>“He doesn’t sound attractive. But you say the place is nice?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s gorgeous. I should go, if I were you, Eve.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I had intended not to. But now you’ve told me about Mr.
-Keeble and Aunt Constance, I’ve changed my mind. I’ll have to look in
-at Clarkie’s office to-morrow and tell her I’m fixed up and shan’t need
-her help. I’m going to take your sad case in hand, darling. I shall go
-to Blandings, and I will dog your stepfather’s footsteps.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, I
-must be going. Come and see me to the front door, or I’ll be losing my
-way in the miles of stately corridors.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I suppose I mayn’t smash
-that china dog before I go? Oh, well, I just thought I’d ask.”</p>
-
-<p>Out in the hall the little maid-of-all-work bobbed up and
-intercepted them.</p>
-
-<p>“I forgot to tell you, mum, a gentleman called. I told him you was
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite right, Jane.”</p>
-
-<p>“Said his name was Smith, ’m.”</p>
-
-<p>Phyllis gave a cry of dismay.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! What a shame! I particularly wanted you to meet him, Eve. I
-wish I’d known.”</p>
-
-<p>“Smith?” said Eve. “The name seems familiar. Why were you so anxious
-for me to meet him?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s Mike’s best friend. Mike worships him.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_58">[p. 58]</span> He’s the son of the Mr. Smith I was telling
-you about—the one Mike was at school and Cambridge with. He’s a perfect
-darling, Eve, and you would love him. He’s just your sort. I do wish
-we had known. And now you’re going to Blandings for goodness knows how
-long, and you won’t be able to see him.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a pity,” said Eve, politely uninterested.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so sorry for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s in the fish business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ugh!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he hates it, poor dear. But he was left stranded like all
-the rest of us after the crash, and he was put into the business by an
-uncle who is a sort of fish magnate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, why does he stay there, if he dislikes it so much?” said Eve
-with indignation. The helpless type of man was her pet aversion. “I
-hate a man who’s got no enterprise.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think you could call him unenterprising. He never struck
-me like that.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You simply must meet him when you come back to
-London.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Eve indifferently. “Just as you like. I might put
-business in his way. I’m very fond of fish.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[p. 59]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III</h2>
- <p class="subh2">EVE BORROWS AN UMBRELLA</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">W</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">What</span> strikes the visitor to
-London most forcibly, as he enters the heart of that city’s fashionable
-shopping district, is the almost entire absence of ostentation in the
-shop-windows, the studied avoidance of garish display. About the front
-of the premises of Messrs. Thorpe &amp; Briscoe, for instance, who sell
-coal in Dover Street, there is as a rule nothing whatever to attract
-fascinated attention. You might give the place a glance as you passed,
-but you would certainly not pause and stand staring at it as at the
-Sistine Chapel or the Taj Mahal. Yet at ten-thirty on the morning after
-Eve Halliday had taken tea with her friend Phyllis Jackson in West
-Kensington, Psmith, lounging gracefully in the smoking-room window of
-the Drones Club, which is immediately opposite the Thorpe &amp; Briscoe
-establishment, had been gazing at it fixedly for a full five minutes.
-One would have said that the spectacle enthralled him. He seemed unable
-to take his eyes off it.</p>
-
-<p>There is always a reason for the most apparently inexplicable
-happenings. It is the practice of Thorpe (or Briscoe) during the months
-of summer to run out an awning over the shop. A quiet, genteel awning,
-of course, nothing to offend the eye—but an awning which offers a quite
-adequate protection against those sudden showers which are such a
-delightfully piquant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[p. 60]</span>
-feature of the English summer: one of which had just begun to sprinkle
-the West End of London with a good deal of heartiness and vigour. And
-under this awning, peering plaintively out at the rain, Eve Halliday,
-on her way to the Ada Clarkson Employment Bureau, had taken refuge. It
-was she who had so enchained Psmith’s interest. It was his considered
-opinion that she improved the Thorpe &amp; Briscoe frontage by about
-ninety-five per cent.</p>
-
-<p>Pleased and gratified as Psmith was to have something nice to look
-at out of the smoking-room window, he was also somewhat puzzled.
-This girl seemed to him to radiate an atmosphere of wealth. Starting
-at farthest south and proceeding northward, she began in a gleam of
-patent-leather shoes. Fawn stockings, obviously expensive, led up to
-a black crêpe frock. And then, just as the eye was beginning to feel
-that there could be nothing more, it was stunned by a supreme hat of
-soft, dull satin with a black bird of Paradise feather falling down
-over the left shoulder. Even to the masculine eye, which is notoriously
-to seek in these matters, a whale of a hat. And yet this sumptuously
-upholstered young woman had been marooned by a shower of rain beneath
-the awning of Messrs. Thorpe &amp; Briscoe. Why, Psmith asked himself,
-was this? Even, he argued, if Charles the chauffeur had been given the
-day off or was driving her father the millionaire to the City to attend
-to his vast interests, she could surely afford a cab-fare? We, who are
-familiar with the state of Eve’s finances, can understand her inability
-to take cabs, but Psmith was frankly perplexed.</p>
-
-<p>Being, however, both ready-witted and chivalrous, he perceived
-that this was no time for idle speculation. His not to reason why;
-his obvious duty was to take<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[p.
-61]</span> steps to assist Beauty in distress. He left the window of
-the smoking-room, and, having made his way with a smooth dignity to the
-club’s cloak-room, proceeded to submit a row of umbrellas to a close
-inspection. He was not easy to satisfy. Two which he went so far as to
-pull out of the rack he returned with a shake of the head. Quite good
-umbrellas, but not fit for this special service. At length, however, he
-found a beauty, and a gentle smile flickered across his solemn face. He
-put up his monocle and gazed searchingly at this umbrella. It seemed to
-answer every test. He was well pleased with it.</p>
-
-<p>“Whose,” he inquired of the attendant, “is this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Belongs to the Honourable Mr. Walderwick, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” said Psmith tolerantly.</p>
-
-<p>He tucked the umbrella under his arm and went out.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Eve Halliday, lightening up the sombre austerity of
-Messrs. Thorpe &amp; Briscoe’s shop-front, continued to think hard
-thoughts of the English climate and to inspect the sky in the hope of
-detecting a spot of blue. She was engaged in this cheerless occupation
-when at her side a voice spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse me!”</p>
-
-<p>A hatless young man was standing beside her, holding an umbrella.
-He was a striking-looking young man, very tall, very thin, and very
-well dressed. In his right eye there was a monocle, and through this he
-looked down at her with a grave friendliness. He said nothing further,
-but, taking her fingers, clasped them round the handle of the umbrella,
-which he had obligingly opened, and then with a courteous bow proceeded
-to dash with long strides across the road, disappearing through the
-doorway of a gloomy building<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[p.
-62]</span> which, from the number of men who had gone in and out during
-her vigil, she had set down as a club of some sort.</p>
-
-<p>A good many surprising things had happened to Eve since first
-she had come to live in London, but nothing quite so surprising as
-this. For several minutes she stood where she was without moving,
-staring round-eyed at the building opposite. The episode was, however,
-apparently ended. The young man did not reappear. He did not even show
-himself at the window. The club had swallowed him up. And eventually
-Eve, deciding that this was not the sort of day on which to refuse
-umbrellas even if they dropped inexplicably from heaven, stepped out
-from under the awning, laughing helplessly, and started to resume her
-interrupted journey to Miss Clarkson’s.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>The offices of the Ada Clarkson International Employment Bureau
-(“Promptitude—Courtesy—Intelligence”) are at the top of Shaftesbury
-Avenue, a little way past the Palace Theatre. Eve, closing the
-umbrella, which had prevented even a spot of rain falling on her hat,
-climbed the short stair leading to the door and tapped on the window
-marked “Enquiries.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can I see Miss Clarkson?”</p>
-
-<p>“What name, please?” responded Enquiries promptly and with
-intelligent courtesy.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Halliday.”</p>
-
-<p>Brief interlude, involving business with speaking-tube.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you go into the private office, please,” said Enquiries
-a moment later, in a voice which now added respect to the other
-advertised qualities, for she had had time to observe and digest the
-hat.</p>
-
-<p>Eve passed in through the general waiting-room with<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[p. 63]</span> its magazine-covered table,
-and tapped at the door beyond marked “Private.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eve, dear!” exclaimed Miss Clarkson the moment she had entered, “I
-don’t know how to tell you, but I have been looking through my books
-and I have nothing, simply nothing. There is not a single place that
-you could possibly take. What <i>is</i> to be done?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right, Clarkie.”</p>
-
-<p>“But&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t come to talk business. I came to ask after Cynthia. How is
-she?”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Clarkson sighed.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor child, she is still in a dreadful state, and no wonder. No
-news at all from her husband. He has simply deserted her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor darling! Can’t I see her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at present. I have persuaded her to go down to Brighton for
-a day or two. I think the sea air will pick her up. So much better
-than mooning about in a London hotel. She is leaving on the eleven
-o’clock train. I gave her your love, and she was most grateful that you
-should have remembered your old friendship and be sorry for her in her
-affliction.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I can write to her. Where is she staying?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know her Brighton address, but no doubt the Cadogan Hotel
-would forward letters. I think she would be glad to hear from you,
-dear.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve looked sadly at the framed testimonials which decorated the
-wall. She was not often melancholy, but it was such a beast of a day
-and all her friends seemed to be having such a bad time.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Clarkie,” she said, “what a lot of trouble there is in the
-world!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes!” sighed Miss Clarkson, a specialist on this subject.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[p. 64]</span>“All the horses you
-back finish sixth and all the girls you like best come croppers. Poor
-little Phyllis! weren’t you sorry for her?”</p>
-
-<p>“But her husband, surely, is most devoted?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but she’s frightfully hard up, and you remember how opulent
-she used to be at school. Of course, it must sound funny hearing
-me pitying people for having no money. But somehow other people’s
-hard-upness always seems so much worse than mine. Especially poor old
-Phyl’s, because she really isn’t fit to stand it. I’ve been used to
-being absolutely broke all my life. Poor dear father always seemed to
-be writing an article against time, with creditors scratching earnestly
-at the door.” Eve laughed, but her eyes were misty. “He was a brick,
-wasn’t he? I mean, sending me to a first-class school like Wayland
-House when he often hadn’t enough money to buy tobacco, poor angel. I
-expect he wasn’t always up to time with fees, was he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my dear, of course I was only an assistant mistress at
-Wayland House and had nothing to do with the financial side, but I did
-hear sometimes. . .”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor darling father! Do you know, one of my earliest
-recollections—I couldn’t have been more than ten—is of a ring at the
-front-door bell and father diving like a seal under the sofa and poking
-his head out and imploring me in a hoarse voice to hold the fort.
-I went to the door and found an indignant man with a blue paper. I
-prattled so prettily and innocently that he not only went away quite
-contentedly but actually patted me on the head and gave me a penny.
-And when the door had shut father crawled out from under the sofa and
-gave me twopence, making threepence in all—a good morning’s work.
-I bought father a diamond ring with it at a shop down the street,
-I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[p. 65]</span> remember. At least
-I thought it was a diamond. They may have swindled me, for I was very
-young.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have had a hard life, dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but hasn’t it been a lark! I’ve loved every minute of it.
-Besides, you can’t call me really one of the submerged tenth. Uncle
-Thomas left me a hundred and fifty pounds a year, and mercifully I’m
-not allowed to touch the capital. If only there were no hats or safety
-bets in the world, I should be smugly opulent.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But I mustn’t
-keep you any longer, Clarkie dear. I expect the waiting-room is full
-of dukes who want cooks and cooks who want dukes, all fidgeting
-and wondering how much longer you’re going to keep them. Good-bye,
-darling.”</p>
-
-<p>And, having kissed Miss Clarkson fondly and straightened her hat,
-which the other’s motherly embrace had disarranged, Eve left the
-room.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_4">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[p. 66]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV</h2>
- <p class="subh2">PAINFUL SCENE AT THE DRONES CLUB</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">M</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">Meanwhile,</span> at the Drones
-Club, a rather painful scene had been taking place. Psmith, regaining
-the shelter of the building, had made his way to the wash-room, where,
-having studied his features with interest for a moment in the mirror,
-he smoothed his hair, which the rain had somewhat disordered, and
-brushed his clothes with extreme care. He then went to the cloak-room
-for his hat. The attendant regarded him as he entered with the air of
-one whose mind is not wholly at rest.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Walderwick was in here a moment ago, sir,” said the
-attendant.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?” said Psmith, mildly interested. “An energetic, bustling soul,
-Comrade Walderwick. Always somewhere. Now here, now there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Asking about his umbrella, he was,” pursued the attendant with a
-touch of coldness.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed? Asking about his umbrella, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Made a great fuss about it, sir, he did.”</p>
-
-<p>“And rightly,” said Psmith with approval. “The good man loves his
-umbrella.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I had to tell him that you had took it, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would not have it otherwise,” assented Psmith heartily. “I
-like this spirit of candour. There must be no reservations, no
-subterfuges between you and Comrade Walderwick. Let all be open and
-above-board.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[p. 67]</span>“He seemed very put
-out, sir. He went off to find you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am always glad of a chat with Comrade Walderwick,” said Psmith.
-“Always.”</p>
-
-<p>He left the cloak-room and made for the hall, where he desired the
-porter to procure him a cab. This having drawn up in front of the club,
-he descended the steps and was about to enter it, when there was a
-hoarse cry in his rear, and through the front door there came bounding
-a pinkly indignant youth, who called loudly:</p>
-
-<p>“Here! Hi! Smith! Dash it!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith climbed into the cab and gazed benevolently out at the
-new-comer.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Comrade Walderwick!” he said. “What have we on our mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s my umbrella?” demanded the pink one. “The cloak-room waiter
-says you took my umbrella. I mean, a joke’s a joke, but that was a
-dashed good umbrella.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was, indeed,” Psmith agreed cordially. “It may be of interest to
-you to know that I selected it as the only possible one from among a
-number of competitors. I fear this club is becoming very mixed, Comrade
-Walderwick. You with your pure mind would hardly believe the rottenness
-of some of the umbrellas I inspected in the cloak-room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“The cloak-room? You turn to the left as you go in at the main
-entrance and&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“My umbrella, dash it! Where’s my umbrella?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, there,” said Psmith, and there was a touch of manly regret in
-his voice, “you have me. I gave it to a young lady in the street. Where
-she is at the present moment I could not say.”</p>
-
-<p>The pink youth tottered slightly.</p>
-
-<p>“You gave my umbrella to a girl?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[p. 68]</span>“A very loose way
-of describing her. You would not speak of her in that light fashion if
-you had seen her. Comrade Walderwick, she was wonderful! I am a plain,
-blunt, rugged man, above the softer emotions as a general thing, but
-I frankly confess that she stirred a chord in me which is not often
-stirred. She thrilled my battered old heart, Comrade Walderwick. There
-is no other word. Thrilled it!”</p>
-
-<p>“But, dash it!&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith reached out a long arm and laid his hand paternally on the
-other’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Be brave, Comrade Walderwick!” he said. “Face this thing like a
-man! I am sorry to have been the means of depriving you of an excellent
-umbrella, but as you will readily understand I had no alternative. It
-was raining. She was over there, crouched despairingly beneath the
-awning of that shop. She wanted to be elsewhere, but the moisture
-lay in wait to damage her hat. What could I do? What could any man
-worthy of the name do but go down to the cloak-room and pinch the
-best umbrella in sight and take it to her? Yours was easily the best.
-There was absolutely no comparison. I gave it to her, and she has
-gone off with it, happy once more. This explanation,” said Psmith,
-“will, I am sure, sensibly diminish your natural chagrin. You have
-lost your umbrella, Comrade Walderwick, but in what a cause! In what
-a cause, Comrade Walderwick! You are now entitled to rank with Sir
-Philip Sidney and Sir Walter Raleigh. The latter is perhaps the closer
-historical parallel. He spread his cloak to keep a queen from wetting
-her feet. You—by proxy—yielded up your umbrella to save a girl’s hat.
-Posterity will be proud of you, Comrade Walderwick. I shall be vastly
-surprised if you do not go down in legend and song. Children in ages
-to come<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[p. 69]</span> will cluster
-about their grandfather’s knees, saying, ‘Tell us how the great
-Walderwick lost his umbrella, grandpapa!’ And he will tell them, and
-they will rise from the recital better, deeper, broader children.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-But now, as I see that the driver has started his meter, I fear I must
-conclude this little chat—which I, for one, have heartily enjoyed.
-Drive on,” he said, leaning out of the window. “I want to go to Ada
-Clarkson’s International Employment Bureau in Shaftesbury Avenue.”</p>
-
-<p>The cab moved off. The Hon. Hugo Walderwick, after one passionate
-glance in its wake, realised that he was getting wet and went back into
-the club.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Arriving at the address named, Psmith paid his cab and, having
-mounted the stairs, delicately knuckled the ground-glass window of
-Enquiries.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Miss Clarkson,” he began in an affable voice, the instant
-the window had shot up, “if you can spare me a few moments of your
-valuable time&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Clarkson’s engaged.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith scrutinised her gravely through his monocle.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t <i>you</i> Miss Clarkson?”</p>
-
-<p>Enquiries said she was not.</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” said Psmith, “there has been a misunderstanding, for which,”
-he added cordially, “I am to blame. Perhaps I could see her anon? You
-will find me in the waiting-room when required.”</p>
-
-<p>He went into the waiting-room, and, having picked up a magazine from
-the table, settled down to read a story in <i>The Girl’s Pet</i>—the January
-number of the year 1919, for Employment Agencies, like dentists, prefer
-their literature of a matured vintage. He was absorbed in this when Eve
-came out of the private office.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_5">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[p. 70]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V</h2>
- <p class="subh2">PSMITH APPLIES FOR EMPLOYMENT</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">P</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">Psmith</span> rose courteously as she
-entered.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Miss Clarkson,” he said, “if you can spare me a moment of
-your valuable time&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good gracious!” said Eve. “How extraordinary!”</p>
-
-<p>“A singular coincidence,” agreed Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“You never gave me time to thank you for the umbrella,” said Eve
-reproachfully. “You must have thought me awfully rude. But you took my
-breath away.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Miss Clarkson, please do not&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you keep calling me that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t <i>you</i> Miss Clarkson either?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I’m not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” said Psmith, “I must start my quest all over again. These
-constant checks are trying to an ardent spirit. Perhaps you are a young
-bride come to engage her first cook?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I’m not married.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good!”</p>
-
-<p>Eve found his relieved thankfulness a little embarrassing. In
-the momentary pause which followed his remark, Enquiries entered
-alertly.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Clarkson will see you now, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave us,” said Psmith with a wave of his hand. “We would be
-alone.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[p. 71]</span>Enquiries stared;
-then, awed by his manner and general appearance of magnificence,
-withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose really,” said Eve, toying with the umbrella, “I ought to
-give this back to you.” She glanced at the dripping window. “But it
-<i>is</i> raining rather hard, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Like the dickens,” assented Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Then would you mind very much if I kept it till this evening?”</p>
-
-<p>“Please do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks ever so much. I will send it back to you to-night if you
-will give me the name and address.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith waved his hand deprecatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no. If it is of any use to you, I hope that you will look on it
-as a present.”</p>
-
-<p>“A present!”</p>
-
-<p>“A gift,” explained Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“But I really can’t go about accepting expensive umbrellas from
-people. Where shall I send it?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you insist, you may send it to the Hon. Hugo Walderwick, Drones
-Club, Dover Street. But it really isn’t necessary.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t forget. And thank you very much, Mr. Walderwick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you call me that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you said&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, I see. A slight confusion of ideas. No, I am not Mr.
-Walderwick. And between ourselves I should hate to be. His is a very C3
-intelligence. Comrade Walderwick is merely the man to whom the umbrella
-belongs.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve’s eyes opened wide.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean to say you gave me somebody else’s umbrella?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[p. 72]</span>“I had
-unfortunately omitted to bring my own out with me this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never heard of such a thing!”</p>
-
-<p>“Merely practical Socialism. Other people are content to talk about
-the Redistribution of Property. I go out and do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But won’t he be awfully angry when he finds out it has gone?”</p>
-
-<p>“He <i>has</i> found out. And it was pretty to see his delight. I
-explained the circumstances, and he was charmed to have been of service
-to you.”</p>
-
-<p>The door opened again, and this time it was Miss Clarkson in person
-who entered. She had found Enquiries’ statement over the speaking-tube
-rambling and unsatisfactory, and had come to investigate for herself
-the reason why the machinery of the office was being held up.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I must go,” said Eve, as she saw her. “I’m interrupting your
-business.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so glad you’re still here, dear,” said Miss Clarkson. “I have
-just been looking over my files, and I see that there <i>is</i> one vacancy.
-For a nurse,” said Miss Clarkson with a touch of the apologetic in her
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, that’s all right,” said Eve. “I don’t really need anything.
-But thanks ever so much for bothering.”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled affectionately upon the proprietress, bestowed another
-smile upon Psmith as he opened the door for her, and went out. Psmith
-turned away from the door with a thoughtful look upon his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that young lady a nurse?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you want a nurse?” inquired Miss Clarkson, at once the woman of
-business.</p>
-
-<p>“I want that nurse,” said Psmith with conviction.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[p. 73]</span>“She is a
-delightful girl,” said Miss Clarkson with enthusiasm. “There is no one
-in whom I would feel more confidence in recommending to a position. She
-is a Miss Halliday, the daughter of a very clever but erratic writer,
-who died some years ago. I can speak with particular knowledge of Miss
-Halliday, for I was for many years an assistant mistress at Wayland
-House, where she was at school. She is a charming, warm-hearted,
-impulsive girl.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But you will hardly want to hear all this.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary,” said Psmith, “I could listen for hours. You have
-stumbled upon my favourite subject.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Clarkson eyed him a little doubtfully, and decided that it
-would be best to reintroduce the business theme.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps, when you say you are looking for a nurse, you mean you
-need a hospital nurse?”</p>
-
-<p>“My friends have sometimes suggested it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Halliday’s greatest experience has, of course, been as a
-governess.”</p>
-
-<p>“A governess is just as good,” said Psmith agreeably.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Clarkson began to be conscious of a sensation of being out of
-her depth.</p>
-
-<p>“How old are your children, sir?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I fear,” said Psmith, “you are peeping into Volume Two. This
-romance has only just started.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid,” said Miss Clarkson, now completely fogged, “I do not
-quite understand. What exactly are you looking for?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith flicked a speck of fluff from his coat-sleeve.</p>
-
-<p>“A job,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“A job!” echoed Miss Clarkson, her voice breaking in an amazed
-squeak.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[p. 74]</span>Psmith raised his
-eyebrows.</p>
-
-<p>“You seem surprised. Isn’t this a job emporium?”</p>
-
-<p>“This <i>is</i> an Employment Bureau,” admitted Miss Clarkson.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew it, I knew it,” said Psmith. “Something seemed to tell me.
-Possibly it was the legend ‘Employment Bureau’ over the door. And
-those framed testimonials would convince the most sceptical. Yes, Miss
-Clarkson, I want a job, and I feel somehow that you are the woman
-to find it for me. I have inserted an advertisement in the papers,
-expressing my readiness to undertake any form of employment, but I have
-since begun to wonder if after all this will lead to wealth and fame.
-At any rate, it is wise to attack the great world from another angle as
-well, so I come to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you must excuse me if I remark that this application of yours
-strikes me as most extraordinary.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why? I am young, active, and extremely broke.”</p>
-
-<p>“But your—er—your clothes&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith squinted, not without complacency, down a faultlessly fitting
-waistcoat, and flicked another speck of dust off his sleeve.</p>
-
-<p>“You consider me well dressed?” he said. “You find me natty? Well,
-well, perhaps you are right, perhaps you are right. But consider, Miss
-Clarkson. If one expects to find employment in these days of strenuous
-competition, one must be neatly and decently clad. Employers look
-askance at a baggy trouser-leg. A zippy waistcoat is more to them than
-an honest heart. This beautiful crease was obtained with the aid of
-the mattress upon which I tossed feverishly last night in my attic
-room.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t take you seriously.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t say that, please.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[p. 75]</span>“You really want me
-to find you work?”</p>
-
-<p>“I prefer the term ‘employment.’”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Clarkson produced a notebook.</p>
-
-<p>“If you are really not making this application just as a
-joke&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I assure you, no. My entire capital consists, in specie, of about
-ten pounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then perhaps you will tell me your name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Things are beginning to move. The name is Psmith. P-smith. The
-p is silent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Psmith?”</p>
-
-<p>“Psmith.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Clarkson brooded over this for a moment in almost pained
-silence, then recovered her slipping grip of affairs.</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” she said, “you had better give me a few particulars about
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothing I should like better,” responded Psmith warmly. “I
-am always ready—I may say eager—to tell people the story of my life,
-but in this rushing age I get little encouragement. Let us start at
-the beginning. My infancy. When I was but a babe, my eldest sister was
-bribed with sixpence an hour by my nurse to keep an eye on me and see
-that I did not raise Cain. At the end of the first day she struck for a
-shilling, and got it. We now pass to my boyhood. At an early age I was
-sent to Eton, everybody predicting a bright career for me. Those were
-happy days, Miss Clarkson. A merry, laughing lad with curly hair and a
-sunny smile, it is not too much to say that I was the pet of the place.
-The old cloisters.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But I am boring you. I can see it in your
-eye.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no,” protested Miss Clarkson. “But what I meant was&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I
-thought you might have had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[p.
-76]</span> some experience in some particular line of&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. In fact,
-what sort of work&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?”</p>
-
-<p>“Employment.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of employment do you require?”</p>
-
-<p>“Broadly speaking,” said Psmith, “any reasonably salaried position
-that has nothing to do with fish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fish!” quavered Miss Clarkson, slipping again. “Why fish?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because, Miss Clarkson, the fish trade was until this morning my
-walk in life, and my soul has sickened of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are in the <i>fish</i> trade?” squeaked Miss Clarkson, with an
-amazed glance at the knife-like crease in his trousers.</p>
-
-<p>“These are not my working clothes,” said Psmith, following and
-interpreting her glance. “Yes, owing to a financial upheaval in my
-branch of the family, I was until this morning at the beck and call
-of an uncle who unfortunately happens to be a Mackerel Monarch or a
-Sardine Sultan, or whatever these merchant princes are called who
-rule the fish market. He insisted on my going into the business to
-learn it from the bottom up, thinking, no doubt, that I would follow
-in his footsteps and eventually work my way to the position of a
-Whitebait Wizard. Alas! he was too sanguine. It was not to be,” said
-Psmith solemnly, fixing an owl-like gaze on Miss Clarkson through his
-eyeglass.</p>
-
-<p>“No?” said Miss Clarkson.</p>
-
-<p>“No. Last night I was obliged to inform him that the fish business
-was all right, but it wouldn’t do, and that I proposed to sever my
-connection with the firm for ever. I may say at once that there ensued
-something in the nature of a family earthquake. Hard words,” sighed
-Psmith. “Black looks. Unseemly wrangle. And the upshot of it all
-was that my uncle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[p. 77]</span>
-washed his hands of me and drove me forth into the great world. Hence
-my anxiety to find employment. My uncle has definitely withdrawn his
-countenance from me, Miss Clarkson.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dear, dear!” murmured the proprietress sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He is a hard man, and he judges his fellows solely by their
-devotion to fish. I never in my life met a man so wrapped up in a
-subject. For years he has been practically a monomaniac on the subject
-of fish. So much so that he actually looks like one. It is as if he
-had taken one of those auto-suggestion courses and had kept saying
-to himself, ‘Every day, in every way, I grow more and more like a
-fish.’ His closest friends can hardly tell now whether he more nearly
-resembles a halibut or a cod.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But I am boring you again with this
-family gossip?”</p>
-
-<p>He eyed Miss Clarkson with such a sudden and penetrating glance that
-she started nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no,” she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“You relieve my apprehensions. I am only too well aware that, when
-fairly launched on the topic of fish, I am more than apt to weary my
-audience. I cannot understand this enthusiasm for fish. My uncle used
-to talk about an unusually large catch of pilchards in Cornwall in
-much the same awed way as a right-minded curate would talk about the
-spiritual excellence of his bishop. To me, Miss Clarkson, from the very
-start, the fish business was what I can only describe as a wash-out. It
-nauseated my finer feelings. It got right in amongst my fibres. I had
-to rise and partake of a simple breakfast at about four in the morning,
-after which I would make my way to Billingsgate Market and stand for
-some hours knee-deep in dead fish of every description. A jolly life
-for a cat,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[p. 78]</span> no doubt,
-but a bit too thick for a Shropshire Psmith. Mine, Miss Clarkson, is
-a refined and poetic nature. I like to be surrounded by joy and life,
-and I know nothing more joyless and deader than a dead fish. Multiply
-that dead fish by a million, and you have an environment which only
-a Dante could contemplate with equanimity. My uncle used to tell me
-that the way to ascertain whether a fish was fresh was to peer into
-its eyes. Could I spend the springtime of life staring into the eyes
-of dead fish? No!” He rose. “Well, I will not detain you any longer.
-Thank you for the unfailing courtesy and attention with which you have
-listened to me. You can understand now why my talents are on the market
-and why I am compelled to state specifically that no employment can be
-considered which has anything to do with fish. I am convinced that you
-will shortly have something particularly good to offer me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that I can say that, Mr. Psmith.”</p>
-
-<p>“The p is silent, as in pshrimp,” he reminded her. “Oh, by the
-way,” he said, pausing at the door, “there is one other thing before
-I go. While I was waiting for you to be disengaged, I chanced on an
-instalment of a serial story in <i>The Girl’s Pet</i> for January, 1919. My
-search for the remaining issues proved fruitless. The title was ‘Her
-Honour At Stake,’ by Jane Emmeline Moss. You don’t happen to know how
-it all came out in the end, do you? Did Lord Eustace ever learn that,
-when he found Clarice in Sir Jasper’s rooms at midnight, she had only
-gone there to recover some compromising letters for a girl friend? You
-don’t know? I feared as much. Well, good morning, Miss Clarkson, good
-morning. I leave my future in your hands with a light heart.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will do my best for you, of course.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[p. 79]</span>“And what,” said
-Psmith cordially, “could be better than Miss Clarkson’s best?”</p>
-
-<p>He closed the door gently behind him, and went out. Struck by
-a kindly thought, he tapped upon Enquiries’ window, and beamed
-benevolently as her bobbed head shot into view.</p>
-
-<p>“They tell me,” he said, “that Aspidistra is much fancied for the
-four o’clock race at Birmingham this afternoon. I give the information
-without prejudice, for what it is worth. Good day!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_6">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[p. 80]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI</h2>
- <p class="subh2">LORD EMSWORTH MEETS A POET</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ch_6_1">§ 1</h3>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">T</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">The</span> rain had stopped when
-Psmith stepped out into the street, and the sun was shining again in
-that half blustering, half apologetic manner which it affects on its
-reappearance after a summer shower. The pavements glistened cheerfully,
-and the air had a welcome freshness. Pausing at the corner, he pondered
-for a moment as to the best method of passing the hour and twenty
-minutes which must elapse before he could reasonably think of lunching.
-The fact that the offices of the <i>Morning Globe</i> were within easy
-strolling distance decided him to go thither and see if the first post
-had brought anything in the shape of answers to his advertisements.
-And his energy was rewarded a few minutes later when Box 365 on being
-opened yielded up quite a little budget of literary matter. No fewer
-than seven letters in all. A nice bag.</p>
-
-<p>What, however, had appeared at first sight evidence of a pleasing
-ebullition of enterprise on the part of the newspaper-reading public
-turned out on closer inspection, when he had retired to a corner where
-he could concentrate in peace, a hollow delusion. Enterprising in a
-sense though the communications were—and they certainly showed the
-writers as men of considerable ginger and business push—to Psmith they
-came as a disappointment. He had expected better things. These<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[p. 81]</span> letters were not at
-all what he had paid good money to receive. They missed the point
-altogether. The right spirit, it seemed to him, was entirely absent.</p>
-
-<p>The first envelope, attractive though it looked from the outside,
-being of an expensive brand of stationery and gaily adorned with a
-somewhat startling crest merely contained a pleasantly-worded offer
-from a Mr. Alistair MacDougall to advance him any sum from ten to fifty
-thousand pounds on his note of hand only. The second revealed a similar
-proposal from another Scot named Colin MacDonald. While in the third
-Mr. Ian Campbell was prepared to go as high as one hundred thousand.
-All three philanthropists had but one stipulation to make—they would
-have no dealings with minors. Youth, with all its glorious traditions,
-did not seem to appeal to them. But they cordially urged Psmith, in the
-event of his having celebrated his twenty-first birthday, to come round
-to the office and take the stuff away in a sack.</p>
-
-<p>Keeping his head well in the midst of this shower of riches, Psmith
-dropped the three letters with a sigh into the waste-paper basket,
-and opened the next in order. This was a bulky envelope, and its
-contents consisted of a printed brochure entitled, “This Night Shall
-Thy Soul Be Required Of Thee”—while, by a curious and appropriate
-coincidence, Number Five proved to be a circular from an energetic firm
-of coffin-makers offering to bury him for eight pounds ten. Number
-Six, also printed, was a manifesto from one Howard Hill, of Newmarket,
-recommending him to apply without delay for “Hill’s Three-Horse
-Special,” without which—(“Who,” demanded Mr. Hill in large type, “gave
-you Wibbly-Wob for the Jubilee Cup?”)—no sportsman could hope to
-accomplish the undoing of the bookmakers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[p. 82]</span>Although by doing
-so he convicted himself of that very lack of enterprise which he had
-been deploring in the great public, Psmith placed this communication
-with the others in the waste-paper baskets. There now remained only
-Number Seven, and a slight flicker of hope returned to him when
-he perceived that this envelope was addressed by hand and not in
-typescript. He opened it.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond a doubt he had kept the pick of the bunch to the last.
-Here was something that made up for all those other disappointments.
-Written in a scrawly and apparently agitated hand, the letter ran as
-follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“<i>If R. Psmith will meet the writer in the lobby of the Piccadilly
-Palace Hotel at twelve sharp, Friday, July 1, business may result
-if business meant and terms reasonable. R. Psmith will wear a pink
-chrysanthemum in his buttonhole, and will say to the writer, ‘There
-will be rain in Northumberland to-morrow,’ to which the writer will
-reply, ‘Good for the crops.’ Kindly be punctual.</i>”</p>
-
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>A pleased smile played about Psmith’s solemn face as he read this
-communication for the second time. It was much more the sort of thing
-for which he had been hoping. Although his closest friend, Mike
-Jackson, was a young man of complete ordinariness, Psmith’s tastes when
-he sought companionship lay as a rule in the direction of the bizarre.
-He preferred his humanity eccentric. And “the writer,” to judge him by
-this specimen of his correspondence, appeared to be eccentric enough
-for the most exacting taste. Whether this promising person turned
-out to be a ribald jester or an earnest crank, Psmith felt no doubt
-whatever as to the advisability of following the matter up.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[p. 83]</span> Whichever he might be, his
-society ought to afford entertainment during the interval before lunch.
-Psmith glanced at his watch. The hour was a quarter to twelve. He would
-be able to secure the necessary chrysanthemum and reach the Piccadilly
-Palace Hotel by twelve sharp, thus achieving the businesslike
-punctuality on which the unknown writer seemed to set such store.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>It was not until he had entered a florist’s shop on the way to
-the tryst that it was borne in upon him that the adventure was going
-to have its drawbacks. The first of these was the chrysanthemum.
-Preoccupied with the rest of the communication, Psmith, when he had
-read the letter, had not given much thought to the decoration which
-it would be necessary for him to wear; and it was only when, in reply
-to his demand for a chrysanthemum, the florist came forward, almost
-hidden, like the army at Dunsinane, behind what looked like a small
-shrubbery, that he realised what he, a correct and fastidious dresser,
-was up against.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that a chrysanthemum?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. Pink chrysanthemum.”</p>
-
-<p>“One?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. One pink chrysanthemum.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith regarded the repellent object with disfavour through his
-eyeglass. Then, having placed it in his buttonhole, he proceeded on his
-way, feeling like some wild thing peering through the undergrowth. The
-distressing shrub completely spoiled his walk.</p>
-
-<p>Arrived at the hotel and standing in the lobby, he perceived the
-existence of further complications. The lobby was in its usual state of
-congestion, it being a recognised meeting-place for those who did not
-find it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[p. 84]</span> convenient
-to go as far east as that traditional rendezvous of Londoners, the
-spot under the clock at Charing Cross Station; and “the writer,” while
-giving instructions as to how Psmith should ornament his exterior, had
-carelessly omitted to mention how he himself was to be recognised. A
-rollicking, slap-dash conspirator, was Psmith’s opinion.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed best to take up a position as nearly as possible in
-the centre of the lobby and stand there until “the writer,” lured
-by the chrysanthemum, should come forward and start something. This
-he accordingly did, but when at the end of ten minutes nothing had
-happened beyond a series of collisions with perhaps a dozen hurrying
-visitors to the hotel, he decided on a more active course. A young
-man of sporting appearance had been standing beside him for the last
-five minutes, and ever and anon this young man had glanced with some
-impatience at his watch. He was plainly waiting for someone, so Psmith
-tried the formula on him.</p>
-
-<p>“There will be rain,” said Psmith, “in Northumberland to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>The young man looked at him, not without interest, certainly, but
-without that gleam of intelligence in his eye which Psmith had hoped to
-see.</p>
-
-<p>“What?” he replied.</p>
-
-<p>“There will be rain in Northumberland to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, Zadkiel,” said the young man. “Deuced gratifying, I’m
-sure. I suppose you couldn’t predict the winner of the Goodwood Cup as
-well?”</p>
-
-<p>He then withdrew rapidly to intercept a young woman in a large hat
-who had just come through the swing doors. Psmith was forced to the
-conclusion that this was not his man. He was sorry on the whole, for he
-had seemed a pleasant fellow.</p>
-
-<p>As Psmith had taken up a stationary position and<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[p. 85]</span> the population of the
-lobby was for the most part in a state of flux, he was finding himself
-next to someone new all the time; and now he decided to accost the
-individual whom the re-shuffle had just brought elbow to elbow with
-him. This was a jovial-looking soul with a flowered waistcoat, a white
-hat, and a mottled face. Just the man who might have written that
-letter.</p>
-
-<p>The effect upon this person of Psmith’s meteorological remark
-was instantaneous. A light of the utmost friendliness shone in his
-beautifully-shaven face as he turned. He seized Psmith’s hand and
-gripped it with a delightful heartiness. He had the air of a man who
-has found a friend, and what is more, an old friend. He had a sort of
-journeys-end-in-lovers’-meeting look.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear old chap!” he cried. “I’ve been waiting for you to speak
-for the last five minutes. Knew we’d met before somewhere, but couldn’t
-place you. Face familiar as the dickens, of course. Well, well, well!
-And how are they all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” said Psmith courteously.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, the boys, my dear chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the boys?”</p>
-
-<p>“The dear old boys,” said the other, specifying more exactly. He
-slapped Psmith on the shoulder. “What times those were, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“The times we all used to have together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, <i>those</i>?” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>Something of discouragement seemed to creep over the other’s
-exuberance, as a cloud creeps over the summer sky. But he
-persevered.</p>
-
-<p>“Fancy meeting you again like this!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a small world,” agreed Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d ask you to come and have a drink,” said the jovial one,
-with the slight increase of tensity which<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_86">[p. 86]</span> comes to a man who approaches the core
-of a business deal, “but the fact is my ass of a man sent me out
-this morning without a penny. Forgot to give me my note-case. Damn’
-careless! I’ll have to sack the fellow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Annoying, certainly,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could have stood you a drink,” said the other
-wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these, ‘It might
-have been,’” sighed Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you what,” said the jovial one, inspired. “Lend me a
-fiver, my dear old boy. That’s the best way out of the difficulty. I
-can send it round to your hotel or wherever you are this evening when I
-get home.”</p>
-
-<p>A sweet, sad smile played over Psmith’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave me, comrade!” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pass along, old friend, pass along.”</p>
-
-<p>Resignation displaced joviality in the other’s countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing doing?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there was no harm in trying,” argued the other.</p>
-
-<p>“None whatever.”</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” said the now far less jovial man confidentially, “you
-look such a perfect mug with that eyeglass that it tempts a chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can quite understand how it must!”</p>
-
-<p>“No offence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Assuredly not.”</p>
-
-<p>The white hat disappeared through the swing doors, and Psmith
-returned to his quest. He engaged the attention of a middle-aged man in
-a snuff-coloured suit who had just come within hail.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[p. 87]</span>“There will be rain
-in Northumberland to-morrow,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>The man peered at him inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith repeated his observation.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh?” said the man.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith was beginning to lose the unruffled calm which made him
-such an impressive figure to the public eye. He had not taken into
-consideration the possibility that the object of his search might be
-deaf. It undoubtedly added to the embarrassment of the pursuit. He was
-moving away, when a hand fell on his sleeve.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith turned. The hand which still grasped his sleeve belonged
-to an elegantly dressed young man of somewhat nervous and feverish
-appearance. During his recent vigil Psmith had noticed this young man
-standing not far away, and had had half a mind to include him in the
-platoon of new friends he was making that morning.</p>
-
-<p>“I say,” said this young man in a tense whisper, “did I hear you say
-that there would be rain in Northumberland to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p>“If,” said Psmith, “you were anywhere within the radius of a dozen
-yards while I was chatting with the recent deaf adder, I think it is
-possible that you did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good for the crops,” said the young man. “Come over here where we
-can talk quietly.”</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_6_2">§ 2</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>“So you’re R. Psmith?” said the young man, when they had made their
-way to a remote corner of the lobby, apart from the throng.</p>
-
-<p>“The same.”</p>
-
-<p>“I say, dash it, you’re frightfully late, you know.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[p. 88]</span> I told you to be here at
-twelve sharp. It’s nearly twelve past.”</p>
-
-<p>“You wrong me,” said Psmith. “I arrived here precisely at twelve.
-Since when, I have been standing like Patience on a monument.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Like what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let it go,” said Psmith. “It is not important.”</p>
-
-<p>“I asked you to wear a pink chrysanthemum. So I could recognise you,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I <i>am</i> wearing a pink chrysanthemum. I should have imagined that
-that was a fact that the most casual could hardly have overlooked.”</p>
-
-<p>“That thing?” The other gazed disparagingly at the floral
-decoration. “I thought it was some kind of cabbage. I meant one of
-those little what-d’you-may-call-its that people do wear in their
-button-holes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Carnation, possibly?”</p>
-
-<p>“Carnation! That’s right.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith removed the chrysanthemum and dropped it behind his chair. He
-looked at his companion reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p>“If you had studied botany at school, comrade,” he said, “much
-misery might have been averted. I cannot begin to tell you the
-spiritual agony I suffered, trailing through the metropolis behind that
-shrub.”</p>
-
-<p>Whatever decent sympathy and remorse the other might have shown at
-these words was swept away in the shock resultant on a glance at his
-watch. Not for an instant during this brief return of his to London
-had Freddie Threepwood been unmindful of his father’s stern injunction
-to him to catch the twelve-fifty train back to Market Blandings. If
-he missed it, there would be the deuce of a lot of unpleasantness,
-and unpleasantness in the home was the one thing Freddie wanted to
-avoid nowadays; for, like a prudent convict in a prison, he<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[p. 89]</span> hoped by exemplary
-behaviour to get his sentence of imprisonment at Blandings Castle
-reduced for good conduct.</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord! I’ve only got about five minutes. Got to talk
-quick.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. About this thing. This business. That advertisement of
-yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes. My advertisement. It interested you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Was it on the level?”</p>
-
-<p>“Assuredly. We Psmiths do not deceive.”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie looked at him doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“You know, you aren’t a bit like I expected you’d be.”</p>
-
-<p>“In what respect,” inquired Psmith, “do I fall short of the
-ideal?”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t so much falling short. It’s—oh, I don’t know&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well,
-yes, if you want to know, I thought you’d be a tougher specimen
-altogether. I got the impression from your advertisement that you were
-down and out and ready for anything, and you look as if you were on
-your way to a garden-party at Buckingham Palace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” said Psmith, enlightened. “It is my costume that is causing
-these doubts in your mind. This is the second time this morning that
-such a misunderstanding has occurred. Have no misgivings. These
-trousers may sit well, but, if they do, it is because the pockets are
-empty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you really broke?”</p>
-
-<p>“As broke as the Ten Commandments.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m hanged if I can believe it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose I brush my hat the wrong way for a moment?” said Psmith
-obligingly. “Would that help?”</p>
-
-<p>His companion remained silent for a few moments. In spite of the
-fact that he was in so great a hurry and that every minute that
-passed brought nearer the moment when he would be compelled to tear
-himself away and make a dash for Paddington Station, Freddie<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[p. 90]</span> was finding it difficult to
-open the subject he had come there to discuss.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” he said at length, “I shall have to trust you, dash
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You could pursue no better course.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s like this. I’m trying to raise a thousand quid&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I regret that I cannot offer to advance it to you myself. I have,
-indeed, already been compelled to decline to lend a gentleman who
-claimed to be an old friend of mine so small a sum as a fiver. But
-there is a dear, obliging soul of the name of Alistair MacDougall
-who&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord! You don’t think I’m trying to touch you?”</p>
-
-<p>“That impression did flit through my mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dash it, no. No, but—well, as I was saying, I’m frightfully
-keen to get hold of a thousand quid.”</p>
-
-<p>“So am I,” said Psmith. “Two minds with but a single thought.
-How do <i>you</i> propose to start about it? For my part, I must freely
-confess that I haven’t a notion. I am stumped. The cry goes round the
-chancelleries, ‘Psmith is baffled!’”</p>
-
-<p>“I say, old thing,” said Freddie plaintively, “you couldn’t talk a
-bit less, could you? I’ve only got about two minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon. Proceed.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so dashed difficult to know how to begin the thing. I mean,
-it’s all a bit complicated till you get the hang of it.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Look
-here, you said in your advertisement that you had no objection to
-crime.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith considered the point.</p>
-
-<p>“Within reason—and if undetected—I see no objection to two-pennorth
-of crime.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, look here&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. look here&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, look<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[p. 91]</span> here,” said Freddie, “will
-you steal my aunt’s diamond necklace?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith placed his monocle in his eye and bent gravely toward his
-companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Steal your aunt’s necklace?” he said indulgently.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“You do not think she might consider it a liberty from one to whom
-she has never been introduced?”</p>
-
-<p>What Freddie might have replied to this pertinent question will
-never be known, for at this moment, looking nervously at his watch for
-the twentieth time, he observed that the hands had passed the half-hour
-and were well on their way to twenty-five minutes to one. He bounded up
-with a cry.</p>
-
-<p>“I must go! I shall miss that damned train!”</p>
-
-<p>“And meanwhile&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>The familiar phrase—the words “And meanwhile” had occurred at least
-once in every film Freddie had ever seen—had the effect of wrenching
-the latter’s mind back to the subject in hand for a moment. Freddie was
-not a clear-thinking young man, but even he could see that he had left
-the negotiations suspended at a very satisfactory point. Nevertheless,
-he had to catch that twelve-fifty.</p>
-
-<p>“Write and tell me what you think about it,” panted Freddie,
-skimming through the lobby like a swallow.</p>
-
-<p>“You have unfortunately omitted to leave a name and address,” Psmith
-pointed out, following him at an easy jog-trot.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his hurry, a prudence born of much movie-seeing
-restrained Freddie from supplying the information asked for. Give away
-your name and address and you never knew what might happen.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll write to you,” he cried, racing for a cab.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall count the minutes,” said Psmith courteously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[p. 92]</span>“Drive like
-blazes!” said Freddie to the chauffeur.</p>
-
-<p>“Where?” inquired the man, not unreasonably.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? Oh, Paddington.”</p>
-
-<p>The cab whirled off, and Psmith, pleasantly conscious of a morning
-not ill-spent, gazed after it pensively for a moment. Then, with
-the feeling that the authorities of Colney Hatch or some kindred
-establishment had been extraordinarily negligent, he permitted his mind
-to turn with genial anticipation in the direction of lunch. For, though
-he had celebrated his first day of emancipation from Billingsgate Fish
-Market by rising late and breakfasting later, he had become aware by
-now of that not unpleasant emptiness which is the silent luncheon-gong
-of the soul.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_6_3">§ 3</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The minor problem now presented itself of where to lunch; and with
-scarcely a moment’s consideration he dismissed those large, noisy, and
-bustling restaurants which lie near Piccadilly Circus. After a morning
-spent with Eve Halliday and the young man who was going about the place
-asking people to steal his aunt’s necklace, it was imperative that he
-select some place where he could sit and think quietly. Any food of
-which he partook must be consumed in calm, even cloistral surroundings,
-unpolluted by the presence of a first violin who tied himself into
-knots and an orchestra in whose lexicon there was no such word as
-<i>piano</i>. One of his clubs seemed indicated.</p>
-
-<p>In the days of his prosperity, Psmith’s father, an enthusiastic
-clubman, had enrolled his son’s name on the list of several
-institutions: and now, although the lean years had arrived, he was
-still a member of six, and would continue to be a member till the
-beginning of the new year and the consequent call for fresh<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[p. 93]</span> subscriptions. These clubs
-ranged from the Drones, frankly frivolous, to the Senior Conservative,
-solidly worthy. Almost immediately Psmith decided that for such a mood
-as was upon him at the moment, the latter might have been specially
-constructed.</p>
-
-<p>Anybody familiar with the interior of the Senior Conservative Club
-would have applauded his choice. In the whole of London no better
-haven could have been found by one desirous of staying his interior
-with excellently-cooked food while passing his soul under a leisurely
-examination. They fed you well at the Drones, too, no doubt: but
-there Youth held carnival, and the thoughtful man, examining his
-soul, was apt at any moment to have his meditations broken in upon
-by a chunk of bread, dexterously thrown by some bright spirit at an
-adjoining table. No horror of that description could possibly occur
-at the Senior Conservative. The Senior Conservative has six thousand
-one hundred and eleven members. Some of the six thousand one hundred
-and eleven are more respectable than the others, but they are all
-respectable—whether they be numbered among the oldest inhabitants like
-the Earl of Emsworth, who joined as a country member in 1888, or are
-among the recent creations of the last election of candidates. They are
-bald, reverend men, who look as if they are on their way to the City to
-preside at directors’ meetings or have dropped in after conferring with
-the Prime Minister at Downing Street as to the prospects at the coming
-by-election in the Little Wabsley Division.</p>
-
-<p>With the quiet dignity which atoned for his lack in years in this
-stronghold of mellow worth, Psmith mounted the steps, passed through
-the doors which were obligingly flung open for him by two uniformed
-dignitaries, and made his way to the coffee-room.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_94">[p. 94]</span> Here, having selected a table in the middle
-of the room and ordered a simple and appetising lunch, he gave himself
-up to thoughts of Eve Halliday. As he had confessed to his young
-friend Mr. Walderwick, she had made a powerful impression upon him.
