Read The Jeeves Omnibus - Vol 4: (Jeeves & Wooster): No.4 Online
Authors: P.G. Wodehouse
Spode wheeled around, flushed with his excesses. I was pleased to see that while looking under the seat he had got a bit of oil on his nose. He eyed Stiffy bleakly.
‘Did you call me an ass?’
‘Certainly I did. I was taught by a long series of governesses always to speak the truth. The idea of accusing Bertie of taking that statuette.’
‘It does sound silly,’ I agreed. ‘Bizarre is perhaps the word.’
‘The thing’s in Uncle Watkyn’s collection room.’
‘It is not in the collection room.’
‘Who says so?’
‘I say so.’
‘Well, I say it is. Go and look, if you don’t believe me. Stop that, Bartholomew, you blighted dog!’ bellowed Stiffy, abruptly changing the subject, and she hastened off on winged feet to confer with the hound, who had found something in, I presumed, the last stages of decay and was rolling on it. I could follow her train of thought. Scotties at their best are niffy. Add to their natural bouquet the aroma of a dead rat or whatever it was, and you have a mixture too rich for the human nostril. There was a momentary altercation, and Bartholomew, cursing a good deal as was natural, was hauled off tubwards.
A minute or two later Spode returned with most of the stuffing removed from his person.
‘I seem to have done you an injustice, Wooster,’ he said, and I was amazed that he had it in him to speak so meekly.
The Woosters are always magnanimous. We do not crush the vanquished beneath the iron heel.
‘Oh, was the thing there all right?’
‘Er – yes. Yes, it was.’
‘Ah well, we all make mistakes.’
‘I could have sworn it had gone.’
‘But wasn’t the door locked?’
‘Yes.’
‘Reminds you of one of those mystery stories, doesn’t it, where there’s a locked room with no windows, and blowed if one fine morning you don’t find a millionaire inside with a dagger of Oriental design sticking in his wishbone. You’ve got some oil on your nose.’
‘Oh, have I?’ he said, feeling.
‘Now you’ve got it on your cheek. I’d go and join Bartholomew in the bath tub if I were you.’
‘I will. Thank you, Wooster.’
‘Not at all, Spode, or rather, Sidcup. Don’t spare the soap.’
I suppose there’s nothing that braces one more thoroughly than the spectacle of the forces of darkness stubbing their toe, and the heart was light as I made my way to the house. What with this and what with that, it was as though a great weight had rolled off me. Birds sang, insects buzzed, and I felt that what they were trying to say was ‘All is well. Bertram has come through.’
But a thing I’ve often noticed is that when I’ve got something off my mind, it pretty nearly always happens that Fate sidles up and shoves on something else, as if curious to see how much the traffic will bear. It went into its act on the present occasion. Feeling that I needed something else to worry about, it spat on its hands and got down to it, allowing Madeline Bassett to corner me as I was passing through the hall.
Even if she had been her normal soupy self, she would have been the last person I wanted to have a word with, but this she was far from being. Something had happened to remove the droopiness, and her eyes had a gleam in them which filled me with a nameless fear. She was obviously all steamed up for some reason, and it was plain that what she was about to say was not going to make the last of the Woosters clap his hands in glee and start chanting hosannas like the Cherubim and Seraphim, if I’ve got the names right. A moment later she revealed what it was that was eating her, dishing it out without what I believe is called preamble.
‘I am furious with Augustus!’ she said, and my heart stood still. It was as if the Totleigh Towers spectre, if there was one, had laid an icy hand on it.
‘Why, what’s happened?’
‘He was very rude to Roderick.’
This seemed incredible. Nobody but an all-in wrestling champion would be rude to a fellow as big as Spode.
‘Surely not?’
‘I mean he was very rude
about
Roderick. He said he was sick and tired of seeing him clumping about the place as if it belonged to him,
and
hadn’t he got a home of his own, and if Daddy had an ounce more sense than a billiard ball he would charge him rent. He was most offensive.’
My h. stood stiller. It is not stretching the facts to say that I was appalled and all of a doodah. It just showed, I was telling myself, what a vegetarian diet can do to a chap, changing him in a flash from a soft boiled to a hard boiled egg. I have no doubt the poet Shelley’s circle noticed the same thing with the poet Shelley.
I tried to pour oil on the troubled w’s.
‘Probably just kidding, don’t you think?’
‘No, I don’t.’
‘He didn’t say it with a twinkle in his eye?’
‘No.’
‘Nor with a light laugh?’
‘No.’
‘You might not have noticed it. Very easy to miss, these light laughs.’
‘He meant every word he said.’
‘Then it was probably just a momentary spasm of what-d’you-call-it. Irritability. We all have them.’
She ground a tooth or two. At least, it looked as if that was what she was doing.
‘It was nothing of the kind. He was harsh and bitter, and he has been like that for a long time. I noticed it first at Brinkley. One morning we had walked in the meadows and the grass was all covered with little wreaths of mist, and I said Didn’t he sometimes feel that they were the elves’ bridal veils, and he said sharply, “No, never,” adding that he had never heard such a silly idea in his life.’
Well, of course, he was perfectly correct, but it was no good pointing that out to a girl like Madeline Bassett.
