'Extremely trying, sir.'
'Dashed so. Have you any remedy to suggest?'
'Not at the moment, sir. Miss Pringle does appear to be distinctly interested in you, sir. She was asking me questions this morning respecting your mode of life in London.'
'What?'
'Yes, sir.'
I stared at the man in horror. A ghastly thought had struck me. I quivered like an aspen.
At lunch that day a curious thing had happened. We had just finished mangling the cutlets and I was sitting back in my chair, taking a bit of an easy before being allotted my slab of boiled pudding, when, happening tolook up, I caught the girl Heloise's eye fixed on me in what seemed to me a rather rummy manner. I didn't think much about it at the time, because boiled pudding is a thing you have to give your undivided attention to if you want to do yourself justice; but now, recalling the episode in the light of Jeeves's words, the full sinister meaning of the thing seemed to come home to me.
Even at the moment, something about that look had struck me as oddly familiar, and now I suddenly saw why. It had been the identical look which I had observed in the eye of Honoria Glossop in the days immediately preceding our engagement—the look of a tigress that has marked down its prey.
'Jeeves, do you know what I think?'
'Sir?'
I gulped slightly.
'Jeeves,' I said, 'listen attentively. I don't want to give the impression that I consider myself one of those deadly coves who exercise an irresistible fascination over one and all and can't meet a girl without wrecking her peace of mind in the first half-minute. As a matter of fact, it's rather the other way with me, for girls on entering my presence are mostly inclined to give me the raised eyebrow and the twitching upper lip. Nobody, therefore, can say that I am a man who's likely to take alarm unnecessarily. You admit that, don't you?'
'Yes, sir.'
'Nevertheless, Jeeves, it is a known scientific fact that there is a particular style of female that does seem strangely attracted to the sort of fellow I am.'
'Very true, sir.'
'I mean to say, I know perfectly well that I've got, roughly speaking, half the amount of brain a normal bloke ought to possess. And when a girl comes along who has about twice the regular allowance, she too often makes a bee line for me with the love-light in her eyes. I don't know how to account for it, but it is so.'
'It may be Nature's provision for maintaining the balance of the species, sir.'
'Very possibly. Anyway, it has happened to me over and over again. It was what happened in the case of Honoria Glossop. She was notoriously one of the brainiest women of her year at Girton, and she just gathered me in like a bull pup swallowing a piece of steak.'
'Miss Pringle, I am informed, sir, was an even more brilliant scholar than Miss Glossop.'
'Well, there you are! Jeeves, she looks at me.'
'Yes, sir?'
'I keep meeting her on the stairs and in passages.'
'Indeed, sir?'
'She recommends me books to read, to improve my mind.'
'Highly suggestive, sir.'
'And at breakfast this morning, when I was eating a sausage, she told me I shouldn't, as modern medical science held that a four-inch sausage contained as many germs as a dead rat. The maternal touch, you understand; fussing over my health.'
'I think we may regard that, sir, as practically conclusive.'
I sank into a chair, thoroughly pipped.
'What's to be done, Jeeves?'
'We must think, sir.'
'You think. I haven't the machinery.'
'I will most certainly devote my very best attention to the matter, sir, and will endeavour to give satisfaction.'
Well, that was something. But I was ill at ease. Yes, there is no getting away from it, Bertram was ill at ease.
Next morning we visited sixty-three more Cambridge colleges, and after lunch I said I was going to my room to lie down. After staying there for half an hour to give the coast time to clear, I shoved a book and smokingmaterials in my pocket, and climbing out of a window, shinned down a convenient water-pipe into the garden. My objective was the summer-house, where it seemed to me that a man might put in a quiet hour or so without interruption.
It was extremely jolly in the garden. The sun was shining, the crocuses were all to the mustard and there wasn't a sign of Heloise Pringle anywhere. The cat was fooling about on the lawn, so I chirruped to it and it gave a low gargle and came trotting up. I had just got it in my arms and was scratching it under the ear when there was a loud shriek from above, and there was Aunt Jane half out of the window. Dashed disturbing.
'Oh, right-ho,' I said.
I dropped the cat, which galloped off into the bushes, and dismissing the idea of bunging a brick at the aged relative, went on my way, heading for the shrubbery. Once safely hidden there, I worked round till I got to the summer-house. And, believe me, I had hardly got my first cigarette nicely under way when a shadow fell on my book and there was young Sticketh-Closer-Than-a-Brother in person.
'So there you are,' she said.
She seated herself by my side, and with a sort of gruesome playfulness jerked the gasper out of the holder and heaved it through the door.
'You're always smoking,' she said, a lot too much like a lovingly chiding young bride for my comfort. 'I wish you wouldn't. It's so bad for you. And you ought not to be sitting out here without your light overcoat. You want someone to look after you.'
'I've got Jeeves.'
She frowned a bit.
'I don't like him,' she said.
'Eh? Why not?'
'I don't know. I wish you would get rid of him.'
My flesh absolutely crept. And I'll tell you why. Oneof the first things Honoria Glossop had done after we had become engaged was to tell me she didn't like Jeeves and wanted him shot out. The realization that this girl resembled Honoria not only in body but in blackness of soul made me go all faint.
'What are you reading?'
She picked up my book and frowned again. The thing was one I had brought down from the old flat in London, to glance at in the train—a fairly zippy effort in the detective line calledThe Trail of Blood. She turned the pages with a nasty sneer.
'I can't understand you liking nonsense of this—' She stopped suddenly. 'Good gracious!'
'What's the matter?'
'Do you know Bertie Wooster?'
And then I saw that my name was scrawled right across the title page, and my heart did three back somersaults.
'Oh—er—well—that is to say—well, slightly.'
'He must be a perfect horror. I'm surprised that you can make a friend of him. Apart from anything else, the man is practically an imbecile. He was engaged to my Cousin Honoria at one time, and it was broken off because he was next door to insane. You should hear my Uncle Roderick talk about him!'
I wasn't keen.
'Do you see much of him?'
'A goodish bit.'
'I saw in the paper the other day that he was fined for making a disgraceful disturbance in the street.'
'Yes, I saw that.'
She gazed at me in a foul, motherly way.
'He can't be a good influence for you,' she said. 'I do wish you would drop him. Will you?'
