The Essential Works of P. G. Wodehouse. P. G. Wodehouse

The Essential Works of P. G. Wodehouse - P. G. Wodehouse


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Bertie, this is positively bright."

      "I told you Jeeves wasn't the only fellow with brain."

      "I believe it would work."

      "It's bound to work. I've recommended it to Tuppy."

      "Young Glossop?"

      "In order to soften Angela."

      "Splendid!"

      "And to Gussie Fink-Nottle, who wants to make a hit with the Bassett."

      "Well, well, well! What a busy little brain it is."

      "Always working, Aunt Dahlia, always working."

      "You're not the chump I took you for, Bertie."

      "When did you ever take me for a chump?"

      "Oh, some time last summer. I forget what gave me the idea. Yes, Bertie, this scheme is bright. I suppose, as a matter of fact, Jeeves suggested it."

      "Jeeves did not suggest it. I resent these implications. Jeeves had nothing to do with it whatsoever."

      "Well, all right, no need to get excited about it. Yes, I think it will work. Tom's devoted to me."

      "Who wouldn't be?"

      "I'll do it."

      And then the rest of the party trickled in, and we toddled down to dinner.

      Conditions being as they were at Brinkley Court—I mean to say, the place being loaded down above the Plimsoll mark with aching hearts and standing room only as regarded tortured souls—I hadn't expected the evening meal to be particularly effervescent. Nor was it. Silent. Sombre. The whole thing more than a bit like Christmas dinner on Devil's Island.

      I was glad when it was over.

      What with having, on top of her other troubles, to rein herself back from the trough, Aunt Dahlia was a total loss as far as anything in the shape of brilliant badinage was concerned. The fact that he was fifty quid in the red and expecting Civilisation to take a toss at any moment had caused Uncle Tom, who always looked a bit like a pterodactyl with a secret sorrow, to take on a deeper melancholy. The Bassett was a silent bread crumbler. Angela might have been hewn from the living rock. Tuppy had the air of a condemned murderer refusing to make the usual hearty breakfast before tooling off to the execution shed.

      And as for Gussie Fink-Nottle, many an experienced undertaker would have been deceived by his appearance and started embalming him on sight.

      This was the first glimpse I had had of Gussie since we parted at my flat, and I must say his demeanour disappointed me. I had been expecting something a great deal more sparkling.

      At my flat, on the occasion alluded to, he had, if you recall, practically given me a signed guarantee that all he needed to touch him off was a rural setting. Yet in this aspect now I could detect no indication whatsoever that he was about to round into mid-season form. He still looked like a cat in an adage, and it did not take me long to realise that my very first act on escaping from this morgue must be to draw him aside and give him a pep talk.

      If ever a chap wanted the clarion note, it looked as if it was this Fink-Nottle.

      In the general exodus of mourners, however, I lost sight of him, and, owing to the fact that Aunt Dahlia roped me in for a game of backgammon, it was not immediately that I was able to institute a search. But after we had been playing for a while, the butler came in and asked her if she would speak to Anatole, so I managed to get away. And some ten minutes later, having failed to find scent in the house, I started to throw out the drag-net through the grounds, and flushed him in the rose garden.

      He was smelling a rose at the moment in a limp sort of way, but removed the beak as I approached.

      "Well, Gussie," I said.

      I had beamed genially upon him as I spoke, such being my customary policy on meeting an old pal; but instead of beaming back genially, he gave me a most unpleasant look. His attitude perplexed me. It was as if he were not glad to see Bertram. For a moment he stood letting this unpleasant look play upon me, as it were, and then he spoke.

      "You and your 'Well, Gussie'!"

      He said this between clenched teeth, always an unmatey thing to do, and I found myself more fogged than ever.

      "How do you mean—me and my 'Well, Gussie'?"

      "I like your nerve, coming bounding about the place, saying 'Well, Gussie.' That's about all the 'Well, Gussie' I shall require from you, Wooster. And it's no good looking like that. You know what I mean. That damned prize-giving! It was a dastardly act to crawl out as you did and shove it off on to me. I will not mince my words. It was the act of a hound and a stinker."

      Now, though, as I have shown, I had devoted most of the time on the journey down to meditating upon the case of Angela and Tuppy, I had not neglected to give a thought or two to what I was going to say when I encountered Gussie. I had foreseen that there might be some little temporary unpleasantness when we met, and when a difficult interview is in the offing Bertram Wooster likes to have his story ready.

      So now I was able to reply with a manly, disarming frankness. The sudden introduction of the topic had given me a bit of a jolt, it is true, for in the stress of recent happenings I had rather let that prize-giving business slide to the back of my mind; but I had speedily recovered and, as I say, was able to reply with a manly d.f.

      "But, my dear chap," I said, "I took it for granted that you would understand that that was all part of my schemes."

      He said something about my schemes which I did not catch.

      "Absolutely. 'Crawling out' is entirely the wrong way to put it. You don't suppose I didn't want to distribute those prizes, do you? Left to myself, there is nothing I would find a greater treat. But I saw that the square, generous thing to do was to step aside and let you take it on, so I did so. I felt that your need was greater than mine. You don't mean to say you aren't looking forward to it?"

      He uttered a coarse expression which I wouldn't have thought he would have known. It just shows that you can bury yourself in the country and still somehow acquire a vocabulary. No doubt one picks up things from the neighbours—the vicar, the local doctor, the man who brings the milk, and so on.

      "But, dash it," I said, "can't you see what this is going to do for you? It will send your stock up with a jump. There you will be, up on that platform, a romantic, impressive figure, the star of the whole proceedings, the what-d'you-call-it of all eyes. Madeline Bassett will be all over you. She will see you in a totally new light."

      "She will, will she?"

      "Certainly she will. Augustus Fink-Nottle, the newts' friend, she knows. She is acquainted with Augustus Fink-Nottle, the dogs' chiropodist. But Augustus Fink-Nottle, the orator—that'll knock her sideways, or I know nothing of the female heart. Girls go potty over a public man. If ever anyone did anyone else a kindness, it was I when I gave this extraordinary attractive assignment to you."

      He seemed impressed by my eloquence. Couldn't have helped himself, of course. The fire faded from behind his horn-rimmed spectacles, and in its place appeared the old fish-like goggle.

      '"Myes," he said meditatively. "Have you ever made a speech, Bertie?"

      "Dozens of times. It's pie. Nothing to it. Why, I once addressed a girls' school."

      "You weren't nervous?"

      "Not a bit."

      "How did you go?"

      "They hung on my lips. I held them in the hollow of my hand."

      "They didn't throw eggs, or anything?"

      "Not a thing."

      He expelled a deep breath, and for a space stood staring in silence at a passing slug.

      "Well," he said, at length, "it may be all right. Possibly I am letting the thing prey on my mind too much. I may be wrong in supposing it the fate that is worse than death. But I'll tell you this much: the


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