-He was tearing himself from his day-dreams in order to wrestle with
-a mutton chop, when a foreign body shot into his orbit and blundered
-heavily against the table. Looking up, he perceived a long, thin,
-elderly gentleman of pleasantly vague aspect, who immediately began to
-apologise.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear sir, I am extremely sorry. I trust I have caused no
-damage.”</p>
-
-<p>“None whatever,” replied Psmith courteously.</p>
-
-<p>“The fact is, I have mislaid my glasses. Blind as a bat without
-them. Can’t see where I’m going.”</p>
-
-<p>A gloomy-looking young man with long and disordered hair, who
-stood at the elderly gentleman’s elbow, coughed suggestively. He was
-shuffling restlessly, and appeared to be anxious to close the episode
-and move on. A young man, evidently, of highly-strung temperament. He
-had a sullen air.</p>
-
-<p>The elderly gentleman started vaguely at the sound of the cough.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?” he said, as if in answer to some spoken remark. “Oh, yes,
-quite so, quite so, my dear fellow. Mustn’t stop here chatting, eh? Had
-to apologise, though. Nearly upset this gentleman’s table. Can’t see
-where I’m going without my glasses. Blind as a bat. Eh? What? Quite so,
-quite so.”</p>
-
-<p>He ambled off, doddering cheerfully, while his companion still
-preserved his look of sulky aloofness. Psmith gazed after them with
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you tell me,” he asked of the waiter, who was rallying round
-with the potatoes, “who that was?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[p. 95]</span>The waiter followed
-his glance.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know who the young gentleman is, sir. Guest here, I fancy.
-The old gentleman is the Earl of Emsworth. Lives in the country and
-doesn’t often come to the club. Very absent-minded gentleman, they tell
-me. Potatoes, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>The waiter drifted away, and returned.</p>
-
-<p>“I have been looking at the guest-book, sir. The name of the
-gentleman lunching with Lord Emsworth is Mr. Ralston McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you very much. I am sorry you had the trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“No trouble, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith resumed his meal.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_6_4">§ 4</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The sullen demeanour of the young man who had accompanied Lord
-Emsworth through the coffee-room accurately reflected the emotions
-which were vexing his troubled soul. Ralston McTodd, the powerful young
-singer of Saskatoon (“Plumbs the depths of human emotion and strikes a
-new note”—<i>Montreal Star</i>. “Very readable”—<i>Ipsilanti Herald</i>), had not
-enjoyed his lunch. The pleasing sense of importance induced by the fact
-that for the first time in his life he was hob-nobbing with a genuine
-earl had given way after ten minutes of his host’s society to a mingled
-despair and irritation which had grown steadily deeper as the meal
-proceeded. It is not too much to say that by the time the fish course
-arrived it would have been a relief to Mr. McTodd’s feelings if he
-could have taken up the butter-dish and banged it down, butter and all,
-on his lordship’s bald head.</p>
-
-<p>A temperamental young man was Ralston McTodd.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_96">[p. 96]</span> He liked to be the centre of the picture,
-to do the talking, to air his views, to be listened to respectfully
-and with interest by a submissive audience. At the meal which had just
-concluded none of these reasonable demands had been permitted to him.
-From the very beginning, Lord Emsworth had collared the conversation
-and held it with a gentle, bleating persistency against all assaults.
-Five times had Mr. McTodd almost succeeded in launching one of his best
-epigrams, only to see it swept away on the tossing flood of a lecture
-on hollyhocks. At the sixth attempt he had managed to get it out,
-complete and sparkling, and the old ass opposite him had taken it in
-his stride like a hurdle and gone galloping off about the mental and
-moral defects of a creature named Angus McAllister, who appeared to be
-his head gardener or something of the kind. The luncheon, though he was
-a hearty feeder and as a rule appreciative of good cooking, had turned
-to ashes in Mr. McTodd’s mouth, and it was a soured and chafing Singer
-of Saskatoon who dropped scowlingly into an arm-chair by the window
-of the lower smoking-room a few moments later. We introduce Ralston
-McTodd to the reader, in short, at a moment when he is very near the
-breaking-point. A little more provocation, and goodness knows what he
-may not do. For the time being, he is merely leaning back in his chair
-and scowling. He has a faint hope, however, that a cigar may bring some
-sort of relief, and he is waiting for one to be ordered for him.</p>
-
-<p>The Earl of Emsworth did not see the scowl. He had not really seen
-Mr. McTodd at all from the moment of his arrival at the club, when
-somebody, who sounded like the head porter, had informed him that a
-gentleman was waiting to see him and had led him up to a shapeless
-blur which had introduced itself as his<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_97">[p. 97]</span> expected guest. The loss of his glasses had
-had its usual effect on Lord Emsworth, making the world a misty place
-in which indefinite objects swam dimly like fish in muddy water. Not
-that this mattered much, seeing that he was in London, for in London
-there was never anything worth looking at. Beyond a vague feeling that
-it would be more comfortable on the whole if he had his glasses—a
-feeling just strong enough to have made him send off a messenger boy to
-his hotel to hunt for them—Lord Emsworth had not allowed lack of vision
-to interfere with his enjoyment of the proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>And, unlike Mr. McTodd, he had been enjoying himself very much.
-A good listener, this young man, he felt. Very soothing, the way he
-had constituted himself a willing audience, never interrupting or
-thrusting himself forward, as is so often the deplorable tendency of
-the modern young man. Lord Emsworth was bound to admit that, much as
-he had disliked the idea of going to London to pick up this poet or
-whatever he was, the thing had turned out better than he had expected.
-He liked Mr. McTodd’s silent but obvious interest in flowers, his tacit
-but warm-hearted sympathy in the matter of Angus McAllister. He was
-glad he was coming to Blandings. It would be agreeable to conduct him
-personally through the gardens, to introduce him to Angus McAllister
-and allow him to plumb for himself the black abysses of that outcast’s
-mental processes.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, he had forgotten all about ordering that cigar&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>“In large gardens where ample space permits,” said Lord Emsworth,
-dropping cosily into his chair and taking up the conversation at
-the point where it had been broken off, “nothing is more desirable
-than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[p. 98]</span> that there
-should be some places, or one at least, of quiet greenery alone,
-without any flowers whatever. I see that you agree with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. McTodd had not agreed with him. The grunt which Lord Emsworth
-had taken for an exclamation of rapturous adhesion to his sentiments
-had been merely a sort of bubble of sound rising from the tortured
-depths of Mr. McTodd’s suffering soul—the cry, as the poet beautifully
-puts it, “of some strong smoker in his agony.” The desire to smoke had
-now gripped Mr. McTodd’s very vitals; but, as some lingering remains
-of the social sense kept him from asking point-blank for the cigar for
-which he yearned, he sought in his mind for a way of approaching the
-subject obliquely.</p>
-
-<p>“In no other way,” proceeded Lord Emsworth, “can the brilliancy of
-flowers be so keenly enjoyed as by&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Talking of flowers,” said Mr. McTodd, “it is a fact, I believe,
-that tobacco smoke is good for roses.”</p>
-
-<p>“. . . as by pacing for a time,” said Lord Emsworth, “in some
-cool, green alley, and then passing on to the flowery places. It is
-partly, no doubt, the unconscious working out of some optical law, the
-explanation of which in everyday language is that the eye&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some people say that smoking is bad for the eyes. I don’t agree
-with them,” said Mr. McTodd warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“. . . being, as it were, saturated with the green colour, is
-the more attuned to receive the others, especially the reds. It was
-probably some such consideration that influenced the designers of the
-many old gardens of England in devoting so much attention to the cult
-of the yew tree. When you come to Blandings, my dear fellow, I will
-show you our celebrated yew alley. And, when you see it, you will agree
-that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[p. 99]</span> I was right in
-taking the stand I did against Angus McAllister’s pernicious views.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was lunching in a club yesterday,” said Mr. McTodd, with the
-splendid McTodd doggedness, “where they had no matches on the tables in
-the smoking-room. Only spills. It made it very inconvenient&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Angus McAllister,” said Lord Emsworth, “is a professional gardener.
-I need say no more. You know as well as I do, my dear fellow, what
-professional gardeners are like when it is a question of moss&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“What it meant was that, when you wanted to light your
-after-luncheon cigar, you had to get up and go to a gas-burner on a
-bracket at the other end of the room&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Moss, for some obscure reason, appears to infuriate them. It rouses
-their basest passions. Nature intended a yew alley to be carpeted with
-a mossy growth. The mossy path in the yew alley at Blandings is in true
-relation for colour to the trees and grassy edges; yet will you credit
-it that that soulless disgrace to Scotland actually wished to grub it
-all up and have a rolled gravel path staring up from beneath those
-immemorial trees! I have already told you how I was compelled to give
-in to him in the matter of the hollyhocks—head gardeners of any ability
-at all are rare in these days and one has to make concessions—but this
-was too much. I was perfectly friendly and civil about it. ‘Certainly,
-McAllister,’ I said, ‘you may have your gravel path if you wish it. I
-make but one proviso, that you construct it over my dead body. Only
-when I am weltering in my blood on the threshold of that yew alley
-shall you disturb one inch of my beautiful moss. Try to remember,
-McAllister,’ I said, still quite cordially, ‘that you are not laying
-out a recreation ground in a Glasgow suburb—you are proposing to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[p. 100]</span> make an eyesore of what
-is possibly the most beautiful nook in one of the finest and oldest
-gardens in the United Kingdom.’ He made some repulsive Scotch noise at
-the back of his throat, and there the matter rests.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Let me, my
-dear fellow,” said Lord Emsworth, writhing down into the depths of his
-chair like an aristocratic snake until his spine rested snugly against
-the leather, “let me describe for you the Yew Alley at Blandings.
-Entering from the west&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. McTodd gave up the struggle and sank back, filled with black and
-deleterious thoughts, into a tobacco-less hell. The smoking-room was
-full now, and on all sides fragrant blue clouds arose from the little
-groups of serious thinkers who were discussing what Gladstone had said
-in ’78. Mr. McTodd, as he watched them, had something of the emotions
-of the Peri excluded from Paradise. So reduced was he by this time that
-he would have accepted gratefully the meanest straight-cut cigarette in
-place of the Corona of his dreams. But even this poor substitute for
-smoking was denied him.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth droned on. Having approached from the west, he was now
-well inside the yew alley.</p>
-
-<p>“Many of the yews, no doubt, have taken forms other than those that
-were originally designed. Some are like turned chessmen; some might
-be taken for adaptations of human figures, for one can trace here
-and there a hat-covered head or a spreading petticoat. Some rise in
-solid blocks with rounded roof and stemless mushroom finial. These
-have for the most part arched recesses, forming arbours. One of the
-tallest&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Eh? What?”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth blinked vaguely at the waiter who had sidled up. A
-moment before he had been a hundred odd miles away, and it was not easy
-to adjust<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[p. 101]</span> his mind
-immediately to the fact that he was in the smoking-room of the Senior
-Conservative Club.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? What?”</p>
-
-<p>“A messenger boy has just arrived with these, your lordship.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth peered in a dazed and woolly manner at the proffered
-spectacle-case. Intelligence returned to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, thank you. Thank you very much. My glasses. Capital! Thank you,
-thank you, thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>He removed the glasses from their case and placed them on his nose:
-and instantly the world sprang into being before his eyes, sharp and
-well-defined. It was like coming out of a fog.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear me!” he said in a self-congratulatory voice.</p>
-
-<p>Then abruptly he sat up, transfixed. The lower smoking-room at the
-Senior Conservative Club is on the street level, and Lord Emsworth’s
-chair faced the large window. Through this, as he raised his now
-spectacled face, he perceived for the first time that among the row of
-shops on the opposite side of the road was a jaunty new florist’s. It
-had not been there at his last visit to the metropolis, and he stared
-at it raptly, as a small boy would stare at a saucer of ice-cream if
-such a thing had suddenly descended from heaven immediately in front of
-him. And, like a small boy in such a situation, he had eyes for nothing
-else. He did not look at his guest. Indeed, in the ecstasy of his
-discovery, he had completely forgotten that he had a guest.</p>
-
-<p>Any flower shop, however small, was a magnet to the Earl of
-Emsworth. And this was a particularly spacious and arresting flower
-shop. Its window was gay with summer blooms. And Lord Emsworth, slowly
-rising<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[p. 102]</span> from his
-chair, “pointed” like a dog that sees a pheasant.</p>
-
-<p>“Bless my soul!” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>If the reader has followed with the closeness which it deserves the
-extremely entertaining conversation of his lordship recorded in the
-last few paragraphs, he will have noted a reference to hollyhocks. Lord
-Emsworth had ventilated the hollyhock question at some little length
-while seated at the luncheon table. But, as we had not the good fortune
-to be present at that enjoyable meal, a brief résumé of the situation
-must now be given and the intelligent public allowed to judge between
-his lordship and the uncompromising McAllister.</p>
-
-<p>Briefly, the position was this. Many head gardeners are apt to
-favour in the hollyhock forms that one cannot but think have for their
-aim an ideal that is a false and unworthy one. Angus McAllister,
-clinging to the head-gardeneresque standard of beauty and correct form,
-would not sanction the wide outer petal. The flower, so Angus held,
-must be very tight and very round, like the uniform of a major-general.
-Lord Emsworth, on the other hand, considered this view narrow, and
-claimed the liberty to try for the very highest and truest beauty
-in hollyhocks. The loosely-folded inner petals of the hollyhock, he
-considered, invited a wonderful play and brilliancy of colour; while
-the wide outer petal, with its slightly waved surface and gently
-frilled edge&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. well, anyway, Lord Emsworth liked his hollyhocks
-floppy and Angus McAllister liked them tight, and bitter warfare had
-resulted, in which, as we have seen, his lordship had been compelled
-to give way. He had been brooding on this defeat ever since, and in
-the florist opposite he saw a possible sympathiser, a potential ally,
-an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[p. 103]</span> intelligent chum
-with whom he could get together and thoroughly damn Angus McAllister’s
-Glaswegian obstinacy.</p>
-
-<p>You would not have suspected Lord Emsworth, from a casual glance, of
-having within him the ability to move rapidly; but it is a fact that
-he was out of the smoking-room and skimming down the front steps of
-the club before Mr. McTodd’s jaw, which had fallen at the spectacle of
-his host bounding out of his horizon of vision like a jack-rabbit, had
-time to hitch itself up again. A moment later, Mr. McTodd, happening
-to direct his gaze out of the window, saw him whiz across the road and
-vanish into the florist’s shop.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this juncture that Psmith, having finished his lunch,
-came downstairs to enjoy a quiet cup of coffee. The room was rather
-crowded, and the chair which Lord Emsworth had vacated offered a wide
-invitation. He made his way to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Is this chair occupied?” he inquired politely. So politely that
-Mr. McTodd’s reply sounded by contrast even more violent than it might
-otherwise have done.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it isn’t!” snapped Mr. McTodd.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith seated himself. He was feeling agreeably disposed to
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord Emsworth has left you then?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Is he a friend of yours?” inquired Mr. McTodd in a voice that
-suggested that he was perfectly willing to accept a proxy as a target
-for his wrath.</p>
-
-<p>“I know him by sight. Nothing more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Blast him!” muttered Mr. McTodd with indescribable virulence.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith eyed him inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p>“Correct me if I am wrong,” he said, “but I seem to detect in your
-manner a certain half-veiled annoyance. Is anything the matter?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[p. 104]</span>Mr. McTodd barked
-bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no. Nothing’s the matter. Nothing whatever, except that that
-old beaver—”—here he wronged Lord Emsworth, who, whatever his faults,
-was not a bearded man—“that old beaver invited me to lunch, talked
-all the time about his infernal flowers, never let me get a word in
-edgeways, hadn’t the common civility to offer me a cigar, and now has
-gone off without a word of apology and buried himself in that shop over
-the way. I’ve never been so insulted in my life!” raved Mr. McTodd.</p>
-
-<p>“Scarcely the perfect host,” admitted Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“And if he thinks,” said Mr. McTodd, rising, “that I’m going to go
-and stay with him at his beastly castle after this, he’s mistaken. I’m
-supposed to go down there with him this evening. And perhaps the old
-fossil thinks I will! After this!” A horrid laugh rolled up from Mr.
-McTodd’s interior. “Likely! I see myself! After being insulted like
-this&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Would <i>you</i>?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith gave the matter thought.</p>
-
-<p>“I am inclined to think no.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so am I damned well inclined to think no!” cried Mr. McTodd.
-“I’m going away now, this very minute. And if that old total loss ever
-comes back, you can tell him he’s seen the last of me.”</p>
-
-<p>And Ralston McTodd, his blood boiling with justifiable indignation
-and pique to a degree dangerous on such a warm day, stalked off towards
-the door with a hard, set face. Through the door he stalked to the
-cloak-room for his hat and cane; then, his lips moving silently, he
-stalked through the hall, stalked down the steps, and passed from the
-scene, stalking furiously round the corner in quest of a tobacconist’s.
-At the moment of his disappearance, the Earl of Emsworth<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[p. 105]</span> had just begun to
-give the sympathetic florist a limpid character-sketch of Angus
-McAllister.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Psmith shook his head sadly. These clashings of human temperament
-were very lamentable. They disturbed the after-luncheon repose of the
-man of sensibility. He ordered coffee, and endeavoured to forget the
-painful scene by thinking of Eve Halliday.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_6_5">§ 5</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The florist who had settled down to ply his trade opposite the
-Senior Conservative Club was a delightful fellow, thoroughly sound on
-the hollyhock question and so informative in the matter of delphiniums,
-achilleas, coreopsis, eryngiums, geums, lupines, bergamot and early
-phloxes that Lord Emsworth gave himself up whole-heartedly to the feast
-of reason and the flow of soul; and it was only some fifteen minutes
-later that he remembered that he had left a guest languishing in the
-lower smoking-room and that this guest might be thinking him a trifle
-remiss in the observance of the sacred duties of hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>“Bless my soul, yes!” said his lordship, coming out from under the
-influence with a start.</p>
-
-<p>Even then he could not bring himself to dash abruptly from the shop.
-Twice he reached the door and twice pottered back to sniff at flowers
-and say something he had forgotten to mention about the Stronger
-Growing Clematis. Finally, however, with one last, longing, lingering
-look behind, he tore himself away and trotted back across the road.</p>
-
-<p>Arrived in the lower smoking-room, he stood in the doorway for a
-moment, peering. The place had been a blur to him when he had left it,
-but he remembered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[p. 106]</span>
-that he had been sitting in the middle window and, as there were only
-two seats by the window, that tall, dark young man in one of them must
-be the guest he had deserted. That he could be a changeling never
-occurred to Lord Emsworth. So pleasantly had the time passed in the
-shop across the way that he had the impression that he had only been
-gone a couple of minutes or so. He made his way to where the young man
-sat. A vague idea came into his head that the other had grown a bit in
-his absence, but it passed.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear fellow,” he said genially, as he slid into the other chair,
-“I really must apologise.”</p>
-
-<p>It was plain to Psmith that the other was under a misapprehension,
-and a really nice-minded young man would no doubt have put the matter
-right at once. The fact that it never for a single instant occurred
-to Psmith to do so was due, no doubt, to some innate defect in his
-character. He was essentially a young man who took life as it came,
-and the more inconsequently it came the better he liked it. Presently,
-he reflected, it would become necessary for him to make some excuse
-and steal quietly out of the other’s life; but meanwhile the situation
-seemed to him to present entertaining possibilities.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” he replied graciously. “Not at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was afraid for a moment,” said Lord Emsworth, “that you
-might—quite naturally—be offended.”</p>
-
-<p>“Absurd!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shouldn’t have left you like that. Shocking bad manners. But, my
-dear fellow, I simply had to pop across the street.”</p>
-
-<p>“Most decidedly,” said Psmith. “Always pop across streets. It is the
-secret of a happy and successful life.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth looked at him a little perplexedly, and wondered
-if he had caught the last remark correctly. But his mind had never
-been designed for the purpose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[p.
-107]</span> of dwelling closely on problems for any length of time, and
-he let it go.</p>
-
-<p>“Beautiful roses that man has,” he observed. “Really an
-extraordinarily fine display.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed?” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to touch mine, though. I wish, my dear fellow, you could
-have been down at Blandings at the beginning of the month. My roses
-were at their best then. It’s too bad you weren’t there to see
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“The fault no doubt was mine,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you weren’t in England then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! That explains it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still, I shall have plenty of flowers to show you when you are at
-Blandings. I expect,” said Lord Emsworth, at last showing a host-like
-disposition to give his guest a belated innings, “I expect you’ll write
-one of your poems about my gardens, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith was conscious of a feeling of distinct gratification. Weeks
-of toil among the herrings of Billingsgate had left him with a sort of
-haunting fear that even in private life there clung to him the miasma
-of the fish market. Yet here was a perfectly unprejudiced observer
-looking squarely at him and mistaking him for a poet—showing that in
-spite of all he had gone through there must still be something notably
-spiritual and unfishy about his outward appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“Very possibly,” he said. “Very possibly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you get ideas for your poetry from all sorts of things,”
-said Lord Emsworth, nobly resisting the temptation to collar the
-conversation again. He was feeling extremely friendly towards this poet
-fellow. It was deuced civil of him not to be put out and huffy at being
-left alone in the smoking-room.</p>
-
-<p>“From practically everything,” said Psmith, “except fish.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[p. 108]</span>“Fish?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have never written a poem about fish.”</p>
-
-<p>“No?” said Lord Emsworth, again feeling that a pin had worked loose
-in the machinery of the conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“I was once offered a princely sum,” went on Psmith, now floating
-happily along on the tide of his native exuberance, “to write a ballad
-for the <i>Fishmonger’s Gazette</i> entitled, ‘Herbert the Turbot.’ But I
-was firm. I declined.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed?” said Lord Emsworth.</p>
-
-<p>“One has one’s self-respect,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, decidedly,” said Lord Emsworth.</p>
-
-<p>“It was painful, of course. The editor broke down completely when
-he realised that my refusal was final. However, I sent him on with a
-letter of introduction to John Drinkwater, who, I believe, turned him
-out quite a good little effort on the theme.”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment, when Lord Emsworth was feeling a trifle dizzy, and
-Psmith, on whom conversation always acted as a mental stimulus, was on
-the point of plunging even deeper into the agreeable depths of light
-persiflage, a waiter approached.</p>
-
-<p>“A lady to see you, your lordship.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? Ah, yes, of course, of course. I was expecting her. It is a
-Miss —— what is the name? Holliday? Halliday. It is a Miss Halliday,”
-he said in explanation to Psmith, “who is coming down to Blandings to
-catalogue the library. My secretary, Baxter, told her to call here and
-see me. If you will excuse me for a moment, my dear fellow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly.”</p>
-
-<p>As Lord Emsworth disappeared, it occurred to Psmith that the moment
-had arrived for him to get his hat and steal softly out of the other’s
-life for ever. Only so could confusion and embarrassing explanations
-be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[p. 109]</span> avoided. And
-it was Psmith’s guiding rule in life always to avoid explanations. It
-might, he felt, cause Lord Emsworth a momentary pang when he returned
-to the smoking-room and found that he was a poet short, but what is
-that in these modern days when poets are so plentiful that it is almost
-impossible to fling a brick in any public place without damaging some
-stern young singer. Psmith’s view of the matter was that, if Lord
-Emsworth was bent on associating with poets, there was bound to be
-another one along in a minute. He was on the point, therefore, of
-rising, when the laziness induced by a good lunch decided him to remain
-in his comfortable chair for a few minutes longer. He was in one of
-those moods of rare tranquillity which it is rash to break.</p>
-
-<p>He lit another cigarette, and his thoughts, as they had done after
-the departure of Mr. McTodd, turned dreamily in the direction of the
-girl he had met at Miss Clarkson’s Employment Bureau. He mused upon
-her with a gentle melancholy. Sad, he felt, that two obviously kindred
-spirits like himself and her should meet in the whirl of London life,
-only to separate again—presumably for ever—simply because the etiquette
-governing those who are created male and female forbids a man to cement
-a chance acquaintanceship by ascertaining the lady’s name and address,
-asking her to lunch, and swearing eternal friendship. He sighed as he
-gazed thoughtfully out of the lower smoking-room window. As he had
-indicated in his conversation with Mr. Walderwick, those blue eyes and
-that cheerful, friendly face had made a deep impression on him. Who was
-she? Where did she live? And was he ever to see her again?</p>
-
-<p>He was. Even as he asked himself the question, two figures came
-down the steps of the club, and paused. One was Lord Emsworth,
-without his hat. The other—and Psmith’s usually orderly heart gave a
-spasmodic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[p. 110]</span> bound
-at the sight of her—was the very girl who was occupying his thoughts.
-There she stood, as blue-eyed, as fair-haired, as indescribably jolly
-and charming as ever.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith rose from his chair with a vehemence almost equal to that
-recently displayed by Mr. McTodd. It was his intention to add himself
-immediately to the group. He raced across the room in a manner that
-drew censorious glances from the local greybeards, many of whom had
-half a mind to write to the committee about it.</p>
-
-<p>But when he reached the open air the pavement at the foot of the
-club steps was empty. The girl was just vanishing round the corner into
-the Strand, and of Lord Emsworth there was no sign whatever.</p>
-
-<p>By this time, however, Psmith had acquired a useful working
-knowledge of his lordship’s habits, and he knew where to look. He
-crossed the street and headed for the florist’s shop.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, my dear fellow,” said his lordship amiably, suspending his
-conversation with the proprietor on the subject of delphiniums, “must
-you be off? Don’t forget that our train leaves Paddington at five
-sharp. You take your ticket for Market Blandings.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith had come into the shop merely with the intention of asking
-his lordship if he happened to know Miss Halliday’s address, but these
-words opened out such a vista of attractive possibilities that he had
-abandoned this tame programme immediately. He remembered now that among
-Mr. McTodd’s remarks on things in general had been one to the effect
-that he had received an invitation to visit Blandings Castle—of which
-invitation he did not propose to avail himself; and he argued that if
-he had acted as substitute for Mr. McTodd at the club, he might well
-continue the kindly work by officiating for him at Blandings. Looking
-at the matter altruistically, he would prevent<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_111">[p. 111]</span> his kind host much disappointment by
-taking this course; and, looking at it from a more personal viewpoint,
-only by going to Blandings could he renew his acquaintance with this
-girl. Psmith had never been one of those who hang back diffidently when
-Adventure calls, and he did not hang back now.</p>
-
-<p>“At five sharp,” he said. “I will be there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Capital, my dear fellow,” said his lordship.</p>
-
-<p>“Does Miss Halliday travel with us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? No, she is coming down in a day or two.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall look forward to meeting her,” said Psmith. He turned to the
-door, and Lord Emsworth with a farewell beam resumed his conversation
-with the florist.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_7">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[p. 112]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII</h2>
- <p class="subh2">BAXTER SUSPECTS</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ch_7_1">§ 1</h3>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">T</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">The</span> five o’clock train,
-having given itself a spasmodic jerk, began to move slowly out of
-Paddington Station. The platform past which it was gliding was crowded
-with a number of the fauna always to be seen at railway stations at
-such moments, but in their ranks there was no sign of Mr. Ralston
-McTodd: and Psmith, as he sat opposite Lord Emsworth in a corner seat
-of a first-class compartment, felt that genial glow of satisfaction
-which comes to the man who has successfully taken a chance. Until now,
-he had been half afraid that McTodd, having changed his mind, might
-suddenly appear with bag and baggage—an event which must necessarily
-have caused confusion and discomfort. His mind was now tranquil.
-Concerning the future he declined to worry. It would, no doubt,
-contain its little difficulties, but he was prepared to meet them
-in the right spirit; and his only trouble in the world now was the
-difficulty he was experiencing in avoiding his lordship’s legs, which
-showed a disposition to pervade the compartment like the tentacles
-of an octopus. Lord Emsworth rather ran to leg, and his practice of
-reclining when at ease on the base of his spine was causing him to
-straddle, like Apollyon in Pilgrim’s Progress, “right across the way.”
-It became manifest that in a journey lasting<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_113">[p. 113]</span> several hours his society was likely to
-prove irksome. For the time being, however, he endured it, and listened
-with polite attention to his host’s remarks on the subject of the
-Blandings gardens. Lord Emsworth, in a train moving in the direction
-of home, was behaving like a horse heading for his stable. He snorted
-eagerly, and spoke at length and with emotion of roses and herbaceous
-borders.</p>
-
-<p>“It will be dark, I suppose, by the time we arrive,” he said
-regretfully, “but the first thing to-morrow, my dear fellow, I must
-take you round and show you my gardens.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall look forward to it keenly,” said Psmith. “They are, I can
-readily imagine, distinctly oojah-cum-spiff.”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon?” said Lord Emsworth with a start.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” said Psmith graciously.</p>
-
-<p>“Er—what did you say?” asked his lordship after a slight pause.</p>
-
-<p>“I was saying that, from all reports, you must have a very nifty
-display of garden-produce at your rural seat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes. Oh, most,” said his lordship, looking puzzled. He examined
-Psmith across the compartment with something of the peering curiosity
-which he would have bestowed upon a new and unclassified shrub. “Most
-extraordinary!” he murmured. “I trust, my dear fellow, you will not
-think me personal, but, do you know, nobody would imagine that you were
-a poet. You don’t look like a poet, and, dash it, you don’t talk like a
-poet.”</p>
-
-<p>“How should a poet talk?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Lord Emsworth considered the point. “Well, Miss
-Peavey&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But of course you don’t know Miss Peavey&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Miss Peavey
-is a poetess, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[p. 114]</span>
-she waylaid me the other morning while I was having a most important
-conference with McAllister on the subject of bulbs and asked me if I
-didn’t think that it was fairies’ tear-drops that made the dew. Did you
-ever hear such dashed nonsense?”</p>
-
-<p>“Evidently an aggravated case. Is Miss Peavey staying at the
-castle?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear fellow, you couldn’t shift her with blasting-powder. Really
-this craze of my sister Constance for filling the house with these
-infernal literary people is getting on my nerves. I can’t stand these
-poets and what not. Never could.”</p>
-
-<p>“We must always remember, however,” said Psmith gravely, “that poets
-are also God’s creatures.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good heavens!” exclaimed his lordship, aghast. “I had forgotten
-that you were one. What will you think of me, my dear fellow! But, of
-course, as I said a moment ago, you are different. I admit that when
-Constance told me that she had invited you to the house I was not
-cheered, but, now that I have had the pleasure of meeting you&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>The conversation had worked round to the very point to which Psmith
-had been wishing to direct it. He was keenly desirous of finding out
-why Mr. McTodd had been invited to Blandings and—a still more vital
-matter—of ascertaining whether, on his arrival there as Mr. McTodd’s
-understudy, he was going to meet people who knew the poet by sight. On
-this latter point, it seemed to him, hung the question of whether he
-was about to enjoy a delightful visit to a historic country house in
-the society of Eve Halliday—or leave the train at the next stop and
-omit to return to it.</p>
-
-<p>“It was extremely kind of Lady Constance,” he hazarded, “to invite a
-perfect stranger to Blandings.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she’s always doing that sort of thing,” said<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[p. 115]</span> his lordship. “It didn’t
-matter to her that she’d never seen you in her life. She had read your
-books, you know, and liked them: and when she heard that you were
-coming to England, she wrote to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said Psmith, relieved.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, it is all right as it has turned out,” said Lord
-Emsworth handsomely. “As I say, you’re different. And how you came to
-write that&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bilge?” suggested Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“The very word I was about to employ, my dear fellow&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. No, no,
-I don’t mean that&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I—I&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Capital stuff, no doubt, capital
-stuff&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Constance tried to make me read the things, but I couldn’t. I fell
-asleep over them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you rested well.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—er—the fact is, I suppose they were beyond me. I couldn’t see any
-sense in the things.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you would care to have another pop at them,” said Psmith
-agreeably, “I have a complete set in my bag.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, my dear fellow, thank you very much, thank you a thousand
-times. I—er—find that reading in the train tries my eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! You would prefer that I read them aloud?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no.” A look of hunted alarm came into his lordship’s speaking
-countenance at the suggestion. “As a matter of fact, I generally take a
-short nap at the beginning of a railway journey. I find it refreshing
-and—er—in short, refreshing. You will excuse me?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you think you can get to sleep all right without the aid of my
-poems, certainly.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t think me rude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, not at all. By the way, am I likely to meet any old
-friends at Blandings?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[p. 116]</span>“Eh? Oh no. There
-will be nobody but ourselves. Except my sister and Miss Peavey, of
-course. You said you had not met Miss Peavey, I think?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have not had that pleasure. I am, of course, looking forward to
-it with the utmost keenness.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth eyed him for a moment, astonished: then concluded the
-conversation by closing his eyes defensively. Psmith was left to his
-reflections, which a few minutes later were interrupted by a smart kick
-on the shin, as Lord Emsworth, a jumpy sleeper, began to throw his long
-legs about. Psmith moved to the other end of the seat, and, taking his
-bag down from the rack, extracted a slim volume bound in squashy mauve.
-After gazing at this in an unfriendly manner for a moment, he opened it
-at random and began to read. His first move on leaving Lord Emsworth
-at the florist’s had been to spend a portion of his slender capital on
-the works of Ralston McTodd in order not to be taken at a disadvantage
-in the event of questions about them at Blandings: but he speedily
-realised, as he dipped into the poems, that anything in the nature of
-a prolonged study of them was likely to spoil his little holiday. They
-were not light summer reading.</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<p class="i0">“<i>Across the pale parabola of Joy</i>&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>A gurgling snort from the other end of the compartment abruptly
-detached his mind from its struggle with this mystic line. He perceived
-that his host had slipped even further down on to his spine and was now
-lying with open mouth in an attitude suggestive of dislocation. And as
-he looked, there was a whistling sound, and another snore proceeded
-from the back of his lordship’s throat.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith rose and took his book of poems out into<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[p. 117]</span> the corridor with the
-purpose of roaming along the train until he should find an empty
-compartment in which to read in peace.</p>
-
-<p>With the two adjoining compartments he had no luck. One was occupied
-by an elderly man with a retriever, while the presence of a baby in the
-other ruled it out of consideration. The third, however, looked more
-promising. It was not actually empty, but there was only one occupant,
-and he was asleep. He was lying back in the far corner with a large
-silk handkerchief draped over his face and his feet propped up on the
-seat opposite. His society did not seem likely to act as a bar to the
-study of Mr. McTodd’s masterpieces. Psmith sat down and resumed his
-reading.</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<p class="i0">“<i>Across the pale parabola of Joy</i>&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Psmith knitted his brow. It was just the sort of line which
-was likely to have puzzled his patroness, Lady Constance, and he
-anticipated that she would come to him directly he arrived and ask for
-an explanation. It would obviously be a poor start for his visit to
-confess that he had no theory as to its meaning himself. He tried it
-again.</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<p class="i0">“<i>Across the pale parabola of Joy</i>&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>A sound like two or three pigs feeding rather noisily
-in the middle of a thunderstorm interrupted his meditations.
-Psmith laid his book down and gazed in a
-pained way across the compartment. There came to
-him a sense of being unfairly put upon, as towards the
-end of his troubles it might have come upon Job. This,
-he felt, was too much. He was being harried.</p>
-
-<p>The man in the corner went on snoring.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[p. 118]</span>There is always
-a way. Almost immediately Psmith saw what Napoleon would have done in
-this crisis. On the seat beside the sleeper was lying a compact little
-suit-case with hard, sharp edges. Rising softly, Psmith edged along the
-compartment and secured this. Then, having balanced it carefully on
-the rack above the sleeper’s stomach, he returned to his seat to await
-developments.</p>
-
-<p>These were not long in coming. The train, now flying at its best
-speed through open country, was shaking itself at intervals in a
-vigorous way as it raced along. A few seconds later it apparently
-passed over some points, and shivered briskly down its whole length.
-The suit-case wobbled insecurely, hesitated, and fell chunkily in
-the exact middle of its owner’s waistcoat. There was a smothered
-gulp beneath the handkerchief. The sleeper sat up with a jerk. The
-handkerchief fell off. And there was revealed to Psmith’s interested
-gaze the face of the Hon. Freddie Threepwood.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_7_2">§ 2</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Goo!” observed Freddie. He removed the bag from his midriff and
-began to massage the stricken spot. Then suddenly perceiving that he
-was not alone he looked up and saw Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Goo!” said Freddie, and sat staring wildly.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody is more alive than we are to the fact that the dialogue of
-Frederick Threepwood, recorded above, is not bright. Nevertheless,
-those were his opening remarks, and the excuse must be that he had
-passed through a trying time and had just received two shocks, one
-after the other. From the first of these, the physical impact of the
-suit-case, he was recovering; but the second had simply paralysed him.
-When, the mists of sleep having cleared away, he saw sitting but a
-few<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[p. 119]</span> feet away from
-him on the train that was carrying him home the very man with whom he
-had plotted in the lobby of the Piccadilly Palace Hotel, a cold fear
-gripped Freddie’s very vitals.</p>
-
-<p>Freddie’s troubles had begun when he just missed the twelve-fifty
-train. This disaster had perturbed him greatly, for he could not
-forget his father’s stern injunctions on the subject. But what had
-really upset him was the fact that he had come within an ace of
-missing the five o’clock train as well. He had spent the afternoon in
-a motion-picture palace, and the fascination of the film had caused
-him to lose all sense of time, so that only the slow fade-out on the
-embrace and the words “The End” reminded him to look at his watch. A
-mad rush had got him to Paddington just as the five o’clock express was
-leaving the station. Exhausted, he had fallen into a troubled sleep,
-from which he had been aroused by a violent blow in the waistcoat and
-the nightmare vision of Psmith in the seat across the compartment. One
-cannot wonder in these circumstances that Freddie did not immediately
-soar to the heights of eloquence.</p>
-
-<p>The picture which the Hon. Frederick Threepwood had selected for his
-patronage that afternoon was the well-known super-super-film, “Fangs
-Of The Past,” featuring Bertha Blevitch and Maurice Heddlestone—which,
-as everybody knows, is all about blackmail. Green-walled by primeval
-hills, bathed in the golden sunshine of peace and happiness, the
-village of Honeydean slumbered in the clear morning air. But off
-the train from the city stepped A Stranger—(The Stranger—Maxwell
-Bannister). He inquired of a passing rustic—(The Passing Rustic—Claude
-Hepworth)—the way to the great house where Myrtle Dale, the
-Lady Bountiful of the village&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. well,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_120">[p. 120]</span> anyway, it is all about blackmail, and it
-had affected Freddie profoundly. It still coloured his imagination, and
-the conclusion to which he came the moment he saw Psmith was that the
-latter had shadowed him and was following him home with the purpose of
-extracting hush-money.</p>
-
-<p>While he was still gurgling wordlessly, Psmith opened the
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“A delightful and unexpected pleasure, comrade. I thought you had
-left the Metropolis some hours since.”</p>
-
-<p>As Freddie sat looking like a cornered dormouse a voice from the
-corridor spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, there you are, my dear fellow!”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth was beaming in the doorway. His slumbers, like those
-of Freddie, had not lasted long. He had been aroused only a few minutes
-after Psmith’s departure by the arrival of the retriever from the next
-compartment, which, bored by the society of its owner, had strolled off
-on a tour of investigation and, finding next door an old acquaintance
-in the person of his lordship, had jumped on the seat and licked his
-face with such hearty good will that further sleep was out of the
-question. Being awake, Lord Emsworth, as always when he was awake, had
-begun to potter.</p>
-
-<p>When he saw Freddie his amiability suffered a shock.</p>
-
-<p>“Frederick! I thought I told you to be sure to return on the
-twelve-fifty train!”</p>
-
-<p>“Missed it, guv’nor,” mumbled Freddie thickly. “Not my fault.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’mph!” His father seemed about to pursue the subject, but the
-fact that a stranger and one who was his guest was present apparently
-decided him to avoid anything in the shape of family wrangles. He
-peered from Freddie to Psmith and back again. “Do you two know each
-other?” he said.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[p. 121]</span>“Not yet,” said
-Psmith. “We only met a moment ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“My son Frederick,” said Lord Emsworth, rather in the voice with
-which he would have called attention to the presence of a slug among
-his flowers. “Frederick, this is Mr. McTodd, the poet, who is coming to
-stay at Blandings.”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie started, and his mouth opened. But, meeting Psmith’s
-friendly gaze, he closed the orifice again without speaking. He licked
-his lips in an overwrought way.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll find me next door, if you want me,” said Lord Emsworth
-to Psmith. “Just discovered that George Willard, very old friend of
-mine, is in there. Never saw him get on the train. His dog came into
-my compartment and licked my face. One of my neighbours. A remarkable
-rose-grower. As you are so interested in flowers, I will take you over
-to his place some time. Why don’t you join us now?”</p>
-
-<p>“I would prefer, if you do not mind,” said Psmith, “to remain here
-for the moment and foster what I feel sure is about to develop into a
-great and lasting friendship. I am convinced that your son and I will
-have much to talk about together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, my dear fellow. We will meet at dinner in the
-restaurant-car.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth pottered off, and Psmith rose and closed the door.
-He returned to his seat to find Freddie regarding him with a tortured
-expression in his rather prominent eyes. Freddie’s brain had had more
-exercise in the last few minutes than in years of his normal life, and
-he was feeling the strain.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, what?” he observed feebly.</p>
-
-<p>“If there is anything,” said Psmith kindly, “that<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[p. 122]</span> I can do to clear up any
-little difficulty that is perplexing you, call on me. What is biting
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie swallowed convulsively.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, he said your name was McTodd!”</p>
-
-<p>“Precisely.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you said it was Psmith.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why did father call you McTodd?”</p>
-
-<p>“He thinks I am. It is a harmless error, and I see no reason why it
-should be discouraged.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why does he think you’re McTodd?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a long story, which you may find tedious. But, if you really
-wish to hear it&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could have exceeded the raptness of Freddie’s attention as
-he listened to the tale of the encounter with Lord Emsworth at the
-Senior Conservative Club.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean to say,” he demanded at its conclusion, “that you’re
-coming to Blandings pretending to be this poet blighter?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is the scheme.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have my reasons, Comrade—what is the name? Threepwood? I thank
-you. You will pardon me, Comrade Threepwood, if I do not go into them.
-And now,” said Psmith, “to resume our very interesting chat which was
-unfortunately cut short this morning, why do you want me to steal your
-aunt’s necklace?”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie jumped. For the moment, so tensely had the fact of his
-companion’s audacity chained his interest, he had actually forgotten
-about the necklace.</p>
-
-<p>“Great Scott!” he exclaimed. “Why, of course!”</p>
-
-<p>“You still have not made it quite clear.”</p>
-
-<p>“It fits splendidly.”</p>
-
-<p>“The necklace?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean to say, the great difficulty would have<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[p. 123]</span> been to find a way of
-getting you into the house, and here you are, coming there as this poet
-bird. Topping!”</p>
-
-<p>“If,” said Psmith, regarding him patiently through his eyeglass,
-“I do not seem to be immediately infected by your joyous enthusiasm,
-put it down to the fact that I haven’t the remotest idea what you’re
-talking about. Could you give me a pointer or two? What, for instance,
-assuming that I agreed to steal your aunt’s necklace, would you expect
-me to do with it, when and if stolen?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, hand it over to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see. And what would you do with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hand it over to my uncle.”</p>
-
-<p>“And whom would he hand it over to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” said Freddie, “I might as well start at the
-beginning.”</p>
-
-<p>“An excellent idea.”</p>
-
-<p>The speed at which the train was now proceeding had begun to render
-conversation in anything but stentorian tones somewhat difficult.
-Freddie accordingly bent forward till his mouth almost touched Psmith’s
-ear.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, it’s like this. My uncle, old Joe Keeble&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Keeble?” said Psmith. “Why,” he murmured meditatively, “is that
-name familiar?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t interrupt, old lad,” pleaded Freddie.</p>
-
-<p>“I stand corrected.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Joe has a stepdaughter—Phyllis her name is—and some time ago
-she popped off and married a cove called Jackson&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith did not interrupt the narrative again, but as it proceeded
-his look of interest deepened. And at the conclusion he patted his
-companion encouragingly on the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“The proceeds, then, of this jewel-robbery, if it comes off,” he
-said, “will go to establish the Jackson home on a firm footing? Am I
-right in thinking that?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[p. 124]</span>“Absolutely.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no danger—you will pardon the suggestion—of you clinging
-like glue to the swag and using it to maintain yourself in the position
-to which you are accustomed?”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely not. Uncle Joe is giving me—er—giving me a bit for
-myself. Just a small bit, you understand. This is the scheme. You sneak
-the necklace and hand it over to me. I push the necklace over to Uncle
-Joe, who hides it somewhere for the moment. There is the dickens of a
-fuss, and Uncle Joe comes out strong by telling Aunt Constance that
-he’ll buy her another necklace, just as good. Then he takes the stones
-out of the necklace, has them reset, and gives them to Aunt Constance.
-Looks like a new necklace, if you see what I mean. Then he draws a
-cheque for twenty thousand quid, which Aunt Constance naturally thinks
-is for the new necklace, and he shoves the money somewhere as a little
-private account. He gives Phyllis her money, and everybody’s happy.
-Aunt Constance has got her necklace, Phyllis has got her money, and all
-that’s happened is that Aunt Constance’s and Uncle Joe’s combined bank
-balance has had a bit of a hole knocked in it. See?”</p>
-
-<p>“I see. It is a little difficult to follow all the necklaces. I
-seemed to count about seventeen of them while you were talking, but I
-suppose I was wrong. Yes, I see, Comrade Threepwood, and I may say at
-once that you can rely on my co-operation.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” said Freddie awkwardly, “I’ll see that you get a bit
-all right. I mean&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith waved his hand deprecatingly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[p. 125]</span>“My dear Comrade
-Threepwood, let us not become sordid on this glad occasion. As far as I
-am concerned, there will be no charge.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! But look here&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Any assistance I can give will be offered in a purely amateur
-spirit. I would have mentioned before, only I was reluctant to
-interrupt you, that Comrade Jackson is my boyhood chum, and that
-Phyllis, his wife, injects into my life the few beams of sunshine that
-illumine its dreary round. I have long desired to do something to
-ameliorate their lot, and now that the chance has come I am delighted.