'Well—' I began. And at this point old Cuthbert, the cat, having presumably found it a bit slow by himself in the bushes, wandered in with a matey expression on hisface and jumped on my lap. I welcomed him with a good deal of cordiality. Though but a cat, he did make a sort of third at this party; and he afforded a good excuse for changing the conversation.
'Jolly birds, cats,' I said.
She wasn't having any.
'Will you drop Bertie Wooster?' she said, absolutely ignoring the catmotif.
'It would be so difficult.'
'Nonsense! It only needs a little will-power. The man surely can't be so interesting a companion as all that. Uncle Roderick says he is an invertebrate waster.'
I could have mentioned a few things that I thought Uncle Roderick was, but my lips were sealed, so to speak.
'You have changed a great deal since we last met,' said the Pringle disease reproachfully. She bent forward and began to scratch the cat under the other ear. 'Do you remember, when we were children together, you used to say that you would do anything for me?'
'Did I?'
'I remember once you cried because I was cross and wouldn't let you kiss me.'
I didn't believe it at the time, and I don't believe it now. Sippy is in many ways a good deal of a chump, but surely even at the age of ten he cannot have been such a priceless ass as that. I think the girl was lying, but that didn't make the position of affairs any better. I edged away a couple of inches and sat staring before me, the old brow beginning to get slightly bedewed.
And then suddenly—well, you know how it is, I mean. I suppose everyone has had that ghastly feeling at one time or another of being urged by some overwhelming force to do some absolutely blithering act. You get it every now and then when you're in a crowded theatre, and something seems to be egging you on to shout 'Fire!' and see what happens. Or you're talking to someone andall at once you feel, 'Now, suppose I suddenly biffed this bird in the eye!'
Well, what I'm driving at is this, at this juncture, with her shoulder squashing against mine and her black hair tickling my nose, a perfectly loony impulse came sweeping over me to kiss her.
'No, really?' I croaked.
'Have you forgotten?'
She lifted the old onion and her eyes looked straight into mine. I could feel myself skidding. I shut my eyes. And then from the doorway there spoke the most beautiful voice I had ever heard in my life:
'Give me that cat!'
I opened my eyes. There was good old Aunt Jane, that queen of her sex, standing before me, glaring at me as if I were a vivisectionist and she had surprised me in the middle of an experiment. How this pearl among women had tracked me down I don't know, but there she stood, bless her dear, intelligent old soul, like the rescue party in the last reel of a motion picture.
I didn't wait. The spell was broken and I legged it. As I went, I heard that lovely voice again.
'He shot arrows at my Tibby from a bow,' said this most deserving and excellent octogenarian.
For the next few days all was peace. I saw comparatively little of Heloise. I found the strategic value of that water-pipe outside my window beyond praise. I seldom left the house now by any other route. It seemed to me that, if only the luck held like this, I might after all be able to stick this visit out for the full term of the sentence.
But meanwhile, as they say in the movies—
The whole family appeared to be present and correct as I came down to the drawing-room a couple of nights later. The Prof, Mrs Prof, the two Exhibits and the girl Heloise were scattered about at intervals. The cat slepton the rug, the canary in its cage. There was nothing, in short, to indicate that this was not just one of our ordinary evenings.
'Well, well, well!' I said cheerily. 'Hullo-ullo-ullo!'
I always like to make something in the nature of an entrance speech, it seeming to me to lend a chummy tone to the proceedings.
The girl Heloise looked at me reproachfully.
'Where have you been all day?' she asked.
'I went to my room after lunch.'
'You weren't there at five.'
'No. After putting in a spell of work on the good old colleges I went for a stroll. Fellow must have exercise if he means to keep fit.'
'Mens sana in corpore sano,' observed the prof.
'I shouldn't wonder,' I said cordially.
At this point, when everything was going as sweet as a nut and I was feeling on top of my form, Mrs Pringle suddenly socked me on the base of the skull with a sandbag. Not actually, I don't mean. No, no. I speak figuratively, as it were.
'Roderick is very late,' she said.
You may think it strange that the sound of that name should have sloshed into my nerve centres like a half-brick. But, take it from me, to a man who has had any dealings with Sir Roderick Glossop there is only one Roderick in the world—and that is one too many.
'Roderick?' I gurgled.
'My brother-in-law, Sir Roderick Glossop, comes to Cambridge tonight,' said the prof. 'He lectures at St Luke's tomorrow. He is coming here to dinner.'
And while I stood there, feeling like the hero when he discovers that he is trapped in the den of the Secret Nine, the door opened.
'Sir Roderick Glossop,' announced the maid or some such person, and in he came.
One of the things that get this old crumb so generallydisliked among the better element of the community is the fact that he has a head like the dome of St Paul's and eyebrows that want bobbing or shingling to reduce them to anything like reasonable size. It is a nasty experience to see this bald and bushy bloke advancing on you when you haven't prepared the strategic railways in your rear.
As he came into the room I backed behind a sofa and commended my soul to God. I didn't need to have my hand read to know that trouble was coming to me through a dark man.
He didn't spot me at first. He shook hands with the prof and wife, kissed Heloise and waggled his head at the Exhibits.
'I fear I am somewhat late,' he said. 'A slight accident on the road, affecting what my chauffeur termed the—'
And then he saw me lurking on the outskirts and gave a startled grunt, as if I hurt him a good deal internally.
'This—' began the prof, waving in my direction.
'I am already acquainted with Mr Wooster.'
'This,' went on the prof, 'is Miss Sipperley's nephew, Oliver. You remember Miss Sipperley?'
'What do you mean?' barked Sir Roderick. Having had so much to do with loonies has given him a rather sharp and authoritative manner on occasion. 'This is that wretched young man, Bertram Wooster. What is all this nonsense about Olivers and Sipperleys?'
The prof was eyeing me with some natural surprise. So were the others. I beamed a bit weakly.
'Well, as a matter of fact—' I said.
The prof was wrestling with the situation. You could hear his brain buzzing.
'He said he was Oliver Sipperley,' he moaned.
'Come here!' bellowed Sir Roderick. 'Am I to understand that you have inflicted yourself on this household under the pretence of being the nephew of an old friend?'
It seemed a pretty accurate description of the facts.
'Well—er—yes,' I said.
Sir Roderick shot an eye at me. It entered the body somewhere about the top stud, roamed around inside for a bit and went out at the back.
'Insane! Quite insane, as I knew from the first moment I saw him.'
'What did he say?' asked Aunt Jane.
