The Greatest Works of P. G. Wodehouse. P. G. Wodehouse

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


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other at one time, of course, but in the last two years I hadn't had so much as a post card from him.

      I put all this to Jeeves:

      "Odd, his coming to me. Still, if he did, he did. No argument about that. It must have been a nasty jar for the poor perisher when he found I wasn't here."

      "No, sir. Mr. Fink-Nottle did not call to see you, sir."

      "Pull yourself together, Jeeves. You've just told me that this is what he has been doing, and assiduously, at that."

      "It was I with whom he was desirous of establishing communication, sir."

      "You? But I didn't know you had ever met him."

      "I had not had that pleasure until he called here, sir. But it appears that Mr. Sipperley, a fellow student with whom Mr. Fink-Nottle had been at the university, recommended him to place his affairs in my hands."

      The mystery had conked. I saw all. As I dare say you know, Jeeves's reputation as a counsellor has long been established among the cognoscenti, and the first move of any of my little circle on discovering themselves in any form of soup is always to roll round and put the thing up to him. And when he's got A out of a bad spot, A puts B on to him. And then, when he has fixed up B, B sends C along. And so on, if you get my drift, and so forth.

      That's how these big consulting practices like Jeeves's grow. Old Sippy, I knew, had been deeply impressed by the man's efforts on his behalf at the time when he was trying to get engaged to Elizabeth Moon, so it was not to be wondered at that he should have advised Gussie to apply. Pure routine, you might say.

      "Oh, you're acting for him, are you?"

      "Yes, sir."

      "Now I follow. Now I understand. And what is Gussie's trouble?"

      "Oddly enough, sir, precisely the same as that of Mr. Sipperley when I was enabled to be of assistance to him. No doubt you recall Mr. Sipperley's predicament, sir. Deeply attached to Miss Moon, he suffered from a rooted diffidence which made it impossible for him to speak."

      I nodded.

      "I remember. Yes, I recall the Sipperley case. He couldn't bring himself to the scratch. A marked coldness of the feet, was there not? I recollect you saying he was letting—what was it?—letting something do something. Cats entered into it, if I am not mistaken."

      "Letting 'I dare not' wait upon 'I would', sir."

      "That's right. But how about the cats?"

      "Like the poor cat i' the adage, sir."

      "Exactly. It beats me how you think up these things. And Gussie, you say, is in the same posish?"

      "Yes, sir. Each time he endeavours to formulate a proposal of marriage, his courage fails him."

      "And yet, if he wants this female to be his wife, he's got to say so, what? I mean, only civil to mention it."

      "Precisely, sir."

      I mused.

      "Well, I suppose this was inevitable, Jeeves. I wouldn't have thought that this Fink-Nottle would ever have fallen a victim to the divine p, but, if he has, no wonder he finds the going sticky."

      "Yes, sir."

      "Look at the life he's led."

      "Yes, sir."

      "I don't suppose he has spoken to a girl for years. What a lesson this is to us, Jeeves, not to shut ourselves up in country houses and stare into glass tanks. You can't be the dominant male if you do that sort of thing. In this life, you can choose between two courses. You can either shut yourself up in a country house and stare into tanks, or you can be a dasher with the sex. You can't do both."

      "No, sir."

      I mused once more. Gussie and I, as I say, had rather lost touch, but all the same I was exercised about the poor fish, as I am about all my pals, close or distant, who find themselves treading upon Life's banana skins. It seemed to me that he was up against it.

      I threw my mind back to the last time I had seen him. About two years ago, it had been. I had looked in at his place while on a motor trip, and he had put me right off my feed by bringing a couple of green things with legs to the luncheon table, crooning over them like a young mother and eventually losing one of them in the salad. That picture, rising before my eyes, didn't give me much confidence in the unfortunate goof's ability to woo and win, I must say. Especially if the girl he had earmarked was one of these tough modern thugs, all lipstick and cool, hard, sardonic eyes, as she probably was.

      "Tell me, Jeeves," I said, wishing to know the worst, "what sort of a girl is this girl of Gussie's?"

      "I have not met the young lady, sir. Mr. Fink-Nottle speaks highly of her attractions."

      "Seemed to like her, did he?"

      "Yes, sir."

      "Did he mention her name? Perhaps I know her."

      "She is a Miss Bassett, sir. Miss Madeline Bassett."

      "What?"

      "Yes, sir."

      I was deeply intrigued.

      "Egad, Jeeves! Fancy that. It's a small world, isn't it, what?"

      "The young lady is an acquaintance of yours, sir?"

      "I know her well. Your news has relieved my mind, Jeeves. It makes the whole thing begin to seem far more like a practical working proposition."

      "Indeed, sir?"

      "Absolutely. I confess that until you supplied this information I was feeling profoundly dubious about poor old Gussie's chances of inducing any spinster of any parish to join him in the saunter down the aisle. You will agree with me that he is not everybody's money."

      "There may be something in what you say, sir."

      "Cleopatra wouldn't have liked him."

      "Possibly not, sir."

      "And I doubt if he would go any too well with Tallulah Bankhead."

      "No, sir."

      "But when you tell me that the object of his affections is Miss Bassett, why, then, Jeeves, hope begins to dawn a bit. He's just the sort of chap a girl like Madeline Bassett might scoop in with relish."

      This Bassett, I must explain, had been a fellow visitor of ours at Cannes; and as she and Angela had struck up one of those effervescent friendships which girls do strike up, I had seen quite a bit of her. Indeed, in my moodier moments it sometimes seemed to me that I could not move a step without stubbing my toe on the woman.

      And what made it all so painful and distressing was that the more we met, the less did I seem able to find to say to her.

      You know how it is with some girls. They seem to take the stuffing right out of you. I mean to say, there is something about their personality that paralyses the vocal cords and reduces the contents of the brain to cauliflower. It was like that with this Bassett and me; so much so that I have known occasions when for minutes at a stretch Bertram Wooster might have been observed fumbling with the tie, shuffling the feet, and behaving in all other respects in her presence like the complete dumb brick. When, therefore, she took her departure some two weeks before we did, you may readily imagine that, in Bertram's opinion, it was not a day too soon.

      It was not her beauty, mark you, that thus numbed me. She was a pretty enough girl in a droopy, blonde, saucer-eyed way, but not the sort of breath-taker that takes the breath.

      No, what caused this disintegration in a usually fairly fluent prattler with the sex was her whole mental attitude. I don't want to wrong anybody, so I won't go so far as to say that she actually wrote poetry, but her conversation, to my mind, was of a nature calculated to excite the liveliest suspicions. Well, I mean to say, when a girl suddenly asks you out of a blue sky if you don't sometimes feel that the stars are God's daisy-chain, you begin to think a bit.

      As regards the fusing of her soul and mine, therefore,


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