-It is true that I am not a man of affluence—my bank-manager, I am told,
-winces in a rather painful manner whenever my name is mentioned—but I
-am not so reduced that I must charge a fee for performing, on behalf of
-a pal, a simple act of courtesy like pinching a twenty thousand pound
-necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord! Fancy that!”</p>
-
-<p>“Fancy what, Comrade Threepwood?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fancy your knowing Phyllis and her husband.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is odd, no doubt. But true. Many a whack at the cold beef have I
-had on Sunday evenings under their roof, and I am much obliged to you
-for putting in my way this opportunity of repaying their hospitality.
-Thank you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s all right,” said Freddie, somewhat bewildered by this
-eloquence.</p>
-
-<p>“Even if the little enterprise meets with disaster, the reflection
-that I did my best for the young couple will be a great consolation
-to me when I am serving my bit of time in Wormwood Scrubbs. It will
-cheer me up. The jailers will cluster outside the door to listen to me
-singing in my cell. My pet rat, as he creeps out to share the crumbs of
-my breakfast, will wonder why I whistle as I pick the morning’s oakum.
-I shall join in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[p. 126]</span>
-hymns on Sundays in a way that will electrify the chaplain. That is
-to say, if anything goes wrong and I am what I believe is technically
-termed ‘copped.’ I say ‘if,’” said Psmith, gazing solemnly at his
-companion. “But I do not intend to be copped. I have never gone in
-largely for crime hitherto, but something tells me I shall be rather
-good at it. I look forward confidently to making a nice, clean job of
-the thing. And now, Comrade Threepwood, I must ask you to excuse me
-while I get the half-nelson on this rather poisonous poetry of good
-old McTodd’s. From the cursory glance I have taken at it, the stuff
-doesn’t seem to mean anything. I think the boy’s <i>non compos</i>. <i>You</i>
-don’t happen to understand the expression ‘Across the pale parabola of
-Joy,’ do you?&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I feared as much. Well, pip-pip for the present,
-Comrade Threepwood. I shall now ask you to retire into your corner
-and amuse yourself for awhile as you best can. I must concentrate,
-concentrate.”</p>
-
-<p>And Psmith, having put his feet up on the opposite seat and reopened
-the mauve volume, began to read. Freddie, his mind still in a whirl,
-looked out of the window at the passing scenery in a mood which was a
-nice blend of elation and apprehension.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_7_3">§ 3</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Although the hands of the station clock pointed to several minutes
-past nine, it was still apparently early evening when the train drew up
-at the platform of Market Blandings and discharged its distinguished
-passengers. The sun, taken in as usual by the never-failing practical
-joke of the Daylight Saving Act, had only just set, and a golden
-afterglow lingered on the fields as the car which had met the
-train purred over the two miles of country road that separated the
-little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[p. 127]</span> town from
-the castle. As they passed in between the great stone gate-posts and
-shot up the winding drive, the soft murmur of the engines seemed
-to deepen rather than break the soothing stillness. The air was
-fragrant with indescribable English scents. Somewhere in the distance
-sheep-bells tinkled; rabbits, waggling white tails, bolted across the
-path; and once a herd of agitated deer made a brief appearance among
-the trees. The only thing that disturbed the magic hush was the fluting
-voice of Lord Emsworth, on whom the spectacle of his beloved property
-had acted as an immediate stimulant. Unlike his son Freddie, who sat
-silent in his corner wrestling with his hopes and fears, Lord Emsworth
-had plunged into a perfect Niagara of speech the moment the car entered
-the park. In a high tenor voice, and with wide, excited gestures, he
-pointed out to Psmith oaks with a history and rhododendrons with a
-past: his conversation as they drew near the castle and came in sight
-of the flower-beds taking on an almost lyrical note and becoming a
-sort of anthem of gladness, through which, like some theme in the
-minor, ran a series of opprobrious observations on the subject of Angus
-McAllister.</p>
-
-<p>Beach, the butler, solicitously scooping them out of the car at the
-front door, announced that her ladyship and Miss Peavey were taking
-their after-dinner coffee in the arbour by the bowling-green; and
-presently Psmith, conducted by his lordship, found himself shaking
-hands with a strikingly handsome woman in whom, though her manner
-was friendliness itself, he could detect a marked suggestion of the
-formidable. Æsthetically, he admired Lady Constance’s appearance, but
-he could not conceal from himself that in the peculiar circumstances he
-would have preferred something rather more fragile and drooping. Lady
-Constance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[p. 128]</span> conveyed
-the impression that anybody who had the choice between stealing
-anything from her and stirring up a nest of hornets with a short
-walking-stick would do well to choose the hornets.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you do, Mr. McTodd?” said Lady Constance with great
-amiability. “I am so glad you were able to come after all.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith wondered what she meant by “after all,” but there were so
-many things about his present situation calculated to tax the mind that
-he had no desire to probe slight verbal ambiguities. He shook her hand
-and replied that it was very kind of her to say so.</p>
-
-<p>“We are quite a small party at present,” continued Lady Constance,
-“but we are expecting a number of people quite soon. For the moment
-Aileen and you are our only guests. Oh, I am sorry, I should have&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Miss Peavey, Mr. McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>The slim and willowy female who during this brief conversation had
-been waiting in an attitude of suspended animation, gazing at Psmith
-with large, wistful eyes, stepped forward. She clasped Psmith’s hand in
-hers, held it, and in a low, soft voice, like thick cream made audible,
-uttered one reverent word.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Maître!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon?” said Psmith. A young man capable of bearing
-himself with calm and dignity in most circumstances, however trying, he
-found his poise wobbling under the impact of Miss Aileen Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey often had this effect on the less soulful type of man,
-especially in the mornings, when such men are not at their strongest
-and best. When she came into the breakfast-room of a country house,
-brave men who had been up a bit late the night before quailed and tried
-to hide behind newspapers. She was the sort of woman who tells a man
-who is propping his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[p. 129]</span>
-eyes open with his fingers and endeavouring to correct a headache with
-strong tea, that she was up at six watching the dew fade off the grass,
-and didn’t he think that those wisps of morning mist were the elves’
-bridal-veils. She had large, fine, melancholy eyes, and was apt to
-droop dreamily.</p>
-
-<p>“Master!” said Miss Peavey, obligingly translating.</p>
-
-<p>There did not seem to be any immediate come-back to a remark like
-this, so Psmith contented himself with beaming genially at her through
-his monocle: and Miss Peavey came to bat again.</p>
-
-<p>“How wonderful that you were able to come—after all!”</p>
-
-<p>Again this “after all” motive creeping into the theme.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>“You know Miss Peavey’s work, of course?” said Lady Constance,
-smiling pleasantly on her two celebrities.</p>
-
-<p>“Who does not?” said Psmith courteously.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, <i>do</i> you?” said Miss Peavey, gratification causing her slender
-body to perform a sort of ladylike shimmy down its whole length. “I
-scarcely hoped that you would know my name. My Canadian sales have not
-been large.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite large enough,” said Psmith. “I mean, of course,” he added
-with a paternal smile, “that, while your delicate art may not have a
-universal appeal in a young country, it is intensely appreciated by a
-small and select body of the intelligentsia.”</p>
-
-<p>And if that was not the stuff to give them, he reflected with not a
-little complacency, he was dashed.</p>
-
-<p>“Your own wonderful poems,” replied Miss Peavey, “are, of course,
-known the whole world over. Oh, Mr. McTodd, you can hardly appreciate
-how I feel, meeting you. It is like the realisation of some golden
-dream of childhood. It is like&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Here the Hon. Freddie Threepwood remarked<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_130">[p. 130]</span> suddenly that he was going to pop into
-the house for a whisky and soda. As he had not previously spoken, his
-observation had something of the effect of a voice from the tomb. The
-daylight was ebbing fast now, and in the shadows he had contrived to
-pass out of sight as well as out of mind. Miss Peavey started like an
-abruptly awakened somnambulist, and Psmith was at last able to release
-his hand, which he had begun to look on as gone beyond his control for
-ever. Until this fortunate interruption there had seemed no reason why
-Miss Peavey should not have continued to hold it till bedtime.</p>
-
-<p>Freddie’s departure had the effect of breaking a spell. Lord
-Emsworth, who had been standing perfectly still with vacant eyes, like
-a dog listening to a noise a long way off, came to life with a jerk.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to have a look at my flowers,” he announced.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be silly, Clarence,” said his sister. “It’s much too dark to
-see flowers.”</p>
-
-<p>“I could smell ’em,” retorted his lordship argumentatively.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed as if the party must break up, for already his lordship
-had begun to potter off, when a new-comer arrived to solidify it
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Baxter, my dear fellow,” said Lord Emsworth. “Here we are, you
-see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Baxter,” said Lady Constance, “I want you to meet Mr.
-McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. McTodd!” said the new arrival, on a note of surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he found himself able to come after all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” said the Efficient Baxter.</p>
-
-<p>It occurred to Psmith as a passing thought, to which he gave
-no more than a momentary attention, that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_131">[p. 131]</span> this spectacled and capable-looking man
-was gazing at him, as they shook hands, with a curious intensity. But
-possibly, he reflected, this was merely a species of optical illusion
-due to the other’s spectacles. Baxter, staring through his spectacles,
-often gave people the impression of possessing an eye that could pierce
-six inches of harveyised steel and stick out on the other side. Having
-registered in his consciousness the fact that he had been stared at
-keenly by this stranger, Psmith thought no more of the matter.</p>
-
-<p>In thus lightly dismissing the Baxterian stare, Psmith had
-acted injudiciously. He should have examined it more closely and
-made an effort to analyse it, for it was by no means without its
-message. It was a stare of suspicion. Vague suspicion as yet, but
-nevertheless suspicion. Rupert Baxter was one of those men whose chief
-characteristic is a disposition to suspect their fellows. He did not
-suspect them of this or that definite crime: he simply suspected them.
-He had not yet definitely accused Psmith in his mind of any specific
-tort or malfeasance. He merely had a nebulous feeling that he would
-bear watching.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey now fluttered again into the centre of things. On the
-arrival of Baxter she had withdrawn for a moment into the background,
-but she was not the woman to stay there long. She came forward holding
-out a small oblong book, which, with a languishing firmness, she
-pressed into Psmith’s hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Could I persuade you, Mr. McTodd,” said Miss Peavey pleadingly, “to
-write some little thought in my autograph-book and sign it? I have a
-fountain-pen.”</p>
-
-<p>Light flooded the arbour. The Efficient Baxter, who knew where
-everything was, had found and pressed the switch. He did this not so
-much to oblige<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[p. 132]</span> Miss
-Peavey as to enable him to obtain a clearer view of the visitor. With
-each minute that passed the Efficient Baxter was finding himself more
-and more doubtful in his mind about this visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“There!” said Miss Peavey, welcoming the illumination.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith tapped his chin thoughtfully with the fountain-pen. He felt
-that he should have foreseen this emergency earlier. If ever there was
-a woman who was bound to have an autograph-book, that woman was Miss
-Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>“Just some little thought&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith hesitated no longer. In a firm hand he wrote the words
-“Across the pale parabola of Joy&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” added an unfaltering “Ralston
-McTodd,” and handed the book back.</p>
-
-<p>“How strange,” sighed Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>“May I look?” said Baxter, moving quickly to her side.</p>
-
-<p>“How strange!” repeated Miss Peavey. “To think that you should have
-chosen that line! There are several of your more mystic passages that I
-meant to ask you to explain, but particularly ‘Across the pale parabola
-of Joy’&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“You find it difficult to understand?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little, I confess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well,” said Psmith indulgently, “perhaps I did put a bit of
-top-spin on that one.”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon?”</p>
-
-<p>“I say, perhaps it is a little obscure. We must have a long chat
-about it—later on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not now?” demanded the Efficient Baxter, flashing his
-spectacles.</p>
-
-<p>“I am rather tired,” said Psmith with gentle reproach, “after my
-journey. Fatigued. We artists&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” said Miss Peavey, with an indignant<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[p. 133]</span> glance at the secretary.
-“Mr. Baxter does not understand the sensitive poetic temperament.”</p>
-
-<p>“A bit unspiritual, eh?” said Psmith tolerantly. “A trifle earthy?
-So I thought, so I thought. One of these strong, hard men of affairs, I
-shouldn’t wonder.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we go and find Lord Emsworth, Mr. McTodd?” said Miss Peavey,
-dismissing the fermenting Baxter with a scornful look. “He wandered off
-just now. I suppose he is among his flowers. Flowers are very beautiful
-by night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, yes,” said Psmith. “And also by day. When I am surrounded
-by flowers, a sort of divine peace floods over me, and the rough, harsh
-world seems far away. I feel soothed, tranquil. I sometimes think, Miss
-Peavey, that flowers must be the souls of little children who have died
-in their innocence.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a beautiful thought, Mr. McTodd!” exclaimed Miss Peavey
-rapturously.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” agreed Psmith. “Don’t pinch it. It’s copyright.”</p>
-
-<p>The darkness swallowed them up. Lady Constance turned to the
-Efficient Baxter, who was brooding with furrowed brow.</p>
-
-<p>“Charming, is he not?”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon?”</p>
-
-<p>“I said I thought Mr. McTodd was charming.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, quite.”</p>
-
-<p>“Completely unspoiled.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, decidedly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am so glad that he was able to come after all. That telegram he
-sent this afternoon cancelling his visit seemed so curt and final.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I thought it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Almost as if he had taken offence at something and decided to have
-nothing to do with us.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[p. 134]</span>“Quite.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Constance shivered delicately. A cool breeze had sprung up.
-She drew her wrap more closely about her shapely shoulders, and began
-to walk to the house. Baxter did not accompany her. The moment she had
-gone he switched off the light and sat down, chin in hand. That massive
-brain was working hard.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_8">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[p. 135]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
- <p class="subh2">CONFIDENCES ON THE LAKE</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ch_8_1">§ 1</h3>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">“M</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap2"><span class="upc">“Miss Halliday,”</span> announced
-the Efficient Baxter, removing another letter from its envelope and
-submitting it to a swift, keen scrutiny, “arrives at about three
-to-day. She is catching the twelve-fifty train.”</p>
-
-<p>He placed the letter on the pile beside his plate; and, having
-decapitated an egg, peered sharply into its interior as if hoping
-to surprise guilty secrets. For it was the breakfast hour, and the
-members of the house party, scattered up and down the long table, were
-fortifying their tissues against another day. An agreeable scent of
-bacon floated over the scene like a benediction.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth looked up from the seed catalogue in which he was
-immersed. For some time past his enjoyment of the meal had been marred
-by a vague sense of something missing, and now he knew what it was.</p>
-
-<p>“Coffee!” he said, not violently, but in the voice of a good man
-oppressed. “I want coffee. Why have I no coffee? Constance, my dear, I
-should have coffee. Why have I none?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I gave you some,” said Lady Constance, brightly presiding
-over the beverages at the other end of the table.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[p. 136]</span>“Then where is
-it?” demanded his lordship clinchingly.</p>
-
-<p>Baxter—almost regretfully, it seemed—gave the egg a clean bill
-of health, and turned in his able way to cope with this domestic
-problem.</p>
-
-<p>“Your coffee is behind the catalogue you are reading, Lord Emsworth.
-You propped the catalogue against your cup.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did I? Did I? Why, so I did! Bless my soul!” His lordship,
-relieved, took an invigorating sip. “What were you saying just then, my
-dear fellow?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have had a letter from Miss Halliday,” said Baxter. “She writes
-that she is catching the twelve-fifty train at Paddington, which means
-that she should arrive at Market Blandings at about three.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who,” asked Miss Peavey, in a low, thrilling voice, ceasing for a
-moment to peck at her plate of kedgeree, “is Miss Halliday?”</p>
-
-<p>“The exact question I was about to ask myself,” said Lord Emsworth.
-“Baxter, my dear fellow, who is Miss Halliday?”</p>
-
-<p>Baxter, with a stifled sigh, was about to refresh his employer’s
-memory, when Psmith anticipated him. Psmith had been consuming toast
-and marmalade with his customary languid grace and up till now had
-firmly checked all attempts to engage him in conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Halliday,” he said, “is a very old and valued friend of mine.
-We two have, so to speak, pulled the gowans fine. I had been hoping to
-hear that she had been sighted on the horizon.”</p>
-
-<p>The effect of these words on two of the company was somewhat
-remarkable. Baxter, hearing them, gave such a violent start that
-he spilled half the contents of his cup: and Freddie, who had been
-flitting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[p. 137]</span> like
-a butterfly among the dishes on the sideboard and had just decided
-to help himself to scrambled eggs, deposited a liberal spoonful on
-the carpet, where it was found and salvaged a moment later by Lady
-Constance’s spaniel.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith did not observe these phenomena, for he had returned to his
-toast and marmalade. He thus missed encountering perhaps the keenest
-glance that had ever come through Rupert Baxter’s spectacles. It was
-not a protracted glance, but while it lasted it was like the ray from
-an oxy-acetylene blowpipe.</p>
-
-<p>“A friend of yours?” said Lord Emsworth. “Indeed? Of course, Baxter,
-I remember now. Miss Halliday is the young lady who is coming to
-catalogue the library.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a delightful task!” cooed Miss Peavey. “To live among the
-stored-up thoughts of dead and gone genius!”</p>
-
-<p>“You had better go down and meet her, my dear fellow,” said Lord
-Emsworth. “At the station, you know,” he continued, clarifying his
-meaning. “She will be glad to see you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was about to suggest it myself,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Though why the library needs cataloguing,” said his lordship,
-returning to a problem which still vexed his soul when he had leisure
-to give a thought to it, “I can’t&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. However&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>He finished his coffee and rose from the table. A stray shaft of
-sunlight had fallen provocatively on his bald head, and sunshine always
-made him restive.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to your flowers, Lord Emsworth?” asked Miss
-Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? What? Yes. Oh, yes. Going to have a look at those lobelias.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will accompany you, if I may,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[p. 138]</span>“Eh? Why,
-certainly, certainly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have always held,” said Psmith, “that there is no finer tonic
-than a good look at a lobelia immediately after breakfast. Doctors, I
-believe, recommend it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I say,” said Freddie hastily, as he reached the door, “can I
-have a couple of words with you a bit later on?”</p>
-
-<p>“A thousand if you wish it,” said Psmith. “You will find me
-somewhere out there in the great open spaces where men are men.”</p>
-
-<p>He included the entire company in a benevolent smile, and left the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>“How charming he is!” sighed Miss Peavey. “Don’t you think so, Mr.
-Baxter?”</p>
-
-<p>The Efficient Baxter seemed for a moment to find some difficulty in
-replying.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, very,” he said, but not heartily.</p>
-
-<p>“And such a <i>soul</i>! It shines on that wonderful brow of his, doesn’t
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“He has a good forehead,” said Lady Constance. “But I wish he
-wouldn’t wear his hair so short. Somehow it makes him seem unlike a
-poet.”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie, alarmed, swallowed a mouthful of scrambled egg.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he’s a poet all right,” he said hastily.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, really, Freddie,” said Lady Constance, piqued, “I think we
-hardly need <i>you</i> to tell us that.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, of course. But what I mean is, in spite of his wearing his
-hair short, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ventured to speak to him of that yesterday,” said Miss Peavey,
-“and he said he rather expected to be wearing it even shorter very
-soon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Freddie!” cried Lady Constance with asperity. “What <i>are</i> you
-doing?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[p. 139]</span>A brown lake of
-tea was filling the portion of the tablecloth immediately opposite the
-Hon. Frederick Threepwood. Like the Efficient Baxter a few minutes
-before, sudden emotion had caused him to upset his cup.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_8_2">§ 2</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The scrutiny of his lordship’s lobelias had palled upon Psmith at
-a fairly early stage in the proceedings, and he was sitting on the
-terrace wall enjoying a meditative cigarette when Freddie found him.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Comrade Threepwood,” said Psmith, “welcome to Blandings Castle!
-You said something about wishing to have speech with me, if I remember
-rightly?”</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Freddie shot a nervous glance about him, and seated himself
-on the wall.</p>
-
-<p>“I say,” he said, “I wish you wouldn’t say things like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Like what, Comrade Threepwood?”</p>
-
-<p>“What you said to the Peavey woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“I recollect having a refreshing chat with Miss Peavey yesterday
-afternoon,” said Psmith, “but I cannot recall saying anything
-calculated to bring the blush of shame to the cheek of modesty. What
-observation of mine was it that meets with your censure?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that stuff about expecting to wear your hair shorter. If
-you’re going to go about saying that sort of thing—well, dash it, you
-might just as well give the whole bally show away at once and have done
-with it.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith nodded gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“Your generous heat, Comrade Threepwood, is not unjustified. It
-was undoubtedly an error of judgment. If I have a fault—which I am
-not prepared to admit—it is a perhaps ungentlemanly desire to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[p. 140]</span> pull that curious
-female’s leg. A stronger man than myself might well find it hard to
-battle against the temptation. However, now that you have called it
-to my notice, it shall not occur again. In future I will moderate the
-persiflage. Cheer up, therefore, Comrade Threepwood, and let us see
-that merry smile of yours, of which I hear such good reports.”</p>
-
-<p>The appeal failed to alleviate Freddie’s gloom. He smote morosely at
-a fly which had settled on his furrowed brow.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m getting as jumpy as a cat,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Fight against this unmanly weakness,” urged Psmith. “As far as I
-can see, everything is going along nicely.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not so sure. I believe that blighter Baxter suspects
-something.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think he suspects?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that there’s something fishy about you.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith winced.</p>
-
-<p>“I would be infinitely obliged to you, Comrade Threepwood, if you
-would not use that particular adjective. It awakens old memories, all
-very painful. But let us go more deeply into this matter, for you
-interest me strangely. Why do you think that cheery old Baxter, a
-delightful personality if ever I met one, suspects me?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the way he looks at you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know what you mean, but I attribute no importance to it. As far
-as I have been able to ascertain during my brief visit, he looks at
-everybody and everything in precisely the same way. Only last night at
-dinner I observed him glaring with keen mistrust at about as blameless
-and innocent a plate of clear soup as was ever dished up. He then
-proceeded to shovel it down with quite undisguised relish. So possibly
-you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[p. 141]</span> are all wrong
-about his motive for looking at me like that. It may be admiration.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor, from an æsthetic point of view, do I. But we must bear
-these things manfully. We must remind ourselves that it is Baxter’s
-misfortune rather than his fault that he looks like a dyspeptic
-lizard.”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie was not to be consoled. His gloom deepened.</p>
-
-<p>“And it isn’t only Baxter.”</p>
-
-<p>“What else is on your mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“The whole atmosphere of the place is getting rummy, if you know
-what I mean.” He bent towards Psmith and whispered pallidly. “I say, I
-believe that new housemaid is a detective!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith eyed him patiently.</p>
-
-<p>“Which new housemaid, Comrade Threepwood? Brooding, as I do,
-pretty tensely all the time on deep and wonderful subjects, I have
-little leisure to keep tab on the domestic staff. <i>Is</i> there a new
-housemaid?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Susan, her name is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Susan? Susan? That sounds all right. Just the name a real housemaid
-would have.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever,” demanded Freddie earnestly, “see a real housemaid
-sweep under a bureau?”</p>
-
-<p>“Does she?”</p>
-
-<p>“Caught her at it in my room this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“But isn’t it a trifle far-fetched to imagine that she is a
-detective? Why should she be a detective?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve seen such a dashed lot of films where the housemaid or
-the parlourmaid or what not were detectives. Makes a fellow uneasy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fortunately,” said Psmith, “there is no necessity to remain in a
-state of doubt. I can give you an unfailing method by means of which
-you may discover if she is what she would have us believe her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[p. 142]</span>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Kiss her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kiss her!”</p>
-
-<p>“Precisely. Go to her and say, ‘Susan, you’re a very pretty
-girl&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.’”</p>
-
-<p>“But she isn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“We will assume, for purposes of argument, that she is. Go to her
-and say, ‘Susan, you are a very pretty girl. What would you do if I
-were to kiss you?’ If she is a detective, she will reply, ‘How dare
-you, sir!’ or, possibly, more simply, ‘Sir!’ Whereas if she is the
-genuine housemaid I believe her to be and only sweeps under bureaux out
-of pure zeal, she will giggle and remark, ‘Oh, don’t be silly, sir!’
-You appreciate the distinction?”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“My grandmother told me, Comrade Threepwood. My advice to you,
-if the state of doubt you are in is affecting your enjoyment of
-life, is to put the matter to the test at the earliest convenient
-opportunity.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll think it over,” said Freddie dubiously.</p>
-
-<p>Silence fell upon him for a space, and Psmith was well content
-to have it so. He had no specific need of Freddie’s prattle to help
-him enjoy the pleasant sunshine and the scent of Angus McAllister’s
-innumerable flowers. Presently, however, his companion was off again.
-But now there was a different note in his voice. Alarm seemed to have
-given place to something which appeared to be embarrassment. He coughed
-several times, and his neatly-shod feet, writhing in self-conscious
-circles, scraped against the wall.</p>
-
-<p>“I say!”</p>
-
-<p>“You have our ear once more, Comrade Threepwood,” said Psmith
-politely.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, what I really came out here to talk about<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[p. 143]</span> was something else. I
-say, are you really a pal of Miss Halliday’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“Assuredly. Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“I say!” A rosy blush mantled the Hon. Freddie’s young cheek. “I
-say, I wish you would put in a word for me, then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Put in a word for you?”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie gulped.</p>
-
-<p>“I love her, dash it!”</p>
-
-<p>“A noble emotion,” said Psmith courteously. “When did you feel it
-coming on?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been in love with her for months. But she won’t look at
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That, of course,” agreed Psmith, “must be a disadvantage. Yes, I
-should imagine that that would stick the gaff into the course of true
-love to no small extent.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean, won’t take me seriously, and all that. Laughs at me, don’t
-you know, when I propose. What would you do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should stop proposing,” said Psmith, having given the matter
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>“But I can’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tut, tut!” said Psmith severely. “And, in case the expression is
-new to you, what I mean is ‘Pooh, pooh!’ Just say to yourself, ‘From
-now on I will not start proposing until after lunch.’ That done, it
-will be an easy step to do no proposing during the afternoon. And by
-degrees you will find that you can give it up altogether. Once you have
-conquered the impulse for the after-breakfast proposal, the rest will
-be easy. The first one of the day is always the hardest to drop.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe she thinks me a mere butterfly,” said Freddie, who had
-not been listening to this most valuable homily.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[p. 144]</span>Psmith slid down
-from the wall and stretched himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” he said, “are butterflies so often described as ‘mere’? I
-have heard them so called a hundred times, and I cannot understand
-the reason.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, it would, no doubt, be both interesting
-and improving to go into the problem, but at this point, Comrade
-Threepwood, I leave you. I would brood.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but, I say, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Will I what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Put in a word for me?”</p>
-
-<p>“If,” said Psmith, “the subject crops up in the course of the
-chit-chat, I shall be delighted to spread myself with no little vim on
-the theme of your fine qualities.”</p>
-
-<p>He melted away into the shrubbery, just in time to avoid Miss
-Peavey, who broke in on Freddie’s meditations a moment later and kept
-him company till lunch.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_8_3">§ 3</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The twelve-fifty train drew up with a grinding of brakes at the
-platform of Market Blandings, and Psmith, who had been whiling away the
-time of waiting by squandering money which he could ill afford on the
-slot-machine which supplied butter-scotch, turned and submitted it to a
-grave scrutiny. Eve Halliday got out of a third-class compartment.</p>
-
-<p>“Welcome to our village, Miss Halliday,” said Psmith, advancing.</p>
-
-<p>Eve regarded him with frank astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing here?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord Emsworth was kind enough to suggest that, as we were such old
-friends, I should come down in the car and meet you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are we old friends?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[p. 145]</span>“Surely. Have you
-forgotten all those happy days in London?”</p>
-
-<p>“There was only one.”</p>
-
-<p>“True. But think how many meetings we crammed into it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you staying at the castle?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. And what is more, I am the life and soul of the party. Have
-you anything in the shape of luggage?”</p>
-
-<p>“I nearly always take luggage when I am going to stay a month or so
-in the country. It’s at the back somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will look after it. You will find the car outside. If you care to
-go and sit in it, I will join you in a moment. And, lest the time hangs
-heavy on your hands, take this. Butter-scotch. Delicious, and, so I
-understand, wholesome. I bought it specially for you.”</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later, having arranged for the trunk to be taken to
-the castle, Psmith emerged from the station and found Eve drinking in
-the beauties of the town of Market Blandings.</p>
-
-<p>“What a delightful old place,” she said as they drove off. “I almost
-wish I lived here.”</p>
-
-<p>“During the brief period of my stay at the castle,” said Psmith,
-“the same thought has occurred to me. It is the sort of place where one
-feels that one could gladly settle down into a peaceful retirement and
-grow a honey-coloured beard.” He looked at her with solemn admiration.
-“Women are wonderful,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“And why, Mr. Bones, are women wonderful?” asked Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“I was thinking at the moment of your appearance. You have just
-stepped off the train after a four-hour journey, and you are as fresh
-and blooming as—if I may coin a simile—a rose. How do you do it?<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[p. 146]</span> When I arrived I was
-deep in alluvial deposits, and have only just managed to scrape them
-off.”</p>
-
-<p>“When did you arrive?”</p>
-
-<p>“On the evening of the day on which I met you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s so extraordinary. That you should be here, I mean. I was
-wondering if I should ever see you again.” Eve coloured a little, and
-went on rather hurriedly. “I mean, it seems so strange that we should
-always be meeting like this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fate, probably,” said Psmith. “I hope it isn’t going to spoil your
-visit?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no.”</p>
-
-<p>“I could have done with a trifle more emphasis on the last word,”
-said Psmith gently. “Forgive me for criticising your methods of voice
-production, but surely you can see how much better it would have
-sounded spoken thus: ‘Oh, <i>no</i>!’”</p>
-
-<p>Eve laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, then,” she said. “Oh, <i>no</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Much better,” said Psmith. “Much better.”</p>
-
-<p>He began to see that it was going to be difficult to introduce a
-eulogy of the Hon. Freddie Threepwood into this conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m very glad you’re here,” said Eve, resuming the talk after a
-slight pause. “Because, as a matter of fact, I’m feeling just the least
-bit nervous.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nervous? Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is my first visit to a place of this size.” The car had turned
-in at the big stone gates, and they were bowling smoothly up the
-winding drive. Through an avenue of trees to the right the great bulk
-of the castle had just appeared, grey and imposing against the sky.
-The afternoon sun glittered on the lake beyond it. “Is everything very
-stately?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[p. 147]</span>“Not at all. We
-are very homely folk, we of Blandings Castle. We go about, simple and
-unaffected, dropping gracious words all over the place. Lord Emsworth
-didn’t overawe you, did he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he’s a dear. And, of course, I know Freddie quite well.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith nodded. If she knew Freddie quite well, there was naturally
-no need to talk about him. He did not talk about him, therefore.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you known Lord Emsworth long?” asked Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“I met him for the first time the day I met you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good gracious!” Eve stared. “And he invited you to the castle?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith smoothed his waistcoat.</p>
-
-<p>“Strange, I agree. One can only account for it, can one not, by
-supposing that I radiate some extraordinary attraction. Have you
-noticed it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No!”</p>
-
-<p>“No?” said Psmith, surprised. “Ah, well,” he went on tolerantly, “no
-doubt it will flash upon you quite unexpectedly sooner or later. Like a
-thunderbolt or something.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you’re terribly conceited.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” said Psmith. “Conceited? No, no. Success has not
-spoiled me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you had any success?”</p>
-
-<p>“None whatever.” The car stopped. “We get down here,” said Psmith,
-opening the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Here? Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because, if we go up to the house, you will infallibly be pounced
-on and set to work by one Baxter—a delightful fellow, but a whale for
-toil. I propose to conduct you on a tour round the grounds, and then we
-will go for a row on the lake. You will enjoy that.”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to have mapped out my future for me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[p. 148]</span>“I have,”
-said Psmith with emphasis, and in the monocled eye that met hers
-Eve detected so beaming a glance of esteem and admiration that she
-retreated warily into herself and endeavoured to be frigid.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid I haven’t time to wander about the grounds,” she said
-aloofly. “I must be going and seeing Mr. Baxter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Baxter,” said Psmith, “is not one of the natural beauties of the
-place. Time enough to see him when you are compelled to&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. We are
-now in the southern pleasaunce or the west home-park or something. Note
-the refined way the deer are cropping the grass. All the ground on
-which we are now standing is of historic interest. Oliver Cromwell went
-through here in 1550. The record has since been lowered.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t time&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leaving the pleasaunce on our left, we proceed to the northern
-messuage. The dandelions were imported from Egypt by the ninth
-Earl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, anyhow,” said Eve mutinously, “I won’t come on the lake.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will enjoy the lake,” said Psmith. “The newts are of the
-famous old Blandings strain. They were introduced, together with the
-water-beetles, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth. Lord Emsworth, of
-course, holds manorial rights over the mosquito-swatting.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve was a girl of high and haughty spirit, and as such strongly
-resented being appropriated and having her movements directed by one
-who, in spite of his specious claims, was almost a stranger. But
-somehow she found her companion’s placid assumption of authority
-hard to resist. Almost meekly she accompanied him through meadow
-and shrubbery, over velvet lawns and past gleaming flower-beds, and
-her indignation evaporated as her eyes absorbed the beauty<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[p. 149]</span> of it all. She gave a
-little sigh. If Market Blandings had seemed a place in which one might
-dwell happily, Blandings Castle was a paradise.</p>
-
-<p>“Before us now,” said Psmith, “lies the celebrated Yew Alley, so
-called from the yews which hem it in. Speaking in my capacity of guide
-to the estate, I may say that when we have turned this next corner you
-will see a most remarkable sight.”</p>
-
-<p>And they did. Before them, as they passed in under the boughs of
-an aged tree lay a green vista, faintly dappled with stray shafts of
-sunshine. In the middle of this vista the Hon. Frederick Threepwood was
-embracing a young woman in the dress of a housemaid.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_8_4">§ 4</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Psmith was the first of the little group to recover from the
-shock of this unexpected encounter, the Hon. Freddie the last. That
-unfortunate youth, meeting Eve’s astonished eye as he raised his head,
-froze where he stood and remained with his mouth open until she had
-disappeared, which she did a few moments later, led away by Psmith,
-who, as he went, directed at his young friend a look in which surprise,
-pain, and reproof were so nicely blended that it would have been hard
-to say which predominated. All that a spectator could have said with
-certainty was that Psmith’s finer feelings had suffered a severe
-blow.</p>
-
-<p>“A painful scene,” he remarked to Eve, as he drew her away in the
-direction of the house. “But we must always strive to be charitable.
-He may have been taking a fly out of her eye, or teaching her
-jiu-jitsu.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her searchingly.</p>
-
-<p>“You seem less revolted,” he said, “than one might<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[p. 150]</span> have expected. This
-argues a sweet, shall we say angelic disposition and confirms my
-already high opinion of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all. Mark you,” said Psmith, “I don’t think that this sort
-of thing is a hobby of Comrade Threepwood’s. He probably has many other
-ways of passing his spare time. Remember that before you pass judgment
-upon him. Also—Young Blood, and all that sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t any intention of passing judgment upon him. It doesn’t
-interest me what Mr. Threepwood does, either in his spare time or out
-of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“His interest in you, on the other hand, is vast. I forgot to
-tell you before, but he loves you. He asked me to mention it if the
-conversation happened to veer round in that direction.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know he does,” said Eve ruefully.</p>
-
-<p>“And does the fact stir no chord in you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think he’s a nuisance.”</p>
-
-<p>“That,” said Psmith cordially, “is the right spirit. I like to see
-it. Very well, then, we will discard the topic of Freddie, and I will
-try to find others that may interest, elevate, and amuse you. We are
-now approaching the main buildings. I am no expert in architecture,
-so cannot tell you all I could wish about the façade, but you can see
-there <i>is</i> a façade, and in my opinion—for what it is worth—a jolly
-good one. We approach by a sweeping gravel walk.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am going in to report to Mr. Baxter,” said Eve with decision.
-“It’s too absurd. I mustn’t spend my time strolling about the grounds.
-I must see Mr. Baxter at once.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith inclined his head courteously.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing easier. That big, open window there is<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[p. 151]</span> the library. Doubtless
-Comrade Baxter is somewhere inside, toiling away among the
-archives.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but I can’t announce myself by shouting to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Assuredly not,” said Psmith. “No need for that at all. Leave
-it to me.” He stooped and picked up a large flower-pot which stood
-under the terrace wall, and before Eve could intervene had tossed it
-lightly through the open window. A muffled thud, followed by a sharp
-exclamation from within, caused a faint smile of gratification to
-illumine his solemn countenance. “He <i>is</i> in. I thought he would be.
-Ah, Baxter,” he said graciously, as the upper half of a body surmounted
-by a spectacled face framed itself suddenly in the window, “a pleasant,
-sunny afternoon. How is everything?”</p>
-
-<p>The Efficient Baxter struggled for utterance.</p>
-
-<p>“You look like the Blessed Damozel gazing down from the gold bar
-of Heaven,” said Psmith genially. “Baxter, I want to introduce you to
-Miss Halliday. She arrived safely after a somewhat fatiguing journey.
-You will like Miss Halliday. If I had a library, I could not wish for a
-more courteous, obliging, and capable cataloguist.”</p>
-
-<p>This striking and unsolicited testimonial made no appeal to the
-Efficient Baxter. His mind seemed occupied with other matters.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you throw that flower-pot?” he demanded coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“You will no doubt,” said Psmith, “wish on some later occasion
-to have a nice long talk with Miss Halliday in order to give her an
-outline of her duties. I have been showing her the grounds and am
-about to take her for a row on the lake. But after that she will—and I
-know I may speak for Miss Halliday in this matter—be entirely at your
-disposal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you throw that flower-pot?”</p>
-
-<p>“I look forward confidently to the pleasantest of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[p. 152]</span> associations between you
-and Miss Halliday. You will find her,” said Psmith warmly, “a willing
-assistant, a tireless worker.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?”</p>
-
-<p>“But now,” said Psmith, “I must be tearing myself away. In order to
-impress Miss Halliday, I put on my best suit when I went to meet her.
-For a row upon the lake something simpler in pale flannel is indicated.
-I shall only be a few minutes,” he said to Eve. “Would you mind meeting
-me at the boat-house?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not coming on the lake with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“At the boat-house in—say—six and a quarter minutes,” said Psmith
-with a gentle smile, and pranced into the house like a long-legged
-mustang.</p>
-
-<p>Eve remained where she stood, struggling between laughter and
-embarrassment. The Efficient Baxter was still leaning wrathfully out
-of the library window, and it began to seem a little difficult to
-carry on an ordinary conversation. The problem of what she was to say
-in order to continue the scene in an agreeable manner was solved by
-the arrival of Lord Emsworth, who pottered out from the bushes with a
-rake in his hand. He stood eyeing Eve for a moment, then memory seemed
-to wake. Eve’s appearance was easier to remember, possibly, than some
-of the things which his lordship was wont to forget. He came forward
-beamingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, there you are, Miss&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Dear me, I’m really
-afraid I have forgotten your name. My memory is excellent as a rule,
-but I cannot remember names&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Miss Halliday! Of
-course, of course. Baxter, my dear fellow,” he proceeded, sighting the
-watcher at the window, “this is Miss Halliday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. McTodd,” said the Efficient One sourly, “has already introduced
-me to Miss Halliday.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[p. 153]</span>“Has he? Deuced
-civil of him, deuced civil of him. But where <i>is</i> he?” inquired his
-lordship, scanning the surrounding scenery with a vague eye.</p>
-
-<p>“He went into the house. After,” said Baxter in a cold voice,
-“throwing a flower-pot at me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doing what?”</p>
-
-<p>“He threw a flower-pot at me,” said Baxter, and vanished moodily.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth stared at the open window, then turned to Eve for
-enlightenment.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Why</i> did Baxter throw a flower-pot at McTodd?” he said. “And,” he
-went on, ventilating an even deeper question, “where the deuce did he
-get a flower-pot? There are no flower-pots in the library.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve, on her side, was also seeking information.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you say his name was McTodd, Lord Emsworth?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no. Baxter. That was Baxter, my secretary.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I mean the one who met me at the station.”</p>
-
-<p>“Baxter did not meet you at the station. The man who met you at
-the station,” said Lord Emsworth, speaking slowly, for women are so
-apt to get things muddled, “was McTodd. He’s staying here. Constance
-asked him, and I’m bound to say when I first heard of it I was not any
-too well pleased. I don’t like poets as a rule. But this fellow’s so
-different from the other poets I’ve met. Different altogether. And,”
-said Lord Emsworth with not a little heat, “I strongly object to Baxter
-throwing flower-pots at him. I won’t <i>have</i> Baxter throwing flower-pots
-at my guests,” he said firmly; for Lord Emsworth, though occasionally a
-little vague, was keenly alive to the ancient traditions of his family
-regarding hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>“Is Mr. McTodd a poet?” said Eve, her heart beating.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? Oh yes, yes. There seems to be no doubt<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_154">[p. 154]</span> about that. A Canadian poet. Apparently
-they have poets out there. And,” demanded his lordship, ever a
-fair-minded man, “why not? A remarkably growing country. I was there in
-the year ’98. Or was it,” he added, thoughtfully passing a muddy hand
-over his chin and leaving a rich brown stain, “’99? I forget. My memory
-isn’t good for dates.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. If you will excuse me, Miss—Miss Halliday,
-of course—if you will excuse me, I must be leaving you. I have to see
-McAllister, my head gardener. An obstinate man. A Scotchman. If you go
-into the house, my sister Constance will give you a cup of tea. I don’t
-know what the time is, but I suppose there will be tea soon. Never take
-it myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. McTodd asked me to go for a row on the lake.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the lake, eh? On the <i>lake</i>?” said his lordship, as if this was
-the last place in the neighbourhood where he would have expected to
-hear of people proposing to row. Then he brightened. “Of course, yes,
-on the lake. I think you will like the lake. I take a dip there myself
-every morning before breakfast. I find it good for the health and
-appetite. I plunge in and swim perhaps fifty yards, and then return.”
-Lord Emsworth suspended the gossip from the training-camp in order to
-look at his watch. “Dear me,” he said, “I must be going. McAllister
-has been waiting fully ten minutes. Good-bye, then, for the present,
-Miss—er—good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p>And Lord Emsworth ambled off, on his face that look of tense
-concentration which it always wore when interviews with Angus
-McAllister were in prospect—the look which stern warriors wear when
-about to meet a foeman worthy of their steel.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_8_5">§ 5</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>There was a cold expression in Eve’s eyes as she made<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[p. 155]</span> her way slowly to the
-boat-house. The information which she had just received had come as a
-shock, and she was trying to adjust her mind to it. When Miss Clarkson
-had told her of the unhappy conclusion to her old school friend’s
-marriage to Ralston McTodd, she had immediately, without knowing
-anything of the facts, arrayed herself loyally on Cynthia’s side and
-condemned the unknown McTodd uncompromisingly and without hesitation.
-It was many years since she had seen Cynthia, and their friendship
-might almost have been said to have lapsed; but Eve’s affection, when
-she had once given it, was a durable thing, capable of surviving long
-separation. She had loved Cynthia at school, and she could feel nothing
-but animosity towards anyone who had treated her badly. She eyed the
-glittering water of the lake from under lowered brows, and prepared to
-be frigid and hostile when the villain of the piece should arrive. It
-was only when she heard footsteps behind her and turned to perceive
-Psmith hurrying up, radiant in gleaming flannel, that it occurred to
-her for the first time that there might have been faults on both sides.
-She had not known Psmith long, it was true, but already his personality
-had made a somewhat deep impression on her, and she was loath to
-believe that he could be the callous scoundrel of her imagination. She
-decided to suspend judgment until they should be out in mid-water and
-in a position to discuss the matter without interruption.</p>
-
-<p>“I am a little late,” said Psmith, as he came up. “I was detained
-by our young friend Freddie. He came into my room and started talking
-about himself at the very moment when I was tying my tie and needed
-every ounce of concentration for that delicate task. The recent
-painful episode appeared to be weighing on his mind to some extent.”
-He helped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[p. 156]</span> Eve into
-the boat and started to row. “I consoled him as best I could by telling
-him that it would probably have made you think all the more highly of
-him. I ventured the suggestion that girls worship the strong, rough,
-dashing type of man. And, after I had done my best to convince him that
-he was a strong, rough, dashing man, I came away. By now, of course,
-he may have had a relapse into despair; so, if you happen to see a
-body bobbing about in the water as we row along, it will probably be
-Freddie’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind about Freddie.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t if you don’t,” said Psmith agreeably. “Very well, then, if
-we see a body, we will ignore it.” He rowed on a few strokes. “Correct
-me if I am wrong,” he said, resting on his oars and leaning forward,
-“but you appear to be brooding about something. If you will give me a
-clue, I will endeavour to assist you to grapple with any little problem
-which is troubling you. What is the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>Eve, questioned thus directly, found it difficult to open the
-subject. She hesitated a moment, and let the water ripple through her
-fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“I have only just found out your name, Mr. McTodd,” she said at
-length.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“It is always thus,” he said. “Passing through this life, we meet a
-fellow-mortal, chat awhile, and part; and the last thing we think of
-doing is to ask him in a manly and direct way what his label is. There
-is something oddly furtive and shamefaced in one’s attitude towards
-people’s names. It is as if we shrank from probing some hideous secret.
-We say to ourselves ‘This pleasant stranger may be a Snooks or a
-Buggins. Better not inquire.’ But in my case&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was a great shock to me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[p. 157]</span>“Now there,” said
-Psmith, “I cannot follow you. I wouldn’t call McTodd a bad name, as
-names go. Don’t you think there is a sort of Highland strength about
-it? It sounds to me like something out of ‘The Lady of the Lake’ or
-‘The Lay of the Last Minstrel.’ ‘The stag at eve had drunk its fill
-adoon the glen beyint the hill, and welcomed with a friendly nod old
-Scotland’s pride, young Laird McTodd.’ You don’t think it has a sort of
-wild romantic ring?”</p>
-
-<p>“I ought to tell you, Mr. McTodd,” said Eve, “that I was at school
-with Cynthia.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith was not a young man who often found himself at a loss, but
-this remark gave him a bewildered feeling such as comes in dreams.
-It was plain to him that this delightful girl thought she had said
-something serious, even impressive; but for the moment it did not seem
-to him to make sense. He sparred warily for time.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed? With Cynthia? That must have been jolly.”</p>
-
-<p>The harmless observation appeared to have the worst effect upon his
-companion. The frown came back to her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t speak in that flippant, sneering way,” she said. “It’s so
-cheap.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith, having nothing to say, remained silent, and the boat drifted
-on. Eve’s face was delicately pink, for she was feeling extraordinarily
-embarrassed. There was something in the solemn gaze of the man
-before her which made it difficult for her to go on. But, with the
-stout-heartedness which was one of her characteristics, she stuck to
-her task.</p>
-
-<p>“After all,” she said, “however you may feel about her now, you must
-have been fond of poor Cynthia at one time, or I don’t see why you
-should have married her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[p. 158]</span>Psmith, for want
-of conversation, had begun rowing again. The start he gave at these
-remarkable words caused him to skim the surface of the water with the
-left oar in such a manner as to send a liberal pint into Eve’s lap. He
-started forward with apologies.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, never mind about that,” said Eve impatiently. “It doesn’t
-matter.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Mr. McTodd,” she said, and there was a note of gentleness
-in her voice, “I do wish you would tell me what the trouble was.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith stared at the floor of the boat in silence. He was wrestling
-with a feeling of injury. True, he had not during their brief
-conversation at the Senior Conservative Club specifically inquired of
-Mr. McTodd whether he was a bachelor, but somehow he felt that the man
-should have dropped some hint as to his married state. True, again,
-Mr. McTodd had not asked him to impersonate him at Blandings Castle.
-And yet, undeniably, he felt that he had a grievance. Psmith’s was
-an orderly mind. He had proposed to continue the pleasant relations
-which had begun between Eve and himself, seeing to it that every day
-they became a little pleasanter, until eventually, in due season, they
-should reach the point where it would become possible to lay heart and
-hand at her feet. For there was no doubt in his mind that in a world
-congested to overflowing with girls Eve Halliday stood entirely alone.