'Roderick says this young man is insane,' roared the prof.
'Ah!' said Aunt Jane, nodding. 'I thought so. He climbs down water-pipes.'
'Does what?'
'I've seen him—ah, many a time!'
Sir Roderick snorted violently.
'He ought to be under proper restraint. It is abominable that a person in his mental condition should be permitted to roam the world at large. The next stage may quite easily be homicidal.'
It seemed to me that, even at the expense of giving old Sippy away, I must be cleared of this frightful charge. After all, Sippy's number was up anyway.
'Let me explain,' I said. 'Sippy asked me to come here.'
'What do you mean?'
'He couldn't come himself, because he was jugged for biffing a cop on Boat-Race Night.'
Well, it wasn't easy to make them get the hang of the story, and even when I'd done it it didn't seem to make them any chummier towards me. A certain coldness about expresses it, and when dinner was announced I counted myself out and pushed off rapidly to my room. I could have done with a bit of dinner, but the atmosphere didn't seem just right.
'Jeeves,' I said, having shot in and pressed the bell, 'we're sunk.'
'Sir?'
'Hell's foundations are quivering and the game is up.'
He listened attentively.
'The contingency was one always to have been anticipated as a possibility, sir. It only remains to take the obvious step.'
'What's that?'
'Go and see Miss Sipperley, sir.'
'What on earth for?'
'I think it would be judicious to apprise her of the facts yourself, sir, instead of allowing her to hear of them through the medium of a letter from Professor Pringle. That is to say, if you are still anxious to do all in your power to assist Mr Sipperley.'
'I can't let Sippy down. If you think it's any good—'
'We can but try it, sir. I have an idea, sir, that we may find Miss Sipperley disposed to look leniently upon Mr Sipperley's misdemeanour.'
'What makes you think that?'
'It is just a feeling that I have, sir.'
'Well, if you think it would be worth trying—How do we get there?'
'The distance is about a hundred and fifty miles, sir. Our best plan would be to hire a car.'
'Get it at once,' I said.
The idea of being a hundred and fifty miles away from Heloise Pringle, not to mention Aunt Jane and Sir Roderick Glossop, sounded about as good to me as anything I had ever heard.
The Paddock, Beckley-on-the-Moor, was about a couple of parasangs from the village, and I set out for it next morning, after partaking of a hearty breakfast at the local inn, practically without a tremor. I suppose when a fellow has been through it as I had in the last two weeks his system becomes hardened. After all, I felt, whatever this aunt of Sippy's might be like, she wasn't Sir Roderick Glossop, so I was that much on velvet from the start.
The Paddock was one of those medium-sized houseswith a goodish bit of very tidy garden and a carefully rolled gravel drive curving past a shrubbery that looked as if it had just come back from the dry cleaner—the sort of house you take one look at and say to yourself, 'Somebody's aunt lives there.' I pushed on up the drive, and as I turned the bend I observed in the middle distance a woman messing about by a flower-bed with a trowel in her hand. If this wasn't the female I was after, I was very much mistaken, so I halted, cleared the throat and gave tongue.
'Miss Sipperley?'
She had had her back to me, and at the sound of my voice she executed a sort of leap or bound, not unlike a barefoot dancer who steps on a tin-tack half-way through the Vision of Salome. She came to earth and goggled at me in a rather goofy manner. A large, stout female with a reddish face.
'Hope I didn't startle you,' I said.
'Who are you?'
'My name's Wooster. I'm a pal of your nephew, Oliver.'
Her breathing had become more regular.
'Oh?' she said. 'When I heard your voice I thought you were someone else.'
'No, that's who I am. I came up here to tell you about Oliver.'
'What about him?'
I hesitated. Now that we were approaching what you might call the nub, or crux, of the situation, a good deal of my breezy confidence seemed to have slipped from me.
'Well, it's rather a painful tale, I must warn you.'
'Oliver isn't ill? He hasn't had an accident?'
She spoke anxiously, and I was pleased at this evidence of human feeling. I decided to shoot the works with no more delay.
'Oh, no, he isn't ill,' I said; 'and as regards havingaccidents, it depends on what you call an accident. He's in chokey.'
'In what?'
'In prison.'
'In prison!'
'It was entirely my fault. We were strolling along on Boat-Race Night and I advised him to pinch a policeman's helmet.'
'I don't understand.'
'Well, he seemed depressed, don't you know; and rightly or wrongly, I thought it might cheer him up if he stepped across the street and collared a policeman's helmet. He thought it a good idea, too, so he started doing it, and the man made a fuss and Oliver sloshed him.'
'Sloshed him?'
'Biffed him—smote him a blow—in the stomach.'
'My nephew Oliver hit a policeman in the stomach?'
'Absolutely in the stomach. And next morning the beak sent him to the bastille for thirty days without the option.'
I was looking at her a bit anxiously all this while to see how she was taking the thing, and at this moment her face seemed suddenly to split in half. For an instant she appeared to be all mouth, and then she was staggering about the grass, shouting with laughter and waving the trowel madly.
It seemed to me a bit of luck for her that Sir Roderick Glossop wasn't on the spot. He would have been sitting on her head and calling for the strait-waistcoat in the first half-minute.
'You aren't annoyed?' I said.
'Annoyed?' She chuckled happily. 'I've never heard such a splendid thing in my life.'
I was pleased and relieved. I had hoped the news wouldn't upset her too much, but I had never expected it to go with such a roar as this.
'I'm proud of him,' she said.
'That's fine.'
'If every young man in England went about hitting policemen in the stomach, it would be a better country to live in.'
I couldn't follow her reasoning, but everything seemed to be all right; so after a few more cheery words I said good-bye and legged it.
'Jeeves,' I said when I got back to the inn, 'everything's fine. But I am far from understanding why.'
'What actually occurred when you met Miss Sipperley, sir?'
'I told her Sippy was in the jug for assaulting the police. Upon which she burst into hearty laughter, waved her trowel in a pleased manner and said she was proud of him.'
'I think I can explain her apparently eccentric behaviour, sir. I am informed that Miss Sipperley has had a good deal of annoyance at the hands of the local constable during the past two weeks. This has doubtless resulted in a prejudice on her part against the force as a whole.'
'Really? How was that?'