-And now this infernal Cynthia had risen from nowhere to stand between
-them. Even a young man as liberally endowed with calm assurance as he
-was might find it awkward to conduct his wooing with such a handicap as
-a wife in the background.</p>
-
-<p>Eve misinterpreted his silence.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you are thinking that it is no business of mine?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith came out of his thoughts with a start.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[p. 159]</span>“No, no. Not at
-all.”</p>
-
-<p>“You see, I’m devoted to Cynthia—and I like you.”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled for the first time. Her embarrassment was passing.</p>
-
-<p>“That is the whole point,” she said. “I do like you. And I’m quite
-sure that if you were really the sort of man I thought you when I first
-heard about all this, I shouldn’t. The friend who told me about you
-and Cynthia made it seem as if the whole fault had been yours. I got
-the impression that you had been very unkind to Cynthia. I thought you
-must be a brute. And when Lord Emsworth told me who you were, my first
-impulse was to hate you. I think if you had come along just then I
-should have been rather horrid to you. But you were late, and that gave
-me time to think it over. And then I remembered how nice you had been
-to me and I felt somehow that—that you must really be quite nice, and
-it occurred to me that there might be some explanation. And I thought
-that—perhaps—if you would let me interfere in your private affairs—and
-if things hadn’t gone too far—I might do something to help—try to bring
-you together, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>She broke off, a little confused, for now that the words were out
-she was conscious of a return of her former shyness. Even though she
-was an old friend of Cynthia’s, there did seem something insufferably
-officious in this meddling. And when she saw the look of pain on her
-companion’s face, she regretted that she had spoken. Naturally, she
-thought, he was offended.</p>
-
-<p>In supposing that Psmith was offended she was mistaken. Internally
-he was glowing with a renewed admiration for all those beautiful
-qualities in her which he had detected, before they had ever met,
-at several yards’ range across the street from the window<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[p. 160]</span> of the Drones Club
-smoking-room. His look of pain was due to the fact that, having now
-had time to grapple with the problem, he had decided to dispose of
-this Cynthia once and for all. He proposed to eliminate her for ever
-from his life. And the elimination of even such a comparative stranger
-seemed to him to call for a pained look. So he assumed one.</p>
-
-<p>“That,” he said gravely, “would, I fear, be impossible. It is like
-you to suggest it, and I cannot tell you how much I appreciate the
-kindness which has made you interest yourself in my troubles, but it is
-too late for any reconciliation. Cynthia and I are divorced.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the temptation had come to him to kill the woman off
-with some wasting sickness, but this he resisted as tending towards
-possible future complications. He was resolved, however, that there
-should be no question of bringing them together again.</p>
-
-<p>He was disturbed to find Eve staring at him in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Divorced? But how can you be divorced? It’s only a few days since
-you and she were in London together.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith ceased to wonder that Mr. McTodd had had trouble with his
-wife. The woman was a perfect pest.</p>
-
-<p>“I used the term in a spiritual rather than a legal sense,” he
-replied. “True, there has been no actual decree, but we are separated
-beyond hope of reunion.” He saw the distress in Eve’s eyes and hurried
-on. “There are things,” he said, “which it is impossible for a man
-to overlook, however broad-minded he may be. Love, Miss Halliday, is
-a delicate plant. It needs tending, nursing, assiduous fostering.
-This cannot be done by throwing the breakfast bacon at a husband’s
-head.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[p. 161]</span>“What!” Eve’s
-astonishment was such that the word came out in a startled squeak.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>In</i> the dish,” said Psmith sadly.</p>
-
-<p>Eve’s blue eyes opened wide.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Cynthia</i> did that!”</p>
-
-<p>“On more than one occasion. Her temper in the mornings was terrible.
-I have known her lift the cat over two chairs and a settee with a
-single kick. And all because there were no mushrooms.”</p>
-
-<p>“But—but I can’t believe it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Come over to Canada,” said Psmith, “and I will show you the
-cat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cynthia did that!—Cynthia—why, she was always the gentlest little
-creature.”</p>
-
-<p>“At school, you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“That,” said Psmith, “would, I suppose, be before she had taken to
-drink.”</p>
-
-<p>“Taken to drink!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith was feeling happier. A passing thought did come to him that
-all this was perhaps a trifle rough on the absent Cynthia, but he
-mastered the unmanly weakness. It was necessary that Cynthia should
-suffer in the good cause. Already he had begun to detect in Eve’s eyes
-the faint dawnings of an angelic pity, and pity is recognised by all
-the best authorities as one of the most valuable emotions which your
-wooer can awaken.</p>
-
-<p>“Drink!” Eve repeated, with a little shudder.</p>
-
-<p>“We lived in one of the dry provinces of Canada, and, as so often
-happens, that started the trouble. From the moment when she installed
-a private still her downfall was swift. I have seen her, under the
-influence of home-brew, rage through the house like a devastating
-cyclone&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I hate speaking like this of one who was<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[p. 162]</span> your friend,” said
-Psmith, in a low, vibrating voice. “I would not tell these things to
-anyone but you. The world, of course, supposes that the entire blame
-for the collapse of our home was mine. I took care that it should be
-so. The opinion of the world matters little to me. But with you it is
-different. I should not like you to think badly of me, Miss Halliday. I
-do not make friends easily—I am a lonely man—but somehow it has seemed
-to me since we met that you and I might be friends.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve stretched her hand out impulsively.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith took her hand and held it far longer than was strictly
-speaking necessary.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” he said. “Thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned the nose of the boat to the shore, and rowed slowly
-back.</p>
-
-<p>“I have suffered,” said Psmith gravely, as he helped her ashore.
-“But, if you will be my friend, I think that I may forget.”</p>
-
-<p>They walked in silence up the winding path to the castle.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_8_6">§ 6</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>To Psmith five minutes later, as he sat in his room smoking a
-cigarette and looking dreamily out at the distant hills, there entered
-the Hon. Frederick Threepwood, who, having closed the door behind him,
-tottered to the bed and uttered a deep and discordant groan. Psmith,
-his mind thus rudely wrenched from pleasant meditations, turned and
-regarded the gloomy youth with disfavour.</p>
-
-<p>“At any other time, Comrade Threepwood,” he said politely but with
-firmness, “certainly. But not now. I am not in the vein.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” said the Hon. Freddie vacantly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[p. 163]</span>“I say that
-at any other time I shall be delighted to listen to your farmyard
-imitations, but not now. At the moment I am deep in thoughts of my
-own, and I may say frankly that I regard you as more or less of an
-excrescence. I want solitude, solitude. I am in a beautiful reverie,
-and your presence jars upon me somewhat profoundly.”</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Freddie ruined the symmetry of his hair by passing his
-fingers feverishly through it.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t <i>talk</i> so much! I never met a fellow like you for talking.”
-Having rumpled his hair to the left, he went through it again and
-rumpled it to the right. “I say, do you know what? You’ve jolly well
-got to clear out of here quick!” He got up from the bed, and approached
-the window. Having done which, he bent towards Psmith and whispered in
-his ear. “The game’s up!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith withdrew his ear with a touch of hauteur, but he looked at
-his companion with a little more interest. He had feared, when he
-saw Freddie stagger in with such melodramatic despair and emit so
-hollow a groan, that the topic on which he wished to converse was the
-already exhausted one of his broken heart. It now began to appear that
-weightier matters were on his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“I fail to understand you, Comrade Threepwood,” he said. “The last
-time I had the privilege of conversing with you, you informed me that
-Susan, or whatever her name is, merely giggled and told you not to be
-silly when you embraced her. In other words, she is <i>not</i> a detective.
-What has happened since then to get you all worked up?”</p>
-
-<p>“Baxter!”</p>
-
-<p>“What has Baxter been doing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only giving the whole bally show away to me,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_164">[p. 164]</span> that’s all,” said Freddie feverishly.
-He clutched Psmith’s arm violently, causing that exquisite to utter a
-slight moan and smooth out the wrinkles thus created in his sleeve.
-“Listen! I’ve just been talking to the blighter. I was passing the
-library just now, when he popped out of the door and hauled me in. And,
-dash it, he hadn’t been talking two seconds before I realised that he
-has seen through the whole dam’ thing practically from the moment you
-got here. Though he doesn’t seem to know that I’ve anything to do with
-it, thank goodness.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should imagine not, if he makes you his confidant. Why did he
-do that, by the way? What made him select you as the recipient of his
-secrets?”</p>
-
-<p>“As far as I can make out, his idea was to form a gang, if you know
-what I mean. He said a lot of stuff about him and me being the only
-two able-bodied young men in the place, and we ought to be prepared to
-tackle you if you started anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see. And now tell me how our delightful friend ever happened
-to begin suspecting that I was not all I seemed to be. I had been
-flattering myself that I had put the little deception over with
-complete success.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, in the first place, dash it, that dam’ fellow McTodd—the
-real one, you know—sent a telegram saying that he wasn’t coming. So it
-seemed rummy to Baxter bang from the start when you blew in all merry
-and bright.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! That was what they all meant by saying they were glad I had
-come ‘after all.’ A phrase which at the moment, I confess, rather
-mystified me.”</p>
-
-<p>“And then you went and wrote in the Peavey female’s
-autograph-book.”</p>
-
-<p>“In what way was that a false move?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[p. 165]</span>“Why, that was
-the biggest bloomer on record, as it has turned out,” said Freddie
-vehemently. “Baxter apparently keeps every letter that comes to the
-place on a file, and he’d skewered McTodd’s original letter with the
-rest. I mean, the one he wrote accepting the invitation to come here.
-And Baxter compared his handwriting with what you wrote in the Peavey’s
-album, and, of course, they weren’t a dam’ bit alike. And that put the
-lid on it.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith lit another cigarette and drew at it thoughtfully. He
-realised that he had made a tactical error in underestimating the
-antagonism of the Efficient One.</p>
-
-<p>“Does he seem to have any idea why I have come to the castle?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Any idea? Why, dash it, the very first thing he said to me was that
-you must have come to sneak Aunt Connie’s necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“In that case, why has he made no move till to-day? I should have
-supposed that he would long since have denounced me before as large an
-audience as he could assemble. Why this reticence on the part of genial
-old Baxter?”</p>
-
-<p>A crimson flush of chivalrous indignation spread itself over
-Freddie’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“He told me that, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“There seems to have been no reserves between Comrade Baxter and
-yourself. And very healthy, too, this spirit of confidence. What was
-his reason for abstaining from loosing the bomb?”</p>
-
-<p>“He said he was pretty sure you wouldn’t try to do anything on your
-own. He thought you would wait till your accomplice arrived. And, damn
-him,” cried Freddie heatedly, “do you know who he’s got the infernal
-gall to think is your accomplice? Miss Halliday! Dash him!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[p. 166]</span>Psmith smoked in
-thoughtful silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, of course, now that this has happened,” said Freddie, “I
-suppose it’s no good thinking of going on with the thing. You’d better
-pop off, what? If I were you, I’d leg it to-day and have your luggage
-sent on after you.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith threw away his cigarette and stretched himself. During the
-last few moments he had been thinking with some tenseness.</p>
-
-<p>“Comrade Threepwood,” he said reprovingly, “you suggest a
-cowardly and weak-minded action. I admit that the outlook would be
-distinctly rosier if no such person as Baxter were on the premises,
-but nevertheless the thing must be seen through to a finish. At least
-we have this advantage over our spectacled friend, that we know he
-suspects me and he doesn’t know we know. I think that with a little
-resource and ingenuity we may yet win through.” He turned to the window
-and looked out. “Sad,” he sighed, “that these idyllic surroundings
-should have become oppressed with a cloud of sinister menace. One
-thinks one sees a faun popping about in the undergrowth, and on
-looking more closely perceives that it is in reality a detective with
-a notebook. What one fancied was the piping of Pan turns out to be a
-police-whistle, summoning assistance. Still, we must bear these things
-without wincing. They are our cross. What you have told me will render
-me, if possible, warier and more snake-like than ever, but my purpose
-remains firm. The cry goes round the castle battlements ‘Psmith intends
-to keep the old flag flying!’ So charge off and soothe your quivering
-ganglions with a couple of aspirins, Comrade Threepwood, and leave me
-to my thoughts. All will doubtless come right in the future.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_9">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[p. 167]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX</h2>
- <p class="subh2">PSMITH ENGAGES A VALET</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ch_9_1">§ 1</h3>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">F</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">From</span> out of the scented shade
-of the big cedar on the lawn in front of the castle Psmith looked at
-the flower-beds, jaunty and gleaming in the afternoon sun; then he
-looked back at Eve, incredulity in every feature.</p>
-
-<p>“I must have misunderstood you. Surely,” he said in a voice vibrant
-with reproach, “you do not seriously intend to <i>work</i> in weather like
-this?”</p>
-
-<p>“I must. I’ve got a conscience. They aren’t paying me a handsome
-salary—a fairly handsome salary—to sit about in deck-chairs.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you only came yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I ought to have worked yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to me,” said Psmith, “the nearest thing to slavery that
-I have ever struck. I had hoped, seeing that everybody had gone off
-and left us alone, that we were going to spend a happy and instructive
-afternoon together under the shade of this noble tree, talking of this
-and that. Is it not to be?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it is not. It’s lucky you’re not the one who’s supposed to be
-cataloguing this library. It would never get finished.”</p>
-
-<p>“And why, as your employer would say, should it? He has expressed
-the opinion several times in my hearing that the library has jogged
-along quite comfortably<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[p.
-168]</span> for a great number of years without being catalogued. Why
-shouldn’t it go on like that indefinitely?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no good trying to tempt me. There’s nothing I should like
-better than to loaf here for hours and hours, but what would Mr. Baxter
-say when he got back and found out?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is becoming increasingly clear to me each day that I stay in
-this place,” said Psmith moodily, “that Comrade Baxter is little short
-of a blister on the community. Tell me, how do you get on with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like him much.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor do I. It is on these communities of taste that life-long
-attachments are built. Sit down and let us exchange confidences on the
-subject of Baxter.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t. You’re simply trying to lure me into staying out here and
-neglecting my duty. I really must be off now. You have no idea what a
-lot of work there is to be done.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are entirely spoiling my afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’m not. You’ve got a book. What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith picked up the brightly-jacketed volume and glanced at it.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>The Man With The Missing Toe.</i> Comrade Threepwood lent it to me.
-He has a vast store of this type of narrative. I expect he will be
-wanting you to catalogue his library next.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it looks interesting.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but what does it <i>teach</i>? How long do you propose to shut
-yourself up in that evil-smelling library?”</p>
-
-<p>“An hour or so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I shall rely on your society at the end of that period. We
-might go for another saunter on the lake.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[p. 169]</span>“All right. I’ll
-come and find you when I’ve finished.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith watched her disappear into the house, then seated himself
-once more in the long chair under the cedar. A sense of loneliness
-oppressed him. He gave one look at <i>The Man With The Missing Toe</i>,
-and, having rejected the entertainment it offered, gave himself up to
-meditation.</p>
-
-<p>Blandings Castle dozed in the midsummer heat like a Palace of Sleep.
-There had been an exodus of its inmates shortly after lunch, when Lord
-Emsworth, Lady Constance, Mr. Keeble, Miss Peavey, and the Efficient
-Baxter had left for the neighbouring town of Bridgeford in the big
-car, with the Hon. Freddie puffing in its wake in a natty two-seater.
-Psmith, who had been invited to accompany them, had declined on the
-plea that he wished to write a poem. He felt but a tepid interest in
-the afternoon’s programme, which was to consist of the unveiling by
-his lordship of the recently completed memorial to the late Hartley
-Reddish, Esq., J.P., for so many years Member of Parliament for the
-Bridgeford and Shifley Division of Shropshire. Not even the prospect
-of hearing Lord Emsworth—clad, not without vain protest and weak
-grumbling, in a silk hat, morning coat, and sponge-bag trousers—deliver
-a speech, had been sufficient to lure him from the castle grounds.</p>
-
-<p>But at the moment when he had uttered his refusal, thereby incurring
-the ill-concealed envy both of Lord Emsworth and his son Freddie, the
-latter also an unwilling celebrant, he had supposed that his solitude
-would be shared by Eve. This deplorable conscientiousness of hers, this
-morbid craving for work, had left him at a loose end. The time and the
-place were both above criticism, but, as so often happens in this life
-of ours, he had been let down by the girl.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[p. 170]</span>But, though he
-chafed for awhile, it was not long before the dreamy peace of the
-afternoon began to exercise a soothing effect upon him. With the
-exception of the bees that worked with their usual misguided energy
-among the flowers and an occasional butterfly which flitted past in
-the sunshine, all nature seemed to be taking a siesta. Somewhere out
-of sight a lawn-mower had begun to emphasise the stillness with its
-musical whir. A telegraph-boy on a red bicycle passed up the drive to
-the front door, and seemed to have some difficulty in establishing
-communication with the domestic staff—from which Psmith deduced that
-Beach, the butler, like a good opportunist, was taking advantage of
-the absence of authority to enjoy a nap in some distant lair of his
-own. Eventually a parlourmaid appeared, accepted the telegram and
-(apparently) a rebuke from the boy, and the bicycle passed out of
-sight, leaving silence and peace once more.</p>
-
-<p>The noblest minds are not proof against atmospheric conditions of
-this kind. Psmith’s eyes closed, opened, closed again. And presently
-his regular breathing, varied by an occasional snore, was added to the
-rest of the small sounds of the summer afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>The shadow of the cedar was appreciably longer when he awoke with
-that sudden start which generally terminates sleep in a garden-chair. A
-glance at his watch told him that it was close on five o’clock, a fact
-which was confirmed a moment later by the arrival of the parlourmaid
-who had answered the summons of the telegraph-boy. She appeared to
-be the sole survivor of the little world that had its centre in the
-servants’ hall. A sort of female Casabianca.</p>
-
-<p>“I have put your tea in the hall, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“You could have performed no nobler or more charitable task,” Psmith
-assured her; and, having<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[p.
-171]</span> corrected a certain stiffness of limb by means of massage,
-went in. It occurred to him that Eve, assiduous worker though she was,
-might have knocked off in order to keep him company.</p>
-
-<p>The hope proved vain. A single cup stood bleakly on the tray. Either
-Eve was superior to the feminine passion for tea or she was having hers
-up in the library. Filled with something of the sadness which he had
-felt at the sight of the toiling bees, Psmith embarked on his solitary
-meal, wondering sorrowfully at the perverseness which made girls work
-when there was no one to watch them.</p>
-
-<p>It was very agreeable here in the coolness of the hall. The great
-door of the castle was open, and through it he had a view of lawns
-bathed in a thirst-provoking sunlight. Through the green-baize door
-to his left, which led to the servants’ quarters, an occasional sharp
-giggle gave evidence of the presence of humanity, but apart from
-that he might have been alone in the world. Once again he fell into
-a dreamy meditation, and there is little reason to doubt that he
-would shortly have disgraced himself by falling asleep for the second
-time in a single afternoon, when he was restored to alertness by the
-sudden appearance of a foreign body in the open doorway. Against the
-background of golden light a black figure had abruptly manifested
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>The sharp pang of apprehension which ran through Psmith’s
-consciousness like an electric shock, causing him to stiffen like
-some wild creature surprised in the woods, was due to the momentary
-belief that the new-comer was the local vicar, of whose conversational
-powers he had had experience on the second day of his visit. Another
-glance showed him that he had been too pessimistic. This was not the
-vicar. It was someone whom he had never seen before—a slim and<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[p. 172]</span> graceful young man with a
-dark, intelligent face, who stood blinking in the subdued light of the
-hall with eyes not yet accustomed to the absence of strong sunshine.
-Greatly relieved, Psmith rose and approached him.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo!” said the new-comer. “I didn’t see you. It’s quite dark in
-here after outside.”</p>
-
-<p>“The light is pleasantly dim,” agreed Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Is Lord Emsworth anywhere about?”</p>
-
-<p>“I fear not. He has legged it, accompanied by the entire household,
-to superintend the unveiling of a memorial at Bridgeford to—if my
-memory serves me rightly—the late Hartley Reddish, Esq., J.P., M.P. Is
-there anything I can do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve come to stay, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Constance invited me to pay a visit as soon as I reached
-England.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Then you have come from foreign parts?”</p>
-
-<p>“Canada.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith started slightly. This, he perceived, was going to complicate
-matters. The last thing he desired was the addition to the Blandings
-circle of one familiar with Canada. Nothing would militate against his
-peace of mind more than the society of a man who would want to exchange
-with him views on that growing country.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Canada?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I wired,” proceeded the other, “but I suppose it came after
-everybody had left. Ah, that must be my telegram on that table over
-there. I walked up from the station.” He was rambling idly about the
-hall after the fashion of one breaking new ground. He paused at an
-occasional table, the one where, when taking after-dinner coffee, Miss
-Peavey was wont to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[p. 173]</span>
-sit. He picked up a book, and uttered a gratified laugh. “One of my
-little things,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“One of what?” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“This book. <i>Songs of Squalor.</i> I wrote it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You wrote it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. My name’s McTodd. Ralston McTodd. I expect you have heard them
-speak of me?”</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_9_2">§ 2</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The mind of a man who has undertaken a mission as delicate as
-Psmith’s at Blandings Castle is necessarily alert. Ever since he had
-stepped into the five o’clock train at Paddington, when his adventure
-might have been said formally to have started, Psmith had walked
-warily, like one in a jungle on whom sudden and unexpected things might
-pounce out at any moment. This calm announcement from the slim young
-man, therefore, though it undoubtedly startled him, did not deprive him
-of his faculties. On the contrary, it quickened them. His first action
-was to step nimbly to the table on which the telegram lay awaiting the
-return of Lord Emsworth, his second was to slip the envelope into his
-pocket. It was imperative that telegrams signed McTodd should not lie
-about loose while he was enjoying the hospitality of the castle.</p>
-
-<p>This done, he confronted the young man.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come!” he said with quiet severity.</p>
-
-<p>He was extremely grateful to a kindly Providence which had arranged
-that this interview should take place at a time when nobody but himself
-was in the house.</p>
-
-<p>“You say that you are Ralston McTodd, the author of these poems?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[p. 174]</span>“Then what,” said
-Psmith incisively, “is a pale parabola of Joy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Er—what?” said the new-comer in an enfeebled voice. There was
-manifest in his demeanour now a marked nervousness.</p>
-
-<p>“And here is another,” said Psmith. “‘The——’ Wait a minute, I’ll get
-it soon. Yes. ‘The sibilant, scented silence that shimmered where we
-sat.’ Could you oblige me with a diagram of that one?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I—— What are you talking about?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith stretched out a long arm and patted him almost affectionately
-on the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s lucky you met me before you had to face the others,” he said.
-“I fear that you undertook this little venture without thoroughly
-equipping yourself. They would have detected your imposture in the
-first minute.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean—imposture? I don’t know what you’re talking
-about.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith waggled his forefinger at him reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Comrade, I may as well tell you at once that the genuine
-McTodd is an old and dear friend of mine. I had a long and entertaining
-conversation with him only a few days ago. So that, I think we may
-confidently assert, is that. Or am I wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hell!” said the young man. And, flopping bonelessly into a
-chair, he mopped his forehead in undisguised and abject collapse.</p>
-
-<p>Silence reigned for awhile.</p>
-
-<p>“What,” inquired the visitor, raising a damp face that shone
-pallidly in the dim light, “are you going to do about it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing, Comrade—by the way, what is your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cootes.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[p. 175]</span>“Nothing, Comrade
-Cootes. Nothing whatever. You are free to leg it hence whenever you
-feel disposed. In fact, the sooner you do so, the better I shall be
-pleased.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say! That’s darned good of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, not at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re an ace——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hush!” interrupted Psmith modestly. “But before you go tell me
-one or two things. I take it that your object in coming here was to
-have a pop at Lady Constance’s necklace?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought as much. And what made you suppose that the real McTodd
-would not be here when you arrived?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that was all right. I travelled over with that guy McTodd on
-the boat, and saw a good deal of him when we got to London. He was full
-of how he’d been invited here, and I got it out of him that no one here
-knew him by sight. And then one afternoon I met him in the Strand, all
-worked up. Madder than a hornet. Said he’d been insulted and wouldn’t
-come down to this place if they came and begged him on their bended
-knees. I couldn’t make out what it was all about, but apparently he
-had met Lord Emsworth and hadn’t been treated right. He told me he was
-going straight off to Paris.”</p>
-
-<p>“And did he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. I saw him off myself at Charing Cross. That’s why it seemed
-such a cinch coming here instead of him. It’s just my darned luck that
-the first man I run into is a friend of his. How was I to know that
-he had any friends this side? He told me he’d never been in England
-before.”</p>
-
-<p>“In this life, Comrade Cootes,” said Psmith, “we<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[p. 176]</span> must always distinguish
-between the Unlikely and the Impossible. It was unlikely, as you say,
-that you would meet any friend of McTodd’s in this out-of-the-way spot;
-and you rashly ordered your movements on the assumption that it was
-impossible. With what result? The cry goes round the Underworld, ‘Poor
-old Cootes has made a bloomer!’”</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t rub it in.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am only doing so for your good. It is my earnest hope that you
-will lay this lesson to heart and profit by it. Who knows that it may
-not be the turning-point in your career? Years hence, when you are
-a white-haired and opulent man of leisure, having retired from the
-crook business with a comfortable fortune, you may look back on your
-experience of to-day and realise that it was the means of starting
-you on the road to Success. You will lay stress on it when you are
-interviewed for the <i>Weekly Burglar</i> on ‘How I Began’&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But,
-talking of starting on roads, I think that perhaps it would be as well
-if you now had a dash at the one leading to the railway-station. The
-household may be returning at any moment now.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” agreed the visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“I think so,” said Psmith. “I think so. You will be happier when you
-are away from here. Once outside the castle precincts, a great weight
-will roll off your mind. A little fresh air will put the roses in your
-cheeks. You know your way out?”</p>
-
-<p>He shepherded the young man to the door and with a cordial push
-started him on his way. Then with long strides he ran upstairs to the
-library to find Eve.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>At about the same moment, on the platform of Market Blandings
-station, Miss Aileen Peavey was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[p.
-177]</span> alighting from the train which had left Bridgeford some
-half an hour earlier. A headache, the fruit of standing about in the
-hot sun, had caused her to forgo the pleasure of hearing Lord Emsworth
-deliver his speech: and she had slipped back on a convenient train with
-the intention of lying down and resting. Finding, on reaching Market
-Blandings, that her head was much better, and the heat of the afternoon
-being now over, she started to walk to the castle, greatly refreshed by
-a cool breeze which had sprung up from the west. She left the town at
-almost the exact time when the disconsolate Mr. Cootes was passing out
-of the big gates at the end of the castle drive.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_9_3">§ 3</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The grey melancholy which accompanied Mr. Cootes like a diligent
-spectre as he began his walk back to the town of Market Blandings, and
-which not even the delightful evening could dispel, was due primarily,
-of course, to that sickening sense of defeat which afflicts a man whose
-high hopes have been wrecked at the very instant when success has
-seemed in sight. Once or twice in the life of every man there falls to
-his lot something which can only be described as a soft snap, and it
-had seemed to Mr. Cootes that this venture of his to Blandings Castle
-came into that category. He had, like most members of his profession,
-had his ups and downs in the past, but at last, he told himself, the
-goddess Fortune had handed him something on a plate with watercress
-round it. Once established in the castle, there would have been a
-hundred opportunities of achieving the capture of Lady Constance’s
-necklace: and it had looked as though all he had to do was to walk in,
-announce himself, and be treated as the honoured guest. As he slouched
-moodily between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[p. 178]</span> the
-dusty hedges that fringed the road to Market Blandings, Edward Cootes
-tasted the bitterness that only those know whose plans have been upset
-by the hundredth chance.</p>
-
-<p>But this was not all. In addition to the sadness of frustrated hope,
-he was also experiencing the anguish of troubled memories. Not only was
-the Present torturing him, but the Past had come to life and jumped
-out and bitten him. A sorrow’s crown of sorrow is remembering happier
-things, and this was what Edward Cootes was doing now. It is at moments
-like this that a man needs a woman’s tender care, and Mr. Cootes had
-lost the only woman in whom he could have confided his grief, the only
-woman who would have understood and sympathised.</p>
-
-<p>We have been introduced to Mr. Cootes at a point in his career
-when he was practising upon dry land; but that was not his chosen
-environment. Until a few months back his business had lain upon deep
-waters. The salt scent of the sea was in his blood. To put it more
-exactly, he had been by profession a card-sharper on the Atlantic
-liners; and it was during this period that he had loved and lost. For
-three years and more he had worked in perfect harmony with the lady
-who, though she adopted a variety of names for purposes of travel,
-was known to her immediate circle as Smooth Lizzie. He had been the
-practitioner, she the decoy, and theirs had been one of those ideal
-business partnerships which one so seldom meets with in a world
-of cynicism and mistrust. Comradeship had ripened into something
-deeper and more sacred, and it was all settled between them that
-when they next touched New York, Mr. Cootes, if still at liberty,
-should proceed to the City Hall for a marriage-licence; when they had
-quarrelled—quarrelled irrevocably over one of<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_179">[p. 179]</span> those trifling points over which lovers
-do quarrel. Some absurd dispute as to the proper division of the quite
-meagre sum obtained from a cattle millionaire on their last voyage had
-marred their golden dreams. One word had led to another. The lady,
-after woman’s habit, had the last of the series, and even Mr. Cootes
-was forced to admit that it was a pippin. She had spoken it on the
-pier at New York, and then passed out of his life. And with her had
-gone all his luck. It was as if her going had brought a curse upon
-him. On the very next trip he had had an unfortunate misunderstanding
-with an irritable gentleman from the Middle West, who, piqued at what
-he considered—not unreasonably—the undue proportion of kings and aces
-in the hands which Mr. Cootes had been dealing himself, expressed his
-displeasure by biting off the first joint of the other’s right index
-finger—thus putting an abrupt end to a brilliant career. For it was on
-this finger that Mr. Cootes principally relied for the almost magical
-effects which he was wont to produce with a pack of cards after a
-little quiet shuffling.</p>
-
-<p>With an aching sense of what might have been he thought now of his
-lost Lizzie. Regretfully he admitted to himself that she had always
-been the brains of the firm. A certain manual dexterity he had no doubt
-possessed, but it was ever Lizzie who had been responsible for the
-finer work. If they had still been partners, he really believed that
-she could have discovered some way of getting round the obstacles which
-had reared themselves now between himself and the necklace of Lady
-Constance Keeble. It was in a humble and contrite spirit that Edward
-Cootes proceeded on his way to Market Blandings.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[p. 180]</span>Miss Peavey,
-meanwhile, who, it will be remembered, was moving slowly along the
-road from the Market Blandings end, was finding her walk both restful
-and enjoyable. There were moments, it has to be recorded, when the
-society of her hostess and her hostess’s relations was something of a
-strain to Miss Peavey; and she was glad to be alone. Her headache had
-disappeared, and she revelled in the quiet evening hush. About now, if
-she had not had the sense to detach herself from the castle platoon,
-she would, she reflected, be listening to Lord Emsworth’s speech on the
-subject of the late Hartley Reddish, J.P., M.P.: a topic which even the
-noblest of orators might have failed to render really gripping. And
-what she knew of her host gave her little confidence in his powers of
-oratory.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, she was well out of it. The gentle breeze played soothingly
-upon her face. Her delicately modelled nostrils drank in gratefully the
-scent from the hedgerows. Somewhere out of sight a thrush was singing.
-And so moved was Miss Peavey by the peace and sweetness of it all that
-she, too, began to sing.</p>
-
-<p>Had those who enjoyed the privilege of her acquaintance at Blandings
-Castle been informed that Miss Peavey was about to sing, they would
-doubtless have considered themselves on firm ground if called upon
-to make a conjecture as to the type of song which she would select.
-Something quaint, dreamy, a little wistful&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that would have been
-the universal guess&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. some old-world ballad, possibly&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>What Miss Peavey actually sang—in a soft, meditative voice like that
-of a linnet waking to greet a new dawn—was that curious composition
-known as “The Beale Street Blues.”</p>
-
-<p>As she reached the last line, she broke off abruptly. She was,
-she perceived, no longer alone. Down the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_181">[p. 181]</span> road toward her, walking pensively like
-one with a secret sorrow, a man was approaching; and for an instant, as
-she turned the corner, something in his appearance seemed to catch her
-by the throat and her breath came sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“Gee!” said Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>She was herself again the next moment. A chance resemblance had
-misled her. She could not see the man’s face, for his head was bent,
-but how was it possible&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>And then, when he was quite close, he raised his head, and the
-county of Shropshire, as far as it was visible to her amazed eyes,
-executed a sudden and eccentric dance. Trees bobbed up and down,
-hedgerows shimmied like a Broadway chorus; and from out of the midst of
-the whirling country-side a voice spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Liz!”</p>
-
-<p>“Eddie!” ejaculated Miss Peavey faintly, and sat down in a heap on a
-grassy bank.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_9_4">§ 4</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, for goodness’ sake!” said Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>Shropshire had become static once more. She stared at him,
-wide-eyed.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you tie it!” said Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>She ran her gaze over him once again from head to foot.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if this ain’t the cat’s whiskers!” said Miss Peavey. And with
-this final pronouncement she rose from her bank, somewhat restored, and
-addressed herself to the task of picking up old threads.</p>
-
-<p>“Wherever,” she inquired, “did you spring from, Ed?”</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing but affection in her voice. Her gaze was that
-of a mother contemplating her long-lost<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_182">[p. 182]</span> child. The past was past and a new era
-had begun. In the past she had been compelled to describe this man as
-a hunk of cheese and to express the opinion that his crookedness was
-such as to enable him to hide at will behind a spiral staircase; but
-now, in the joy of this unexpected reunion, all these harsh views were
-forgotten. This was Eddie Cootes, her old side-kick, come back to her
-after many days, and only now was it borne in upon her what a gap in
-her life his going had made. She flung herself into his arms with a
-glad cry.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes, who had not been expecting this demonstration of esteem,
-staggered a trifle at the impact, but recovered himself sufficiently
-to return the embrace with something of his ancient warmth. He was
-delighted at this cordiality, but also surprised. The memory of the
-lady’s parting words on the occasion of their last meeting was still
-green, and he had not realised how quickly women forget and forgive,
-and how a sensitive girl, stirred by some fancied injury, may address a
-man as a pie-faced plugugly and yet retain in her inmost heart all the
-old love and affection. He kissed Miss Peavey fondly.</p>
-
-<p>“Liz,” he said with fervour, “you’re prettier than ever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now you behave,” responded Miss Peavey coyly.</p>
-
-<p>The arrival of a baaing flock of sheep, escorted by a priggish dog
-and followed by a couple of the local peasantry, caused an intermission
-in these tender exchanges; and by the time the procession had moved off
-down the road they were in a more suitable frame of mind to converse
-quietly and in a practical spirit, to compare notes, and to fill up the
-blanks.</p>
-
-<p>“Wherever,” inquired Miss Peavey again, “did you spring from, Ed?
-You could of knocked me down with a feather when I saw you coming
-along the road.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[p. 183]</span> I
-couldn’t have believed it was you, this far from the ocean. What are
-you doing inland like this? Taking a vacation, or aren’t you working
-the boats any more?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Liz,” said Mr. Cootes sadly. “I’ve had to give that up.”</p>
-
-<p>And he exhibited the hiatus where an important section of his finger
-had been and told his painful tale. His companion’s sympathy was balm
-to his wounded soul.</p>
-
-<p>“The risks of the profession, of course,” said Mr. Cootes moodily,
-removing the exhibit in order to place his arm about her slender waist.
-“Still, it’s done me in. I tried once or twice, but I couldn’t seem to
-make the cards behave no more, so I quit. Ah, Liz,” said Mr. Cootes
-with feeling, “you can take it from me that I’ve had no luck since
-you left me. Regular hoodoo there’s been on me. If I’d walked under a
-ladder on a Friday to smash a mirror over the dome of a black cat I
-couldn’t have had it tougher.”</p>
-
-<p>“You poor boy!”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes nodded sombrely.</p>
-
-<p>“Tough,” he agreed, “but there it is. Only this afternoon my
-jinx gummed the game for me and threw a spanner into the prettiest
-little scenario you ever thought of&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But let’s not talk about my
-troubles. What are you doing now, Liz?”</p>
-
-<p>“Me? Oh, I’m living near here.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes started.</p>
-
-<p>“Not married?” he exclaimed in alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” cried Miss Peavey with vehemence, and shot a tender glance up
-at his face. “And I guess you know why, Ed.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t mean&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you hadn’t forgotten me?”</p>
-
-<p>“As if I could ever forget you, Eddie! There’s only one tintype on
-<i>my</i> mantelpiece.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[p. 184]</span>“But it struck
-me&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. it sort of occurred to me as a passing thought that, when we
-saw each other last, you were a mite peeved with your Eddie&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the first allusion either of them had made to the past
-unpleasantness, and it caused a faint blush to dye Miss Peavey’s soft
-cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shucks!” she said. “I’d forgotten all about that next day. I
-was good and mad at the time, I’ll allow, but if only you’d called me
-up next morning, Ed&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a silence, as they mused on what might have been.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing, living here?” asked Mr. Cootes after a pregnant
-pause. “Have you retired?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, <i>sir</i>. I’m sitting in at a game with real worthwhile stakes.
-But, darn it,” said Miss Peavey regretfully, “I’m wondering if it isn’t
-too big for me to put through alone. Oh, Eddie, if only there was some
-way you and me could work it together like in the old days.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Diamonds, Eddie. A necklace. I’ve only had one look at it so far,
-but that was enough. Some of the best ice I’ve saw in years, Ed. Worth
-every cent of a hundred thousand berries.”</p>
-
-<p>The coincidence drew from Mr. Cootes a sharp exclamation.</p>
-
-<p>“A necklace!”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen, Ed, while I slip you the low-down. And, say, if you knew
-the relief it was to me talking good United States again! Like taking
-off a pair of tight shoes. I’m doing the high-toned stuff for the
-moment. Soulful. <i>You</i> remember, like I used to pull once or twice in
-the old days. Just after you and me had that little spat of ours I
-thought I’d take another trip in the old <i>Atlantic</i>—force of habit or
-something, I guess.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[p. 185]</span>
-Anyway, I sailed, and we weren’t two days out from New York when I
-made the biggest kind of a hit with the dame this necklace belongs to.
-Seemed to take a shine to me right away&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t blame her!” murmured Mr. Cootes devotedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Now don’t you interrupt,” said Miss Peavey, administering a
-gratified slap. “Where was I? Oh yes. This here now Lady Constance
-Keeble I’m telling you about&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Constance Keeble?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the name. She’s Lord Emsworth’s sister, who lives at a big
-place up the road. Blandings Castle it’s called. She didn’t seem like
-she was able to let me out of her sight, and I’ve been with her off and
-on ever since we landed. I’m visiting at the castle now.”</p>
-
-<p>A deep sigh, like the groan of some great spirit in travail, forced
-itself from between Mr. Cootes’s lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, wouldn’t that jar you!” he demanded of circumambient space.
-“Of all the lucky ones! getting into the place like that, with the band
-playing and a red carpet laid down for you to walk on! Gee, if you
-fell down a well, Liz, you’d come up with the bucket. You’re a human
-horseshoe, that’s what you are. Say, listen. Lemme-tell-ya-sumf’n. Do
-you know what <i>I’ve</i> been doing this afternoon? Only trying to edge
-into the dam’ place myself and getting the air two minutes after I was
-past the front door.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! <i>You</i>, Ed?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. You’re not the only one that’s heard of that collection of
-ice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Ed!” Bitter disappointment rang in Miss Peavey’s voice. “If
-only you could have worked it!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[p.
-186]</span> Me and you partners again! It hurts to think of it. What
-was the stuff you pulled to get you in?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes so far forgot himself in his agony of spirit as to
-expectorate disgustedly at a passing frog. And even in this trivial
-enterprise failure dogged him. He missed the frog, which withdrew into
-the grass with a cold look of disapproval.</p>
-
-<p>“Me?” said Mr. Cootes. “I thought I’d got it smooth. I’d chummed up
-with a fellow who had been invited down to the place and had thought it
-over and decided not to go, so I said to myself what’s the matter with
-going there instead of him. A gink called McTodd this was, a poet, and
-none of the folks had ever set eyes on him, except the old man, who’s
-too short-sighted to see anyone, so&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t mean to tell me, Ed Cootes, that you thought you could
-get into the castle by pretending to be Ralston McTodd?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure I did. Why not? It didn’t seem like there was anything to it.
-A cinch, that’s what it looked like. And the first guy I meet in the
-joint is a mutt who knows this McTodd well. We had a couple of words,
-and I beat it. I know when I’m not wanted.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Ed! Ed! What do you mean? Ralston McTodd is at the castle now,
-this very moment.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. Been there coupla days and more. Long, thin bird with an
-eyeglass.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes’s mind was in a whirl. He could make nothing of this
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing like it! McTodd’s not so darned tall or so thin, if it
-comes to that. And he didn’t wear no eyeglass all the time I was
-with him. This&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” He broke off sharply. “My gosh! I wonder!” he
-cried.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[p. 187]</span> “Liz! How
-many men are there in the joint right now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only four besides Lord Emsworth. There’s a big party coming down
-for the County Ball, but that’s all there is at present. There’s Lord
-Emsworth’s son, Freddie&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“What does he look like?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sort of a dude with blond hair slicked back. Then there’s Mr.
-Keeble. He’s short with a red face.”</p>
-
-<p>“And?”</p>
-
-<p>“And Baxter. He’s Lord Emsworth’s secretary. Wears spectacles.”</p>
-
-<p>“And that’s the lot?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all there is, not counting this here McTodd and the
-help.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes brought his hand down with a resounding report on
-his leg. The mildly pleasant look which had been a feature of his
-appearance during his interview with Psmith had vanished now, its place
-taken by one of an extremely sinister malevolence.</p>
-
-<p>“And I let him shoo me out as if I was a stray pup!” he muttered
-through clenched teeth. “Of all the bunk games!”</p>
-
-<p>“What <i>are</i> you talking about, Ed?”</p>
-
-<p>“And I thanked him! <i>Thanked</i> him!” moaned Edward Cootes, writhing
-at the memory. “I thanked him for letting me go!”</p>
-
-<p>“Eddie Cootes, whatever are you&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen, Liz.” Mr. Cootes mastered his emotion with a strong effort.
-“I blew into that joint and met this fellow with the eyeglass, and
-he told me he knew McTodd well and that I wasn’t him. And, from what
-you tell me, this must be the very guy that’s passing himself off as
-McTodd! Don’t you see? This baby must have started working on the same
-lines I did.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[p. 188]</span> Got
-to know McTodd, found he wasn’t coming to the castle, and came down
-instead of him, same as me. Only he got there first, damn him! Wouldn’t
-that give you a pain in the neck!”</p>
-
-<p>Amazement held Miss Peavey dumb for an instant. Then she spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“The big stiff!” said Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes, regardless of a lady’s presence, went even further in
-his censure.</p>
-
-<p>“I had a feeling from the first that there was something not on the
-level about that guy!” said Miss Peavey. “Gee! He must be after that
-necklace too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure he’s after the necklace,” said Mr. Cootes impatiently. “What
-did you think he’d come down for? A change of air?”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Ed! Say! Are you going to let him get away with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Am <i>I</i> going to let him get away with it!” said Mr. Cootes, annoyed
-by the foolish question. “Wake me up in the night and ask me!”</p>
-
-<p>“But what are you going to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do!” said Mr. Cootes. “Do! I’ll tell you what I’m going to&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”
-He paused, and the stern resolve that shone in his face seemed to
-flicker. “Say, what the hell <i>am</i> I going to do?” he went on somewhat
-weakly.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t get anything by putting the folks wise that he’s a
-fake. That would be the finish of him, but it wouldn’t get <i>you</i>
-anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Mr. Cootes.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a minute while I think,” said Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause. Miss Peavey sat with knit brows.</p>
-
-<p>“How would it be&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?” ventured Mr. Cootes.</p>
-
-<p>“Cheese it!” said Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[p. 189]</span>Mr. Cootes
-cheesed it. The minutes ticked on.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got it,” said Miss Peavey. “This guy’s ace-high with Lady
-Constance. You’ve got to get him alone right away and tell him he’s got
-to get you invited to the place as a friend of his.”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew you’d think of something, Liz,” said Mr. Cootes, almost
-humbly. “You always were a wonder like that. How am I to get him
-alone?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can fix that. I’ll ask him to come for a stroll with me. He’s not
-what you’d call crazy about me, but he can’t very well duck if I keep
-after him. We’ll go down the drive. You’ll be in the bushes—I’ll show
-you the place. Then I’ll send him to fetch me a wrap or something, and
-while I walk on he’ll come back past where you’re hiding, and you jump
-out at him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Liz,” said Mr. Cootes, lost in admiration, “when it comes to doping
-out a scheme, you’re the snake’s eyebrows!”</p>
-
-<p>“But what are you going to do if he just turns you down?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes uttered a bleak laugh, and from the recesses of his
-costume produced a neat little revolver.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>He</i> won’t turn me down!” he said.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_9_5">§ 5</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Fancy!” said Miss Peavey. “If I had not had a headache and come
-back early, we should never have had this little chat!”</p>
-
-<p>She gazed up at Psmith in her gentle, wistful way as they started
-together down the broad gravel drive. A timid, soulful little thing she
-looked.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a gushing reply, but he was not feeling at his sunniest.
-The idea that Miss Peavey might return from Bridgeford in advance
-of the main body had not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[p.
-190]</span> occurred to him. As he would have said himself, he had
-confused the Unlikely with the Impossible. And the result had been that
-she had caught him beyond hope of retreat as he sat in his garden-chair
-and thought of Eve Halliday, who on their return from the lake had
-been seized with a fresh spasm of conscience and had gone back to the
-library to put in another hour’s work before dinner. To decline Miss
-Peavey’s invitation to accompany her down the drive in order to see if
-there were any signs of those who had been doing honour to the late
-Hartley Reddish, M.P., had been out of the question. But Psmith, though
-he went, went without pleasure. Every moment he spent in her society
-tended to confirm him more and more in the opinion that Miss Peavey was
-the curse of the species.</p>
-
-<p>“And I have been so longing,” continued his companion, “to have a
-nice, long talk. All these days I have felt that I haven’t been able to
-get as <i>near</i> you as I should wish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, of course, with the others always about&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I meant in a spiritual sense, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted so much to discuss your wonderful poetry with you. You
-haven’t so much as <i>mentioned</i> your work since you came here. <i>Have</i>
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but, you see, I am trying to keep my mind off it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really? Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“My medical adviser warned me that I had been concentrating a trifle
-too much. He offered me the choice, in fact, between a complete rest
-and the loony-bin.”</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>what</i>, Mr. McTodd?”</p>
-
-<p>“The lunatic asylum, he meant. These medical men express themselves
-oddly.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[p. 191]</span>“But surely,
-then, you ought not to <i>dream</i> of trying to compose if it is as bad as
-that? And you told Lord Emsworth that you wished to stay at home this
-afternoon to write a poem.”</p>
-
-<p>Her glance showed nothing but tender solicitude, but inwardly Miss
-Peavey was telling herself that <i>that</i> would hold him for awhile.</p>
-
-<p>“True,” said Psmith, “true. But you know what Art is. An inexorable
-mistress. The inspiration came, and I felt that I must take the risk.
-But it has left me weak, weak.”</p>
-
-<p>“You BIG STIFF!” said Miss Peavey. But not aloud.</p>
-
-<p>They walked on a few steps.</p>
-
-<p>“In fact,” said Psmith, with another inspiration, “I’m not sure I
-ought not to be going back and resting now.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey eyed a clump of bushes some dozen yards farther down
-the drive. They were quivering slightly, as though they sheltered some
-alien body; and Miss Peavey, whose temper was apt to be impatient,
-registered a resolve to tell Edward Cootes that, if he couldn’t hide
-behind a bush without dancing about like a cat on hot bricks, he had
-better give up his profession and take to selling jellied eels. In
-which, it may be mentioned, she wronged her old friend. He had been as
-still as a statue until a moment before, when a large and excitable
-beetle had fallen down the space between his collar and his neck, an
-experience which might well have tried the subtlest woodsman.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, please don’t go in yet,” said Miss Peavey. “It is such a lovely
-evening. Hark to the music of the breeze in the tree-tops. So soothing.
-Like a far-away harp. I wonder if it is whispering secrets to the
-birds.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[p. 192]</span>Psmith forbore to
-follow her into this region of speculation, and they walked past the
-bushes in silence.</p>
-
-<p>Some little distance farther on, however, Miss Peavey seemed to
-relent.</p>
-
-<p>“You <i>are</i> looking tired, Mr. McTodd,” she said anxiously. “I am
-afraid you really have been overtaxing your strength. Perhaps after all
-you had better go back and lie down.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think so?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure of it. I will just stroll on to the gates and see if the
-car is in sight.”</p>
-
-<p>“I feel that I am deserting you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, please!” said Miss Peavey deprecatingly.</p>
-
-<p>With something of the feelings of a long-sentence convict
-unexpectedly released immediately on his arrival in jail, Psmith
-retraced his steps. Glancing over his shoulder, he saw that Miss Peavey
-had disappeared round a bend in the drive; and he paused to light
-a cigarette. He had just thrown away the match and was walking on,
-well content with life, when a voice behind him said “Hey!” and the
-well-remembered form of Mr. Edward Cootes stepped out of the bushes.</p>
-
-<p>“See this?” said Mr. Cootes, exhibiting his revolver.</p>
-
-<p>“I do indeed, Comrade Cootes,” replied Psmith. “And, if it is not an
-untimely question, what is the idea?”</p>
-
-<p>“That,” said Mr. Cootes, “is just in case you try any funny
-business.” And, replacing the weapon in a handy pocket, he proceeded
-to slap vigorously at the region between his shoulder blades. He also
-wriggled with not a little animation.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith watched these manœuvres gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“You did not stop me at the pistol’s point merely to watch you go
-through your Swedish exercises?” he said.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[p. 193]</span>Mr. Cootes paused
-for an instant.</p>
-
-<p>“Got a beetle or something down my back,” he explained curtly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah? Then, as you will naturally wish to be alone in such a sad
-moment, I will be bidding you a cordial good evening and strolling
-on.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you don’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t I?” said Psmith resignedly. “Perhaps you are right, perhaps
-you are right.” Mr. Cootes replaced the revolver once more. “I take it,
-then, Comrade Cootes, that you would have speech with me. Carry on,
-old friend, and get it off your diaphragm. What seems to be on your
-mind?”</p>
-
-<p>A lucky blow appeared to have stunned Mr. Cootes’s beetle, and he
-was able to give his full attention to the matter in hand. He stared at
-Psmith with considerable distaste.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m on to you, Bill!” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“My name is not Bill,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” snapped Mr. Cootes, his annoyance by this time very manifest.
-“And it’s not McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith looked at his companion thoughtfully. This was an unforeseen
-complication, and for the moment he would readily have admitted that he
-saw no way of overcoming it. That the other was in no genial frame of
-mind towards him the expression on his face would have showed, even if
-his actions had not been sufficient indication of the fact. Mr. Cootes,
-having disposed of his beetle and being now at leisure to concentrate
-his whole attention on Psmith, was eyeing that immaculate young man
-with a dislike which he did not attempt to conceal.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we be strolling on?” suggested Psmith. “Walking may assist
-thought. At the moment I am free to confess that you have opened up
-a subject<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[p. 194]</span> which
-causes me some perplexity. I think, Comrade Cootes, having given the
-position of affairs a careful examination, that we may say that the
-next move is with you. What do you propose to do about it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like,” said Mr. Cootes with asperity, “to beat your block
-off.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt. But&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to knock you for a goal!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith discouraged these Utopian dreams with a deprecating wave of
-the hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I can readily understand it,” he said courteously. “But, to keep
-within the sphere of practical politics, what is the actual move which
-you contemplate? You could expose me, no doubt, to my host, but I
-cannot see how that would profit you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that. But you can remember I’ve got that up my sleeve in
-case you try any funny business.”</p>
-
-<p>“You persist in harping on that possibility, Comrade Cootes. The
-idea seems to be an obsession with you. I can assure you that I
-contemplate no such thing. What, to return to the point, do you intend
-to do?”</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the broad expanse opposite the front door, where
-the drive, from being a river, spread out into a lake of gravel. Psmith
-stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got to get me into this joint,” said Mr. Cootes.</p>
-
-<p>“I feared that that was what you were about to suggest. In my
-peculiar position I have naturally no choice but to endeavour to carry
-out your wishes. Any attempt not to do so would, I imagine, infallibly
-strike so keen a critic as yourself as ‘funny business.’ But how can I
-get you into what you breezily describe as ‘this joint’?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[p. 195]</span>“You can say I’m
-a friend of yours and ask them to invite me.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith shook his head gently.</p>
-
-<p>“Not one of your brightest suggestions, Comrade Cootes. Tactfully
-refraining from stressing the point that an instant lowering of my
-prestige would inevitably ensue should it be supposed that you were a
-friend of mine, I will merely mention that, being myself merely a guest
-in this stately home of England, I can hardly go about inviting my
-chums here for indefinite visits. No, we must find another way.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-You’re sure you want to stay? Quite so, quite so, I merely asked.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Now, let us think.”</p>
-
-<p>Through the belt of rhododendrons which jutted out from one side of
-the castle a portly form at this point made itself visible, moving high
-and disposedly in the direction of the back premises. It was Beach, the
-butler, returning from the pleasant ramble in which he had indulged
-himself on the departure of his employer and the rest of the party.
-Revived by some gracious hours in the open air, Beach was returning to
-duty. And with the sight of him there came to Psmith a neat solution of
-the problem confronting him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Beach,” he called.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?” responded a fruity voice. There was a brief pause while the
-butler navigated into the open. He removed the straw hat which he had
-donned for his excursion, and enfolded Psmith in a pop-eyed but not
-unkindly gaze. A thoughtful critic of country-house humanity, he had
-long since decided that he approved of Psmith. Since Lady Constance
-had first begun to offer the hospitality of the castle to the literary
-and artistic world, he had been profoundly shocked by some of the
-rare and curious specimens who had nodded their disordered locks and
-flaunted their ill-cut evening<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[p.
-196]</span> clothes at the dinner-table over which he presided; and
-Psmith had come as a pleasant surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry to trouble you, Beach.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“This,” said Psmith, indicating Mr. Cootes, who was viewing the
-scene with a wary and suspicious eye, an eye obviously alert for any
-signs of funny business, “is my man. My valet, you know. He has just
-arrived from town. I had to leave him behind to attend the bedside
-of a sick aunt. Your aunt was better when you came away, Cootes?” he
-inquired graciously.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes correctly interpreted this question as a feeler with
-regard to his views on this new development, and decided to accept the
-situation. True, he had hoped to enter the castle in a slightly higher
-capacity than that of a gentleman’s personal gentleman, but he was an
-old campaigner. Once in, as he put it to himself with admirable common
-sense, he would be in.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p>“Capital,” said Psmith. “Capital. Then will you look after Cootes,
-Beach.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very good, sir,” said the butler in a voice of cordial approval.
-The only point he had found to cavil at in Psmith had been removed;
-for it had hitherto pained him a little that a gentleman with so nice
-a taste in clothes as that dignified guest should have embarked on a
-visit to such a place as Blandings Castle without a personal attendant.
-Now all was explained and, as far as Beach was concerned, forgiven. He
-proceeded to escort Mr. Cootes to the rear. They disappeared behind the
-rhododendrons.</p>
-
-<p>They had hardly gone when a sudden thought came to Psmith as he sat
-once more in the coolness of the hall. He pressed the bell. Strange, he
-reflected, how<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[p. 197]</span> one
-overlooked these obvious things. That was how generals lost battles.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?” said Beach, appearing through the green baize door.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry to trouble you again, Beach.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you will make Cootes comfortable. I think you will like him.
-His, when you get to know him, is a very winning personality.”</p>
-
-<p>“He seems a nice young fellow, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, by the way, Beach. You might ask him if he brought my revolver
-from town with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” said Beach, who would have scorned to betray emotion if
-it had been a Lewis gun.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I saw it sticking out of his pocket. You might bring it to
-me, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very good, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>Beach retired, to return a moment later. On the silver salver which
-he carried the lethal weapon was duly reposing.</p>
-
-<p>“Your revolver, sir,” said Beach.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_9_6">§ 6</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>For some moments after the butler had withdrawn in his stately
-pigeon-toed way through the green baize door, Psmith lay back in his
-chair with the feeling that something attempted, something done, had
-earned a night’s repose. He was not so sanguine as to suppose that he
-had actually checkmated an adversary of Mr. Cootes’s strenuousness
-by the simple act of removing a revolver from his possession; but
-there was no denying the fact that the feel of the thing in his
-pocket engendered a certain cosy satisfaction. The little he had
-seen of Mr. Cootes had been enough to convince<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_198">[p. 198]</span> him that the other was a man who was far
-better off without an automatic pistol. There was an impulsiveness
-about his character which did not go well with the possession of
-fire-arms.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith’s meditations had taken him thus far when they were
-interrupted by an imperative voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey!”</p>
-
-<p>Only one person of Psmith’s acquaintance was in the habit of opening
-his remarks in this manner. It was consequently no surprise to him to
-find Mr. Edward Cootes standing at his elbow.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Comrade Cootes,” said Psmith with a touch of austerity,
-“I heard you the first time. And may I remind you that this habit of
-yours of popping out from unexpected places and saying ‘Hey!’ is one
-which should be overcome. Valets are supposed to wait till rung for. At
-least, I think so. I must confess that until this moment I have never
-had a valet.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you wouldn’t have one now if I could help it,” responded Mr.
-Cootes.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith raised his eyebrows.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” he inquired, surprised, “this peevishness? Don’t you like
-being a valet?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“You astonish me. I should have thought you would have gone singing
-about the house. Have you considered that the tenancy of such a
-position throws you into the constant society of Comrade Beach, than
-whom it would be difficult to imagine a more delightful companion?”</p>
-
-<p>“Old stiff!” said Mr. Cootes sourly. “If there’s one thing that
-makes me tired, it’s a guy that talks about his darned stomach all the
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[p. 199]</span>“The Beach gook,”
-explained Mr. Cootes, “has got something wrong with the lining of his
-stomach, and if I hadn’t made my getaway he’d be talking about it
-yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you fail to find entertainment and uplift in first-hand
-information about Comrade Beach’s stomach, you must indeed be hard
-to please. I am to take it, then, that you came snorting out here,
-interrupting my daydreams, merely in order to seek my sympathy?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes gazed upon him with a smouldering eye.</p>
-
-<p>“I came to tell you I suppose you think you’re darned smart.”</p>
-
-<p>“And very nice of you, too,” said Psmith, touched. “A pretty
-compliment, for which I am not ungrateful.”</p>
-
-<p>“You got that gun away from me mighty smoothly, didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Since you mention it, yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“And now I suppose you think you’re going to slip in ahead of me and
-get away with that necklace? Well, say, listen, lemme tell you it’ll
-take someone better than a half-baked string-bean like you to put one
-over on me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I seem,” said Psmith, pained, “to detect a certain animus creeping
-into your tone. Surely we can be trade rivals without this spirit of
-hostility. My attitude towards you is one of kindly tolerance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Even if you get it, where do you think you’re going to hide it?
-And, believe me, it’ll take some hiding. Say, lemme tell you something.
-I’m your valet, ain’t I? Well, then, I can come into your room and
-be tidying up whenever I darn please, can’t I? Sure I can. I’ll tell
-the world I can do just that little thing. And you take it from me,
-Bill&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“You persist in the delusion that my name is William&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[p. 200]</span>“You take it from
-me, Bill, that if ever that necklace disappears and it isn’t me that’s
-done the disappearing, you’ll find me tidying up in a way that’ll make
-you dizzy. I’ll go through that room of yours with a fine-tooth comb.
-So chew on that, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>And Edward Cootes, moving sombrely across the hall, made a sinister
-exit. The mood of cool reflection was still to come, when he would
-realise that, in his desire to administer what he would have described
-as a hot one, he had acted a little rashly in putting his enemy on
-his guard. All he was thinking now was that his brief sketch of the
-position of affairs would have the effect of diminishing Psmith’s
-complacency a trifle. He had, he flattered himself, slipped over
-something that could be classed as a jolt.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was he unjustified in this view. The aspect of the matter on
-which he had touched was one that had not previously presented itself
-to Psmith: and, musing on it as he resettled himself in his chair, he
-could see that it afforded food for thought. As regarded the disposal
-of the necklace, should it ever come into his possession, he had formed
-no definite plan. He had assumed that he would conceal it somewhere
-until the first excitement of the chase slackened, and it was only now
-that he realised the difficulty of finding a suitable hiding-place
-outside his bedroom. Yes, it was certainly a matter on which, as Mr.
-Cootes had suggested, he would do well to chew. For ten minutes,
-accordingly, he did so. And—it being practically impossible to keep a
-good man down—at the end of that period he was rewarded with an idea.
-He rose from his chair and pressed the bell.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Beach,” he said affably, as the green baize door swung open,
-“I must apologise once more for troubling you. I keep ringing, don’t
-I?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[p. 201]</span>“No trouble at
-all, sir,” responded the butler paternally. “But if you were ringing to
-summon your personal attendant, I fear he is not immediately available.
-He left me somewhat abruptly a few moments ago. I was not aware that
-you would be requiring his services until the dressing-gong sounded, or
-I would have detained him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind. It was you I wished to see. Beach,” said Psmith, “I
-am concerned about you. I learn from my man that the lining of your
-stomach is not all it should be.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is true, sir,” replied Beach, an excited gleam coming into his
-dull eyes. He shivered slightly, as might a war-horse at the sound of
-the bugle. “I do have trouble with the lining of my stomach.”</p>
-
-<p>“Every stomach has a silver lining.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“I said, tell me all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, really, sir&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” said Beach wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>“To please me,” urged Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, it is extremely kind of you to take an interest. It
-generally starts with a dull shooting pain on the right side of the
-abdomen from twenty minutes to half an hour after the conclusion of a
-meal. The symptoms&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing but courteous sympathy in Psmith’s gaze as he
-listened to what sounded like an eyewitness’s account of the San
-Francisco earthquake, but inwardly he was wishing that his companion
-could see his way to making it a bit briefer and snappier. However,
-all things come to an end. Even the weariest river winds somewhere
-to the sea. With a moving period, the butler finally concluded his
-narrative.</p>
-
-<p>“Parks’ Pepsinine,” said Psmith promptly.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[p. 202]</span>“That’s what you
-want. Parks’ Pepsinine. It would set you right in no time.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will make a note of the name, sir. The specific has not come
-to my notice until now. And, if I may say so,” added Beach, with a
-glassy but adoring look at his benefactor, “I should like to express my
-gratitude for your kindness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, Beach, not at all. Oh, Beach,” he said, as the other
-started to manœuvre towards the door, “I’ve just remembered. There was
-something else I wanted to talk to you about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought it might be as well to speak to you about it before
-approaching Lady Constance. The fact is, Beach, I am feeling
-cramped.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, sir? I forgot to mention that one of the symptoms from
-which I suffer is a sharp cramp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Too bad. But let us, if you do not mind, shelve for the moment
-the subject of your interior organism and its ailments. When I say I
-am feeling cramped, I mean spiritually. Have you ever written poetry,
-Beach?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Then it may be a little difficult for you to understand my
-feelings. My trouble is this. Out in Canada, Beach, I grew accustomed
-to doing my work in the most solitary surroundings. You remember that
-passage in my <i>Songs of Squalor</i> which begins ‘Across the pale parabola
-of Joy&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.’?”</p>
-
-<p>“I fear, sir&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“You missed it? Tough luck. Try to get hold of it some time. It’s a
-bird. Well, that passage was written in a lonely hut on the banks of
-the Saskatchewan, miles away from human habitation. I am like that,
-Beach. I need the stimulus of the great open<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_203">[p. 203]</span> spaces. When I am surrounded by my
-fellows, inspiration slackens and dies. You know how it is when there
-are people about. Just as you are starting in to write a nifty, someone
-comes and sits down on the desk and begins talking about himself. Every
-time you get going nicely, in barges some alien influence and the Muse
-goes blooey. You see what I mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” said Beach, gaping slightly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that is why for a man like me existence in Blandings Castle
-has its drawbacks. I have got to get a place where I can be alone,
-Beach—alone with my dreams and visions. Some little eyrie perched on
-the cliffs of Time.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. In other words, do you know of an empty
-cottage somewhere on the estate where I could betake myself when in the
-mood and swing a nib without any possibility of being interrupted?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little cottage, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little cottage. With honeysuckle over the door, and Old Mister
-Moon climbing up above the trees. A cottage, Beach, where I can
-meditate, where I can turn the key in the door and bid the world go
-by. Now that the castle is going to be full of all these people who
-are coming for the County Ball, it is imperative that I wangle such a
-haven. Otherwise, a considerable slab of priceless poetry will be lost
-to humanity for ever.”</p>
-
-<p>“You desire,” said Beach, feeling his way cautiously, “a small
-cottage where you can write poetry, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“You follow me like a leopard. Do you know of such a one?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is an unoccupied gamekeeper’s cottage in the west wood, sir,
-but it is an extremely humble place.”</p>
-
-<p>“Be it never so humble, it will do for me. Do you think Lady
-Constance would be offended if I were to ask for the loan of it for a
-few days?”</p>
-
-<p>“I fancy that her ladyship would receive the request<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[p. 204]</span> with equanimity, sir.
-She is used to&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. She is not unaccustomed&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, I can only
-say, sir, that there was a literary gentleman visiting the castle last
-summer who expressed a desire to take sun-baths in the garden each
-morning before breakfast. In the nood, sir. And, beyond instructing me
-to warn the maids, her ladyship placed no obstacle in the way of the
-fulfilment of his wishes. So&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“So a modest request like mine isn’t likely to cause a heart-attack?
-Admirable! You don’t know what it means to me to feel that I shall
-soon have a little refuge of my own, to which I can retreat and be in
-solitude.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can imagine that it must be extremely gratifying, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will put the motion before the Board directly Lady Constance
-returns.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very good, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to splash it on the record once more, Beach, that I
-am much obliged to you for your sympathy and advice in this matter. I
-knew you would not fail me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, sir. I am only too glad to have been able to be of
-assistance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, and, Beach&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just one other thing. Will you be seeing Cootes, my valet, again
-shortly?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite shortly, sir, I should imagine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then would you mind just prodding him smartly in the lower
-ribs&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?” cried Beach, startled out of his butlerian calm. He swallowed
-a little convulsively. For eighteen months and more, ever since Lady
-Constance Keeble had first begun to cast her fly and hook over<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[p. 205]</span> the murky water of
-the artistic world and jerk its denizens on to the pile carpets of
-Blandings Castle, Beach had had his fill of eccentricity. But until
-this moment he had hoped that Psmith was going to prove an agreeable
-change from the stream of literary lunatics which had been coming and
-going all that weary time. And lo! Psmith’s name led all the rest. Even
-the man who had come for a week in April and had wanted to eat jam with
-his fish paled in comparison.</p>
-
-<p>“Prod him in the ribs, sir?” he quavered.</p>
-
-<p>“Prod him in the ribs,” said Psmith firmly. “And at the same time
-whisper in his ear the word ‘Aha!’” Beach licked his dry lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Aha, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aha! And say it came from me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very good, sir. The matter shall be attended to,” said Beach. And
-with a muffled sound that was half a sigh, half a death-rattle, he
-tottered through the green-baize door.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_10">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[p. 206]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X</h2>
- <p class="subh2">SENSATIONAL OCCURRENCE AT A POETRY READING</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ch_10_1">§ 1</h3>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">B</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">Breakfast</span> was over, and the
-guests of Blandings had scattered to their morning occupations. Some
-were writing letters, some were in the billiard-room: some had gone to
-the stables, some to the links: Lady Constance was interviewing the
-housekeeper, Lord Emsworth harrying head-gardener McAllister among the
-flower-beds: and in the Yew Alley, the dappled sunlight falling upon
-her graceful head, Miss Peavey walked pensively up and down.</p>
-
-<p>She was alone. It is a sad but indisputable fact that in this
-imperfect world Genius is too often condemned to walk alone—if the
-earthier members of the community see it coming and have time to duck.
-Not one of the horde of visitors who had arrived overnight for the
-County Ball had shown any disposition whatever to court Miss Peavey’s
-society.</p>
-
-<p>One regrets this. Except for that slight bias towards dishonesty
-which led her to steal everything she could lay her hands on that was
-not nailed down, Aileen Peavey’s was an admirable character; and,
-oddly enough, it was the noble side of her nature to which these
-coarse-fibred critics objected. Of Miss Peavey, the purloiner of
-other people’s goods, they knew nothing; the woman they were dodging
-was Miss Peavey, the poetess. And it may be mentioned that,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[p. 207]</span> however much she might
-unbend in the presence of a congenial friend like Mr. Edward Cootes,
-she was a perfectly genuine poetess. Those six volumes under her name
-in the British Museum catalogue were her own genuine and unaided
-work: and, though she had been compelled to pay for the production of
-the first of the series, the other five had been brought out at her
-publisher’s own risk, and had even made a little money.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey, however, was not sorry to be alone: for she had that
-on her mind which called for solitary thinking. The matter engaging
-her attention was the problem of what on earth had happened to Mr.
-Edward Cootes. Two days had passed since he had left her to go and
-force Psmith at the pistol’s point to introduce him into the castle:
-and since that moment he had vanished completely. Miss Peavey could not
-understand it.</p>
-
-<p>His non-appearance was all the more galling in that her superb brain
-had just completed in every detail a scheme for the seizure of Lady
-Constance Keeble’s diamond necklace; and to the success of this plot
-his aid was an indispensable adjunct. She was in the position of a
-general who comes from his tent with a plan of battle all mapped out,
-and finds that his army has strolled off somewhere and left him. Little
-wonder that, as she paced the Yew Alley, there was a frown on Miss
-Peavey’s fair forehead.</p>
-
-<p>The Yew Alley, as Lord Emsworth had indicated in his extremely
-interesting lecture to Mr. Ralston McTodd at the Senior Conservative
-Club, contained among other noteworthy features certain yews which rose
-in solid blocks with rounded roof and stemless mushroom finials, the
-majority possessing arched recesses, forming arbors. As Miss Peavey was
-passing one of these, a voice suddenly addressed her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[p. 208]</span>“Hey!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey started violently.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyone about?”</p>
-
-<p>A damp face with twigs sticking to it was protruding from a near-by
-yew. It rolled its eyes in an ineffectual effort to see round the
-corner.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey drew nearer, breathing heavily. The question as to the
-whereabouts of her wandering boy was solved; but the abruptness of his
-return had caused her to bite her tongue; and joy, as she confronted
-him, was blended with other emotions.</p>
-
-<p>“You dish-faced gazooni!” she exclaimed heatedly, her voice
-trembling with a sense of ill-usage, “where do you get that stuff,
-hiding in trees, and barking a girl’s head off?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry, Liz. I&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“And where,” proceeded Miss Peavey, ventilating another grievance,
-“have you been all this darned time? Gosh-dingit, you leave me a coupla
-days back saying you’re going to stick up this bozo that calls himself
-McTodd with a gat and make him get you into the house, and that’s the
-last I see of you. What’s the big idea?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right, Liz. He did get me into the house. I’m his valet.
-That’s why I couldn’t get at you before. The way the help has to keep
-itself to itself in this joint, we might as well have been in different
-counties. If I hadn’t happened to see you snooping off by yourself this
-morning&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey’s keen mind grasped the position of affairs.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, all right,” she interrupted, ever impatient of long
-speeches from others. “I understand. Well, this is good, Ed. It
-couldn’t have worked out better. I’ve got a scheme all doped out, and
-now you’re here we can get busy.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[p. 209]</span>“A scheme?”</p>
-
-<p>“A pippin,” assented Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll need to be,” said Mr. Cootes, on whom the events of the last
-few days had caused pessimism to set its seal. “I tell you that McTodd
-gook is smooth. He somehow,” said Mr. Cootes prudently, for he feared
-harsh criticisms from his lady-love should he reveal the whole truth,
-“he somehow got wise to the notion that, as I was his valet, I could go
-and snoop round in his room, where he’d be wanting to hide the stuff if
-he ever got it, and now he’s gone and got them to let him have a kind
-of shack in the woods.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m!” said Miss Peavey. “Well,” she resumed after a thoughtful
-pause, “I’m not worrying about him. Let him go and roost in the woods
-all he wants to. I’ve got a scheme all ready, and it’s gilt-edged. And,
-unless you ball up your end of it, Ed, it can’t fail to drag home the
-gravy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Am I in it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet you’re in it. I can’t work it without you. That’s what’s
-been making me so darned mad when you didn’t show up all this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Spill it, Liz,” said Mr. Cootes humbly. As always in the presence
-of this dynamic woman, he was suffering from an inferiority complex.
-From the very start of their combined activities she had been the
-brains of the firm, he merely the instrument to carry into effect the
-plans she dictated.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey glanced swiftly up and down the Yew Alley. It was still
-the same peaceful, lonely spot. She turned to Mr. Cootes again, and
-spoke with brisk decision.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, listen, Ed, and get this straight, because maybe I shan’t have
-another chance of talking to you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[p. 210]</span>“I’m listening,”
-said Mr. Cootes obsequiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, to begin with, now that the house is full, Her Nibs is
-wearing that necklace every night. And you can take it from me, Ed,
-that you want to put on your smoked glasses before you look at it. It’s
-a lalapaloosa.”</p>
-
-<p>“As good as that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ask me! You don’t know the half of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where does she keep it, Liz? Have you found that out?” asked
-Mr. Cootes, a gleam of optimism playing across his sad face for an
-instant.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t. And I don’t want to. I’ve not got time to waste
-monkeying about with safes and maybe having the whole bunch pile on the
-back of my neck. I believe in getting things easy. Well, to-night this
-bimbo that calls himself McTodd is going to give a reading of his poems
-in the big drawing-room. You know where that is?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can find out.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you better had find out,” said Miss Peavey vehemently. “And
-before to-night at that. Well, there you are. Do you begin to get
-wise?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes, his head protruding unhappily from the yew tree, would
-have given much to have been able to make the demanded claim to wisdom,
-for he knew of old the store his alert partner set upon quickness
-of intellect. He was compelled, however, to disturb the branches by
-shaking his head.</p>
-
-<p>“You always were pretty dumb,” said Miss Peavey with scorn. “I’ll
-say that you’ve got good solid qualities, Ed—from the neck up. Why, I’m
-going to sit behind Lady Constance while that goof is shooting his fool
-head off, and I’m going to reach out and grab that necklace off of her.
-See?”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Liz”—Mr. Cootes diffidently summoned up<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_211">[p. 211]</span> courage to point out what appeared to him
-to be a flaw in the scheme—“if you start any strong-arm work in front
-of everybody like the way you say, won’t they&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, they won’t. And I’ll tell you why they won’t. They aren’t going
-to see me do it, because when I do it it’s going to be good and dark in
-that room. And it’s going to be dark because you’ll be somewheres out
-at the back of the house, wherever they keep the main electric-light
-works, turning the switch as hard as you can go. See? That’s your end
-of it, and pretty soft for you at that. All you have to do is to find
-out where the thing is and what you have to do to it to put out all the
-lights in the joint. I guess I can trust you not to bungle that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Liz,” said Mr. Cootes, and there was reverence in his voice, “you
-can do just that little thing. But what&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, I know what you’re going to say. What happens after
-that, and how do I get away with the stuff? Well, the window’ll be
-open, and I’ll just get to it and fling the necklace out. See? There’ll
-be a big fuss going on in the room on account of the darkness and all
-that, and while everybody’s cutting up and what-the-helling, you’ll
-pick up your dogs and run round as quick as you can make it and pouch
-the thing. I guess it won’t be hard for you to locate it. The window’s
-just over the terrace, all smooth turf, and it isn’t real dark nights
-now, and you ought to have plenty of time to hunt around before they
-can get the lights going again.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, what do you
-think of it?” There was a brief silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Liz,” said Mr. Cootes at length.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it or is it not,” demanded Miss Peavey, “a ball of fire?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[p. 212]</span>“Liz,” said Mr.
-Cootes, and his voice was husky with such awe as some young officer
-of Napoleon’s staff might have felt on hearing the details of the
-latest plan of campaign, “Liz, I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it
-again. When it comes to the smooth stuff, old girl, you’re the oyster’s
-eye-tooth!”</p>
-
-<p>And, reaching out an arm from the recesses of the yew, he took Miss
-Peavey’s hand in his and gave it a tender squeeze. A dreamy look came
-into the poetess’s fine eyes, and she giggled a little. Dumb-bell
-though he was, she loved this man.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_10_2">§ 2</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Mr. Baxter!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Miss Halliday?”</p>
-
-<p>The Brains of Blandings looked abstractedly up from his desk. It was
-only some half-hour since luncheon had finished, but already he was in
-the library surrounded by large books like a sea-beast among rocks.
-Most of his time was spent in the library when the castle was full of
-guests, for his lofty mind was ill-attuned to the frivolous babblings
-of Society butterflies.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder if you could spare me this afternoon?” said Eve.</p>
-
-<p>Baxter directed the glare of his spectacles upon her
-inquisitorially.</p>
-
-<p>“The whole afternoon?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you don’t mind. You see, I had a letter by the second post from
-a great friend of mine, saying that she will be in Market Blandings
-this afternoon and asking me to meet her there. I must see her, Mr.
-Baxter, <i>please</i>. You’ve no notion how important it is.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve’s manner was excited, and her eyes as they met Baxter’s sparkled
-in a fashion that might have disturbed a man made of less stern stuff.
-If it had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[p. 213]</span> been the
-Hon. Freddie Threepwood, for instance, who had been gazing into their
-blue depths, that impulsive youth would have tied himself into knots
-and yapped like a dog. Baxter, the superman, felt no urge towards
-any such display. He reviewed her request calmly and judicially, and
-decided that it was a reasonable one.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, Miss Halliday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you ever so much. I’ll make up for it by working twice as
-hard to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve flitted to the door, pausing there to bestow a grateful smile
-upon him before going out; and Baxter returned to his reading. For
-a moment he was conscious of a feeling of regret that this quite
-attractive and uniformly respectful girl should be the partner in crime
-of a man of whom he disapproved even more than he disapproved of most
-malefactors. Then he crushed down the weak emotion and was himself
-again.</p>
-
-<p>Eve trotted downstairs, humming happily to herself. She had expected
-a longer and more strenuous struggle before she obtained her order of
-release, and told herself that, despite a manner which seldom deviated
-from the forbidding, Baxter was really quite nice. In short, it seemed
-to her that nothing could possibly occur to mar the joyfulness of this
-admirable afternoon; and it was only when a voice hailed her as she was
-going through the hall a few minutes later that she realised that she
-was mistaken. The voice, which trembled throatily, was that of the Hon.
-Freddie; and her first look at him told Eve, an expert diagnostician,
-that he was going to propose to her again.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Freddie?” said Eve resignedly.</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Frederick Threepwood was a young man who was used to
-hearing people say “Well, Freddie?” resignedly when he appeared. His
-father said it;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[p. 214]</span> his
-Aunt Constance said it; all his other aunts and uncles said it. Widely
-differing personalities in every other respect, they all said “Well,
-Freddie?” resignedly directly they caught sight of him. Eve’s words,
-therefore, and the tone in which they were spoken, did not damp him
-as they might have damped another. His only feeling was one of solemn
-gladness at the thought that at last he had managed to get her alone
-for half a minute.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that this was the first time he had been able to get her
-alone since her arrival at the castle had caused Freddie a good deal
-of sorrow. Bad luck was what he attributed it to, thereby giving the
-object of his affections less credit than was her due for a masterly
-policy of evasion. He sidled up, looking like a well-dressed sheep.</p>
-
-<p>“Going anywhere?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I’m going to Market Blandings. Isn’t it a lovely afternoon?
-I suppose you are busy all the time now that the house is full?
-Good-bye,” said Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?” said Freddie, blinking.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye. I must be hurrying.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you say you were going?”</p>
-
-<p>“Market Blandings.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I want to be alone. I’ve got to meet someone there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come with you as far as the gates,” said Freddie, the human
-limpet.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon sun seemed to Eve to be shining a little less brightly
-as they started down the drive. She was a kind-hearted girl, and
-it irked her to have to be continually acting as a black frost in
-Freddie’s garden of dreams. There appeared, however, to be but two
-ways out of the thing: either she must accept<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_215">[p. 215]</span> him or he must stop proposing. The
-first of these alternatives she resolutely declined to consider, and,
-as far as was ascertainable from his actions, Freddie declined just
-as resolutely to consider the second. The result was that solitary
-interviews between them were seldom wholly free from embarrassing
-developments.</p>
-
-<p>They walked for a while in silence. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“You’re dashed hard on a fellow,” said Freddie.</p>
-
-<p>“How’s your putting coming on?” asked Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Your putting. You told me you had so much trouble with it.”</p>
-
-<p>She was not looking at him, for she had developed a habit of not
-looking at him on these occasions; but she assumed that the odd sound
-which greeted her remark was a hollow, mirthless laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“My putting!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you told me yourself it’s the most important part of
-golf.”</p>
-
-<p>“Golf! Do you think I have time to worry about golf these days?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, how splendid, Freddie! Are you really doing some work of some
-kind? It’s quite time, you know. Think how pleased your father will
-be.”</p>
-
-<p>“I say,” said Freddie, “I do think you might marry a chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose I shall some day,” said Eve, “if I meet the right
-one.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no!” said Freddie despairingly. She was not usually so dense
-as this. He had always looked on her as a dashed clever girl. “I mean
-<i>me</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve sighed. She had hoped to avert the inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Freddie!” she exclaimed, exasperated. She was still sorry
-for him, but she could not help being<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_216">[p. 216]</span> irritated. It was such a splendid
-afternoon and she had been feeling so happy. And now he had spoiled
-everything. It always took her at least half an hour to get over the
-nervous strain of refusing his proposals.</p>
-
-<p>“I love you, dash it!” said Freddie.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, do stop loving me,” said Eve. “I’m an awful girl, really. I’d
-make you miserable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Happiest man in the world,” corrected Freddie devoutly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got a frightful temper.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re an angel.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve’s exasperation increased. She always had a curious fear that one
-of these days, if he went on proposing, she might say “Yes” by mistake.
-She wished that there was some way known to science of stopping him
-once and for all. And in her desperation she thought of a line of
-argument which she had not yet employed.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so absurd, Freddie,” she said. “Really, it is. Apart from the
-fact that I don’t want to marry you, how can you marry anyone—anyone, I
-mean, who hasn’t plenty of money?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t dream of marrying for money.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, of course not, but&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cupid,” said Freddie woodenly, “pines and sickens in a gilded
-cage.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve had not expected to be surprised by anything her companion might
-say, it being her experience that he possessed a vocabulary of about
-forty-three words and a sum-total of ideas that hardly ran into two
-figures; but this poetic remark took her back.</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie repeated the observation. When it had been flashed on the
-screen as a spoken sub-title in the six-reel wonder film, “Love or
-Mammon” (Beatrice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[p. 217]</span>
-Comely and Brian Fraser), he had approved and made a note of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” said Eve, and was silent. As Miss Peavey would have put it, it
-held her for a while. “What I meant,” she went on after a moment, “was
-that you can’t possibly marry a girl without money unless you’ve some
-money of your own.”</p>
-
-<p>“I say, dash it!” A strange note of jubilation had come into the
-wooer’s voice. “I say, is that really all that stands between us?
-Because&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it isn’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“Because, look here, I’m going to have quite a good deal of money at
-any moment. It’s more or less of a secret, you know—in fact a pretty
-deadish secret—so keep it dark, but Uncle Joe is going to give me a
-couple of thousand quid. He promised me. Two thousand of the crispest.
-Absolutely!”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Joe?”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>You</i> know. Old Keeble. He’s going to give me a couple of thousand
-quid, and then I’m going to buy a partnership in a bookie’s business
-and simply coin money. Stands to reason, I mean. You can’t help making
-your bally fortune. Look at all the mugs who are losing money all the
-time at the races. It’s the bookies that get the stuff. A pal of mine
-who was up at Oxford with me is in a bookie’s office, and they’re going
-to let me in if I&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>The momentous nature of his information had caused Eve to deviate
-now from her policy of keeping her eyes off Freddie when in emotional
-vein. And, if she had desired to check his lecture on finance, she
-could have chosen no better method than to look at him; for, meeting
-her gaze, Freddie immediately lost the thread of his discourse and
-stood yammering. A direct hit from Eve’s eyes always affected him in
-this way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[p. 218]</span>“Mr. Keeble is
-going to give you two thousand pounds!”</p>
-
-<p>A wave of mortification swept over Eve. If there was one thing
-on which she prided herself, it was the belief that she was a loyal
-friend, a staunch pal; and now for the first time she found herself
-facing the unpleasant truth that she had been neglecting Phyllis
-Jackson’s interests in the most abominable way ever since she had come
-to Blandings. She had definitely promised Phyllis that she would tackle
-this stepfather of hers and shame him with burning words into yielding
-up the three thousand pounds which Phyllis needed so desperately for
-her Lincolnshire farm. And what had she done? Nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Eve was honest to the core, even in her dealings with herself.
-A less conscientious girl might have argued that she had had no
-opportunity of a private interview with Mr. Keeble. She scorned to
-soothe herself with this specious plea. If she had given her mind to
-it she could have brought about a dozen private interviews, and she
-knew it. No. She had allowed the pleasant persistence of Psmith to take
-up her time, and Phyllis and her troubles had been thrust into the
-background. She confessed, despising herself, that she had hardly given
-Phyllis a thought.</p>
-
-<p>And all the while this Mr. Keeble had been in a position to scatter
-largess, thousands of pounds of it, to undeserving people like Freddie.
-Why, a word from her about Phyllis would have&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>“Two thousand pounds?” she repeated dizzily. “Mr. Keeble!”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely!” cried Freddie radiantly. The first shock of
-looking into her eyes had passed, and he was now revelling in that
-occupation.</p>
-
-<p>“What for?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[p. 219]</span>Freddie’s rapt
-gaze flickered. Love, he perceived, had nearly caused him to be
-indiscreet.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” he mumbled. “He’s just giving it me, you know,
-don’t you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you simply go to him and ask him for it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—er—well, yes. That was about the strength of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he didn’t object?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. He seemed rather pleased.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pleased!” Eve found breathing difficult. She was feeling rather
-like a man who suddenly discovers that the hole in his back yard
-which he has been passing nonchalantly for months is a goldmine. If
-the operation of extracting money from Mr. Keeble was not only easy
-but also agreeable to the victim&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. She became aware of a sudden
-imperative need for Freddie’s absence. She wanted to think this thing
-over.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said Freddie, “coming back to it, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” said Eve, distrait.</p>
-
-<p>“Marry me, you know. What I mean to say is, I worship the very
-ground you walk on, and all that sort of rot&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I mean, and all
-that. And now that you realise that I’m going to get this couple of
-thousand&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and the bookie’s business&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and what not, I mean to
-say&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Freddie,” said Eve tensely, expressing her harassed nerves in a
-voice that came hotly through clenched teeth, “go away!”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to marry you, and I’m sick of having to keep on
-telling you so. Will you please go away and leave me alone?” She
-stopped. Her sense of fairness told her that she was working off
-on her hapless suitor venom which should have been expended<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[p. 220]</span> on herself. “I’m sorry,
-Freddie,” she said, softening; “I didn’t mean to be such a beast as
-that. I know you’re awfully fond of me, but really, really I can’t
-marry you. You don’t want to marry a girl who doesn’t love you, do
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do,” said Freddie stoutly. “If it’s you, I mean. Love is a
-tiny seed that coldness can wither, but if tended and nurtured in the
-fostering warmth of an honest heart&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Freddie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Blossoms into a flower,” concluded Freddie rapidly. “What I mean to
-say is, love would come after marriage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s the way it happened in ‘A Society Mating.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Freddie,” said Eve, “I really don’t want to talk any more. Will you
-be a dear and just go away? I’ve got a lot of thinking to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, thinking?” said Freddie, impressed. “Right ho!”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you so much.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh—er—not at all. Well, pip-pip.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p>“See you later, what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fine! Well, toodle-oo!”</p>
-
-<p>And the Hon. Freddie, not ill-pleased—for it seemed to him that
-at long last he detected signs of melting in the party of the second
-part—swivelled round on his long legs and started for home.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_10_3">§ 3</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The little town of Market Blandings was a peaceful sight as it
-slept in the sun. For the first time since Freddie had left her, Eve
-became conscious of a certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[p.
-221]</span> tranquillity as she entered the old grey High Street,
-which was the centre of the place’s life and thought. Market Blandings
-had a comforting air of having been exactly the same for centuries.
-Troubles might vex the generations it housed, but they did not worry
-that lichened church with its sturdy four-square tower, nor those
-red-roofed shops, nor the age-old inns whose second stories bulged so
-comfortably out over the pavements. As Eve walked in slow meditation
-towards the “Emsworth Arms,” the intensely respectable hostelry which
-was her objective, archways met her gaze, opening with a picturesque
-unexpectedness to show heartening glimpses of ancient nooks all cool
-and green. There was about the High Street of Market Blandings a
-suggestion of a slumbering cathedral close. Nothing was modern in it
-except the moving-picture house—and even that called itself an Electric
-Theatre, and was ivy-covered and surmounted by stone gables.</p>
-
-<p>On second thoughts, that statement is too sweeping. There was one
-other modern building in the High Street—Jno. Banks, Hairdresser, to
-wit, and Eve was just coming abreast of Mr. Banks’s emporium now.</p>
-
-<p>In any ordinary surroundings these premises would have been a
-tolerably attractive sight, but in Market Blandings they were almost
-an eyesore; and Eve, finding herself at the door, was jarred out of
-her reverie as if she had heard a false note in a solemn anthem. She
-was on the point of hurrying past, when the door opened and a short,
-solid figure came out. And at the sight of this short, solid figure Eve
-stopped abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>It was with the object of getting his grizzled locks clipped in
-preparation for the County Ball that Joseph Keeble had come to Mr.
-Banks’s shop as soon as he had finished lunch. As he emerged now
-into the High Street he was wondering why he had permitted Mr. Banks
-to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[p. 222]</span> finish off
-the job with a heliotrope-scented hair-wash. It seemed to Mr. Keeble
-that the air was heavy with heliotrope, and it came to him suddenly
-that heliotrope was a scent which he always found particularly
-objectionable.</p>
-
-<p>Ordinarily Joseph Keeble was accustomed to show an iron front to
-hairdressers who tried to inflict lotions upon him; and the reason his
-vigilance had relaxed under the ministrations of Jno. Banks was that
-the second post, which arrived at the castle at the luncheon hour, had
-brought him a plaintive letter from his stepdaughter Phyllis—the second
-he had had from her since the one which had caused him to tackle his
-masterful wife in the smoking-room. Immediately after the conclusion
-of his business deal with the Hon. Freddie, he had written to Phyllis
-in a vein of optimism rendered glowing by Freddie’s promises, assuring
-her that at any moment he would be in a position to send her the three
-thousand pounds which she required to clinch the purchase of that
-dream-farm in Lincolnshire. To this she had replied with thanks. And
-after that there had been a lapse of days and still he had not made
-good. Phyllis was becoming worried, and said so in six closely-written
-pages.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble, as he sat in the barber’s chair going over this letter
-in his mind, had groaned in spirit, while Jno. Banks with gleaming
-eyes did practically what he liked with the heliotrope bottle. Not for
-the first time since the formation of their partnership, Joseph Keeble
-was tormented with doubts as to his wisdom in entrusting a commission
-so delicate as the purloining of his wife’s diamond necklace to one
-of his nephew Freddie’s known feebleness of intellect. Here, he told
-himself unhappily, was a job of work which would have tested the
-combined abilities of a syndicate consisting of Charles Peace and the
-James Brothers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[p. 223]</span>
-and he had put it in the hands of a young man who in all his life had
-only once shown genuine inspiration and initiative—on the occasion
-when he had parted his hair in the middle at a time when all the other
-members of the Bachelors’ Club were brushing it straight back. The more
-Mr. Keeble thought of Freddie’s chances, the slimmer they appeared.
-By the time Jno. Banks had released him from the spotted apron he
-was thoroughly pessimistic, and as he passed out of the door, “so
-perfumed that the winds were love-sick with him,” his estimate of his
-colleague’s abilities was reduced to a point where he began to doubt
-whether the stealing of a mere milk-can was not beyond his scope. So
-deeply immersed was he in these gloomy thoughts that Eve had to call
-his name twice before he came out of them.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Halliday?” he said apologetically. “I beg your pardon. I was
-thinking.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve, though they had hardly exchanged a word since her arrival
-at the castle, had taken a liking to Mr. Keeble; and she felt in
-consequence none of the embarrassment which might have handicapped her
-in the discussion of an extremely delicate matter with another man. By
-nature direct and straightforward, she came to the point at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you spare me a moment or two, Mr. Keeble?” she said. She
-glanced at the clock on the church tower and saw that she had ample
-time before her own appointment. “I want to talk to you about Phyllis.”
-Mr. Keeble jerked his head back in astonishment, and the world became
-noisome with heliotrope. It was as if the Voice of Conscience had
-suddenly addressed him.</p>
-
-<p>“Phyllis!” he gasped, and the letter crackled in his
-breast-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Your stepdaughter Phyllis.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[p. 224]</span>“Do you know
-her?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was my best friend at school. I had tea with her just before I
-came to the castle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Extraordinary!” said Mr. Keeble.</p>
-
-<p>A customer in quest of a shave thrust himself between them and went
-into the shop. They moved away a few paces.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course if you say it is none of my business&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear young lady&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it <i>is</i> my business, because she’s my friend,” said Eve
-firmly. “Mr. Keeble, Phyllis told me she had written to you about
-buying that farm. Why don’t you help her?”</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon was warm, but not warm enough to account for the
-moistness of Mr. Keeble’s brow. He drew out a large handkerchief and
-mopped his forehead. A hunted look was in his eyes. The hand which was
-not occupied with the handkerchief had sought his pocket and was busy
-rattling keys.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to help her. I would do anything in the world to help
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I am curiously situated.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Phyllis told me something about that. I can see that it is
-a difficult position for you. But, Mr. Keeble, surely, surely if you
-can manage to give Freddie Threepwood two thousand pounds to start a
-bookmaker’s business&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Her words were cut short by a strangled cry from her companion.
-Sheer panic was in his eyes now, and in his heart an overwhelming
-regret that he had ever been fool enough to dabble in crime in
-the company of a mere animated talking-machine like his nephew
-Freddie. This girl knew! And if she knew, how many others knew?
-The young imbecile had probably babbled his<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_225">[p. 225]</span> hideous secret into the ears of every
-human being in the place who would listen to him.</p>
-
-<p>“He told you!” he stammered. “He t-told you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Just now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Goosh!” muttered Mr. Keeble brokenly.</p>
-
-<p>Eve stared at him in surprise. She could not understand this
-emotion. The handkerchief, after a busy session, was lowered now, and
-he was looking at her imploringly.</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t told anyone?” he croaked hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not. I said I had only heard of it just now.”</p>
-
-<p>“You wouldn’t tell anyone?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble’s breath, which had seemed to him for a moment gone for
-ever, began to return timidly. Relief for a space held him dumb. What
-nonsense, he reflected, these newspapers and people talked about the
-modern girl. It was this very broad-mindedness of hers, to which they
-objected so absurdly, that made her a creature of such charm. She
-might behave in certain ways in a fashion that would have shocked her
-grandmother, but how comforting it was to find her calm and unmoved in
-the contemplation of another’s crime. His heart warmed to Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re wonderful!” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” argued Mr. Keeble, “it isn’t really stealing.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall buy my wife another necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will—what?”</p>
-
-<p>“So everything will be all right. Constance will be perfectly happy,
-and Phyllis will have her money, and&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[p. 226]</span>Something in
-Eve’s astonished gaze seemed to smite Mr. Keeble.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you <i>know</i>?” he broke off.</p>
-
-<p>“Know? Know what?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble perceived that he had wronged Freddie. The young ass
-had been a fool even to mention the money to this girl, but he had
-at least, it seemed, stopped short of disclosing the entire plot. An
-oyster-like reserve came upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing, nothing,” he said hastily. “Forget what I was going to
-say. Well, I must be going, I must be going.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve clutched wildly at his retreating sleeve. Unintelligible though
-his words had been, one sentence had come home to her, the one about
-Phyllis having her money. It was no time for half-measures. She grabbed
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Keeble,” she cried urgently. “I don’t know what you mean, but
-you were just going to say something which sounded&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Mr. Keeble, do
-trust me. I’m Phyllis’s best friend, and if you’ve thought out any way
-of helping her I wish you would tell me&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You must tell me. I might
-be able to help&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keeble, as she began her broken speech, had been endeavouring
-with deprecatory tugs to disengage his coat from her grasp. But now he
-ceased to struggle. Those doubts of Freddie’s efficiency, which had
-troubled him in Jno. Banks’s chair, still lingered. His opinion that
-Freddie was but a broken reed had not changed. Indeed, it had grown. He
-looked at Eve. He looked at her searchingly. Into her pleading eyes he
-directed a stare that sought to probe her soul, and saw there honesty,
-sympathy, and—better still—intelligence. He might have stood and gazed
-into Freddie’s fishy eyes for weeks without discovering a tithe of
-such<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[p. 227]</span> intelligence.