'The constable has been somewhat over-zealous in the performance of his duties, sir. On no fewer than three occasions in the last ten days he has served summonses upon Miss Sipperley—for exceeding the speed limit in her car; for allowing her dog to appear in public without a collar; and for failing to abate a smoky chimney. Being in the nature of an autocrat, if I may use the term, in the village, Miss Sipperley has been accustomed to do these things in the past with impunity, and the constable's unexpected zeal has made her somewhat ill-disposed to policemen as a class and consequently disposed to look upon such assaults as Mr Sipperley's in a kindly and broadminded spirit.'
I saw his point.
'What an amazing bit of luck, Jeeves!'
'Yes, sir.'
'Where did you hear all this?'
'My informant was the constable himself, sir. He is my cousin.'
I gaped at the man. I saw, so to speak, all.
'Good Lord, Jeeves! You didn't bribe him?'
'Oh, no, sir. But it was his birthday last week, and I gave him a little present. I have always been fond of Egbert, sir.'
'How much?'
'A matter of five pounds, sir.'
I felt in my pocket.
'Here you are,' I said. 'And another fiver for luck.'
'Thank you very much, sir.'
'Jeeves,' I said, 'you move in a mysterious way your wonders to perform. You don't mind if I sing a bit, do you?'
'Not at all, sir,' said Jeeves.
'Jeeves,' I said, looking in on him one afternoon on my return from the club, 'I don't want to interrupt you.'
'No, sir?'
'But I would like a word with you.'
'Yes, sir?'
He had been packing a few of the Wooster necessaries in the old kitbag against our approaching visit to the seaside, and he now rose and stood bursting with courteous zeal.
'Jeeves,' I said, 'a somewhat disturbing situation has arisen with regard to a pal of mine.'
'Indeed, sir?'
'You know Mr Bullivant?'
'Yes, sir.'
'Well, I slid into the Drones this morning for a bite of lunch, and found him in a dark corner of the smoking-room looking like the last rose of summer. Naturally I was surprised. You know what a bright lad he is as a rule. The life and soul of every gathering he attends.'
'Yes, sir.'
'Quite the little lump of fun, in fact.'
'Precisely, sir.'
'Well, I made inquiries, and he told me that he had had a quarrel with the girl he's engaged to. You knew he was engaged to Miss Elizabeth Vickers?'
'Yes, sir. I recall reading the announcement in theMorning Post.'
'Well, he isn't any longer. What the row was about he didn't say, but the broad facts, Jeeves, are that she hasscratched the fixture. She won't let him come near her, refuses to talk on the phone, and sends back his letters unopened.'
'Extremely trying, sir.'
'We ought to do something, Jeeves. But what?'
'It is somewhat difficult to make a suggestion, sir.'
'Well, what I'm going to do for a start is to take him down to Marvis Bay with me. I know these birds who have been handed their hat by the girl of their dreams, Jeeves. What they want is complete change of scene.'
'There is much in what you say, sir.'
'Yes. Change of scene is the thing. I heard of a man. Girl refused him. Man went abroad. Two months later girl wired him "Come back, Muriel." Man started to write out a reply; suddenly found that he couldn't remember girl's surname; so never answered at all, and lived happily ever after. It may well be, Jeeves, that after Freddie Bullivant has had a few weeks of Marvis Bay he will get completely over it.'
'Very possibly, sir.'
'And, if not, it is quite likely that, refreshed by sea air and good simple food, you will get a brain-wave and think up some scheme for bringing these two misguided blighters together again.'
'I will do my best, sir.'
'I knew it, Jeeves, I knew it. Don't forget to put in plenty of socks.'
'No, sir.'
'Also of tennis shirts not a few.'
'Very good, sir.'
I left him to his packing, and a couple of days later we started off for Marvis Bay, where I had taken a cottage for July and August.
I don't know if you know Marvis Bay? It's in Dorsetshire; and, while not what you would call a fiercely exciting spot, has many good points. You spend the day there bathing and sitting on the sands, and in theevening you stroll out on the shore with the mosquitoes. At nine p.m. you rub ointment on the wounds and go to bed. It was a simple, healthy life, and it seemed to suit poor old Freddie absolutely. Once the moon was up and the breeze sighing in the trees, you couldn't drag him from that beach with ropes. He became quite a popular pet with the mosquitoes. They would hang round waiting for him to come out, and would give a miss to perfectly good strollers just so as to be in good condition for him.
It was during the day that I found Freddie, poor old chap, a trifle heavy as a guest. I suppose you can't blame a bloke whose heart is broken, but it required a good deal of fortitude to bear up against this gloom-crushed exhibit during the early days of our little holiday. When he wasn't chewing a pipe and scowling at the carpet, he was sitting at the piano, playing 'The Rosary' with one finger. He couldn't play anything except 'The Rosary', and he couldn't play much of that. However firmly and confidently he started off, somewhere around the third bar a fuse would blow out and he would have to start all over again.
He was playing it as usual one morning when I came in from bathing: and it seemed to me that he was extracting more hideous melancholy from it even than usual. Nor had my sense deceived me.
'Bertie,' he said in a hollow voice, skidding on the fourth crotchet from the left as you enter the second bar and producing a distressing sound like the death-rattle of a sand-eel, 'I've seen her!'
'Seen her?' I said. 'What, Elizabeth Vickers? How do you mean, you've seen her? She isn't down here.'
'Yes, she is. I suppose she's staying with relations or something. I was down at the post office, seeing if there were any letters, and we met in the doorway.'
'What happened?'
'She cut me dead.'
He started 'The Rosary' again, and stubbed his finger on a semi-quaver.
'Bertie,' he said, 'you ought never to have brought me here. I must go away.'
'Go away? Don't talk such rot. This is the best thing that could have happened. It's a most amazing bit of luck, her being down here. This is where you come out strong.'
'She cut me.'
'Never mind. Be a sportsman. Have another dash at her.'
'She looked clean through me.'
'Well, don't mind that. Stick at it. Now, having got her down here, what you want,' I said, 'is to place her under some obligation to you. What you want is to get her timidly thanking you. What you want—'
'What's she going to thank me timidly for?'
I thought for a while. Undoubtedly he had put his finger on the nub of the problem. For some moments I was at a loss, not to say nonplussed. Then I saw the way.
'What you want,' I said, 'is to look out for a chance and save her from drowning.'
'I can't swim.'
That was Freddie Bullivant all over. A dear old chap in a thousand ways, but no help to a fellow, if you know what I mean.
He cranked up the piano once more, and I legged it for the open.