-His mind was made up. This girl was an ally. A girl of dash and vigour.
-A girl worth a thousand Freddies—not, however, reflected Mr. Keeble,
-that that was saying much. He hesitated no longer.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s like this,” said Mr. Keeble.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_10_4">§ 4</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The information, authoritatively conveyed to him during breakfast
-by Lady Constance, that he was scheduled that night to read select
-passages from Ralston McTodd’s <i>Songs of Squalor</i> to the entire
-house-party assembled in the big drawing-room, had come as a complete
-surprise to Psmith, and to his fellow-guests—such of them as were young
-and of the soulless sex—as a shock from which they found it hard to
-rally. True, they had before now gathered in a vague sort of way that
-he was one of those literary fellows, but so normal and engaging had
-they found his whole manner and appearance that it had never occurred
-to them that he concealed anything up his sleeve as lethal as <i>Songs
-of Squalor</i>. Among these members of the younger set the consensus of
-opinion was that it was a bit thick, and that at such a price even the
-lavish hospitality of Blandings was scarcely worth having. Only those
-who had visited the castle before during the era of her ladyship’s
-flirtation with Art could have been described as resigned. These stout
-hearts argued that while this latest blister was probably going to be
-pretty bad, he could hardly be worse than the chappie who had lectured
-on Theosophy last November, and must almost of necessity be better than
-the bird who during the Shifley race-week had attempted in a two-hour
-discourse to convert them to vegetarianism.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith himself regarded the coming ordeal with equanimity. He was
-not one of those whom the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[p.
-228]</span> prospect of speaking in public afflicts with nervous
-horror. He liked the sound of his own voice, and night, when it came,
-found him calmly cheerful. He listened contentedly to the murmur of the
-drawing-room filling up as he strolled on the star-lit terrace, smoking
-a last cigarette before duty called him elsewhere. And when, some few
-yards away, seated on the terrace wall gazing out into the velvet
-darkness, he perceived Eve Halliday, his sense of well-being became
-acute.</p>
-
-<p>All day he had been conscious of a growing desire for another
-of those cosy chats with Eve which had done so much to make life
-agreeable for him during his stay at Blandings. Her prejudice—which
-he deplored—in favour of doing a certain amount of work to justify
-her salary, had kept him during the morning away from the little room
-off the library where she was wont to sit cataloguing books; and when
-he had gone there after lunch he had found it empty. As he approached
-her now, he was thinking pleasantly of all those delightful walks,
-those excellent driftings on the lake, and those cheery conversations
-which had gone to cement his conviction that of all possible girls she
-was the only possible one. It seemed to him that in addition to being
-beautiful she brought out all that was best in him of intellect and
-soul. That is to say, she let him talk oftener and longer than any girl
-he had ever known.</p>
-
-<p>It struck him as a little curious that she made no move to greet
-him. She remained apparently unaware of his approach. And yet the
-summer night was not of such density as to hide him from view—and, even
-if she could not see him, she must undoubtedly have heard him; for
-only a moment before he had tripped with some violence over a large
-flower-pot, one of a row of sixteen which Angus McAllister, doubtless
-for some good purpose, had placed in the fairway that afternoon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[p. 229]</span>“A pleasant
-night,” he said, seating himself gracefully beside her on the wall.</p>
-
-<p>She turned her head for a brief instant, and, having turned it,
-looked away again.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Her manner was not effusive, but Psmith persevered.</p>
-
-<p>“The stars,” he proceeded, indicating them with a kindly yet not
-patronising wave of the hand. “Bright, twinkling, and—if I may say
-so—rather neatly arranged. When I was a mere lad, someone whose name
-I cannot recollect taught me which was Orion. Also Mars, Venus, and
-Jupiter. This thoroughly useless chunk of knowledge has, I am happy to
-say, long since passed from my mind. However, I am in a position to
-state that that wiggly thing up there a little to the right is King
-Charles’s Wain.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed, I assure you.” It struck Psmith that Astronomy was not
-gripping his audience, so he tried Travel. “I hear,” he said, “you went
-to Market Blandings this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“An attractive settlement.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause. Psmith removed his monocle and polished it
-thoughtfully. The summer night seemed to him to have taken on a touch
-of chill.</p>
-
-<p>“What I like about the English rural districts,” he went on, “is
-that when the authorities have finished building a place they stop.
-Somewhere about the reign of Henry the Eighth, I imagine that the
-master-mason gave the final house a pat with his trowel and said,
-‘Well, boys, that’s Market Blandings.’ To which his assistants no
-doubt assented with many a hearty ‘Grammercy!’ and ‘I’fackins!’ these
-being expletives to which they were much addicted. And they went<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[p. 230]</span> away and left it, and
-nobody has touched it since. And I, for one, thoroughly approve. I
-think it makes the place soothing. Don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>As far as the darkness would permit, Psmith subjected Eve to
-an inquiring glance through his monocle. This was a strange new
-mood in which he had found her. Hitherto, though she had always
-endeared herself to him by permitting him the major portion of
-the dialogue, they had usually split conversations on at least a
-seventy-five—twenty-five basis. And though it gratified Psmith to be
-allowed to deliver a monologue when talking with most people, he found
-Eve more companionable when in a slightly chattier vein.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you coming in to hear me read?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a change from “Yes,” but that was the best that could be
-said of it. A good deal of discouragement was always required to damp
-Psmith, but he could not help feeling a slight diminution of buoyancy.
-However, he kept on trying.</p>
-
-<p>“You show your usual sterling good sense,” he said approvingly. “A
-scalier method of passing the scented summer night could hardly be
-hit upon.” He abandoned the topic of the reading. It did not grip.
-That was manifest. It lacked appeal. “I went to Market Blandings this
-afternoon, too,” he said. “Comrade Baxter informed me that you had gone
-thither, so I went after you. Not being able to find you, I turned in
-for half an hour at the local moving-picture palace. They were showing
-Episode Eleven of a serial. It concluded with the heroine, kidnapped by
-Indians, stretched on the sacrificial altar with the high-priest making
-passes at her with a knife. The hero meanwhile had started to climb a
-rather nasty precipice on his way to the rescue.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_231">[p. 231]</span> The final picture was a close-up of his
-fingers slipping slowly off a rock. Episode Twelve next week.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve looked out into the night without speaking.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid it won’t end happily,” said Psmith with a sigh. “I think
-he’ll save her.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve turned on him with a menacing abruptness.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I tell you why I went to Market Blandings this afternoon?”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Do,” said Psmith cordially. “It is not for me to criticise, but as
-a matter of fact I was rather wondering when you were going to begin
-telling me all about your adventures. I have been monopolising the
-conversation.”</p>
-
-<p>“I went to meet Cynthia.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith’s monocle fell out of his eye and swung jerkily on its
-cord. He was not easily disconcerted, but this unexpected piece of
-information, coming on top of her peculiar manner, undoubtedly jarred
-him. He foresaw difficulties, and once again found himself thinking
-hard thoughts of this confounded female who kept bobbing up when least
-expected. How simple life would have been, he mused wistfully, had
-Ralston McTodd only had the good sense to remain a bachelor.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Cynthia?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Cynthia,” said Eve. The inconvenient Mrs. McTodd possessed
-a Christian name admirably adapted for being hissed between clenched
-teeth, and Eve hissed it in this fashion now. It became evident to
-Psmith that the dear girl was in a condition of hardly suppressed fury
-and that trouble was coming his way. He braced himself to meet it.</p>
-
-<p>“Directly after we had that talk on the lake, the day I arrived,”
-continued Eve tersely, “I wrote to Cynthia, telling her to come here at
-once and meet me at the ‘Emsworth Arms’&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[p. 232]</span>“In the High
-Street,” said Psmith. “I know it. Good beer.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>“I said they sell good beer&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind about the beer,” cried Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no. I merely mentioned it in passing.”</p>
-
-<p>“At lunch to-day I got a letter from her saying that she would
-be there this afternoon. So I hurried off. I wanted——” Eve laughed
-a hollow, mirthless laugh of a calibre which even the Hon. Freddie
-Threepwood would have found beyond his powers, and he was a
-specialist—“I wanted to try to bring you two together. I thought that
-if I could see her and have a talk with her that you might become
-reconciled.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith, though obsessed with a disquieting feeling that he was
-fighting in the last ditch, pulled himself together sufficiently to pat
-her hand as it lay beside him on the wall like some white and fragile
-flower.</p>
-
-<p>“That was like you,” he murmured. “That was an act worthy of your
-great heart. But I fear that the rift between Cynthia and myself has
-reached such dimensions&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve drew her hand away. She swung round, and the battery of her
-indignant gaze raked him furiously.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw Cynthia,” she said, “and she told me that her husband was in
-Paris.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, how in the world,” said Psmith, struggling bravely but with a
-growing sense that they were coming over the plate a bit too fast for
-him, “how in the world did she get an idea like that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really want to know?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do, indeed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll tell you. She got the idea because she had had a letter
-from him, begging her to join him there. She had just finished telling
-me this, when I caught sight of you from the inn window, walking<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[p. 233]</span> along the High Street. I
-pointed you out to Cynthia, and she said she had never seen you before
-in her life.”</p>
-
-<p>“Women soon forget,” sighed Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“The only excuse I can find for you,” stormed Eve in a vibrant
-undertone necessitated by the fact that somebody had just emerged from
-the castle door and they no longer had the terrace to themselves, “is
-that you’re mad. When I think of all you said to me about poor Cynthia
-on the lake that afternoon, when I think of all the sympathy I wasted
-on you&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not wasted,” corrected Psmith firmly. “It was by no means wasted.
-It made me love you—if possible—even more.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve had supposed that she had embarked on a tirade which would last
-until she had worked off her indignation and felt composed again,
-but this extraordinary remark scattered the thread of her harangue
-so hopelessly that all she could do was to stare at him in amazed
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Womanly intuition,” proceeded Psmith gravely, “will have told
-you long ere this that I love you with a fervour which with my poor
-vocabulary I cannot hope to express. True, as you are about to say, we
-have known each other but a short time, as time is measured. But what
-of that?”</p>
-
-<p>Eve raised her eyebrows. Her voice was cold and hostile.</p>
-
-<p>“After what has happened,” she said, “I suppose I ought not to
-be surprised at finding you capable of anything, but—are you really
-choosing this moment to—to propose to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“To employ a favourite word of your own—yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you expect me to take you seriously?”</p>
-
-<p>“Assuredly not. I look upon the present disclosure purely as a
-sighting shot. You may regard it, if you will, as a kind of formal
-proclamation. I wish simply to go on record as an aspirant to your
-hand. I want you, if you will be so good, to make a note of my
-words<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[p. 234]</span> and give them
-a thought from time to time. As Comrade Cootes—a young friend of mine
-whom you have not yet met—would say, ‘Chew on them.’”</p>
-
-<p>“I&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is possible,” continued Psmith, “that black moments will come to
-you—for they come to all of us, even the sunniest—when you will find
-yourself saying, ‘Nobody loves me!’ On such occasions I should like
-you to add, ‘No, I am wrong. There <i>is</i> somebody who loves me.’ At
-first, it may be, that reflection will bring but scant balm. Gradually,
-however, as the days go by and we are constantly together and my nature
-unfolds itself before you like the petals of some timid flower beneath
-the rays of the sun&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve’s eyes opened wider. She had supposed herself incapable of
-further astonishment, but she saw that she had been mistaken.</p>
-
-<p>“You surely aren’t dreaming of staying on here <i>now</i>?” she
-gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“Most decidedly. Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“But—but what is to prevent me telling everybody that you are not
-Mr. McTodd?”</p>
-
-<p>“Your sweet, generous nature,” said Psmith. “Your big heart. Your
-angelic forbearance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>“Considering that I only came here as McTodd—and if you had seen
-him you would realise that he is not a person for whom the man of
-sensibility and refinement would lightly allow himself to be mistaken—I
-say considering that I only took on the job of understudy so as to
-get to the castle and be near you, I hardly think that you will be
-able to bring yourself to get me slung out. You must try to understand
-what happened. When Lord Emsworth started chatting with me under
-the impression that I was Comrade McTodd, I<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_235">[p. 235]</span> encouraged the mistake purely with the
-kindly intention of putting him at his ease. Even when he informed me
-that he was expecting me to come down to Blandings with him on the five
-o’clock train, it never occurred to me to do so. It was only when I
-saw you talking to him in the street and he revealed the fact that you
-were about to enjoy his hospitality that I decided that there was no
-other course open to the man of spirit. Consider! Twice that day you
-had passed out of my life—may I say taking the sunshine with you?—and
-I began to fear you might pass out of it for ever. So, loath though I
-was to commit the solecism of planting myself in this happy home under
-false pretences, I could see no other way. And here I am!”</p>
-
-<p>“You <i>must</i> be mad!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, as I was saying, the days will go by, you will have ample
-opportunity of studying my personality, and it is quite possible that
-in due season the love of an honest heart may impress you as worth
-having. I may add that I have loved you since the moment when I saw
-you sheltering from the rain under that awning in Dover Street, and I
-recall saying as much to Comrade Walderwick when he was chatting with
-me some short time later on the subject of his umbrella. I do not press
-you for an answer now&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should hope not!”</p>
-
-<p>“I merely say ‘Think it over.’ It is nothing to cause you mental
-distress. Other men love you. Freddie Threepwood loves you. Just add me
-to the list. That is all I ask. Muse on me from time to time. Reflect
-that I may be an acquired taste. You probably did not like olives the
-first time you tasted them. Now you probably do. Give me the same
-chance you would an olive. Consider, also, how little you actually have
-against me. What, indeed, does it amount to, when<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_236">[p. 236]</span> you come to examine it narrowly? All you
-have against me is the fact that I am not Ralston McTodd. Think how
-comparatively few people <i>are</i> Ralston McTodd. Let your meditations
-proceed along these lines and&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>He broke off, for at this moment the individual who had come out of
-the front door a short while back loomed beside them, and the glint of
-starlight on glass revealed him as the Efficient Baxter.</p>
-
-<p>“Everybody is waiting, Mr. McTodd,” said the Efficient Baxter. He
-spoke the name, as always, with a certain sardonic emphasis.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” said Psmith affably, “of course. I was forgetting. I
-will get to work at once. You are quite sure you do not wish to hear a
-scuttleful of modern poetry, Miss Halliday?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“And yet even now, so our genial friend here informs us, a bevy of
-youth and beauty is crowding the drawing-room, agog for the treat.
-Well, well! It is these strange clashings of personal taste which
-constitute what we call Life. I think I will write a poem about it
-some day. Come, Comrade Baxter, let us be up and doing. I must not
-disappoint my public.”</p>
-
-<p>For some moments after the two had left her—Baxter silent and
-chilly, Psmith, all debonair chumminess, kneading the other’s arm
-and pointing out as they went objects of interest by the wayside—Eve
-remained on the terrace wall, thinking. She was laughing now, but
-behind her amusement there was another feeling, and one that perplexed
-her. A good many men had proposed to her in the course of her
-career, but none of them had ever left her with this odd feeling of
-exhilaration. Psmith was different from any other man who had come her
-way, and difference was a quality which Eve esteemed.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[p. 237]</span>She had just
-reached the conclusion that life for whatever girl might eventually
-decide to risk it in Psmith’s company would never be dull, when
-strange doings in her immediate neighbourhood roused her from her
-meditations.</p>
-
-<p>The thing happened as she rose from her seat on the wall and started
-to cross the terrace on her way to the front door. She had stopped for
-an instant beneath the huge open window of the drawing-room to listen
-to what was going on inside. Faintly, with something of the quality of
-a far-off phonograph, the sound of Psmith reading came to her; and even
-at this distance there was a composed blandness about his voice which
-brought a smile to her lips.</p>
-
-<p>And then, with a startling abruptness, the lighted window was
-dark. And she was aware that all the lighted windows on that side of
-the castle had suddenly become dark. The lamp that shone over the
-great door ceased to shine. And above the hubbub of voices in the
-drawing-room she heard Psmith’s patient drawl.</p>
-
-<p>“Ladies and gentlemen, I think the lights have gone out.”</p>
-
-<p>The night air was rent by a single piercing scream. Something
-flashed like a shooting star and fell at her feet; and, stooping, Eve
-found in her hands Lady Constance Keeble’s diamond necklace.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_10_5">§ 5</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>To be prepared is everything in this life. Ever since her talk with
-Mr. Joseph Keeble in the High Street of Market Blandings that afternoon
-Eve’s mind had been flitting nimbly from one scheme to another, all
-designed to end in this very act of seizing the necklace in her hands
-and each rendered impracticable by some annoying flaw. And now that
-Fate in its impulsive way had achieved for her what she had begun to
-feel she could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[p. 238]</span>
-never accomplish for herself, she wasted no time in bewildered
-inaction. The miracle found her ready for it.</p>
-
-<p>For an instant she debated with herself the chances of a dash
-through the darkened hall up the stairs to her room. But the lights
-might go on again, and she might meet someone. Memories of sensational
-novels read in the past told her that on occasions such as this people
-were detained and searched.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, as she stood there, she found the way. Close beside her,
-lying on its side, was the flower-pot which Psmith had overturned as he
-came to join her on the terrace wall. It might have defects as a cache,
-but at the moment she could perceive none. Most flower-pots are alike,
-but this was a particularly easily-remembered flower-pot: for in its
-journeying from the potting shed to the terrace it had acquired on its
-side a splash of white paint. She would be able to distinguish it from
-its fellows when, late that night, she crept out to retrieve the spoil.
-And surely nobody would ever think of suspecting&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>She plunged her fingers into the soft mould, and straightened
-herself, breathing quickly. It was not an ideal piece of work, but it
-would serve.</p>
-
-<p>She rubbed her fingers on the turf, put the flower-pot back in the
-row with the others, and then, like a flying white phantom, darted
-across the terrace and into the house. And so with beating heart,
-groping her way, to the bathroom to wash her hands.</p>
-
-<p>The twenty-thousand-pound flower-pot looked placidly up at the
-winking stars.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_10_6">§ 6</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was perhaps two minutes later that Mr. Cootes, sprinting lustily,
-rounded the corner of the house and burst on to the terrace. Late as
-usual.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_11">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[p. 239]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI</h2>
- <p class="subh2">ALMOST ENTIRELY ABOUT FLOWER-POTS</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ch_11_1">§ 1</h3>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">T</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">The</span> Efficient Baxter prowled
-feverishly up and down the yielding carpet of the big drawing-room.
-His eyes gleamed behind their spectacles, his dome-like brow was
-corrugated. Except for himself, the room was empty. As far as the scene
-of the disaster was concerned, the tumult and the shouting had died. It
-was going on vigorously in practically every other part of the house,
-but in the drawing-room there was stillness, if not peace.</p>
-
-<p>Baxter paused, came to a decision, went to the wall and pressed the
-bell.</p>
-
-<p>“Thomas,” he said when that footman presented himself a few moments
-later.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Send Susan to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Susan, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Susan,” snapped the Efficient One, who had always a short
-way with the domestic staff. “Susan, Susan, Susan.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The new
-parlourmaid.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, sir. Very good, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>Thomas withdrew, outwardly all grave respectfulness, inwardly
-piqued, as was his wont, at the airy manner in which the secretary
-flung his orders about at the castle. The domestic staff at Blandings
-lived in a perpetual state of smouldering discontent under Baxter’s
-rule.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[p. 240]</span>“Susan,” said
-Thomas when he arrived in the lower regions, “you’re to go up to the
-drawing-room. Nosey Parker wants you.”</p>
-
-<p>The pleasant-faced young woman whom he addressed laid down her
-knitting.</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Mister Blooming Baxter. When you’ve been here a little longer
-you’ll know that he’s the feller that owns the place. How he got it
-I don’t know. Found it,” said Thomas satirically, “in his Christmas
-stocking, I expect. Anyhow, you’re to go up.”</p>
-
-<p>Thomas’s fellow-footman, Stokes, a serious-looking man with a bald
-forehead, shook that forehead solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>“Something’s the matter,” he asserted. “You can’t tell me that
-wasn’t a scream we heard when them lights was out. Or,” he added
-weightily, for he was a man who looked at every side of a question,
-“a shriek. It was a shriek or scream. I said so at the time. ‘There,’
-I said, ‘listen!’ I said. ‘That’s somebody screaming,’ I said. ‘Or
-shrieking.’ Something’s up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Baxter hasn’t been murdered, worse luck,” said Thomas.
-“He’s up there screaming or shrieking for Susan. ‘Send Susan to me!’”
-proceeded Thomas, giving an always popular imitation. “‘Susan, Susan,
-Susan.’ So you’d best go, my girl, and see what he wants.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well.”</p>
-
-<p>“And, Susan,” said Thomas, a tender note creeping into his voice,
-for already, brief as had been her sojourn at Blandings, he had found
-the new parlourmaid making a deep impression on him, “if it’s a row of
-any kind&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or description,” interjected Stokes.</p>
-
-<p>“Or description,” continued Thomas, accepting the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[p. 241]</span> word, “if ’e’s ’arsh with
-you for some reason or other, you come right back to me and sob out
-your troubles on my chest, see? Lay your little ’ead on my shoulder and
-tell me all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>The new parlourmaid, primly declining to reply to this alluring
-invitation, started on her journey upstairs; and Thomas, with a not
-unmanly sigh, resumed his interrupted game of halfpenny nap with
-colleague Stokes.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>The Efficient Baxter had gone to the open window and was gazing out
-into the night when Susan entered the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>“You wished to see me, Mr. Baxter?”</p>
-
-<p>The secretary spun round. So softly had she opened the door, and
-so noiselessly had she moved when inside the room, that it was not
-until she spoke that he had become aware of her arrival. It was a
-characteristic of this girl Susan that she was always apt to be among
-those present some time before the latter became cognisant of the
-fact.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, good evening, Miss Simmons. You came in very quietly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Habit,” said the parlourmaid.</p>
-
-<p>“You gave me quite a start.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry. What was it,” she asked, dismissing in a positively
-unfeeling manner the subject of her companion’s jarred nerves, “that
-you wished to see me about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut that door.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have. I always shut doors.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please sit down.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thank you, Mr. Baxter. It might look odd if anyone should come
-in.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[p. 242]</span>“Of course. You
-think of everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“I always do.”</p>
-
-<p>Baxter stood for a moment, frowning.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Simmons,” he said, “when I thought it expedient to install a
-private detective in this house, I insisted on Wragge’s sending you. We
-had worked together before&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sixteenth of December, 1918, to January twelve, 1919, when you were
-secretary to Mr. Horace Jevons, the American millionaire,” said Miss
-Simmons as promptly as if he had touched a spring. It was her hobby to
-remember dates with precision.</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly. I insisted upon your being sent because I knew from
-experience that you were reliable. At that time I looked on your
-presence here merely as a precautionary measure. Now, I am sorry to
-say&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did someone steal Lady Constance’s necklace to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!”</p>
-
-<p>“When the lights went out just now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, why couldn’t you say so at once? Good gracious, man, you
-don’t have to break the thing gently to me.”</p>
-
-<p>The Efficient Baxter, though he strongly objected to being addressed
-as “man,” decided to overlook the solecism.</p>
-
-<p>“The lights suddenly went out,” he said. “There was a certain amount
-of laughter and confusion. Then a piercing shriek&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And immediately after Lady Constance’s voice crying that her jewels
-had been snatched from her neck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then what happened?”</p>
-
-<p>“Still greater confusion, which lasted until one of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[p. 243]</span> the maids arrived with a
-candle. Eventually the lights went on again, but of the necklace there
-was no sign whatever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well? Were you expecting the thief to wear it as a watch-chain or
-hang it from his teeth?”</p>
-
-<p>Baxter was finding his companion’s manner more trying every minute,
-but he preserved his calm.</p>
-
-<p>“Naturally the doors were barred and a complete search instituted.
-And extremely embarrassing it was. With the single exception of the
-scoundrel who has been palming himself off as McTodd, all those present
-were well-known members of Society.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well-known members of Society might not object to getting hold of
-a twenty-thousand pound necklace. But still, with the McTodd fellow
-there, you oughtn’t to have had far to look. What had he to say about
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was among the first to empty his pockets.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, he must have hidden the thing somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not in this room. I have searched assiduously.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a silence.</p>
-
-<p>“It is baffling,” said Baxter, “baffling.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is nothing of the kind,” replied Miss Simmons tartly. “This
-wasn’t a one-man job. How could it have been? I should be inclined to
-call it a three-man job. One to switch off the lights, one to snatch
-the necklace, and one to—was that window open all the time? I thought
-so—and one to pick up the necklace when the second fellow threw it out
-on to the terrace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Terrace!”</p>
-
-<p>The word shot from Baxter’s lips with explosive force. Miss Simmons
-looked at him curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Thought of something?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[p. 244]</span>“Miss Simmons,”
-said the Efficient One impressively, “everybody was assembled in here
-waiting for the reading to begin, but the pseudo-McTodd was nowhere to
-be found. I discovered him eventually on the terrace in close talk with
-the Halliday girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“His partner,” said Miss Simmons, nodding. “We thought so all along.
-And let me add my little bit. There’s a fellow down in the servants’
-hall that calls himself a valet, and I’ll bet he didn’t know what a
-valet was till he came here. I thought he was a crook the moment I set
-eyes on him. I can tell ’em in the dark. Now, do you know whose valet
-he is? This McTodd fellow’s!”</p>
-
-<p>Baxter bounded to and fro like a caged tiger.</p>
-
-<p>“And with my own ears,” he cried excitedly, “I heard the Halliday
-girl refuse to come to the drawing-room to listen to the reading. She
-was out on the terrace throughout the whole affair. Miss Simmons, we
-must act! We must act!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but not like idiots,” replied the detective frostily.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you can’t charge out, as you looked as if you wanted to
-just then, and denounce these crooks where they sit. We’ve got to go
-carefully.”</p>
-
-<p>“But meanwhile they will smuggle the necklace away!”</p>
-
-<p>“They won’t smuggle any necklace away, not while I’m around.
-Suspicion’s no good. We’ve made out a nice little case against the
-three of them, but it’s no use unless we catch them with the goods.
-The first thing we have to do is to find out where they’ve hidden the
-stuff. And that’ll take patience. I’ll start by searching that girl’s
-room. Then I’ll search the valet fellow’s room. And if the stuff isn’t
-there, it’ll mean they’ve hidden it out in the open somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[p. 245]</span>“But this McTodd
-fellow. This fellow who poses as McTodd. He may have it all the
-while.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I’ll search his room, too, but the stuff won’t be there. He’s
-the fellow who’s going to get it in the end, because he’s got that
-place out in the woods to hide it in. But they wouldn’t have had time
-to slip it to him yet. That necklace is somewhere right here. And if,”
-said Miss Simmons with grim facetiousness, “they can hide it from me,
-they may keep it as a birthday present.”</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_11_2">§ 2</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>How wonderful, if we pause to examine it, is Nature’s inexorable
-law of compensation. Instead of wasting time in envy of our mental
-superiors, we would do well to reflect that these gifts of theirs
-which excite our wistful jealousy are ever attended by corresponding
-penalties. To take an example that lies to hand, it was the very fact
-that he possessed a brain like a buzz-saw that rendered the Efficient
-Baxter a bad sleeper. Just as he would be dropping off, bing! would
-go that brain of his, melting the mists of sleep like snow in a
-furnace.</p>
-
-<p>This was so even when life was running calmly for him and without
-excitement. To-night, his mind, bearing the load it did, firmly
-declined even to consider the question of slumber. The hour of two,
-chiming from the clock over the stables, found him as wide awake as
-ever he was at high noon.</p>
-
-<p>Lying in bed in the darkness, he reviewed the situation as far as
-he had the data. Shortly before he retired, Miss Simmons had made her
-report about the bedrooms. Though subjected to the severest scrutiny,
-neither Psmith’s boudoir nor Cootes’s attic nor Eve’s little nook on
-the third floor had yielded up treasure of any<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_246">[p. 246]</span> description. And this, Miss Simmons held,
-confirmed her original view that the necklace must be lying concealed
-in what might almost be called a public spot—on some window-ledge,
-maybe, or somewhere in the hall.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>Baxter lay considering this theory. It did appear to be the only
-tenable one; but it offended him by giving the search a frivolous
-suggestion of being some sort of round game like Hunt the Slipper or
-Find the Thimble. As a child he had held austerely aloof from these
-silly pastimes, and he resented being compelled to play them now.
-Still&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>He sat up, thinking. He had heard a noise.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>The attitude of the majority of people towards noises in the
-night is one of cautious non-interference. But Rupert Baxter was
-made of sterner stuff. The sound had seemed to come from downstairs
-somewhere—perhaps from that very hall where, according to Miss Simmons,
-the stolen necklace might even now be lying hid. Whatever it was, it
-must certainly not be ignored. He reached for the spectacles which lay
-ever ready to his hand on the table beside him: then climbed out of
-bed, and, having put on a pair of slippers and opened the door, crept
-forth into the darkness. As far as he could ascertain by holding his
-breath and straining his ears, all was still from cellar to roof; but
-nevertheless he was not satisfied. He continued to listen. His room
-was on the second floor, one of a series that ran along a balcony
-overlooking the hall; and he stood, leaning over the balcony rail, a
-silent statue of Vigilance.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>The noise which had acted so electrically upon the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[p. 247]</span> Efficient Baxter had been
-a particularly noisy noise; and only the intervening distance and the
-fact that his door was closed had prevented it sounding to him like
-an explosion. It had been caused by the crashing downfall of a small
-table containing a vase, a jar of potpourri, an Indian sandalwood box
-of curious workmanship, and a cabinet-size photograph of the Earl of
-Emsworth’s eldest son, Lord Bosham; and the table had fallen because
-Eve, <i>en route</i> across the hall in quest of her precious flower-pot,
-had collided with it while making for the front door. Of all indoor
-sports—and Eve, as she stood pallidly among the ruins, would have been
-the first to endorse this dictum—the one which offers the minimum
-of pleasure to the participant is that of roaming in pitch darkness
-through the hall of a country-house. Easily navigable in the daytime,
-these places become at night mere traps for the unwary.</p>
-
-<p>Eve paused breathlessly. So terrific had the noise sounded to her
-guilty ears that every moment she was expecting doors to open all over
-the castle, belching forth shouting men with pistols. But as nothing
-happened, courage returned to her, and she resumed her journey. She
-found the great door, ran her fingers along its surface, and drew the
-chain. The shooting back of the bolts occupied but another instant, and
-then she was out on the terrace running her hardest towards the row of
-flower-pots.</p>
-
-<p>Up on his balcony, meanwhile, the Efficient Baxter was stopping,
-looking, and listening. The looking brought no results, for all
-below was black as pitch; but the listening proved more fruitful.
-Faintly from down in the well of the hall there floated up to him
-a peculiar sound like something rustling in the darkness. Had he
-reached the balcony a moment earlier, he would<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_248">[p. 248]</span> have heard the rattle of the chain and
-the click of the bolts; but these noises had occurred just before he
-came out of his room. Now all that was audible was this rustling.</p>
-
-<p>He could not analyse the sound, but the fact that there was any
-sound at all in such a place at such an hour increased his suspicions
-that dark doings were toward which would pay for investigation. With
-stealthy steps he crept to the head of the stairs and descended.</p>
-
-<p>One uses the verb “descend” advisedly, for what is required is some
-word suggesting instantaneous activity. About Baxter’s progress from
-the second floor to the first there was nothing halting or hesitating.
-He, so to speak, did it now. Planting his foot firmly on a golf-ball
-which the Hon. Freddie Threepwood, who had been practising putting in
-the corridor before retiring to bed, had left in his casual fashion
-just where the steps began, he took the entire staircase in one
-majestic, volplaning sweep. There were eleven stairs in all separating
-his landing from the landing below, and the only ones he hit were the
-third and tenth. He came to rest with a squattering thud on the lower
-landing, and for a moment or two the fever of the chase left him.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that many writers in their time have commented at some
-length on the mysterious manner in which Fate is apt to perform
-its work must not deter us now from a brief survey of this latest
-manifestation of its ingenious methods. Had not his interview with
-Eve that afternoon so stimulated the Hon. Freddie as to revive in
-him a faint yet definite desire to putt, there would have been no
-golf-ball waiting for Baxter on the stairs. And had he been permitted
-to negotiate the stairs in a less impetuous manner, Baxter would not at
-this juncture have switched on the light.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[p. 249]</span>It had not
-been his original intention to illuminate the theatre of action, but
-after that Lucifer-like descent from the second floor to the first
-he was taking no more chances. “Safety First” was Baxter’s slogan.
-As soon, therefore, as he had shaken off a dazed sensation of mental
-and moral collapse, akin to that which comes to the man who steps on
-the teeth of a rake and is smitten on the forehead by the handle, he
-rose with infinite caution to his feet and, feeling his way down by
-the banisters, groped for the switch and pressed it. And so it came
-about that Eve, heading for home with her precious flower-pot in her
-arms, was stopped when at the very door by a sudden warning flood of
-light. Another instant, and she would have been across the threshold of
-disaster.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment paralysis gripped her. The light had affected her like
-someone shouting loudly and unexpectedly in her ear. Her heart gave
-one convulsive bound, and she stood frozen. Then, filled with a blind
-desire for flight, she dashed like a hunted rabbit into the friendly
-shelter of a clump of bushes.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Baxter stood blinking. Gradually his eyes adjusted themselves to the
-light, and immediately they had done so he was seized by a fresh frenzy
-of zeal. Now that all things were made visible to him he could see that
-that faint rustling sound had been caused by a curtain flapping in the
-breeze, and that the breeze which made the curtain flap was coming in
-through the open front door.</p>
-
-<p>Baxter wasted no time in abstract thought. He acted swiftly and with
-decision. Straightening his spectacles on his nose, he girded up his
-pyjamas and galloped out into the night.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[p. 250]</span>The smooth
-terrace slept under the stars. To a more poetic man than Baxter it
-would have seemed to wear that faintly reproachful air which a garden
-always assumes when invaded at unseemly hours by people who ought to
-be in bed. Baxter, never fanciful, was blind to this. He was thinking,
-thinking. That shaking-up on the stairs had churned into activity the
-very depths of his brain and he was at the fever-point of his reasoning
-powers. A thought had come like a full-blown rose, flushing his brow.
-Miss Simmons, arguing plausibly, had suggested that the stolen necklace
-might be concealed in the hall. Baxter, inspired, fancied not. Whoever
-it was that had been at work in the hall just now had been making
-for the garden. It was not the desire to escape which had led him—or
-her—to open the front door, for the opening had been done before he,
-Baxter, had come out on to the balcony—otherwise he must have heard the
-shooting of the bolts. No. The enemy’s objective had been the garden.
-In other words, the terrace. And why? Because somewhere on the terrace
-was the stolen necklace.</p>
-
-<p>Standing there in the starlight, the Efficient Baxter endeavoured to
-reconstruct the scene, and did so with remarkable accuracy. He saw the
-jewels flashing down. He saw them picked up. But there he stopped. Try
-as he might, he could not see them hidden. And yet that they had been
-hidden—and that within a few feet of where he was now standing—he felt
-convinced.</p>
-
-<p>He moved from his position near the door and began to roam
-restlessly. His slippered feet padded over the soft turf.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Eve peered out from her clump of bushes. It was not<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[p. 251]</span> easy to see any great
-distance, but Fate, her friend, was still with her. There had been a
-moment that night when Baxter, disrobing for bed, had wavered absently
-between his brown and his lemon-coloured pyjamas, little recking
-of what hung upon the choice. Fate had directed his hand to the
-lemon-coloured, and he had put them on; with the result that he shone
-now in the dim light like the white plume of Navarre. Eve could follow
-his movements perfectly, and, when he was far enough away from his base
-to make the enterprise prudent, she slipped out and raced for home and
-safety. Baxter at the moment was leaning on the terrace wall, thinking,
-thinking, thinking.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>It was possibly the cool air, playing about his bare ankles, that at
-last chilled the secretary’s dashing mood and brought the disquieting
-thought that he was doing something distinctly dangerous in remaining
-out here in the open like this. A gang of thieves are ugly customers,
-likely to stick at little when a valuable necklace is at stake, and
-it came to the Efficient Baxter that in his light pyjamas he must
-be offering a tempting mark for any marauder lurking—say in those
-bushes. And at the thought, the summer night, though pleasantly mild,
-grew suddenly chilly. With an almost convulsive rapidity he turned
-to re-enter the house. Zeal was well enough, but it was silly to be
-rash. He covered the last few yards of his journey at a rare burst of
-speed.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this point that he discovered that the lights in the hall
-had been switched off and that the front door was closed and bolted.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_11_3">§ 3</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is the opinion of most thoughtful students of life<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[p. 252]</span> that happiness in this
-world depends chiefly on the ability to take things as they come. An
-instance of one who may be said to have perfected this attitude is to
-be found in the writings of a certain eminent Arabian author who tells
-of a traveller who, sinking to sleep one afternoon upon a patch of turf
-containing an acorn, discovered when he woke that the warmth of his
-body had caused the acorn to germinate and that he was now some sixty
-feet above the ground in the upper branches of a massive oak. Unable
-to descend, he faced the situation equably. “I cannot,” he observed,
-“adapt circumstances to my will: therefore I shall adapt my will to
-circumstances. I decide to remain here.” Which he did.</p>
-
-<p>Rupert Baxter, as he stood before the barred door of Blandings
-Castle, was very far from imitating this admirable philosopher. To
-find oneself locked out of a country-house at half-past two in the
-morning in lemon-coloured pyjamas can never be an unmixedly agreeable
-experience, and Baxter was a man less fitted by nature to endure it
-with equanimity than most men. His was a fiery and an arrogant soul,
-and he seethed in furious rebellion against the intolerable position
-into which Fate had manœuvred him. He even went so far as to give
-the front door a petulant kick. Finding, however, that this hurt his
-toes and accomplished no useful end, he addressed himself to the task
-of ascertaining whether there was any way of getting in—short of
-banging the knocker and rousing the house, a line of action which did
-not commend itself to him. He made a practice of avoiding as far as
-possible the ribald type of young man of which the castle was now full,
-and he had no desire to meet them at this hour in his present costume.
-He left the front door and proceeded to make a circuit of the castle
-walls; and his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[p. 253]</span>
-spirits sank even lower. In the Middle Ages, during that stormy period
-of England’s history when walls were built six feet thick and a window
-was not so much a window as a handy place for pouring molten lead on
-the heads of visitors, Blandings had been an impregnable fortress.
-But in all its career it can seldom have looked more of a fortress to
-anyone than it did now to the Efficient Baxter.</p>
-
-<p>One of the disadvantages of being a man of action, impervious to the
-softer emotions, is that in moments of trial the beauties of Nature are
-powerless to soothe the anguished heart. Had Baxter been of a dreamy
-and poetic temperament he might now have been drawing all sorts of
-balm from the loveliness of his surroundings. The air was full of the
-scent of growing things; strange, shy creatures came and went about him
-as he walked; down in the woods a nightingale had begun to sing; and
-there was something grandly majestic in the huge bulk of the castle
-as it towered against the sky. But Baxter had temporarily lost his
-sense of smell; he feared and disliked the strange, shy creatures; the
-nightingale left him cold; and the only thought the towering castle
-inspired in him was that it looked as if a fellow would need half a ton
-of dynamite to get into it.</p>
-
-<p>Baxter paused. He was back now near the spot from which he had
-started, having completed two laps without finding any solution of his
-difficulties. The idea in his mind had been to stand under somebody’s
-window and attract the sleeper’s attention with soft, significant
-whistles. But the first whistle he emitted had sounded to him in the
-stillness of early morn so like a steam syren that thereafter he had
-merely uttered timid, mouse-like sounds which the breezes had carried
-away the moment they crept out. He proposed now to halt for awhile and
-rest his lips before making<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[p.
-254]</span> another attempt. He proceeded to the terrace wall and sat
-down. The clock over the stables struck three.</p>
-
-<p>To the restless type of thinker like Rupert Baxter, the act of
-sitting down is nearly always the signal for the brain to begin
-working with even more than its customary energy. The relaxed body
-seems to invite thought. And Baxter, having suspended for the moment
-his physical activities—and glad to do so, for his slippers hurt
-him—gave himself up to tense speculation as to the hiding-place of
-Lady Constance Keeble’s necklace. From the spot where he now sat
-he was probably, he reflected, actually in a position to see that
-hiding-place—if only, when he saw it, he were able to recognise it for
-what it was. Somewhere out here—in yonder bushes or in some unsuspected
-hole in yonder tree—the jewels must have been placed. Or&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>Something seemed to go off inside Baxter like a touched spring. One
-moment, he was sitting limply, keenly conscious of a blister on the
-sole of his left foot; the next, regardless of the blister, he was
-off the wall and racing madly along the terrace in a flurry of flying
-slippers. Inspiration had come to him.</p>
-
-<p>Day dawns early in the summer months, and already a sort of
-unhealthy pallor had begun to manifest itself in the sky. It was still
-far from light, but objects hitherto hidden in the gloom had begun to
-take on uncertain shape. And among these there had come into the line
-of Baxter’s vision a row of fifteen flower-pots.</p>
-
-<p>There they stood, side by side, round and inviting, each with a
-geranium in its bed of mould. Fifteen flower-pots. There had originally
-been sixteen, but Baxter knew nothing of that. All he knew was that he
-was on the trail.</p>
-
-<p>The quest for buried treasure is one which right<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[p. 255]</span> through the ages has
-exercised an irresistible spell over humanity. Confronted with a spot
-where buried treasure may lurk, men do not stand upon the order of
-their digging; they go at it with both hands. No solicitude for his
-employer’s geraniums came to hamper Rupert Baxter’s researches. To
-grasp the first flower-pot and tilt out its contents was with him the
-work of a moment. He scrabbled his fingers through the little pile of
-mould&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing.</p>
-
-<p>A second geranium lay broken on the ground&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing.</p>
-
-<p>A third&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>The Efficient Baxter straightened himself painfully. He was unused
-to stooping, and his back ached. But physical discomfort was forgotten
-in the agony of hope frustrated. As he stood there, wiping his forehead
-with an earth-stained hand, fifteen geranium corpses gazed up at him in
-the growing light, it seemed with reproach. But Baxter felt no remorse.
-He included all geraniums, all thieves, and most of the human race in
-one comprehensive black hatred.</p>
-
-<p>All that Rupert Baxter wanted in this world now was bed. The
-clock over the stables had just struck four, and he was aware of an
-overpowering fatigue. Somehow or other, if he had to dig through the
-walls with his bare hands, he must get into the house. He dragged
-himself painfully from the scene of carnage and blinked up at the row
-of silent windows above him. He was past whistling now. He stooped for
-a pebble, and tossed it up at the nearest window.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing happened. Whoever was sleeping up there continued to sleep.
-The sky had turned pink, birds<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[p.
-256]</span> were twittering in the ivy, other birds had begun to sing
-in the bushes. All Nature, in short, was waking—except the unseen
-sluggard up in that room.</p>
-
-<p>He threw another pebble&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to Rupert Baxter that he had been standing there throwing
-pebbles through a nightmare eternity. The whole universe had now become
-concentrated in his efforts to rouse that log-like sleeper; and for a
-brief instant fatigue left him, driven away by a sort of Berserk fury.
-And there floated into his mind, as if from some previous existence,
-a memory of somebody once standing near where he was standing now and
-throwing a flower-pot in at a window at someone. Who it was that had
-thrown the thing at whom, he could not at the moment recall; but the
-outstanding point on which his mind focused itself was the fact that
-the man had had the right idea. This was no time for pebbles. Pebbles
-were feeble and inadequate. With one voice the birds, the breezes, the
-grasshoppers, the whole chorus of Nature waking to another day seemed
-to shout to him, “Say it with flower-pots!”</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_11_4">§ 4</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The ability to sleep soundly and deeply is the prerogative, as has
-been pointed out earlier in this straightforward narrative of the
-simple home-life of the English upper classes, of those who do not
-think quickly. The Earl of Emsworth, who had not thought quickly since
-the occasion in the summer of 1874 when he had heard his father’s
-footsteps approaching the stable-loft in which he, a lad of fifteen,
-sat smoking his first cigar, was an excellent sleeper. He started
-early and finished late. It was his gentle boast that for more<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[p. 257]</span> than twenty years he
-had never missed his full eight hours. Generally he managed to get
-something nearer ten.</p>
-
-<p>But then, as a rule, people did not fling flower-pots through his
-window at four in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>Even under this unusual handicap, however, he struggled bravely
-to preserve his record. The first of Baxter’s missiles, falling on a
-settee, produced no change in his regular breathing. The second, which
-struck the carpet, caused him to stir. It was the third, colliding
-sharply with his humped back, that definitely woke him. He sat up in
-bed and stared at the thing.</p>
-
-<p>In the first moment of his waking, relief was, oddly enough, his
-chief emotion. The blow had roused him from a disquieting dream in
-which he had been arguing with Angus McAllister about early spring
-bulbs, and McAllister, worsted verbally, had hit him in the ribs with
-a spud. Even in his dream Lord Emsworth had been perplexed as to what
-his next move ought to be; and when he found himself awake and in his
-bedroom he was at first merely thankful that the necessity for making a
-decision had at any rate been postponed. Angus McAllister might on some
-future occasion smite him with a spud, but he had not done it yet.</p>
-
-<p>There followed a period of vague bewilderment. He looked at the
-flower-pot. It held no message for him. He had not put it there. He
-never took flower-pots to bed. Once, as a child, he had taken a dead
-pet rabbit, but never a flower-pot. The whole affair was completely
-inscrutable; and his lordship, unable to solve the mystery, was on the
-point of taking the statesmanlike course of going to sleep again, when
-something large and solid whizzed through the open window and crashed
-against the wall, where it broke, but not into such small fragments
-that he could not perceive that in its prime it, too, had been a
-flower<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[p. 258]</span>-pot. And at
-this moment his eyes fell on the carpet and then on the settee; and the
-affair passed still farther into the realm of the inexplicable. The
-Hon. Freddie Threepwood, who had a poor singing-voice but was a game
-trier, had been annoying his father of late by crooning a ballad ending
-in the words:</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<p class="i0">“<i>It is not raining rain at all:</i></p>
-<p class="i2"><i>It’s raining vi-o-lets.</i>”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="ti0">It seemed to Lord Emsworth now that matters had gone a
-step farther. It was raining flower-pots.</p>
-
-<p>The customary attitude of the Earl of Emsworth towards all mundane
-affairs was one of vague detachment; but this phenomenon was so
-remarkable that he found himself stirred to quite a little flutter
-of excitement and interest. His brain still refused to cope with the
-problem of why anybody should be throwing flower-pots into his room at
-this hour—or, indeed, at any hour; but it seemed a good idea to go and
-ascertain who this peculiar person was.</p>
-
-<p>He put on his glasses and hopped out of bed and trotted to the
-window. And it was while he was on his way there that memory stirred
-in him, as some minutes ago it had stirred in the Efficient Baxter.
-He recalled that odd episode of a few days back, when that delightful
-girl, Miss What’s-her-name, had informed him that his secretary had
-been throwing flower-pots at that poet fellow, McTodd. He had been
-annoyed, he remembered, that Baxter should so far have forgotten
-himself. Now, he found himself more frightened than annoyed. Just as
-every dog is permitted one bite without having its sanity questioned,
-so, if you consider it in a broad-minded way, may every man be allowed
-to throw one flower-pot. But let the thing become a habit, and we
-look askance. This strange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[p.
-259]</span> hobby of his appeared to be growing on Baxter like a drug,
-and Lord Emsworth did not like it at all. He had never before suspected
-his secretary of an unbalanced mind, but now he mused, as he tiptoed
-cautiously to the window, that the Baxter sort of man, the energetic
-restless type, was just the kind that does go off his head. Just some
-such calamity as this, his lordship felt, he might have foreseen. Day
-in, day out, Rupert Baxter had been exercising his brain ever since
-he had come to the castle—and now he had gone and sprained it. Lord
-Emsworth peeped timidly out from behind a curtain.</p>
-
-<p>His worst fears were realised. It was Baxter, sure enough; and a
-tousled, wild-eyed Baxter incredibly clad in lemon-coloured pyjamas.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth stepped back from the window. He had seen sufficient.