I strolled out on the beach and began to think this thing over. I would have liked to consult Jeeves, of course, but Jeeves had disappeared for the morning. There was no doubt that it was hopeless expecting Freddie to do anything for himself in this crisis. I'm not saying that dear old Freddie hasn't got his strong qualities. He is good at polo, and I have heard him spoken of as a coming man at snooker-pool. But apart from this you couldn't call him a man of enterprise.
Well, I was rounding some rocks, thinking pretty tensely, when I caught sight of a blue dress, and there was the girl in person. I had never met her, but Freddie had sixteen photographs of her sprinkled round his bedroom, and I knew I couldn't be mistaken. She was sitting on the sand, helping a small, fat child to build a castle. On a chair close by was an elderly female reading a novel. I heard the girl call her 'aunt'. So, getting the reasoning faculties to work, I deduced that the fat child must be her cousin. It struck me that if Freddie had been there he would probably have tried to work up some sentiment about the kid on the strength of it. I couldn't manage this. I don't think I ever saw a kid who made me feel less sentimental. He was one of those round, bulging kids.
After he had finished his castle he seemed to get bored with life and began to cry. The girl, who seemed to read him like a book, took him off to where a fellow was selling sweets at a stall. And I walked on.
Now, those who know me, if you ask them, will tell you that I'm a chump. My Aunt Agatha would testify to this effect. So would my Uncle Percy and many more of my nearest and—if you like to use the expression—dearest. Well, I don't mind. I admit it. Iama chump. But what I do say—and I should like to lay the greatest possible stress on this—is that every now and then, just when the populace has given up hope that I will ever show any real human intelligence—I get what it is idle to pretend is not an inspiration. And that's what happened now. I doubt if the idea that came to me at this juncture would have occurred to a single one of any dozen of the largest-brained blokes in history. Napoleon might have got it, but I'll bet Darwin and Shakespeare and Thomas Hardy wouldn't have thought of it in a thousand years.
It came to me on my return journey. I was walking back along the shore, exercising the old bean fiercely,when I saw the fat child meditatively smacking a jelly-fish with a spade. The girl wasn't with him. The aunt wasn't with him. In fact, there wasn't anybody else in sight. And the solution of the whole trouble between Freddie and his Elizabeth suddenly came to me in a flash.
From what I had seen of the two, the girl was evidently fond of this kid: and, anyhow, he was her cousin, so what I said to myself was this: If I kidnap this young heavyweight for a brief space of time: and if, when the girl has got frightfully anxious about where he can have got to, dear old Freddie suddenly appears leading the infant by the hand and telling a story to the effect that he found him wandering at large about the country and practically saved his life, the girl's gratitude is bound to make her chuck hostilities and be friends again.
So I gathered up the kid and made off with him.
Freddie, dear old chap, was rather slow at first in getting on to the fine points of the idea. When I appeared at the cottage, carrying the child, and dumped him down in the sitting-room, he showed no joy whatever. The child had started to bellow by this time, not thinking much of the thing, and Freddie seemed to find it rather trying.
'What the devil's all this?' he asked, regarding the little visitor with a good deal of loathing.
The kid loosed off a yell that made the windows rattle, and I saw that this was a time for strategy. I raced to the kitchen and fetched a pot of honey. It was the right idea. The kid stopped bellowing and began to smear his face with the stuff.
'Well?' said Freddie, when silence had set in.
I explained the scheme. After a while it began to strike him. The careworn look faded from his face, and for the first time since his arrival at Marvis Bay he smiled almost happily.
'There's something in this, Bertie.'
'It's the goods.'
'I think it will work,' said Freddie.
And, disentangling the child from the honey, he led him out.
'I expect Elizabeth will be on the beach somewhere,' he said.
What you might call a quiet happiness suffused me, if that's the word I want. I was very fond of old Freddie, and it was jolly to think that he was shortly about to click once more. I was leaning back in a chair on the veranda, smoking a peaceful cigarette, when down the road I saw the old boy returning, and, by George, the kid was still with him.
'Hallo!' I said. 'Couldn't you find her?'
I then perceived that Freddie was looking as if he had been kicked in the stomach.
'Yes, I found her,' he replied, with one of those bitter, mirthless laughs you read about.
'Well, then—?'
He sank into a chair and groaned.
'This isn't her cousin, you idiot,' he said. 'He's no relation at all—just a kid she met on the beach. She had never seen him before in her life.'
'But she was helping him build a sand-castle.'
'I don't care. He's a perfect stranger.'
It seemed to me that, if the modern girl goes about building sand-castles with kids she has only known for five minutes and probably without a proper introduction at that, then all that has been written about her is perfectly true. Brazen is the word that seems to meet the case.
I said as much to Freddie, but he wasn't listening.
'Well, who is this ghastly child, then?' I said.
'I don't know. O Lord, I've had a time! Thank goodness you will probably spend the next few years of your life in Dartmoor for kidnapping. That's my onlyconsolation. I'll come and jeer at you through the bars on visiting days.'
'Tell me all, old man,' I said.
He told me all. It took him a good long time to do it, for he broke off in the middle of nearly every sentence to call me names, but I gradually gathered what had happened. The girl Elizabeth had listened like an iceberg while he worked off the story he had prepared, and then—well, she didn't actually call him a liar in so many words, but she gave him to understand in a general sort of way that he was a worm and an outcast. And then he crawled off with the kid, licked to a splinter.
'And mind,' he concluded, 'this is your affair. I'm not mixed up in it at all. If you want to escape your sentence—or anyway get a portion of it remitted—you'd better go and find the child's parents and return him before the police come for you.'
'Who are his parents?'
'I don't know.'
'Where do they live?'
'I don't know.'
The kid didn't seem to know, either. A thoroughly vapid and uninformed infant. I got out of him the fact that he had a father, but that was as far as he went. It didn't seem ever to have occurred to him, chatting of an evening with the old man, to ask him his name and address. So, after a wasted ten minutes, out we went into the great world, more or less what you might call at random.
I give you my word that, until I started to tramp the place with this child, I never had a notion that it was such a difficult job restoring a son to his parents. How kidnappers ever get caught is a mystery to me. I searched Marvis Bay like a bloodhound, but nobody came forward to claim the infant. You would have thought, from the lack of interest in him, that he was stopping there all by himself in a cottage of his own. It wasn't till, by another inspiration, I thought to ask the sweet-stall man that Igot on the track. The sweet-stall man, who seemed to have seen a lot of him, said that the child's name was Kegworthy, and that his parents lived at a place called Ocean Rest.