-The pyjamas had in some curious way set the coping-stone on his dismay,
-and he was now in a condition approximating to panic. That Baxter
-should be so irresistibly impelled by his strange mania as actually
-to omit to attire himself decently before going out on one of these
-flower-pot-hurling expeditions of his seemed to make it all so sad and
-hopeless. The dreamy peer was no poltroon, but he was past his first
-youth, and it came to him very forcibly that the interviewing and
-pacifying of secretaries who ran amok was young man’s work. He stole
-across the room and opened the door. It was his purpose to put this
-matter into the hands of an agent. And so it came about that Psmith was
-aroused some few minutes later from slumber by a touch on the arm and
-sat up to find his host’s pale face peering at him in the weird light
-of early morning.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[p. 260]</span>“My dear fellow,”
-quavered Lord Emsworth.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith, like Baxter, was a light sleeper; and it was only a moment
-before he was wide awake and exerting himself to do the courtesies.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning,” he said pleasantly. “Will you take a seat.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am extremely sorry to be obliged to wake you, my dear fellow,”
-said his lordship, “but the fact of the matter is, my secretary,
-Baxter, has gone off his head.”</p>
-
-<p>“Much?” inquired Psmith, interested.</p>
-
-<p>“He is out in the garden in his pyjamas, throwing flower-pots
-through my window.”</p>
-
-<p>“Flower-pots?”</p>
-
-<p>“Flower-pots!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, flower-pots!” said Psmith, frowning thoughtfully, as if he had
-expected it would be something else. “And what steps are you proposing
-to take? That is to say,” he went on, “unless you wish him to continue
-throwing flower-pots.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear fellow&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;!”</p>
-
-<p>“Some people like it,” explained Psmith. “But you do not? Quite so,
-quite so. I understand perfectly. We all have our likes and dislikes.
-Well, what would you suggest?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was hoping that you might consent to go down—er—having possibly
-armed yourself with a good stout stick—and induce him to desist and
-return to bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“A sound suggestion in which I can see no flaw,” said Psmith
-approvingly. “If you will make yourself at home in here—pardon me for
-issuing invitations to you in your own house—I will see what can be
-done. I have always found Comrade Baxter a reasonable man, ready to
-welcome suggestions from outside sources, and I have no doubt that we
-shall easily be able to reach some arrangement.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[p. 261]</span>He got out of
-bed, and, having put on his slippers, and his monocle, paused before
-the mirror to brush his hair.</p>
-
-<p>“For,” he explained, “one must be natty when entering the presence
-of a Baxter.”</p>
-
-<p>He went to the closet and took from among a number of hats a
-neat Homburg. Then, having selected from a bowl of flowers on the
-mantelpiece a simple white rose, he pinned it in the coat of his
-pyjama-suit and announced himself ready.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_11_5">§ 5</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The sudden freshet of vicious energy which had
-spurred the Efficient Baxter on to his recent exhibition
-of marksmanship had not lasted. Lethargy was
-creeping back on him even as he stooped to pick up the
-flower-pot which had found its billet on Lord Emsworth’s
-spine. And, as he stood there after hurling that final
-missile, he had realised that that was his last shot. If
-that produced no results, he was finished.</p>
-
-<p>And, as far as he could gather, it had produced no
-results whatever. No head had popped inquiringly
-out of the window. No sound of anybody stirring had
-reached his ears. The place was as still as if he had
-been throwing marsh-mallows. A weary sigh escaped
-from Baxter’s lips. And a moment later he was reclining
-on the ground with his head propped against the
-terrace wall, a beaten man.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes closed. Sleep, which he had been denying
-to himself for so long, would be denied no more. When
-Psmith arrived, daintily swinging the Hon. Freddie
-Threepwood’s niblick like a clouded cane, he had just
-begun to snore.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[p. 262]</span>Psmith was a
-kindly soul. He did not like Rupert Baxter, but that was no reason why
-he should allow him to continue lying on turf wet with the morning
-dew, thus courting lumbago and sciatica. He prodded Baxter in the
-stomach with the niblick, and the secretary sat up, blinking. And with
-returning consciousness came a burning sense of grievance.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve been long enough,” he growled. Then, as he rubbed his
-red-rimmed eyes and was able to see more clearly, he perceived who it
-was that had come to his rescue. The spectacle of Psmith of all people
-beaming benignly down at him was an added offence. “Oh, it’s you?” he
-said morosely.</p>
-
-<p>“I in person,” said Psmith genially. “Awake, beloved! Awake, for
-morning in the bowl of night has flung the stone that puts the stars to
-flight; and lo! the hunter of the East has caught the Sultan’s turret
-in a noose of light. The Sultan himself,” he added, “you will find
-behind yonder window, speculating idly on your motives for bunging
-flower-pots at him. Why, if I may venture the question, <i>did</i> you?”</p>
-
-<p>Baxter was in no confiding mood. Without replying, he rose to his
-feet and started to trudge wearily along the terrace to the front door.
-Psmith fell into step beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“If I were you,” said Psmith, “and I offer the suggestion in the
-most cordial spirit of goodwill, I would use every effort to prevent
-this passion for flinging flower-pots from growing upon me. I know you
-will say that you can take it or leave it alone; that just one more
-pot won’t hurt you; but can you stop at one? Isn’t it just that first
-insidious flower-pot that does all the mischief? Be a man, Comrade
-Baxter!” He laid his hand appealingly on the secretary’s shoulder.
-“The next time the craving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[p.
-263]</span> comes on you, fight it. Fight it! Are you, the heir of the
-ages, going to become a slave to a habit? Tush! You know and I know
-that there is better stuff in you than that. Use your will-power, man,
-use your will-power.”</p>
-
-<p>Whatever reply Baxter might have intended to make to this powerful
-harangue—and his attitude as he turned on his companion suggested that
-he had much to say—was checked by a voice from above.</p>
-
-<p>“Baxter! My dear fellow!”</p>
-
-<p>The Earl of Emsworth, having observed the secretary’s awakening from
-the safe observation-post of Psmith’s bedroom, and having noted that he
-seemed to be exhibiting no signs of violence, had decided to make his
-presence known. His panic had passed, and he wanted to go into first
-causes.</p>
-
-<p>Baxter gazed wanly up at the window.</p>
-
-<p>“I can explain everything, Lord Emsworth.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” said his lordship, leaning farther out.</p>
-
-<p>“I can explain everything,” bellowed Baxter.</p>
-
-<p>“It turns out after all,” said Psmith pleasantly, “to be very
-simple. He was practising for the Jerking The Geranium event at the
-next Olympic Games.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth adjusted his glasses.</p>
-
-<p>“Your face is dirty,” he said, peering down at his dishevelled
-secretary. “Baxter, my dear fellow, your face is dirty.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was digging,” replied Baxter sullenly.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Digging!”</p>
-
-<p>“The terrier complex,” explained Psmith. “What,” he asked kindly,
-turning to his companion, “were you digging for? Forgive me if the
-question seems an impertinent one, but we are naturally curious.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[p. 264]</span>Baxter
-hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“What were you digging for?” asked Lord Emsworth.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” said Psmith. “<i>He</i> wants to know.”</p>
-
-<p>Not for the first time since they had become associated, a mad
-feeling of irritation at his employer’s woolly persistence flared up in
-Rupert Baxter’s bosom. The old ass was always pottering about asking
-questions. Fury and want of sleep combined to dull the secretary’s
-normal prudence. Dimly he realised that he was imparting Psmith, the
-scoundrel who he was convinced was the ringleader of last night’s
-outrage, valuable information; but anything was better than to have to
-stand here shouting up at Lord Emsworth. He wanted to get it over and
-go to bed.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought Lady Constance’s necklace was in one of the flower-pots,”
-he shrilled.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>The secretary’s powers of endurance gave out. This maddening
-inquisition, coming on top of the restless night he had had, was too
-much for him. With a low moan he made one agonised leap for the front
-door and passed through it to where beyond these voices there was
-peace.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith, deprived thus abruptly of his stimulating society, remained
-for some moments standing near the front door, drinking in with grave
-approval the fresh scents of the summer morning. It was many years
-since he had been up and about as early as this, and he had forgotten
-how delightful the first beginnings of a July day can be. Unlike
-Baxter, on whose self-centred soul these things had been lost, he
-revelled in the soft breezes, the singing birds, the growing pinkness
-of the eastern sky. He awoke at length from his reverie to find that
-Lord Emsworth had toddled down and was tapping him on the arm.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[p. 265]</span>“<i>What</i> did he
-say?” inquired his lordship. He was feeling like a man who has been cut
-off in the midst of an absorbing telephone conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“Say?” said Psmith. “Oh, Comrade Baxter? Now, let me think. What
-<i>did</i> he say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Something about something being in a flower-pot,” prompted his
-lordship.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes. He said he thought that Lady Constance’s necklace was in
-one of the flower-pots.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth, it should be mentioned, was not completely in touch
-with recent happenings in his home. His habit of going early to bed had
-caused him to miss the sensational events in the drawing-room: and,
-as he was a sound sleeper, the subsequent screams—or, as Stokes the
-footman would have said, shrieks—had not disturbed him. He stared at
-Psmith, aghast. For a while the apparent placidity of Baxter had lulled
-his first suspicions, but now they returned with renewed force.</p>
-
-<p>“Baxter thought my sister’s necklace was in a flower-pot?” he
-gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“So I understood him to say.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why should my sister keep her necklace in a flower-pot?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, there you take me into deep waters.”</p>
-
-<p>“The man’s mad,” cried Lord Emsworth, his last doubts removed.
-“Stark, staring mad! I thought so before, and now I’m convinced of
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>His lordship was no novice in the symptoms of insanity. Several of
-his best friends were residing in those palatial establishments set
-in pleasant parks and surrounded by high walls with broken bottles on
-them, to which the wealthy and aristocratic are wont to retire when
-the strain of modern life becomes too great. And one of his uncles by
-marriage, who believed that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[p.
-266]</span> he was a loaf of bread, had made his first public statement
-on the matter in the smoking-room of this very castle. What Lord
-Emsworth did not know about lunatics was not worth knowing.</p>
-
-<p>“I must get rid of him,” he said. And at the thought the fair
-morning seemed to Lord Emsworth to take on a sudden new beauty. Many a
-time had he toyed wistfully with the idea of dismissing his efficient
-but tyrannical secretary, but never before had that sickeningly
-competent young man given him any reasonable cause to act. Hitherto,
-moreover, he had feared his sister’s wrath should he take the plunge.
-But now&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Surely even Connie, pig-headed as she was, could not
-blame him for dispensing with the services of a secretary who thought
-she kept her necklaces in flower-pots, and went out into the garden in
-the early dawn to hurl them at his bedroom window.</p>
-
-<p>His demeanour took on a sudden buoyancy. He hummed a gay air.</p>
-
-<p>“Get rid of him,” he murmured, rolling the blessed words round his
-tongue. He patted Psmith genially on the shoulder. “Well, my dear
-fellow,” he said, “I suppose we had better be getting back to bed and
-seeing if we can’t get a little sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith gave a little start. He had been somewhat deeply immersed in
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not,” he said courteously, “let me keep you from the hay if you
-wish to retire. To me—you know what we poets are—this lovely morning
-has brought inspiration. I think I will push off to my little nook in
-the woods, and write a poem about something.”</p>
-
-<p>He accompanied his host up the silent stairs, and they parted with
-mutual good will at their respective doors. Psmith, having cleared his
-brain with a hurried cold bath, began to dress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[p. 267]</span>As a rule, the
-donning of his clothes was a solemn ceremony over which he dwelt
-lovingly; but this morning he abandoned his customary leisurely habit.
-He climbed into his trousers with animation, and lingered but a moment
-over the tying of his tie. He was convinced that there was that before
-him which would pay for haste.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing in this world is sadder than the frequency with which we
-suspect our fellows without just cause. In the happenings of the night
-before, Psmith had seen the hand of Edward Cootes. Edward Cootes, he
-considered, had been indulging in what—in another—he would certainly
-have described as funny business. Like Miss Simmons, Psmith had quickly
-arrived at the conclusion that the necklace had been thrown out of
-the drawing-room window by one of those who made up the audience at
-his reading: and it was his firm belief that it had been picked up
-and hidden by Mr. Cootes. He had been trying to think ever since
-where that persevering man could have concealed it, and Baxter had
-provided the clue. But Psmith saw clearer than Baxter. The secretary,
-having disembowelled fifteen flower-pots and found nothing, had
-abandoned his theory. Psmith went further, and suspected the existence
-of a sixteenth. And he proposed as soon as he was dressed to sally
-downstairs in search of it.</p>
-
-<p>He put on his shoes, and left the room, buttoning his waistcoat as
-he went.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_11_6">§ 6</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The hands of the clock over the stables were pointing to half-past
-five when Eve Halliday, tiptoeing furtively, made another descent
-of the stairs. Her feelings as she went were very different from
-those which had caused her to jump at every<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_268">[p. 268]</span> sound when she had started on this
-same journey three hours earlier. Then, she had been a prowler in
-the darkness and, as such, a fitting object of suspicion: now, if
-she happened to run into anybody, she was merely a girl who, unable
-to sleep, had risen early to take a stroll in the garden. It was a
-distinction that made all the difference.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, it covered the facts. She had not been able to
-sleep—except for an hour when she had dozed off in a chair by her
-window; and she certainly proposed to take a stroll in the garden. It
-was her intention to recover the necklace from the place where she had
-deposited it, and bury it somewhere where no one could possibly find
-it. There it could lie until she had a chance of meeting and talking to
-Mr. Keeble, and ascertaining what was the next step he wished taken.</p>
-
-<p>Two reasons had led Eve, after making her panic dash back into the
-house after lurking in the bushes while Baxter patrolled the terrace,
-to leave her precious flower-pot on the sill of the window beside the
-front door. She had read in stories of sensation that for purposes
-of concealment the most open place is the best place: and, secondly,
-the nearer the front door she put the flower-pot, the less distance
-would she have to carry it when the time came for its removal. In
-the present excited condition of the household, with every guest an
-amateur detective, the spectacle of a girl tripping downstairs with a
-flower-pot in her arms would excite remark.</p>
-
-<p>Eve felt exhilarated. She was not used to getting only one hour’s
-sleep in the course of a night, but excitement and the reflection that
-she had played a difficult game and won it against odds bore her up
-so strongly that she was not conscious of fatigue: and so uplifted
-did she feel that as she reached the landing<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_269">[p. 269]</span> above the hall she abandoned her cautious
-mode of progress and ran down the remaining stairs. She had the
-sensation of being in the last few yards of a winning race.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>The hall was quite light now. Every object in it was plainly
-visible. There was the huge dinner-gong: there was the long leather
-settee: there was the table which she had upset in the darkness. And
-there was the sill of the window by the front door. But the flower-pot
-which had been on it was gone.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_12">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[p. 270]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII</h2>
- <p class="subh2">MORE ON THE FLOWER-POT THEME</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">I</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">In</span> any community in which
-a sensational crime has recently been committed, the feelings of
-the individuals who go to make up that community must of necessity
-vary somewhat sharply according to the degree in which the personal
-fortunes of each are affected by the outrage. Vivid in their own way
-as may be the emotions of one who sees a fellow-citizen sandbagged
-in a quiet street, they differ in kind from those experienced by the
-victim himself. And so, though the theft of Lady Constance Keeble’s
-diamond necklace had stirred Blandings Castle to its depths, it had
-not affected all those present in quite the same way. It left the
-house-party divided into two distinct schools of thought—the one
-finding in the occurrence material for gloom and despondency, the other
-deriving from it nothing but joyful excitement.</p>
-
-<p>To this latter section belonged those free young spirits who had
-chafed at the prospect of being herded into the drawing-room on the
-eventful night to listen to Psmith’s reading of <i>Songs of Squalor</i>.
-It made them tremble now to think of what they would have missed, had
-Lady Constance’s vigilance relaxed sufficiently to enable them to
-execute the quiet sneak for the billiard-room of which even at the
-eleventh hour they had thought so wistfully. As far as the Reggies,
-Berties, Claudes, and Archies at that moment<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_271">[p. 271]</span> enjoying Lord Emsworth’s hospitality were
-concerned the thing was top-hole, priceless, and indisputably what the
-doctor ordered. They spent a great deal of their time going from one
-country-house to another, and as a rule found the routine a little
-monotonous. A happening like that of the previous night gave a splendid
-zip to rural life. And when they reflected that, right on top of this
-binge, there was coming the County Ball, it seemed to them that God was
-in His heaven and all right with the world. They stuck cigarettes in
-long holders, and collected in groups, chattering like starlings.</p>
-
-<p>The gloomy brigade, those with hearts bowed down, listened to their
-effervescent babbling with wan distaste. These last were a small body
-numerically, but very select. Lady Constance might have been described
-as their head and patroness. Morning found her still in a state
-bordering on collapse. After breakfast, however, which she took in her
-room, and which was sweetened by an interview with Mr. Joseph Keeble,
-her husband, she brightened considerably. Mr. Keeble, thought Lady
-Constance, behaved magnificently. She had always loved him dearly, but
-never so much as when, abstaining from the slightest reproach of her
-obstinacy in refusing to allow the jewels to be placed in the bank, he
-spaciously informed her that he would buy her another necklace, just
-as good and costing every penny as much as the old one. It was at this
-point that Lady Constance almost seceded from the ranks of gloom. She
-kissed Mr. Keeble gratefully, and attacked with something approaching
-animation the boiled egg at which she had been pecking when he came
-in.</p>
-
-<p>But a few minutes later the average of despair was restored by
-the enrolment of Mr. Keeble in the ranks<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_272">[p. 272]</span> of the despondent. He had gladsomely
-assumed overnight that one of his agents, either Eve or Freddie, had
-been responsible for the disappearance of the necklace. The fact that
-Freddie, interviewed by stealth in his room, gapingly disclaimed any
-share in the matter had not damped him. He had never expected results
-from Freddie. But when, after leaving Lady Constance, he encountered
-Eve and was given a short outline of history, beginning with her
-acquisition of the necklace, and ending—like a modern novel—on the
-sombre note of her finding the flower-pot gone, he too sat him down and
-mourned as deeply as anyone.</p>
-
-<p>Passing with a brief mention over Freddie, whose morose bearing
-was the subject of considerable comment among the younger set; over
-Lord Emsworth, who woke at twelve o’clock disgusted to find that he
-had missed several hours among his beloved flower-beds; and over the
-Efficient Baxter, who was roused from sleep at twelve-fifteen by Thomas
-the footman knocking on his door in order to hand him a note from his
-employer enclosing a cheque, and dispensing with his services; we come
-to Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>At twenty minutes past eleven on this morning when so much was
-happening to so many people, Miss Peavey stood in the Yew Alley gazing
-belligerently at the stemless mushroom finial of a tree about half-way
-between the entrance and the point where the alley merged into the
-west wood. She appeared to be soliloquising. For, though words were
-proceeding from her with considerable rapidity, there seemed to be no
-one in sight to whom they were being addressed. Only an exceptionally
-keen observer would have noted a slight significant quivering among the
-tree’s tightly-woven branches.</p>
-
-<p>“You poor bone-headed fish,” the poetess was<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_273">[p. 273]</span> saying with that strained tenseness which
-results from the churning up of a generous and emotional nature, “isn’t
-there anything in this world you can do without tumbling over your feet
-and making a mess of it? All I ask of you is to stroll under a window
-and pick up a few jewels, and now you come and tell me&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Liz!” said the tree plaintively.</p>
-
-<p>“I do all the difficult part of the job. All that there was left for
-you to handle was something a child of three could have done on its
-ear. And now&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Liz! I’m telling you I couldn’t find the stuff. I was down
-there all right, but I couldn’t find it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You couldn’t find it!” Miss Peavey pawed restlessly at the soft
-turf with a shapely shoe. “You’re the sort of dumb Isaac that couldn’t
-find a bass-drum in a telephone-booth. You didn’t <i>look</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“I did look. Honest, I did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the stuff was there. I threw it down the moment the lights
-went out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody must have got there first, and swiped it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who could have got there first? Everybody was up in the room where
-I was.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I sure? Am I&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” The poetess’s voice trailed
-off. She was staring down the Yew Alley at a couple who had just
-entered. She hissed a warning in a sharp undertone. “Hsst! Cheese it,
-Ed. There’s someone coming.”</p>
-
-<p>The two intruders who had caused Miss Peavey to suspend her remarks
-to her erring lieutenant were of opposite sexes—a tall girl with fair
-hair, and a taller young man irreproachably clad in white flannels who
-beamed down at his companion through a single eyeglass. Miss Peavey
-gazed at them searchingly as they approached. A sudden thought had
-come to her at the sight of them. Mistrusting Psmith as she had<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[p. 274]</span> done ever since Mr.
-Cootes had unmasked him for the impostor that he was, the fact that
-they were so often together had led her to extend her suspicion to Eve.
-It might, of course, be nothing but a casual friendship, begun here
-at the castle; but Miss Peavey had always felt that Eve would bear
-watching. And now, seeing them together again this morning, it had
-suddenly come to her that she did not recall having observed Eve among
-the gathering in the drawing-room last night. True, there had been many
-people present, but Eve’s appearance was striking, and she was sure
-that she would have noticed her, if she had been there. And, if she had
-not been there, why should she not have been on the terrace? Somebody
-had been on the terrace last night, that was certain. For all her
-censorious attitude in their recent conversation, Miss Peavey had not
-really in her heart believed that even a dumb-bell like Eddie Cootes
-would not have found the necklace if it had been lying under the window
-on his arrival.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, good morning, Mr. McTodd,” she cooed. “I’m feeling <i>so</i> upset
-about this terrible affair. Aren’t <i>you</i>, Miss Halliday?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Eve, and she had never said a more truthful word.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith, for his part, was in more debonair and cheerful mood
-even than was his wont. He had examined the position of affairs and
-found life good. He was particularly pleased with the fact that he
-had persuaded Eve to stroll with him this morning and inspect his
-cottage in the woods. Buoyant as was his temperament, he had been
-half afraid that last night’s interview on the terrace might have
-had disastrous effects on their intimacy. He was now feeling full of
-kindliness and goodwill towards all mankind—even<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_275">[p. 275]</span> Miss Peavey; and he bestowed on the
-poetess a dazzling smile.</p>
-
-<p>“We must always,” he said, “endeavour to look on the bright side. It
-was a pity, no doubt, that my reading last night had to be stopped at
-a cost of about twenty thousand pounds to the Keeble coffers, but let
-us not forget that but for that timely interruption I should have gone
-on for about another hour. I am like that. My friends have frequently
-told me that when once I start talking it requires something in the
-nature of a cataclysm to stop me. But, of course, there are drawbacks
-to everything, and last night’s rannygazoo perhaps shook your nervous
-system to some extent?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was dreadfully frightened,” said Miss Peavey. She turned to Eve
-with a delicate shiver. “Weren’t <i>you</i>, Miss Halliday?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t there,” said Eve absently.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Halliday,” explained Psmith, “has had in the last few days
-some little experience of myself as orator, and with her usual good
-sense decided not to go out of her way to get more of me than was
-absolutely necessary. I was perhaps a trifle wounded at the moment,
-but on thinking it over came to the conclusion that she was perfectly
-justified in her attitude. I endeavour always in my conversation to
-instruct, elevate, and entertain, but there is no gainsaying the fact
-that a purist might consider enough of my chit-chat to be sufficient.
-Such, at any rate, was Miss Halliday’s view, and I honour her for it.
-But here I am, rambling on again just when I can see that you wish to
-be alone. We will leave you, therefore, to muse. No doubt we have been
-interrupting a train of thought which would have resulted but for my
-arrival in a rondel or a ballade or some other poetic morceau. Come,
-Miss Halliday. A weird and repellent female,” he said to Eve as<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[p. 276]</span> they drew out of hearing,
-“created for some purpose which I cannot fathom. Everything in this
-world, I like to think, is placed there for some useful end: but why
-the authorities unleashed Miss Peavey on us is beyond me. It is not too
-much to say that she gives me a pain in the gizzard.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey, unaware of these harsh views, had watched them out of
-sight, and now she turned excitedly to the tree which sheltered her
-ally.</p>
-
-<p>“Ed!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hello?” replied the muffled voice of Mr. Cootes.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you hear?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my heavens!” cried his overwrought partner. “He’s gone deaf
-now! That girl—you didn’t hear what she was saying? She said that she
-wasn’t in the drawing-room when those lights went out. Ed, she was down
-below on the terrace, that’s where she was, picking up the stuff. And
-if it isn’t hidden somewheres in that McTodd’s shack down there in the
-woods I’ll eat my Sunday rubbers.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve, with Psmith prattling amiably at her side, pursued her way
-through the wood. She was wondering why she had come. She ought, she
-felt, to have been very cold and distant to this young man after what
-had occurred between them last night. But somehow it was difficult
-to be cold and distant with Psmith. He cheered her stricken soul. By
-the time they reached the little clearing and came in sight of the
-squat, shed-like building with its funny windows and stained door, her
-spirits, always mercurial, had risen to a point where she found herself
-almost able to forget her troubles.</p>
-
-<p>“What a horrible-looking place!” she exclaimed. “Whatever did you
-want it for?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[p. 277]</span>“Purely as a
-nook,” said Psmith, taking out his key. “You know how the man of
-sensibility and refinement needs a nook. In this rushing age it is
-imperative that the thinker shall have a place, however humble, where
-he can be alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you aren’t a thinker.”</p>
-
-<p>“You wrong me. For the last few days I have been doing some
-extremely brisk thinking. And the strain has taken its toll. The fierce
-whirl of life at Blandings is wearing me away. There are dark circles
-under my eyes and I see floating spots.” He opened the door. “Well,
-here we are. Will you pop in for a moment?”</p>
-
-<p>Eve went in. The single sitting-room of the cottage certainly bore
-out the promise of the exterior. It contained a table with a red cloth,
-a chair, three stuffed birds in a glass case on the wall, and a small
-horsehair sofa. A depressing musty scent pervaded the place, as if a
-cheese had recently died there in painful circumstances. Eve gave a
-little shiver of distaste.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand your silent criticism,” said Psmith. “You are saying
-to yourself that plain living and high thinking is evidently the ideal
-of the gamekeepers on the Blandings estate. They are strong, rugged
-men who care little for the refinements of interior decoration. But
-shall we blame them? If I had to spend most of the day and night
-chivvying poachers and keeping an eye on the local rabbits, I imagine
-that in my off-hours practically anything with a roof would satisfy
-me. It was in the hope that you might be able to offer some hints and
-suggestions for small improvements here and there that I invited you
-to inspect my little place. There is no doubt that it wants doing up
-a bit, by a woman’s gentle hand. Will you take a look round and give
-out a few ideas? The wall-paper is, I fear,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_278">[p. 278]</span> a fixture, but in every other direction
-consider yourself untrammelled.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve looked about her.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” she began dubiously, “I don’t think&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>She stopped abruptly, tingling all over. A second glance had shown
-her something which her first careless inspection had overlooked.
-Half hidden by a ragged curtain, there stood on the window-sill a
-large flower-pot containing a geranium. And across the surface of the
-flower-pot was a broad splash of white paint.</p>
-
-<p>“You were saying&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?” said Psmith
-courteously.</p>
-
-<p>Eve did not reply. She hardly heard him. Her mind was in a confused
-whirl. A monstrous suspicion was forming itself in her brain.</p>
-
-<p>“You are admiring the shrub?” said Psmith. “I found it lying about
-up at the castle this morning and pinched it. I thought it would add a
-touch of colour to the place.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve, looking at him keenly as his gaze shifted to the flower-pot,
-told herself that her suspicion had been absurd. Surely this blandness
-could not be a cloak for guilt.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you find it?”</p>
-
-<p>“By one of the windows in the hall, more or less wasting its
-sweetness. I am bound to say I am a little disappointed in the thing. I
-had a sort of idea it would turn the old homestead into a floral bower,
-but it doesn’t seem to.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a beautiful geranium.”</p>
-
-<p>“There,” said Psmith, “I cannot agree with you. It seems to me to
-have the glanders or something.”</p>
-
-<p>“It only wants watering.”</p>
-
-<p>“And unfortunately this cosy little place appears to possess no
-water supply. I take it that the late proprietor when in residence
-used to trudge to the back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[p.
-279]</span> door of the castle and fetch what he needed in a bucket.
-If this moribund plant fancies that I am going to spend my time racing
-to and fro with refreshments, it is vastly mistaken. To-morrow it goes
-into the dustbin.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve shut her eyes. She was awed by a sense of having arrived at a
-supreme moment. She had the sensations of a gambler who risks all on a
-single throw.</p>
-
-<p>“What a shame!” she said, and her voice, though she tried to control
-it, shook. “You had better give it to me. I’ll take care of it. It’s
-just what I want for my room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pray take it,” said Psmith. “It isn’t mine, but pray take it. And
-very encouraging it is, let me add, that you should be accepting gifts
-from me in this hearty fashion; for it is well known that there is no
-surer sign of the dawning of the divine emotion—love,” he explained,
-“than this willingness to receive presents from the hands of the
-adorer. I make progress, I make progress.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t do anything of the kind,” said Eve. Her eyes were
-sparkling and her heart sang within her. In the revulsion of feeling
-which had come to her on finding her suspicions unfounded she was aware
-of a warm friendliness towards this absurd young man.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me,” said Psmith firmly. “I am quoting an established
-authority—Auntie Belle of <i>Home Gossip</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“I must be going,” said Eve. She took the flower-pot and hugged it
-to her. “I’ve got work to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Work, work, always work!” sighed Psmith. “The curse of the age.
-Well, I will escort you back to your cell.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you won’t,” said Eve. “I mean, thank you for your polite offer,
-but I want to be alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Alone?” Psmith looked at her, astonished.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_280">[p. 280]</span> “When you have the chance of being with
-<i>me</i>? This is a strange attitude.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye,” said Eve. “Thank you for being so hospitable and lavish.
-I’ll try to find some cushions and muslin and stuff to brighten up this
-place.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your presence does that adequately,” said Psmith, accompanying her
-to the door. “By the way, returning to the subject we were discussing
-last night, I forgot to mention, when asking you to marry me, that I
-can do card-tricks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really?”</p>
-
-<p>“And also a passable imitation of a cat calling to her young. Has
-this no weight with you? Think! These things come in very handy in the
-long winter evenings.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I shan’t be there when you are imitating cats in the long
-winter evenings.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you are wrong. As I visualise my little home, I can see you
-there very clearly, sitting before the fire. Your maid has put you into
-something loose. The light of the flickering flames reflects itself
-in your lovely eyes. You are pleasantly tired after an afternoon’s
-shopping, but not so tired as to be unable to select a card—<i>any</i>
-card—from the pack which I offer&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye,” said Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“If it must be so—good-bye. For the present. I shall see you
-anon?”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good! I will count the minutes.”</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Eve walked rapidly away. As she snuggled the flower-pot under her
-arm she was feeling like a child about to open its Christmas stocking.
-Before she had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[p. 281]</span> gone
-far, a shout stopped her and she perceived Psmith galloping gracefully
-in her wake.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you spare me a moment?” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should have added that I can also recite ‘Gunga-Din.’ Will you
-think that over?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” said Psmith. “Thank you. I have a feeling that it may
-just turn the scale.”</p>
-
-<p>He raised his hat ambassadorially and galloped away again.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Eve found herself unable to wait any longer. Psmith was out of sight
-now, and the wood was very still and empty. Birds twittered in the
-branches, and the sun made little pools of gold upon the ground. She
-cast a swift glance about her and crouched down in the shelter of a
-tree.</p>
-
-<p>The birds stopped singing. The sun no longer shone. The wood had
-become cold and sinister. For Eve, with a heart of lead, was staring
-blankly at a little pile of mould at her feet; mould which she had
-sifted again and again in a frenzied, fruitless effort to find a
-necklace which was not there.</p>
-
-<p>The empty flower-pot seemed to leer up at her in mockery.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_13">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[p. 282]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
- <p class="subh2">PSMITH RECEIVES GUESTS</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="Ch_13_1">§ 1</h3>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">B</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">Blandings Castle</span> was astir
-from roof to hall. Lights blazed, voices shouted, bells rang. All
-over the huge building there prevailed a vast activity like that of a
-barracks on the eve of the regiment’s departure for abroad. Dinner was
-over, and the Expeditionary Force was making its final preparations
-before starting off in many motor-cars for the County Ball at Shifley.
-In the bedrooms on every floor, Reggies, doubtful at the last moment
-about their white ties, were feverishly arranging new ones; Berties
-brushed their already glistening hair; and Claudes shouted to Archies
-along the passages insulting inquiries as to whether they had been
-sneaking their handkerchiefs. Valets skimmed like swallows up and
-down corridors, maids fluttered in and out of rooms in aid of Beauty
-in distress. The noise penetrated into every nook and corner of the
-house. It vexed the Efficient Baxter, going through his papers in the
-library preparatory to leaving Blandings on the morrow for ever. It
-disturbed Lord Emsworth, who stoutly declining to go within ten miles
-of the County Ball, had retired to his room with a book on Herbaceous
-Borders. It troubled the peace of Beach the butler, refreshing himself
-after his activities around the dinner table with a glass of sound port
-in the housekeeper’s room. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[p.
-283]</span> only person in the place who paid no attention to it was
-Eve Halliday.</p>
-
-<p>Eve was too furious to pay attention to anything but her deleterious
-thoughts. As she walked on the terrace, to which she had fled in quest
-of solitude, her teeth were set and her blue eyes glowed belligerently.
-As Miss Peavey would have put it in one of her colloquial moods, she
-was mad clear through. For Eve was a girl of spirit, and there is
-nothing your girl of spirit so keenly resents as being made a fool of,
-whether it be by Fate or by a fellow human creature. Eve was in the
-uncomfortable position of having had this indignity put upon her by
-both. But, while as far as Fate was concerned she merely smouldered
-rebelliously, her animosity towards Psmith was vivid in the extreme.</p>
-
-<p>A hot wave of humiliation made her writhe as she remembered the
-infantile guilelessness with which she had accepted the preposterous
-story he had told her in explanation of his presence at Blandings in
-another man’s name. He had been playing with her all the time—fooling
-her—and, most unforgivable crime of all, he had dared to pretend that
-he was fond of her and—Eve’s face burned again—to make her—almost—fond
-of him. How he must have laughed&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>Well, she was not beaten yet. Her chin went up and she began to walk
-quicker. He was clever, but she would be cleverer. The game was not
-over&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo!”</p>
-
-<p>A white waistcoat was gleaming at her side. Polished shoes shuffled
-on the turf. Light hair, brushed and brilliantined to the last possible
-pitch of perfection, shone in the light of the stars. The Hon. Freddie
-Threepwood was in her midst.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Freddie?” said Eve resignedly.</p>
-
-<p>“I say,” said Freddie in a voice in which self-pity<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[p. 284]</span> fought with commiseration
-for her. “Beastly shame you aren’t coming to the hop.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I do, dash it! The thing won’t be anything without you. A
-bally wash-out. And I’ve been trying out some new steps with the
-Victrola.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there will be plenty of other girls there for you to step
-on.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t <i>want</i> other girls, dash them. I want you.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s very nice of you,” said Eve. The first truculence of her
-manner had softened. She reminded herself, as she had so often been
-obliged to remind herself before, that Freddie meant well. “But it
-can’t be helped. I’m only an employée here, not a guest. I’m not
-invited.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Freddie. “And that’s what makes it so dashed
-sickening. It’s like that picture I saw once, ‘A Modern Cinderella.’
-Only there the girl nipped off to the dance—disguised, you know—and had
-a most topping time. I wish life was a bit more like the movies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it was enough like the movies last night when&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>Eve stopped. Her heart gave a sudden jump. Somehow the presence of
-Freddie was so inextricably associated in her mind with limp proposals
-of marriage that she had completely forgotten that there was another
-and a more dashing side to his nature, that side which Mr. Keeble had
-revealed to her at their meeting in Market Blandings on the previous
-afternoon. She looked at him with new eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything up?” said Freddie.</p>
-
-<p>Eve took him excitedly by the sleeve and drew him farther away from
-the house. Not that there was any need to do so, for the bustle within
-continued unabated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[p. 285]</span>“Freddie,” she
-whispered, “listen! I met Mr. Keeble yesterday after I had left you,
-and he told me all about how you and he had planned to steal Lady
-Constance’s necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord!” cried Freddie, and leaped like a stranded fish.</p>
-
-<p>“And I’ve got an idea,” said Eve.</p>
-
-<p>She had, and it was one which had only in this instant come to her.
-Until now, though she had tilted her chin bravely and assured herself
-that the game was not over and that she was not yet beaten, a small
-discouraging voice had whispered to her all the while that this was
-mere bravado. What, the voice had asked, are you going to do? And she
-had not been able to answer it. But now, with Freddie as an ally, she
-could act.</p>
-
-<p>“Told you all about it?” Freddie was muttering pallidly. He had
-never had a very high opinion of his Uncle Joseph’s mentality, but he
-had supposed him capable of keeping a thing like that to himself. He
-was, indeed, thinking of Mr. Keeble almost the identical thoughts which
-Mr. Keeble in the first moments of his interview with Eve in Market
-Blandings had thought of him. And these reflections brought much the
-same qualms which they had brought to the elder conspirator. Once these
-things got talked about, mused Freddie agitatedly, you never knew where
-they would stop. Before his mental eye there swam a painful picture of
-his Aunt Constance, informed of the plot, tackling him and demanding
-the return of her necklace. “Told you all about it?” he bleated, and,
-like Mr. Keeble, mopped his brow.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right,” said Eve impatiently. “It’s quite all right. He
-asked me to steal the necklace, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“You?” said Freddie, gaping.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[p. 286]</span>“My Gosh!”
-cried Freddie, electrified. “Then was it you who got the thing last
-night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes it was. But&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment Freddie had to wrestle with something that was almost
-a sordid envy. Then better feelings prevailed. He quivered with manly
-generosity. He gave Eve’s hand a tender pat. It was too dark for her to
-see it, but he was registering renunciation.</p>
-
-<p>“Little girl,” he murmured, “there’s no one I’d rather got that
-thousand quid than you. If I couldn’t have it myself, I mean to say.
-Little girl&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, be quiet!” cried Eve. “I wasn’t doing it for any thousand
-pounds. I didn’t want Mr. Keeble to give me money&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t want him to give you money!” repeated Freddie
-wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I just wanted to help Phyllis. She’s my friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pals, pardner, pals! Pals till hell freezes!” cried Freddie, deeply
-moved.</p>
-
-<p>“What <i>are</i> you talking about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry. That was a sub-title from a thing called ‘Prairie Nell,’ you
-know. Just happened to cross my mind. It was in the second reel where
-the two fellows are&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes; never mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thought I’d mention it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“It seemed to fit in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do <i>stop</i>, Freddie!”</p>
-
-<p>“Right-ho!”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me,” resumed Eve, “is Mr. McTodd going to the ball?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? Why, yes, I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, listen. You know that little cottage your father has let him
-have?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[p. 287]</span>“Little
-cottage?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. In the wood past the Yew Alley.”</p>
-
-<p>“Little cottage? I never heard of any little cottage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he’s got one,” said Eve. “And as soon as everybody has gone
-to the ball you and I are going to burgle it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>“Burgle it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Burgle it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, <i>burgle</i> it!”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie gulped.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, old thing,” he said plaintively. “This is a bit beyond
-me. It doesn’t seem to me to make sense.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve forced herself to be patient. After all, she reflected,
-perhaps she had been approaching the matter a little rapidly. The
-desire to beat Freddie violently over the head passed, and she began
-to speak slowly, and, as far as she could manage it, in words of one
-syllable.</p>
-
-<p>“I can make it quite clear if you will listen and not say a word
-till I’ve done. This man who calls himself McTodd is not Mr. McTodd at
-all. He is a thief who got into the place by saying that he was McTodd.
-He stole the jewels from me last night and hid them in his cottage.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, I say!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t interrupt. I know he has them there, so when he has gone to
-the ball and the coast is clear you and I will go and search till we
-find them.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, I say!”</p>
-
-<p>Eve crushed down her impatience once more.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really think this cove has got the necklace?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[p. 288]</span>“I know he
-has.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, it’s jolly well the best thing that could possibly have
-happened, because I got him here to pinch it for Uncle Joseph.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely. You see, I began to have a doubt or two as to whether
-I was quite equal to the contract, so I roped in this bird by way of a
-gang.”</p>
-
-<p>“You got him here? You mean you sent for him and arranged that he
-should pass himself off as Mr. McTodd?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, no, not exactly that. He was coming here as McTodd anyway, as
-far as I can gather. But I’d talked it over with him, you know, before
-that and asked him to pinch the necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you know him quite well? He is a friend of yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t say that exactly. But he said he was a great pal of
-Phyllis and her husband.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did he tell you that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely!”</p>
-
-<p>“When?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the train.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean, was it before or after you had told him why you wanted the
-necklace stolen?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? Let me think. After.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me exactly what happened,” said Eve. “I can’t understand it at
-all at present.”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie marshalled his thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, let’s see. Well, to start with, I told Uncle Joe I would
-pinch the necklace and slip it to him, and he said if I did he’d give
-me a thousand quid. As a matter of fact, he made it two thousand,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[p. 289]</span> and very decent of him, I
-thought it. Is that straight?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I sort of got cold feet. Began to wonder, don’t you know, if I
-hadn’t bitten off rather more than I could chew.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“And then I saw this advertisement in the paper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Advertisement? What advertisement?”</p>
-
-<p>“There was an advertisement in the paper saying if anybody wanted
-anything done simply apply to this chap. So I wrote him a letter
-and went up and had a talk with him in the lobby of the Piccadilly
-Palace. Only, unfortunately, I’d promised the guv’nor I’d catch the
-twelve-fifty home, so I had to dash off in the middle. Must have
-thought me rather an ass, it’s sometimes occurred to me since. I mean,
-practically all I said was, ‘Will you pinch my aunt’s necklace?’
-and then buzzed off to catch the train. Never thought I’d see the
-man again, but when I got into the five o’clock train—I missed the
-twelve-fifty—there he was, as large as life, and the guv’nor suddenly
-trickled in from another compartment and introduced him to me as McTodd
-the poet. Then the guv’nor legged it, and this chap told me he wasn’t
-really McTodd, only pretending to be McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t that strike you as strange?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, rather rummy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ask him why he was doing such an extraordinary thing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes. But he wouldn’t tell me. And then he asked me why I
-wanted him to pinch Aunt Connie’s necklace, and it suddenly occurred
-to me that everything was working rather smoothly—I mean, him being on
-his way to the castle like that. Right on the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_290">[p. 290]</span> spot, don’t you know. So I told him all
-about Phyllis, and it was then that he said that he had been a pal of
-hers and her husband’s for years. So we fixed it up that he was to get
-the necklace and hand it over. I must say I was rather drawn to the
-chappie. He said he didn’t want any money for swiping the thing.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve laughed bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why should he, when he was going to get twenty thousand pounds’
-worth of diamonds and keep them? Oh, Freddie, I should have thought
-that even you would have seen through him. You go to this perfect
-stranger and tell him that there is a valuable necklace waiting here
-to be stolen, you find him on his way to steal it, and you trust him
-implicitly just because he tells you he knows Phyllis—whom he had never
-heard of in his life till you mentioned her. Freddie, really!”</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Freddie scratched his beautifully shaven chin.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, when you put it like that,” he said, “I must own it does
-sound a bit off. But he seemed such a dashed matey sort of bird. Cheery
-and all that. I liked the feller.”</p>
-
-<p>“What nonsense!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but you liked him, too. I mean to say, you were about with
-him a goodish lot.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hate him!” said Eve angrily. “I wish I had never seen him. And if
-I let him get away with that necklace and cheat poor little Phyllis out
-of her money, I’ll—I’ll&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>She raised a grimly determined chin to the stars. Freddie watched
-her admiringly.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, you know, you are a wonderful girl,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“He <i>shan’t</i> get away with it, if I have to pull the place
-down.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[p. 291]</span>“When you chuck
-your head up like that you remind me a bit of What’s-her-name, the
-Famous Players star—you know, girl who was in ‘Wed To A Satyr.’ Only,”
-added Freddie hurriedly, “she isn’t half so pretty. I say, I was rather
-looking forward to that County Ball, but now this has happened I don’t
-mind missing it a bit. I mean, it seems to draw us closer together
-somehow, if you follow me. I say, honestly, all kidding aside, you
-think that love might some day awaken in&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“We shall want a lamp, of course,” said Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“A lamp—to see with when we are in the cottage. Can you get one?”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie reluctantly perceived that the moment for sentiment had not
-arrived.</p>
-
-<p>“A lamp? Oh, yes, of course. Rather.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better get two,” said Eve. “And meet me here about half an hour
-after everybody has gone to the ball.”</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_13_2">§ 2</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The tiny sitting-room of Psmith’s haven of rest in the woods had
-never reached a high standard of decorativeness even in its best days;
-but as Eve paused from her labours and looked at it in the light of her
-lamp about an hour after her conversation with Freddie on the terrace,
-it presented a picture of desolation which would have startled the
-plain-living game-keeper to whom it had once been a home. Even Freddie,
-though normally an unobservant youth, seemed awed by the ruin he had
-helped to create.</p>
-
-<p>“Golly!” he observed. “I say, we’ve rather mucked the place up a
-bit!”</p>
-
-<p>It was no over-statement. Eve had come to the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_292">[p. 292]</span> cottage to search, and she had searched
-thoroughly. The torn carpet lay in a untidy heap against the wall. The
-table was overturned. Boards had been wrenched from the floor, bricks
-from the chimney-place. The horsehair sofa was in ribbons, and the
-one small cushion in the room lay limply in a corner, its stuffing
-distributed north, south, east and west. There was soot everywhere—on
-the walls, on the floor, on the fire-place, and on Freddie. A brace
-of dead bats, the further result of the latter’s groping in a chimney
-which had not been swept for seven months, reposed in the fender. The
-sitting-room had never been luxurious; it was now not even cosy.</p>
-
-<p>Eve did not reply. She was struggling with what she was fair-minded
-enough to see was an entirely unjust fever of irritation, with her
-courteous and obliging assistant as its object. It was wrong, she
-knew, to feel like this. That she should be furious at her failure to
-find the jewels was excusable, but she had no possible right to be
-furious with Freddie. It was not his fault that soot had poured from
-the chimney in lieu of diamonds. If he had asked for a necklace and
-been given a dead bat, he was surely more to be pitied than censured.
-Yet Eve, eyeing his grimy face, would have given very much to have
-been able to scream loudly and throw something at him. The fact was,
-the Hon. Freddie belonged to that unfortunate type of humanity which
-automatically gets blamed for everything in moments of stress.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the bally thing isn’t here,” said Freddie. He spoke thickly,
-as a man will whose mouth is covered with soot.</p>
-
-<p>“I know it isn’t,” said Eve. “But this isn’t the only room in the
-house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think he might have hidden the stuff upstairs?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[p. 293]</span>“Or
-downstairs.”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie shook his head, dislodging a portion of a third bat.</p>
-
-<p>“Must be upstairs, if it’s anywhere. Mean to say, there isn’t any
-downstairs.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s the cellar,” said Eve. “Take your lamp and go and have a
-look.”</p>
-
-<p>For the first time in the proceedings a spirit of disaffection
-seemed to manifest itself in the bosom of her assistant. Up till this
-moment Freddie had taken his orders placidly and executed them with
-promptness and civility. Even when the first shower of soot had driven
-him choking from the fire-place, his manly spirit had not been crushed;
-he had merely uttered a startled “Oh, I say!” and returned gallantly to
-the attack. But now he obviously hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“Go on,” said Eve impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but, I say, you know&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think the chap would be likely to hide a necklace in the
-cellar. I vote we give it a miss and try upstairs.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be silly, Freddie. He may have hidden it anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, to be absolutely honest, I’d much rather not go into any
-bally cellar, if it’s all the same to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why ever not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Beetles. Always had a horror of beetles. Ever since I was a
-kid.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve bit her lip. She was feeling, as Miss Peavey had so often felt
-when associated in some delicate undertaking with Edward Cootes, that
-exasperating sense of man’s inadequacy which comes to high-spirited
-girls at moments such as these. To achieve the end for which she
-had started out that night she would have<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_294">[p. 294]</span> waded waist-high through a sea of
-beetles. But, divining with that sixth sense which tells women when
-the male has been pushed just so far and can be pushed no farther,
-that Freddie, wax though he might be in her hands in any other
-circumstances, was on this one point adamant, she made no further
-effort to bend him to her will.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” she said. “I’ll go down into the cellar. You go and
-look upstairs.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I say, sure you don’t mind?”</p>
-
-<p>Eve took up her lamp and left the craven.</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>For a girl of iron resolution and unswerving purpose, Eve’s
-inspection of the cellar was decidedly cursory. A distinct feeling of
-relief came over her as she stood at the top of the steps and saw by
-the light of the lamp how small and bare it was. For, impervious as she
-might be to the intimidation of beetles, her armour still contained a
-chink. She was terribly afraid of rats. And even when the rays of the
-lamp disclosed no scuttling horrors, she still lingered for a moment
-before descending. You never knew with rats. They pretended not to be
-there just to lure you on, and then came out and whizzed about your
-ankles. However, the memory of her scorn for Freddie’s pusillanimity
-forced her on, and she went down.</p>
-
-<p>The word “cellar” is an elastic one. It can be applied equally to
-the acres of bottle-fringed vaults which lie beneath a great pile like
-Blandings Castle and to a hole in the ground like the one in which she
-now found herself. This cellar was easily searched. She stamped on its
-stone flags with an ear strained to detect any note of hollowness,
-but none came. She moved the lamp so that it shone into every corner,
-but there was not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[p. 295]</span>
-even a crack in which a diamond necklace could have been concealed.