It then remained to find Ocean Rest. And eventually, after visiting Ocean View, Ocean Prospect, Ocean Breeze, Ocean Cottage, Ocean Bungalow, Ocean Nook and Ocean Homestead, I trailed it down.
I knocked at the door. Nobody answered. I knocked again. I could hear movements inside, but nobody appeared. I was just going to get to work with that knocker in such a way that it would filter through these people's heads that I wasn't standing there just for the fun of the thing, when a voice from somewhere above shouted 'Hi!'
I looked up and saw a round, pink face, with grey whiskers east and west of it, staring down at me from an upper window.
'Hi!' it shouted again. 'You can't come in.'
'I don't want to come in.'
'Because—Oh, is that Tootles?'
'My name is not Tootles. Are you Mr Kegworthy? I've brought back your son.'
'I see him. Peep-bo, Tootles, Dadda can see 'oo.'
The face disappeared with a jerk. I could hear voices. The face reappeared.
'Hi!'
I churned the gravel madly. This blighter was giving me the pip.
'Do you live here?' asked the face.
'I have taken a cottage here for a few weeks.'
'What's your name?'
'Wooster.'
'Fancy that! Do you spell it W-o-r-c-e-s-t-e-r or W-o-o-s-t-e-r?'
'W-o-o—'
'I ask because I once knew a Miss Wooster, spelled W-o—'
I had had about enough of this spelling-bee.
'Will you open the door and take this child in?'
'I mustn't open the door. This Miss Wooster that I knew married a man named Spenser. Was she any relation?'
'She is my Aunt Agatha,' I replied, and I spoke with a good deal of bitterness, trying to suggest by my manner that he was exactly the sort of man, in my opinion, who would know my Aunt Agatha.
He beamed down at me.
'This is most fortunate. We were wondering what to do with Tootles. You see, we have mumps here. My daughter Bootles has just developed mumps. Tootles must not be exposed to the risk of infection. We could not think what to do with him. It was most fortunate, your finding the dear child. He strayed from his nurse. I would hesitate to trust him to a stranger, but you are different. Any nephew of Mrs Spenser's has my complete confidence. You must take Tootles into your house. It will be an ideal arrangement. I have written to my brother in London to come and fetch him. He may be here in a few days.'
'May!'
'He is a busy man, of course; but he should certainly be here within a week. Till then Tootles can stop with you. It is an excellent plan. Very much obliged to you. Your wife will like Tootles.'
'I haven't got a wife!' I yelled; but the window had closed with a bang, as if the man with the whiskers had found a germ trying to escape and had headed it off just in time.
I breathed a deep breath and wiped the old forehead.
The window flew up again.
'Hi!'
A package weighing about a ton hit me on the head and burst like a bomb.
'Did you catch it?' said the face, reappearing. 'Dear me, you missed it. Never mind. You can get it at the grocer's. Ask for Bailey's Granulated Breakfast Chips. Tootles takes them for breakfast with a little milk. Not cream. Milk. Be sure to get Bailey's.'
'Yes, but—'
The face disappeared, and the window was banged down again. I lingered a while, but nothing else happened, so, taking Tootles by the hand, I walked slowly away.
And as we turned up the road we met Freddie's Elizabeth.
'Well, baby?' she said, sighting the kid. 'So daddy found you again, did he? Your little son and I made great friends on the beach this morning,' she said to me.
This was the limit. Coming on top of that interview with the whiskered lunatic, it so utterly unnerved me that she had nodded good-bye and was half-way down the road before I caught up with my breath enough to deny the charge of being the infant's father.
I hadn't expected Freddie to sing with joy when he saw me looming up with child complete, but I did think he might have showed a little more manly fortitude, a little more of the old British bulldog spirit. He leaped up when we came in, glared at the kid and clutched his head. He didn't speak for a long time; but, to make up for it, when he began he did not leave off for a long time.
'Well,' he said, when he had finished the body of his remarks, 'say something! Heavens, man, why don't you say something?'
'If you'll give me a chance, I will,' I said, and shot the bad news.
'What are you going to do about it?' he asked. And it would be idle to deny that his manner was peevish.
'What can we do about it?'
'We? What do you mean, we? I'm not going to spend my time taking turns as a nursemaid to this excrescence. I'm going back to London.'
'Freddie!' I cried. 'Freddie, old man!' My voice shook. 'Would you desert a pal at a time like this?'
'Yes, I would.'
'Freddie,' I said, 'you've got to stand by me. You must. Do you realize that this child has to be undressed, and bathed, and dressed again? You wouldn't leave me to do all that single-handed?'
'Jeeves can help you.'
'No, sir,' said Jeeves, who had just rolled in with lunch; 'I must, I fear, disassociate myself completely from the matter.' He spoke respectfully but firmly. 'I have had little or no experience with children.'
'Now's the time to start,' I urged.
'No, sir,—I am sorry to say that I cannot involve myself in any way.'
'Then you must stand by me, Freddie.'
'I won't.'
'You must. Reflect, old man! We have been pals for years. Your mother likes me.'
'No, she doesn't.'
'Well, anyway, we were at school together and you owe me a tenner.'
'Oh, well,' he said in a resigned sort of voice.
'Besides, old thing,' I said, 'I did it all for your sake, you know.'
He looked at me in a curious way, and breathed rather hard for some moments.
'Bertie,' he said, 'one moment. I will stand a good deal, but I will not stand being expected to be grateful.'
Looking back at it, I can see that what saved me from Colney Hatch in this crisis was my bright idea in buying up most of the contents of the local sweet-shop. Byserving out sweets to the kid practically incessantly we managed to get through the rest of that day pretty satisfactorily. At eight o'clock he fell asleep in a chair; and, having undressed him by unbuttoning every button in sight and, where there were no buttons, pulling till something gave, we carried him up to bed.
Freddie stood looking at the pile of clothes on the floor with a sort of careworn wrinkle between his eyes, and I knew what he was thinking. To get the kid undressed had been simple—a mere matter of muscle. But how were we to get him into his clothes again? I stirred the heap with my foot. There was a long linen arrangement which might have been anything. Also a strip of pink flannel which was like nothing on earth. All most unpleasant.
But in the morning I remembered that there were children in the next bungalow but one, and I went there before breakfast and borrowed their nurse. Women are wonderful, by Jove they are! This nurse had all the spare parts assembled and in the right places in about eight minutes, and there was the kid dressed and looking fit to go to a garden party at Buckingham Palace. I showered wealth upon her, and she promised to come in morning and evening. I sat down to breakfast almost cheerful again. It was the first bit of silver lining that had presented itself to date.
'And, after all,' I said, 'there's lots to be argued in favour of having a child about the place, if you know what I mean. Kind of cosy and domestic, what?'
Just then the kid upset the milk over Freddie's trousers, and when he had come back after changing he lacked sparkle.
It was shortly after breakfast that Jeeves asked if he could have a word in my ear.
Now, though in the anguish of recent events I had rather tended to forget what had been the original idea inbringing Freddie down to this place, I hadn't forgotten it altogether; and I'm bound to say that, as the days went by, I had found myself a little disappointed in Jeeves. The scheme had been, if you recall, that he should refresh himself with sea air and simple food and, having thus got his brain into prime working order, evolve some means of bringing Freddie and his Elizabeth together again.
And what had happened? The man had eaten well and he had slept well, but not a step did he appear to have taken towards bringing about the happy ending. The only move that had been made in that direction had been made by me, alone and unaided; and, though I freely admit that it had turned out a good deal of a bloomer, still the fact remains that I had shown zeal and enterprise. Consequently I received him with a bit of hauteur when he blew in. Slightly cold. A trifle frosty.
'Yes, Jeeves?' I said. 'You wished to speak to me?'
'Yes, sir.'
'Say on, Jeeves,' I said.
'Thank you, sir. What I desired to say, sir, was this: I attended a performance at the local cinema last night.'
I raised the eyebrows. I was surprised at the man. With life in the home so frightfully tense and the young master up against it to such a fearful extent, I disapproved of him coming toddling in and prattling about his amusements.
'I hope you enjoyed yourself,' I said in rather a nasty manner.
'Yes, sir, thank you. The management was presenting a super-super-film in seven reels, dealing with life in the wilder and more feverish strata of New York Society, featuring Bertha Blevitch, Orlando Murphy and Baby Bobbie. I found it most entertaining, sir.'
'That's good,' I said. 'And if you have a nice time this morning on the sands with your spade and bucket, you will come and tell me all about it, won't you? I have solittle on my mind just now that it's a treat to hear all about your happy holiday.'
Satirical, if you see what I mean. Sarcastic. Almost bitter, as a matter of fact, if you come right down to it.
'The title of the film wasTiny Hands, sir. And the father and mother of the character played by Baby Bobbie had unfortunately drifted apart—'
'Too bad,' I said.
'Although at heart they loved each other still, sir.'
'Did they really? I'm glad you told me that.'
'And so matters went on, sir, till came a day when—'
'Jeeves,' I said, fixing him with a dashed unpleasant eye, 'what the dickens do you think you're talking about? Do you suppose that, with this infernal child landed on me and the peace of the home practically shattered into a million bits, I want to hear—'
'I beg your pardon, sir. I would not have mentioned this cinema performance were it not for the fact that it gave me an idea, sir.'
'An idea!'
'An idea that will, I fancy, sir, prove of value in straightening out the matrimonial future of Mr Bullivant. To which end, if you recollect, sir, you desired me to—'
I snorted with remorse.
'Jeeves,' I said, 'I wronged you.'
'Not at all, sir.'
'Yes, I did. I wronged you. I had a notion that you had given yourself up entirely to the pleasures of the seaside and had chucked that business altogether. I might have known better. Tell me all, Jeeves.'
He bowed in a gratified manner. I beamed. And, while we didn't actually fall on each other's necks, we gave each other to understand that all was well once more.
'In this super-super-filmTiny Hands, sir,' said Jeeves, 'the parents of the child had, as I say, drifted apart.'
'Drifted apart,' I said, nodding. 'Right! And then?'
'Came a day, sir, when their little child brought them together again.'
'How?'
'If I remember rightly, sir, he said, "Dadda, doesn't 'oo love mummie no more?"'
'And then?'
'They exhibited a good deal of emotion. There was what I believe is termed a cut-back, showing scenes from their courtship and early married life and some glimpses of Lovers Through the Ages, and the picture concluded with a close-up of the pair in an embrace, with the child looking on with natural gratification and an organ playing "Hearts and Flowers" in the distance.'
'Proceed, Jeeves,' I said. 'You interest me strangely. I begin to grasp the idea. You mean—?'
'I mean, sir, that, with this young gentleman on the premises, it might be possible to arrange adénouementof a somewhat similar nature in regard to Mr Bullivant and Miss Vickers.'
'Aren't you overlooking the fact that this kid is no relation of Mr Bullivant or Miss Vickers?'
'Even with that handicap, sir, I fancy that good results might ensue. I think that, if it were possible to bring Mr Bullivant and Miss Vickers together for a short space of time in the presence of the child, sir, and if the child were to say something of a touching nature—'
'I follow you absolutely, Jeeves,' I cried with enthusiasm. 'It's big. This is the way I see it. We lay the scene in this room. Child, centre. Girl, l.c. Freddie up stage, playing the piano. No, that won't do. He can only play a little of "The Rosary" with one finger, so we'll have to cut out the soft music. But the rest's all right. Look here,' I said. 'This inkpot is Miss Vickers. This mug with "A Present from Marvis Bay" on it is the child. This penwiper is Mr Bullivant. Start with dialogue leading up to child's line. Child speaks line, let us say,"Boofer lady, does 'oo love dadda?" Business of outstretched hands. Hold picture for a moment. Freddie crosses l. takes girl's hand. Business of swallowing lump in throat. Then big speech: "Ah, Elizabeth, has not this misunderstanding of ours gone on too long? See! A little child rebukes us!" And so on. I'm just giving you the general outline. Freddie must work up his own part. And we must get a good line for the child. "Boofer lady, does 'oo love dadda?" isn't definite enough. We want something more—'
'If I might make the suggestion, sir—?'
'Yes?'
'I would advocate the words "Kiss Freddie!" It is short, readily memorized, and has what I believe is technically termed the punch.'
'Genius, Jeeves!'
'Thank you very much, sir.'