-Satisfied that the place contained nothing but a little coal-dust and a
-smell of damp decay, Eve passed thankfully out.</p>
-
-<p>The law of elimination was doing its remorseless work. It had ruled
-out the cellar, the kitchen, and the living-room—that is to say, the
-whole of the lower of the two floors which made up the cottage. There
-now remained only the rooms upstairs. There were probably not more than
-two, and Freddie must already have searched one of these. The quest
-seemed to be nearing its end. As Eve made for the narrow staircase that
-led to the second floor, the lamp shook in her hand and cast weird
-shadows. Now that success was in sight, the strain was beginning to
-affect her nerves.</p>
-
-<p>It was to nerves that in the first instant of hearing it she
-attributed what sounded like a soft cough in the sitting-room, a few
-feet from where she stood. Then a chill feeling of dismay gripped her.
-It could only, she thought, be Freddie, returned from his search;
-and if Freddie had returned from his search already, what could it
-mean except that those upstairs rooms, on which she had counted so
-confidently, had proved as empty as the others? Freddie was not one of
-your restrained, unemotional men. If he had found the necklace he would
-have been downstairs in two bounds, shouting. His silence was ominous.
-She opened the door and went quickly in.</p>
-
-<p>“Freddie,” she began, and broke off with a gasp.</p>
-
-<p>It was not Freddie who had coughed. It was Psmith. He was seated on
-the remains of the horsehair sofa, toying with an automatic pistol and
-gravely surveying through his monocle the ruins of a home.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_13_3">§ 3</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[p. 296]</span>“Good evening,”
-said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>It was not for a philosopher like himself to display astonishment.
-He was, however, undeniably feeling it. When, a few minutes before, he
-had encountered Freddie in this same room, he had received a distinct
-shock; but a rough theory which would account for Freddie’s presence in
-his home-from-home he had been able to work out. He groped in vain for
-one which would explain Eve.</p>
-
-<p>Mere surprise, however, was never enough to prevent Psmith talking.
-He began at once.</p>
-
-<p>“It was nice of you,” he said, rising courteously, “to look in.
-Won’t you sit down? On the sofa, perhaps? Or would you prefer a
-brick?”</p>
-
-<p>Eve was not yet equal to speech. She had been so firmly convinced
-that he was ten miles away at Shifley that his presence here in the
-sitting-room of the cottage had something of the breath-taking quality
-of a miracle. The explanation, if she could have known it, was simple.
-Two excellent reasons had kept Psmith from gracing the County Ball
-with his dignified support. In the first place, as Shifley was only
-four miles from the village where he had spent most of his life,
-he had regarded it as probable, if not certain, that he would have
-encountered there old friends to whom it would have been both tedious
-and embarrassing to explain why he had changed his name to McTodd.
-And secondly, though he had not actually anticipated a nocturnal raid
-on his little nook, he had thought it well to be on the premises that
-evening in case Mr. Edward Cootes should have been getting ideas
-into his head. As soon, therefore, as the castle had emptied itself
-and the wheels of the last car had passed away<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_297">[p. 297]</span> down the drive, he had pocketed Mr.
-Cootes’s revolver and proceeded to the cottage.</p>
-
-<p>Eve recovered her self-possession. She was not a girl given to
-collapse in moments of crisis. The first shock of amazement had passed;
-a humiliating feeling of extreme foolishness, which came directly
-after, had also passed; she was now grimly ready for battle.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Mr. Threepwood?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Upstairs. I have put him in storage for a while. Do not worry
-about Comrade Threepwood. He has lots to think about. He is under the
-impression that if he stirs out he will be instantly shot.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh? Well, I want to put this lamp down. Will you please pick up
-that table?”</p>
-
-<p>“By all means. But—I am a novice in these matters—ought I not first
-to say ‘Hands up!’ or something?”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you please pick up that table?”</p>
-
-<p>“A friend of mine—one Cootes—you must meet him some time—generally
-remarks ‘Hey!’ in a sharp, arresting voice on these occasions.
-Personally I consider the expression too abrupt. Still, he has had
-great experience&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you please pick up that table?”</p>
-
-<p>“Most certainly. I take it, then, that you would prefer to dispense
-with the usual formalities. In that case, I will park this revolver on
-the mantelpiece while we chat. I have taken a curious dislike to the
-thing. It makes me feel like Dangerous Dan McGrew.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve put down the lamp, and there was silence for a moment. Psmith
-looked about him thoughtfully. He picked up one of the dead bats and
-covered it with his handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody’s mother,” he murmured reverently.</p>
-
-<p>Eve sat down on the sofa.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[p. 298]</span>“Mr.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” She
-stopped. “I can’t call you Mr. McTodd. Will you please tell me your
-name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ronald,” said Psmith. “Ronald Eustace.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you have a surname?” snapped Eve. “Or an alias?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith eyed her with a pained expression.</p>
-
-<p>“I may be hyper-sensitive,” he said, “but that last remark sounded
-to me like a dirty dig. You seem to imply that I am some sort of a
-criminal.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve laughed shortly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry if I hurt your feelings. There’s not much sense in
-pretending now, is there? What is your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Psmith. The p is silent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mr. Smith, I imagine you understand why I am here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I took it for granted that you had come to fulfil your kindly
-promise of doing the place up a bit. Will you be wounded if I say
-frankly that I preferred it the way it was before? All this may be
-the last word in ultra-modern interior decoration, but I suppose I
-am old-fashioned. The whisper flies round Shropshire and adjoining
-counties, ‘Psmith is hide-bound. He is not attuned to up-to-date
-methods.’ Honestly, don’t you think you have rather unduly stressed the
-bizarre note? This soot&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. these dead bats&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have come to get that necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! The necklace!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to get it, too.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith shook his head gently.</p>
-
-<p>“There,” he said, “if you will pardon me, I take issue with you.
-There is nobody to whom I would rather give that necklace than you, but
-there are special circumstances connected with it which render such an
-action impossible. I fancy, Miss Halliday, that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_299">[p. 299]</span> you have been misled by your young friend
-upstairs. No; let me speak,” he said, raising a hand. “You know what
-a treat it is to me. The way I envisage the matter is thus. I still
-cannot understand as completely as I could wish how you come to be
-mixed up in the affair, but it is plain that in some way or other
-Comrade Threepwood has enlisted your services, and I regret to be
-obliged to inform you that the motives animating him in this quest are
-not pure. To put it crisply, he is engaged in what Comrade Cootes, to
-whom I alluded just now, would call ‘funny business’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me,” said Psmith. “If you will be patient for a few minutes
-more, I shall have finished and shall then be delighted to lend an
-attentive ear to any remarks you may wish to make. As it occurs to
-me—indeed, you hinted as much yourself just now—that my own position
-in this little matter has an appearance which to the uninitiated might
-seem tolerably rummy, I had better explain how I come to be guarding a
-diamond necklace which does not belong to me. I rely on your womanly
-discretion to let the thing go no further.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you please&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“In one moment. The facts are as follows. Our mutual friend Mr.
-Keeble, Miss Halliday, has a stepdaughter who is married to one Comrade
-Jackson who, if he had no other claim to fame, would go ringing down
-through history for this reason, that he and I were at school together
-and that he is my best friend. We two have sported on the green—ooh, a
-lot of times. Well, owing to one thing and another, the Jackson family
-is rather badly up against it at the present&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve jumped up angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe a word of it,” she cried. “What is the use
-of trying to fool me like this? You had<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_300">[p. 300]</span> never heard of Phyllis before Freddie
-spoke about her in the train&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Believe me&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t. Freddie got you down here to help him steal that necklace
-and give it to Mr. Keeble so that he could help Phyllis, and now you’ve
-got it and are trying to keep it for yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith started slightly. His monocle fell from its place.</p>
-
-<p>“Is <i>everybody</i> in this little plot! Are you also one of Comrade
-Keeble’s corps of assistants?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Keeble asked me to try to get the necklace for him.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith replaced his monocle thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” he said, “opens up a new line of thought. Can it be that I
-have been wronging Comrade Threepwood all this time? I must confess
-that, when I found him here just now standing like Marius among the
-ruins of Carthage (the allusion is a classical one, and the fruit of an
-expensive education), I jumped—I may say, sprang—to the conclusion that
-he was endeavouring to double-cross both myself and the boss by getting
-hold of the necklace with a view to retaining it for his own benefit.
-It never occurred to me that he might be crediting me with the same
-sinful guile.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve ran to him and clutched his arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Smith, is this really true? Are you really a friend of
-Phyllis?”</p>
-
-<p>“She looks on me as a grandfather. Are <i>you</i> a friend of hers?”</p>
-
-<p>“We were at school together.”</p>
-
-<p>“This,” said Psmith cordially, “is one of the most gratifying
-moments of my life. It makes us all seem like one great big family.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I never heard Phyllis speak about you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[p. 301]</span>“Strange!” said
-Psmith. “Strange. Surely she was not ashamed of her humble friend?”</p>
-
-<p>“Her what?”</p>
-
-<p>“I must explain,” said Psmith, “that until recently I was earning a
-difficult livelihood by slinging fish about in Billingsgate Market. It
-is possible that some snobbish strain in Comrade Jackson’s bride, which
-I confess I had not suspected, kept her from admitting that she was
-accustomed to hob-nob with one in the fish business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good gracious!” cried Eve.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Smith&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Fish business&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Why, it was you who called at
-Phyllis’s house while I was there. Just before I came down here. I
-remember Phyllis saying how sorry she was that we had not met. She said
-you were just my sort of&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I mean, she said she wanted me to meet
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“This,” said Psmith, “is becoming more and more gratifying every
-moment. It seems to me that you and I were made for each other. I am
-your best friend’s best friend and we both have a taste for stealing
-other people’s jewellery. I cannot see how you can very well resist the
-conclusion that we are twin-souls.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be silly.”</p>
-
-<p>“We shall get into that series of ‘Husbands and Wives Who Work
-Together.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is the necklace?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith sighed.</p>
-
-<p>“The business note. Always the business note. Can’t we keep all that
-till later?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. We can’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, well!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith crossed the room, and took down from the wall the case of
-stuffed birds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[p. 302]</span>“The one place,”
-said Eve, with mortification, “where we didn’t think of looking!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith opened the case and removed the centre bird, a
-depressed-looking fowl with glass eyes which stared with a haunting
-pathos. He felt in its interior and pulled out something that glittered
-and sparkled in the lamp-light.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>Eve ran her fingers almost lovingly through the jewels as they lay
-before her on the little table.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t they beautiful!”</p>
-
-<p>“Distinctly. I think I may say that of all the jewels I have ever
-stolen&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“HEY!”</p>
-
-<p>Eve let the necklace fall with a cry. Psmith spun round. In the
-doorway stood Mr. Edward Cootes, pointing a pistol.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_13_4">§ 4</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Hands up!” said Mr. Cootes with the uncouth curtness of one who
-has not had the advantages of a refined home and a nice upbringing. He
-advanced warily, preceded by the revolver. It was a dainty, miniature
-weapon, such as might have been the property of some gentle lady. Mr.
-Cootes had, in fact, borrowed it from Miss Peavey, who at this juncture
-entered the room in a black and silver dinner-dress surmounted by a
-Rose du Barri wrap, her spiritual face glowing softly in the subdued
-light.</p>
-
-<p>“Attaboy, Ed,” observed Miss Peavey crisply.</p>
-
-<p>She swooped on the table and gathered up the necklace. Mr. Cootes,
-though probably gratified by the tribute, made no acknowledgment of it,
-but continued to direct an austere gaze at Eve and Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“No funny business,” he advised.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[p. 303]</span>“I would be the
-last person,” said Psmith agreeably, “to advocate anything of the sort.
-This,” he said to Eve, “is Comrade Cootes, of whom you have heard so
-much.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve was staring, bewildered, at the poetess, who, satisfied with the
-manner in which the preliminaries had been conducted, had begun looking
-about her with idle curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Peavey!” cried Eve. Of all the events of this eventful night
-the appearance of Lady Constance’s emotional friend in the rôle of
-criminal was the most disconcerting. “Miss <i>Peavey</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo?” responded that lady agreeably.</p>
-
-<p>“I&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp; I&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“What, I think, Miss Halliday is trying to say,” cut in Psmith, “is
-that she is finding it a little difficult to adjust her mind to the
-present development. I, too, must confess myself somewhat at a loss.
-I knew, of course, that Comrade Cootes had—shall I say an acquisitive
-streak in him, but you I had always supposed to be one hundred per
-cent. soul—and snowy white at that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yeah?” said Miss Peavey, but faintly interested.</p>
-
-<p>“I imagined that you were a poetess.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I am a poetess,” retorted Miss Peavey hotly. “Just you start in
-joshing my poems and see how quick I’ll bean you with a brick. Well,
-Ed, no sense in sticking around here. Let’s go.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll have to tie these birds up,” said Mr. Cootes. “Otherwise
-we’ll have them squealing before I can make a getaway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ed,” said Miss Peavey with the scorn which her colleague so often
-excited in her, “try to remember sometimes that that thing balanced on
-your collar is a head, not a hubbard squash. And be careful what<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[p. 304]</span> you’re doing with that
-gat! Waving it about like it was a bouquet or something. How are they
-going to squeal? They can’t say a thing without telling everyone they
-snitched the stuff first.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” admitted Mr. Cootes.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, don’t come butting in.”</p>
-
-<p>The silence into which this rebuke plunged Mr. Cootes gave Psmith
-the opportunity to resume speech. An opportunity of which he was glad,
-for, while he had nothing of definitely vital import to say, he was
-optimist enough to feel that his only hope of recovering the necklace
-was to keep the conversation going on the chance of something turning
-up. Affable though his manner was, he had never lost sight of the fact
-that one leap would take him across the space of floor separating
-him from Mr. Cootes. At present, that small but effective revolver
-precluded anything in the nature of leaps, however short, but if in the
-near future anything occurred to divert his adversary’s vigilance even
-momentarily.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. He pursued a policy of watchful waiting, and in the
-meantime started to talk again.</p>
-
-<p>“If, before you go,” he said, “you can spare us a moment of your
-valuable time, I should be glad of a few words. And, first, may I say
-that I cordially agree with your condemnation of Comrade Cootes’s
-recent suggestion. The man is an ass.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say!” cried Mr. Cootes, coming to life again, “that’ll be about all
-from you. If there wasn’t ladies present, I’d bust you one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ed,” said Miss Peavey with quiet authority, “shut your trap!”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes subsided once more. Psmith gazed at him through his
-monocle, interested.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me,” he said, “but—if it is not a rude question—are you two
-married?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[p. 305]</span>“Eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“You seemed to me to talk to him like a wife. Am I addressing Mrs.
-Cootes?”</p>
-
-<p>“You will be if you stick around a while.”</p>
-
-<p>“A thousand congratulations to Comrade Cootes. Not quite so many to
-you, possibly, but fully that number of good wishes.” He moved towards
-the poetess with extended hand. “I am thinking of getting married
-myself shortly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Keep those hands up,” said Mr. Cootes.</p>
-
-<p>“Surely,” said Psmith reproachfully, “these conventions need not be
-observed among friends? You will find the only revolver I have ever
-possessed over there on the mantelpiece. Go and look at it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and have you jumping on my back the moment I took my eyes off
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>“There is a suspicious vein in your nature, Comrade Cootes,” sighed
-Psmith, “which I do not like to see. Fight against it.” He turned to
-Miss Peavey once more. “To resume a pleasanter topic, you will let me
-know where to send the plated fish-slice, won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh?” said the lady.</p>
-
-<p>“I was hoping,” proceeded Psmith, “if you do not think it a liberty
-on the part of one who has known you but a short time, to be allowed
-to send you a small wedding-present in due season. And one of these
-days, perhaps, when I too am married, you and Comrade Cootes will come
-and visit us in our little home. You will receive a hearty, unaffected
-welcome. You must not be offended if, just before you say good-bye, we
-count the spoons.”</p>
-
-<p>One would scarcely have supposed Miss Peavey a sensitive woman,
-yet at this remark an ominous frown clouded her white forehead. Her
-careless amiability<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[p. 306]</span>
-seemed to wane. She raked Psmith with a glittering eye.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re talking a dam’ lot,” she observed coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“An old failing of mine,” said Psmith apologetically, “and one
-concerning which there have been numerous complaints. I see now
-that I have been boring you, and I hope that you will allow me to
-express.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>He broke off abruptly, not because he had reached the end of his
-remarks, but because at this moment there came from above their heads
-a sudden sharp cracking sound, and almost simultaneously a shower of
-plaster fell from the ceiling, followed by the startling appearance
-of a long, shapely leg, which remained waggling in space. And from
-somewhere out of sight there filtered down a sharp and agonised
-oath.</p>
-
-<p>Time and neglect had done their work with the flooring of the
-room in which Psmith had bestowed the Hon. Freddie Threepwood, and,
-creeping cautiously about in the dark, he had had the misfortune to go
-through.</p>
-
-<p>But, as so often happens in this life, the misfortune of one is the
-good fortune of another. Badly as the accident had shaken Freddie, from
-the point of view of Psmith it was almost ideal. The sudden appearance
-of a human leg through the ceiling at a moment of nervous tension is
-enough to unman the stoutest-hearted, and Edward Cootes made no attempt
-to conceal his perturbation. Leaping a clear six inches from the floor,
-he jerked up his head and quite unintentionally pulled the trigger of
-his revolver. A bullet ripped through the plaster.</p>
-
-<p>The leg disappeared. Not for an instant since he had been shut
-in that upper room had Freddie Threepwood ceased to be mindful of
-Psmith’s parting statement that he would be shot if he tried to escape,
-and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[p. 307]</span> Mr. Cootes’
-bullet seemed to him a dramatic fulfilment of that promise. Wrenching
-his leg with painful energy out of the abyss, he proceeded to execute
-a backward spring which took him to the far wall—at which point, as
-it was impossible to get any farther away from the centre of events,
-he was compelled to halt his retreat. Having rolled himself up into
-as small a ball as he could manage, he sat where he was, trying not
-to breathe. His momentary intention of explaining through the hole
-that the entire thing had been a regrettable accident, he prudently
-abandoned. Unintelligent though he had often proved himself in other
-crises of his life, he had the sagacity now to realise that the
-neighbourhood of the hole was unhealthy and should be avoided. So,
-preserving a complete and unbroken silence, he crouched there in the
-darkness, only asking to be left alone.</p>
-
-<p>And it seemed, as the moments slipped by, that this modest wish was
-to be gratified. Noises and the sound of voices came up to him from
-the room below, but no more bullets. It would be paltering with the
-truth to say that this put him completely at his ease, but still it was
-something. Freddie’s pulse began to return to the normal.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes’, on the other hand, was beating with a dangerous
-quickness. Swift and objectionable things had been happening to
-Edward Cootes in that lower room. His first impression was that the
-rift in the plaster above him had been instantly followed by the
-collapse of the entire ceiling, but this was a mistaken idea. All
-that had occurred was that Psmith, finding Mr. Cootes’ eye and pistol
-functioning in another direction, had sprung forward, snatched up a
-chair, hit the unfortunate man over the head with it, relieved him of
-his pistol, leaped to the mantelpiece, removed<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_308">[p. 308]</span> the revolver which lay there, and now,
-holding both weapons in an attitude of menace, was regarding him
-censoriously through a gleaming eyeglass.</p>
-
-<p>“No funny business, Comrade Cootes,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cootes picked himself up painfully. His head was singing. He
-looked at the revolvers, blinked, opened his mouth and shut it again.
-He was oppressed with a sense of defeat. Nature had not built him for
-a man of violence. Peaceful manipulation of a pack of cards in the
-smoke-room of an Atlantic liner was a thing he understood and enjoyed:
-rough-and-tumble encounters were alien to him and distasteful. As far
-as Mr. Cootes was concerned, the war was over.</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Peavey was a woman of spirit. Her hat was still in the
-ring. She clutched the necklace in a grasp of steel, and her fine eyes
-glared defiance.</p>
-
-<p>“You think yourself smart, don’t you?” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith eyed her commiseratingly. Her valorous attitude appealed to
-him. Nevertheless, business was business.</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid,” he said regretfully, “that I must trouble you to hand
-over that necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Try and get it,” said Miss Peavey.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith looked hurt.</p>
-
-<p>“I am a child in these matters,” he said, “but I had always gathered
-that on these occasions the wishes of the man behind the gun were
-automatically respected.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll call your bluff,” said Miss Peavey firmly. “I’m going to walk
-straight out of here with this collection of ice right now, and I’ll
-bet you won’t have the nerve to start any shooting. Shoot a woman? Not
-you!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[p. 309]</span>Psmith nodded
-gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“Your knowledge of psychology is absolutely correct. Your trust
-in my sense of chivalry rests on solid ground. But,” he proceeded,
-cheering up, “I fancy that I see a way out of the difficulty. An idea
-has been vouchsafed to me. I shall shoot—not you, but Comrade Cootes.
-This will dispose of all unpleasantness. If you attempt to edge out
-through that door I shall immediately proceed to plug Comrade Cootes
-in the leg. At least, I shall try. I am a poor shot and may hit him
-in some more vital spot, but at least he will have the consolation of
-knowing that I did my best and meant well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hey!” cried Mr. Cootes. And never, in a life liberally embellished
-with this favourite ejaculation of his, had he uttered it more
-feelingly. He shot a feverish glance at Miss Peavey; and, reading in
-her face indecision rather than that instant acquiescence which he had
-hoped to see, cast off his customary attitude of respectful humility
-and asserted himself. He was no cave-man, but this was one occasion
-when he meant to have his own way. With an agonised bound he reached
-Miss Peavey’s side, wrenched the necklace from her grasp and flung it
-into the enemy’s camp. Eve stooped and picked it up.</p>
-
-<p>“I thank you,” said Psmith with a brief bow in her direction.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peavey breathed heavily. Her strong hands clenched and
-unclenched. Between her parted lips her teeth showed in a thin white
-line. Suddenly she swallowed quickly, as if draining a glass of
-unpalatable medicine.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” she said in a low, even voice, “that seems to be about all.
-Guess we’ll be going. Come along, Ed, pick up the Henries.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[p. 310]</span>“Coming, Liz,”
-replied Mr. Cootes humbly.</p>
-
-<p>They passed together into the night.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
- <h3 id="Ch_13_5">§ 5</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Silence followed their departure. Eve, weak with the reaction from
-the complex emotions which she had undergone since her arrival at the
-cottage, sat on the battered sofa, her chin resting in her hands. She
-looked at Psmith, who, humming a light air, was delicately piling
-with the toe of his shoe a funeral mound over the second of the dead
-bats.</p>
-
-<p>“So that’s that!” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith looked up with a bright and friendly smile.</p>
-
-<p>“You have a very happy gift of phrase,” he said. “That, as you
-sensibly say, is that.”</p>
-
-<p>Eve was silent for awhile. Psmith completed the obsequies and
-stepped back with the air of a man who has done what he can for a
-fallen friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Fancy Miss Peavey being a thief!” said Eve. She was somehow feeling
-a disinclination to allow the conversation to die down, and yet she
-had an idea that, unless it was permitted to die down, it might
-become embarrassingly intimate. Subconsciously, she was endeavouring
-to analyse her views on this long, calm person who had so recently
-added himself to the list of those who claimed to look upon her with
-affection.</p>
-
-<p>“I confess it came as something of a shock to me also,” said Psmith.
-“In fact, the revelation that there was this other, deeper side to her
-nature materially altered the opinion I had formed of her. I found
-myself warming to Miss Peavey. Something that was akin to respect began
-to stir within me. Indeed, I almost wish that we had not been compelled
-to deprive her of the jewels.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘We’?” said Eve. “I’m afraid I didn’t do much.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[p. 311]</span>“Your attitude
-was exactly right,” Psmith assured her. “You afforded just the moral
-support which a man needs in such a crisis.”</p>
-
-<p>Silence fell once more. Eve returned to her thoughts. And then, with
-a suddenness which surprised her, she found that she had made up her
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“So you’re going to be married?” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Psmith polished his monocle thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I think so,” he said. “I think so. What do <i>you</i> think?”</p>
-
-<p>Eve regarded him steadfastly. Then she gave a little laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she said, “I think so, too.” She paused. “Shall I tell you
-something?”</p>
-
-<p>“You could tell me nothing more wonderful than that.”</p>
-
-<p>“When I met Cynthia in Market Blandings, she told me what the
-trouble was which made her husband leave her. What do you suppose it
-was?”</p>
-
-<p>“From my brief acquaintance with Comrade McTodd, I would hazard the
-guess that he tried to stab her with the bread-knife. He struck me as a
-murderous-looking specimen.”</p>
-
-<p>“They had some people to dinner, and there was chicken, and Cynthia
-gave all the giblets to the guests, and her husband bounded out of his
-seat with a wild cry, and, shouting ‘You <i>know</i> I love those things
-better than anything in the world!’ rushed from the house, never to
-return!”</p>
-
-<p>“Precisely how I would have wished him to rush, had I been Mrs.
-McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cynthia told me that he had rushed from the house, never to return,
-six times since they were married.”</p>
-
-<p>“May I mention—in passing—” said Psmith, “that I do not like chicken
-giblets?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[p. 312]</span>“Cynthia advised
-me,” proceeded Eve, “if ever I married, to marry someone eccentric. She
-said it was such fun. Well, I don’t suppose I am ever likely to meet
-anyone more eccentric than you, am I?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you would be unwise to wait on the chance.”</p>
-
-<p>“The only thing is&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” said Eve reflectively. “‘Mrs.
-Smith’&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It doesn’t <i>sound</i> much, does it?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith beamed encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p>“We must look into the future,” he said. “We must remember that I
-am only at the beginning of what I am convinced is to be a singularly
-illustrious career. ‘Lady Psmith’ is better&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ‘Baroness Psmith’
-better still&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And—who knows?—‘The Duchess of Psmith’&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, anyhow,” said Eve, “you were wonderful just now, simply
-wonderful. The way you made one spring&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your words,” said Psmith, “are music to my ears, but we must not
-forget that the foundations of the success of the manœuvre were laid
-by Comrade Threepwood. Had it not been for the timely incursion of his
-leg&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good gracious!” cried Eve. “Freddie! I had forgotten all about
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>“The right spirit,” said Psmith. “Quite the right spirit.”</p>
-
-<p>“We must go and let him out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just as you say. And then he can come with us on the stroll I
-was about to propose that we should take through the woods. It is a
-lovely night, and what could be jollier than to have Comrade Threepwood
-prattling at our side? I will go and let him out at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, don’t bother,” said Eve.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Ch_14">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[p. 313]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
- <p class="subh2">PSMITH ACCEPTS EMPLOYMENT</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="drop">
- <p class="fs500 lh80 ti0">T</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="icap"><span class="upc">The</span> golden stillness of a
-perfect summer morning brooded over Blandings Castle and its adjacent
-pleasure-grounds. From a sky of unbroken blue the sun poured down
-its heartening rays on all those roses, pinks, pansies, carnations,
-hollyhocks, columbines, larkspurs, London pride and Canterbury bells
-which made the gardens so rarely beautiful. Flannelled youths and
-maidens in white serge sported in the shade; gay cries arose from the
-tennis-courts behind the shrubbery; and birds, bees, and butterflies
-went about their business with a new energy and zip. In short, the
-casual observer, assuming that he was addicted to trite phrases, would
-have said that happiness reigned supreme.</p>
-
-<p>But happiness, even on the finest mornings, is seldom universal.
-The strolling youths and maidens were happy; the tennis-players were
-happy; the birds, bees, and butterflies were happy. Eve, walking in
-pleasant meditation on the terrace, was happy. Freddie Threepwood
-was happy as he lounged in the smoking-room and gloated over the
-information, received from Psmith in the small hours, that his thousand
-pounds was safe. Mr. Keeble, writing to Phyllis to inform her that she
-might clinch the purchase of the Lincolnshire farm, was happy. Even
-Head-gardener Angus McAllister was as happy as a Scotsman can ever be.
-But Lord Emsworth,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[p. 314]</span>
-drooping out of the library window, felt only a nervous irritation more
-in keeping with the blizzards of winter than with the only fine July
-that England had known in the last ten years.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen his lordship in a similar attitude and a like frame
-of mind on a previous occasion; but then his melancholy had been due
-to the loss of his glasses. This morning these were perched firmly on
-his nose and he saw all things clearly. What was causing his gloom now
-was the fact that some ten minutes earlier his sister Constance had
-trapped him in the library, full of jarring rebuke on the subject of
-the dismissal of Rupert Baxter, the world’s most efficient secretary.
-It was to avoid her compelling eye that Lord Emsworth had turned to the
-window. And what he saw from that window thrust him even deeper into
-the abyss of gloom. The sun, the birds, the bees, the butterflies, and
-the flowers called to him to come out and have the time of his life,
-but he just lacked the nerve to make a dash for it.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you must be mad,” said Lady Constance bitterly, resuming
-her remarks and starting at the point where she had begun before.</p>
-
-<p>“Baxter’s mad,” retorted his lordship, also re-treading old
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>“You are too absurd!”</p>
-
-<p>“He threw flower-pots at me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do please stop talking about those flower-pots. Mr. Baxter has
-explained the whole thing to me, and surely even you can see that his
-behaviour was perfectly excusable.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like the fellow,” cried Lord Emsworth, once more retreating
-to his last line of trenches—the one line from which all Lady
-Constance’s eloquence had been unable to dislodge him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[p. 315]</span>There was a
-silence, as there had been a short while before when the discussion had
-reached this same point.</p>
-
-<p>“You will be helpless without him,” said Lady Constance.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing of the kind,” said his lordship.</p>
-
-<p>“You know you will. Where will you ever get another secretary
-capable of looking after everything like Mr. Baxter? You know you are a
-perfect child, and unless you have someone whom you can trust to manage
-your affairs I cannot see what will happen.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth made no reply. He merely gazed wanly from the
-window.</p>
-
-<p>“Chaos,” moaned Lady Constance.</p>
-
-<p>His lordship remained mute, but now there was a gleam of something
-approaching pleasure in his pale eyes; for at this moment a car rounded
-the corner of the house from the direction of the stables and stood
-purring at the door. There was a trunk on the car and a suit-case. And
-almost simultaneously the Efficient Baxter entered the library, clothed
-and spatted for travel.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come to say good-bye, Lady Constance,” said Baxter coldly
-and precisely, flashing at his late employer through his spectacles a
-look of stern reproach. “The car which is taking me to the station is
-at the door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mr. Baxter.” Lady Constance, strong woman though she was,
-fluttered with distress. “Oh, Mr. Baxter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye.” He gripped her hand in brief farewell and directed his
-spectacles for another tense instant upon the sagging figure at the
-window. “Good-bye, Lord Emsworth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? What? Oh! Ah, yes. Good-bye, my dear fel——, I mean, good-bye.
-I—er—hope you will have a pleasant journey.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” said Baxter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[p. 316]</span>“But, Mr.
-Baxter,” said Lady Constance.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord Emsworth,” said the ex-secretary icily, “I am no longer in
-your employment&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Mr. Baxter,” moaned Lady Constance, “surely&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. even
-now&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. misunderstanding&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. talk it all over quietly&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth started violently.</p>
-
-<p>“Here!” he protested, in much the same manner as that in which the
-recent Mr. Cootes had been wont to say “Hey!”</p>
-
-<p>“I fear it is too late,” said Baxter, to his infinite relief, “to
-talk things over. My arrangements are already made and cannot be
-altered. Ever since I came here to work for Lord Emsworth, my former
-employer—an American millionaire named Jevons—has been making me
-flattering offers to return to him. Until now a mistaken sense of
-loyalty has kept me from accepting these offers, but this morning I
-telegraphed to Mr. Jevons to say that I was at liberty and could join
-him at once. It is too late now to cancel this promise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite, quite, oh certainly, quite, mustn’t dream of it, my dear
-fellow. No, no, no, indeed no,” said Lord Emsworth with an effervescent
-cordiality which struck both his hearers as in the most dubious
-taste.</p>
-
-<p>Baxter merely stiffened haughtily, but Lady Constance was so
-poignantly affected by the words and the joyous tone in which they were
-uttered that she could endure her brother’s loathly society no longer.
-Shaking Baxter’s hand once more and gazing stonily for a moment at the
-worm by the window, she left the room.</p>
-
-<p>For some seconds after she had gone, there was silence—a silence
-which Lord Emsworth found embarrassing. He turned to the window again
-and took in with one wistful glance the roses, the pinks, the pansies,
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[p. 317]</span> carnations, the
-hollyhocks, the columbines, the larkspurs, the London pride and the
-Canterbury bells. And then suddenly there came to him the realisation
-that with Lady Constance gone there no longer existed any reason why
-he should stay cooped up in this stuffy library on the finest morning
-that had ever been sent to gladden the heart of man. He shivered
-ecstatically from the top of his bald head to the soles of his roomy
-shoes, and, bounding gleefully from the window, started to amble across
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord Emsworth!”</p>
-
-<p>His lordship halted. His was a one-track mind, capable of
-accommodating only one thought at a time—if that, and he had almost
-forgotten that Baxter was still there. He eyed his late secretary
-peevishly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes? Is there anything&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to speak to you for a moment.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have a most important conference with McAllister&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will not detain you long. Lord Emsworth, I am no longer in your
-employment, but I think it my duty to say before I go&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, my dear fellow, I quite understand. Quite, quite, quite.
-Constance has been going over all that. I know what you are trying to
-say. That matter of the flower-pots. Please do not apologise. It is
-quite all right. I was startled at the time, I own, but no doubt you
-had excellent motives. Let us forget the whole affair.”</p>
-
-<p>Baxter ground an impatient heel into the carpet.</p>
-
-<p>“I had no intention of referring to the matter to which you allude,”
-he said. “I merely wished&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes, of course.” A vagrant breeze floated in at the window,
-languid with summer scents, and Lord Emsworth, sniffing, shuffled
-restlessly. “Of course,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[p.
-318]</span> of course, of course. Some other time, eh? Yes, yes, that
-will be capital. Capital, capital, cap——”</p>
-
-<p>The Efficient Baxter uttered a sound that was partly a cry, partly
-a snort. Its quality was so arresting that Lord Emsworth paused, his
-fingers on the door-handle, and peered back at him, startled.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Baxter shortly. “Pray do not let me keep you. If
-you are not interested in the fact that Blandings Castle is sheltering
-a criminal&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>It was not easy to divert Lord Emsworth when in quest of Angus
-McAllister, but this remark succeeded in doing so. He let go of the
-door-handle and came back a step or two into the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Sheltering a criminal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.” Baxter glanced at his watch. “I must go now or I shall miss
-my train,” he said curtly. “I was merely going to tell you that this
-fellow who calls himself Ralston McTodd is not Ralston McTodd at
-all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not Ralston McTodd?” repeated his lordship blankly. “But——” He
-suddenly perceived a flaw in the argument. “But he <i>said</i> he was,”
-he pointed out cleverly. “Yes, I remember distinctly. He said he was
-McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is an impostor. And I imagine that if you investigate you will
-find that it is he and his accomplices who stole Lady Constance’s
-necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my dear fellow&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Baxter walked briskly to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“You need not take my word for it,” he said. “What I say can easily
-be proved. Get this so-called McTodd to write his name on a piece
-of paper and then compare it with the signature to the letter which
-the real McTodd wrote when accepting Lady Constance’s invitation to
-the castle. You will find it filed away in the drawer of that desk
-there.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[p. 319]</span>Lord Emsworth
-adjusted his glasses and stared at the desk as if he expected it to do
-a conjuring-trick.</p>
-
-<p>“I will leave you to take what steps you please,” said Baxter. “Now
-that I am no longer in your employment, the thing does not concern
-me one way or another. But I thought you might be glad to hear the
-facts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I <i>am</i>!” responded his lordship, still peering vaguely. “Oh, I
-<i>am</i>! Oh, yes, yes, yes. Oh, yes, yes&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Baxter&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth trotted out on to the landing, but Baxter had got
-off to a good start and was almost out of sight round the bend of the
-stairs.</p>
-
-<p>“But, my dear fellow&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” bleated his lordship plaintively over
-the banisters.</p>
-
-<p>From below, out on the drive, came the sound of an automobile
-getting into gear and moving off, than which no sound is more final.
-The great door of the castle closed with a soft but significant bang—as
-doors close when handled by an untipped butler. Lord Emsworth returned
-to the library to wrestle with his problem unaided.</p>
-
-<p>He was greatly disturbed. Apart from the fact that he disliked
-criminals and impostors as a class, it was a shock to him to learn that
-the particular criminal and impostor then in residence at Blandings was
-the man for whom, brief as had been the duration of their acquaintance,
-he had conceived a warm affection. He was fond of Psmith. Psmith
-soothed him. If he had had to choose any member of his immediate circle
-for the rôle of criminal and impostor, he would have chosen Psmith
-last.</p>
-
-<p>He went to the window again and looked out. There was the
-sunshine, there were the birds, there were<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_320">[p. 320]</span> the hollyhocks, carnations, and
-Canterbury bells, all present and correct; but now they failed to
-cheer him. He was wondering dismally what on earth he was going to do.
-What <i>did</i> one do with criminals and impostors? Had ’em arrested, he
-supposed. But he shrank from the thought of arresting Psmith. It seemed
-so deuced unfriendly.</p>
-
-<p>He was still meditating gloomily when a voice spoke behind him.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning. I am looking for Miss Halliday. You have not seen her
-by any chance? Ah, there she is down there on the terrace.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth was aware of Psmith beside him at the window, waving
-cordially to Eve, who waved back.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought possibly,” continued Psmith, “that Miss Halliday would be
-in her little room yonder”—he indicated the dummy book-shelves through
-which he had entered. “But I am glad to see that the morning is so fine
-that she has given toil the miss-in-baulk. It is the right spirit,”
-said Psmith. “I like to see it.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth peered at him nervously through his glasses. His
-embarrassment and his distaste for the task that lay before him
-increased as he scanned his companion in vain for those signs of
-villainy which all well-regulated criminals and impostors ought to
-exhibit to the eye of discernment.</p>
-
-<p>“I am surprised to find you indoors,” said Psmith, “on so glorious
-a morning. I should have supposed that you would have been down there
-among the shrubs, taking a good sniff at a hollyhock or something.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth braced himself for the ordeal.</p>
-
-<p>“Er, my dear fellow&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that is to say&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” He paused. Psmith
-was regarding him almost lovingly through his monocle, and it was
-becoming increasingly difficult to warm up to the work of denouncing
-him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[p. 321]</span>“You were
-observing&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;?” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth uttered curious buzzing noises.</p>
-
-<p>“I have just parted from Baxter,” he said at length, deciding to
-approach the subject in more roundabout fashion.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed?” said Psmith courteously.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Baxter has gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“For ever?”</p>
-
-<p>“Er—yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Splendid!” said Psmith. “Splendid, splendid.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth removed his glasses, twiddled them on their cord, and
-replaced them on his nose.</p>
-
-<p>“He made&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. He—er—the fact is, he made&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Before he went
-Baxter made a most remarkable statement&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a charge&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, in
-short, he made a very strange statement about you.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith nodded gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“I had been expecting something of the kind,” he said. “He said, no
-doubt, that I was not really Ralston McTodd?”</p>
-
-<p>His lordship’s mouth opened feebly.</p>
-
-<p>“Er—yes,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been meaning to tell you about that,” said Psmith amiably. “It
-is quite true. I am not Ralston McTodd.”</p>
-
-<p>“You—you admit it!”</p>
-
-<p>“I am proud of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth drew himself up. He endeavoured to assume the attitude
-of stern censure which came so naturally to him in interviews with his
-son Frederick. But he met Psmith’s eye and sagged again. Beneath the
-solemn friendliness of Psmith’s gaze hauteur was impossible.</p>
-
-<p>“Then what the deuce are you doing here under his name?” he
-asked, placing his finger in statesmanlike<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_322">[p. 322]</span> fashion on the very nub of the problem.
-“I mean to say,” he went on, making his meaning clearer, “if you aren’t
-McTodd, why did you come here saying you were McTodd?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith nodded slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“The point is well taken,” he said. “I was expecting you to ask that
-question. Primarily—I want no thanks, but primarily I did it to save
-you embarrassment.”</p>
-
-<p>“Save me embarrassment?”</p>
-
-<p>“Precisely. When I came into the smoking-room of our mutual club
-that afternoon when you had been entertaining Comrade McTodd at lunch,
-I found him on the point of passing out of your life for ever. It seems
-that he had taken umbrage to some slight extent because you had buzzed
-off to chat with the florist across the way instead of remaining with
-him. And, after we had exchanged a pleasant word or two, he legged it,
-leaving you short one modern poet. On your return I stepped into the
-breach to save you from the inconvenience of having to return here
-without a McTodd of any description. No one, of course, could have been
-more alive than myself to the fact that I was merely a poor substitute,
-a sort of synthetic McTodd, but still I considered that I was better
-than nothing, so I came along.”</p>
-
-<p>His lordship digested this explanation in silence. Then he seized on
-a magnificent point.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you a member of the Senior Conservative Club?”</p>
-
-<p>“Most certainly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, then, dash it,” cried his lordship, paying to that august
-stronghold of respectability as striking a tribute as it had ever
-received, “if you’re a member of the Senior Conservative, you can’t be
-a criminal. Baxter’s an ass!”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[p. 323]</span>“Baxter would
-have it that you had stolen my sister’s necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can assure you that I have not got Lady Constance’s necklace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not, of course not, my dear fellow. I’m only telling
-you what that idiot Baxter said. Thank goodness I’ve got rid of the
-fellow.” A cloud passed over his now sunny face. “Though, confound it,
-Connie was right about one thing.” He relapsed into a somewhat moody
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?” said his lordship.</p>
-
-<p>“You were saying that Lady Constance had been right about one
-thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes. She was saying that I should have a hard time finding
-another secretary as capable as Baxter.”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith permitted himself to bestow an encouraging pat on his host’s
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“You have touched on a matter,” he said, “which I had intended to
-broach to you at some convenient moment when you were at leisure. If
-you would care to accept my services, they are at your disposal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“The fact is,” said Psmith, “I am shortly about to be married,
-and it is more or less imperative that I connect with some job which
-will ensure a moderate competence. Why should I not become your
-secretary?”</p>
-
-<p>“You want to be my secretary?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have unravelled my meaning exactly.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’ve never had a married secretary.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think that you would find a steady married man an improvement
-on these wild, flower-pot-throwing bachelors. If it would help to
-influence your decision, I may say that my bride-to-be is Miss
-Halliday, probably the finest library-cataloguist in the United
-Kingdom.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[p. 324]</span>“Eh? Miss
-Halliday? That girl down there?”</p>
-
-<p>“No other,” said Psmith, waving fondly at Eve as she passed
-underneath the window. “In fact, the same.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I like her,” said Lord Emsworth, as if stating an insuperable
-objection.</p>
-
-<p>“Excellent.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a nice girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“I quite agree with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think you could really look after things here like
-Baxter?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am convinced of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, my dear fellow—well, really I must say&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I must say&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-well, I mean, why shouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Precisely,” said Psmith. “You have put in a nutshell the very thing
-I have been trying to express.”</p>
-
-<p>“But have you had any experience as a secretary?”</p>
-
-<p>“I must admit that I have not. You see, until recently I was more
-or less one of the idle rich. I toiled not, neither did I—except once,
-after a bump-supper at Cambridge—spin. My name, perhaps I ought to
-reveal to you, is Psmith—the p is silent—and until very recently I
-lived in affluence not far from the village of Much Middlefold in this
-county. My name is probably unfamiliar to you, but you may have heard
-of the house which was for many years the Psmith head-quarters—Corfby
-Hall.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Emsworth jerked his glasses off his nose.</p>
-
-<p>“Corfby Hall! Are you the son of the Smith who used to own Corfby
-Hall? Why, bless my soul, I knew your father well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. That is to say, I never met him.”</p>
-
-<p>“No?”</p>
-
-<p>“But I won the first prize for roses at the Shrewsbury Flower Show
-the year he won the prize for tulips.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[p. 325]</span>“It seems to draw
-us very close together,” said Psmith.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, my dear boy,” cried Lord Emsworth jubilantly, “if you are
-really looking for a position of some kind and would care to be my
-secretary, nothing could suit me better. Nothing, nothing, nothing.
-Why, bless my soul&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am extremely obliged,” said Psmith. “And I shall endeavour to
-give satisfaction. And surely, if a mere Baxter could hold down the
-job, it should be well within the scope of a Shropshire Psmith. I think
-so, I think so.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And now, if you will excuse me, I think I will go
-down and tell the glad news to the little woman, if I may so describe
-her.”</p>
-
-<p class="aster">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>Psmith made his way down the broad staircase at an even better pace
-than that recently achieved by the departing Baxter, for he rightly
-considered each moment of this excellent day wasted that was not spent
-in the company of Eve. He crooned blithely to himself as he passed
-through the hall, only pausing when, as he passed the door of the
-smoking-room, the Hon. Freddie Threepwood suddenly emerged.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I say!” said Freddie. “Just the fellow I wanted to see. I was
-going off to look for you.”</p>
-
-<p>Freddie’s tone was cordiality itself. As far as Freddie was
-concerned, all that had passed between them in the cottage in the west
-wood last night was forgiven and forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>“Say on, Comrade Threepwood,” replied Psmith; “and, if I may offer
-the suggestion, make it snappy, for I would be elsewhere. I have man’s
-work before me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come over here.” Freddie drew him into a far corner of the hall and
-lowered his voice to a whisper. “I say, it’s all right, you know.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[p. 326]</span>“Excellent!” said
-Psmith. “Splendid! This is great news. What is all right?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve just seen Uncle Joe. He’s going to cough up the money he
-promised me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I congratulate you.”</p>
-
-<p>“So now I shall be able to get into that bookie’s business and
-make a pile. And, I say, you remember my telling you about Miss
-Halliday?”</p>
-
-<p>“What was that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that I loved her, I mean, and all that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, look here, between ourselves,” said Freddie earnestly, “the
-whole trouble all along has been that she thought I hadn’t any money to
-get married on. She didn’t actually say so in so many words, but you
-know how it is with women—you can read between the lines, if you know
-what I mean. So now everything’s going to be all right. I shall simply
-go to her and say, ‘Well, what about it?’ and—well, and so on, don’t
-you know?”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith considered the point gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“I see your reasoning, Comrade Threepwood,” he said. “I can detect
-but one flaw in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Flaw? What flaw?”</p>
-
-<p>“The fact that Miss Halliday is going to marry <i>me</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Freddie’s jaw dropped. His prominent eyes became more
-prawn-like.</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>Psmith patted his shoulder commiseratingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Be a man, Comrade Threepwood, and bite the bullet. These things
-will happen to the best of us. Some day you will be thankful that
-this has occurred. Purged in the holocaust of a mighty love, you
-will wander out into the sunset, a finer, broader man.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And now
-I must reluctantly tear myself away. I have<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_327">[p. 327]</span> an important appointment.” He patted his
-shoulder once more. “If you would care to be a page at the wedding,
-Comrade Threepwood, I can honestly say that there is no one whom I
-would rather have in that capacity.”</p>
-
-<p>And with a stately gesture of farewell, Psmith passed out on to the
-terrace to join Eve.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra fs90 mt2">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="tnote">
-<div class="transnote">
- <p class="tnotetit">Transcriber’s note</p>
- <ul>
- <li>Obvious printer errors have been silently corrected.</li>
- <li>Original spelling was kept, but variant spellings were made
- consistent when a predominant usage was found.</li>
- <li>Ellipses are shown spaced (“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” instead of “...”),
- as in the printed original.</li>
- </ul>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
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