'"Kiss Freddie!" it is, then. But, I say, Jeeves, how the deuce are we to get them together in here? Miss Vickers cuts Mr Bullivant. She wouldn't come within a mile of him.'
'It is awkward, sir.'
'It doesn't matter. We shall have to make it an exterior set instead of an interior. We can easily corner her on the beach somewhere, when we're ready. Meanwhile, we must get the kid word-perfect.'
'Yes, sir.'
'Right! First rehearsal for lines and business at eleven sharp tomorrow morning.'
Poor old Freddie was in such a gloomy frame of mind that I decided not to tell him the idea till we had finished coaching the child. He wasn't in the mood to have a thing like that hanging over him. So we concentrated on Tootles. And pretty early in the proceedings we saw that the only way to get Tootlesworked up to the spirit of the thing was to introduce sweets of some sort as a sub-motive, so to speak.
'The chief difficulty, sir,' said Jeeves, at the end of the first rehearsal, 'is, as I envisage it, to establish in the young gentleman's mind a connexion between the words we desire him to say and the refreshment.'
'Exactly,' I said. 'Once the blighter has grasped the basic fact that these two words, clearly spoken, result automatically in chocolate nougat, we have got a success.'
I've often thought how interesting it must be to be one of those animal-trainer blokes—to stimulate the dawning intelligence and all that. Well, this was every bit as exciting. Some days success seemed to be staring us in the eyeball, and the kid got out the line as if he had been an old professional. And then he would go all to pieces again. And time was flying.
'We must hurry up, Jeeves,' I said. 'The kid's uncle may arrive any day now and take him away.'
'Exactly, sir.'
'And we have no understudy.'
'Very true, sir.'
'We must work! I must say this child is a bit discouraging at times. I should have thought a deaf-mute would have learned his part by now.'
I will say this for the kid, though: he was a trier. Failure didn't damp him. Whenever there was any kind of sweet in sight he had a dash at his line, and kept saying something till he had got what he was after. His chief fault was his uncertainty. Personally, I would have been prepared to risk opening in the act and was ready to start the public performance at the first opportunity, but Jeeves said no.
'I would not advocate undue haste, sir,' he said. 'As long as the young gentleman's memory refuses to act with any certainty, we are running grave risks of failure.Today, if you recollect, sir, he said "Kick Freddie!" That is not a speech to win a young lady's heart, sir.'
'No. And she might do it, too. You're right. We must postpone production.'
But, by Jove, we didn't! The curtain went up the very next afternoon.
It was nobody's fault—certainly not mine. It was just fate. Jeeves was out, and I was alone in the house with Freddie and the child. Freddie had just settled down at the piano, and I was leading the kid out of the place for a bit of exercise, when, just as we'd got on to the veranda, along came the girl Elizabeth on her way to the beach. And at the sight of her the kid set up a matey yell, and she stopped at the foot of the steps.
'Hallo, baby,' she said. 'Good morning,' she said to me. 'May I come up?'
She didn't wait for an answer. She just hopped on to the veranda. She seemed to be that sort of girl. She started fussing over the child. And six feet away, mind you, Freddie smiting the piano in the sitting-room. It was a dashed disturbing situation, take it from Bertram. At any minute Freddie might take it into his head to come out on the veranda, and I hadn't even begun to rehearse him in his part.
I tried to break up the scene.
'We were just going down to the beach,' I said.
'Yes?' said the girl. She listened for a moment. 'So you're having your piano tuned?' she said. 'My aunt has been trying to find a tuner for ours. Do you mind if I go in and tell this man to come on to us when he has finished here?'
I mopped the brow.
'Er—I shouldn't go in just now,' I said. 'Not just now, while he's working, if you don't mind. These fellows can't bear to be disturbed when they're at work. It's the artistic temperament. I'll tell him later.'
'Very well. Ask him to call at Pine Bungalow. Vickers is the name.... Oh, he seems to have stopped. I suppose he will be out in a minute now. I'll wait.'
'Don't you think—shouldn't you be getting on to the beach?' I said.
She had started talking to the kid and didn't hear. She was feeling in her bag for something.
'The beach,' I babbled.
'See what I've got for you, baby,' said the girl. 'I thought I might meet you somewhere, so I bought some of your favourite sweets.'
And, by Jove, she held up in front of the kid's bulging eyes, a chunk of toffee about the size of the Albert Memorial!
That finished it. We had just been having a long rehearsal, and the kid was all worked up in his part. He got it right first time.
'Kiss Fweddie!' he shouted.
And the French windows opened and Freddie came out on to the veranda, for all the world as if he had been taking a cue.
'Kiss Fweddie!' shrieked the child.
Freddie looked at the girl, and the girl looked at him. I looked at the ground, and the kid looked at the toffee.
'Kiss Fweddie!' he yelled. 'Kiss Fweddie!'
'What does this mean?' said the girl, turning on me.
'You'd better give it him,' I said. 'He'll go on till you do, you know.'
She gave the kid the toffee and he subsided. Freddie, poor ass, still stood there gaping, without a word.
'What does it mean?' said the girl again. Her face was pink, and her eyes were sparkling in the sort of way, don't you know, that makes a fellow feel as if he hadn't any bones in him, if you know what I mean. Yes, Bertram felt filleted. Did you ever tread on your partner's dress at a dance—I'm speaking now of the days when women wore dresses long enough to be troddenon—and hear it rip and see her smile at you like an angel and say, 'Pleasedon't apologize. It's nothing,' and then suddenly meet her clear blue eyes and feel as if you had stepped on the teeth of a rake and had the handle jump up and hit you in the face? Well, that's how Freddie's Elizabeth looked.
'Well!' she said, and her teeth gave a little click.
I gulped. Then I said it was nothing. Then I said it was nothing much. Then I said, 'Oh, well, it was this way.' And I told her all about it. And all the while Idiot Freddie stood there gaping, without a word. Not one solitary yip had he let out of himself from the start.
And the girl didn't speak, either. She just stood listening.
And then she began to laugh. I never heard a girl laugh so much. She leaned against the side of the veranda and shrieked. And all the while Freddie, the World's Champion Dumb Brick, standing there, saying nothing.
Well, I finished my story and sidled to the steps. I had said all I had to say, and it seemed to me that about here the stage-direction 'exit cautiously' was written in my part. I gave poor old Freddie up in despair. If only he had said a word it might have been all right. But there he stood speechless.
Just out of sight of the house I met Jeeves, returning from his stroll.