‘And that evening we were watching the sunset, and I said sunsets always made me think of the Blessed Damozel leaning out from the gold bar of heaven, and he said “Who?” and I said “The Blessed Damozel,” and he said, “Never heard of her”. And he said that sunsets made him sick and so did the Blessed Damozel and he had a pain in his inside.’
I saw that the time had come to be a
raisonneur
.
‘This was at Brinkley?’
‘Yes.’
‘I see. After you had made him become a vegetarian. Are you sure,’ I said, raisonneuring like nobody’s business, ‘that you were altogether wise in confining him to spinach and what not? Many a proud spirit
rebels
when warned off the proteins. And I don’t know if you know it, but medical research has established that the ideal diet is one in which animal and vegetable foods are balanced. It’s something to do with the something acids required by the body.’
I won’t say she actually snorted, but the sound she uttered was certainly on the borderline of the snort.
‘What nonsense!’
‘It’s what doctors say.’
‘Which doctors?’
‘Well-known Harley Street physicians.’
‘I don’t believe it. Thousands of people are vegetarians and enjoy perfect health.’
‘Bodily health, yes,’ I said, cleverly seizing on the debating point. ‘But what of the soul? If you suddenly steer a fellow off the steaks and chops, it does something to his soul. My Aunt Agatha once made my Uncle Percy be a vegetarian, and his whole nature became soured. Not,’ I was forced to admit, ‘that it wasn’t fairly soured already, as anyone’s would be who was in constant contact with my Aunt Agatha. I bet you’ll find that that’s all that’s wrong with Gussie. He simply wants a mutton chop or two under his belt.’
‘Well, he’s not going to have them. And if he continues to behave like a sulky child, I shall know what to do about it.’
I remember Stinker Pinker telling me once that toward the end of his time at Oxford he was down in Bethnal Green spreading the light, and a costermonger kicked him in the stomach. He said it gave him a strange, confused, dreamlike feeling, and that’s what these ominous words of M. Bassett’s gave me now. She had spoken them from between teeth which, if not actually clenched, were the next thing to it, and it was as if the substantial boot of a vendor of blood oranges and bananas had caught me squarely in the solar plexus.
‘Er – what will you do about it?’
‘Never mind.’
I put out a cautious feeler.
‘Suppose … not that it’s likely to happen, of course … but suppose Gussie, maddened by abstinence, were to go off and tuck into … well, to take an instance at random, cold steak and kidney pie, what would be the upshot?’
I had never supposed that she had it in her to give anyone a piercing look, but that is what she gave me now. I don’t think even Aunt Agatha’s eyes have bored more deeply into me.
‘Are you telling me, Bertie, that Augustus has been eating steak and kidney pie?’
‘Good heavens, no. It was just a thingummy.’
‘I don’t understand you.’
‘What do they call questions that aren’t really questions? Begins with an h. Hypothetical, that’s the word. It was just a hypothetical question.’
‘Oh? Well, the answer to it is that if I found that Augustus had been eating the flesh of animals slain in anger, I would have nothing more to do with him,’ she said, and she biffed off, leaving me a spent force and a mere shell of my former self.
THE FOLLOWING DAY
dawned bright and fair. At least I suppose it did. I didn’t see it dawning myself, having dropped off into a troubled slumber some hours before it got its nose down to it, but when the mists of sleep cleared and I was able to attend to what was going on, sunshine was seeping through the window and the ear detected the chirping of about seven hundred and fifty birds, not one of whom, unlike me, appeared to have a damn thing on his or her mind. As carefree a bunch as I’ve ever struck, and it gave me the pip to listen to them, for melancholy had marked me for her own, as the fellow said, and all this buck and heartiness simply stepped up the gloom in which my yesterday’s chat with Madeline Bassett had plunged me.
As may well be imagined, her obiter dicta, as I believe they’re called, had got right in amongst me. This, it was plain, was no mere lovers’ tiff, to be cleaned up with a couple of tears and a kiss or two, but a real Class A rift which, if prompt steps were not taken through the proper channels, would put the lute right out of business and make it as mute as a drum with a hole in it. And the problem of how those steps were to be taken defeated me. Two iron wills had clashed. On the one hand we had Madeline’s strong anti-flesh-food bias, on the other Gussie’s firm determination to get all the cuts off the joint that were coming to him. What, I asked myself, would the harvest be, and I was still shuddering at the thought of what the future might hold, when Jeeves trickled in with the morning cup of tea.
‘Eh?’ I said absently, as he put it on the table. Usually I spring at the refreshing fluid like a seal going after a slice of fish. Preoccupied, if you know what I mean. Or distrait, if you care to put it that way.
‘I was saying that we are fortunate in having a fine day for the school treat, sir.’
I sat up with a jerk, upsetting the cuppa as deftly as if I’d been the Rev. H.P. Pinker.
‘Is it today?’
‘This afternoon, sir.’
I groaned one of those hollow ones.
‘It needed but this, Jeeves.’
‘Sir?’
‘The last straw. I’d enough on my mind already.’
‘There is something disturbing you, sir?’
‘You’re right there is. Hell’s foundations are quivering. What do you call it when a couple of nations start off by being all palsy-walsy and then begin calling each other ticks and bounders?’
‘Relations have deteriorated would be the customary phrase, sir.’
‘Well, relations have deteriorated between Miss Bassett and Gussie. He, as we know, was already disgruntled, and now she’s disgruntled, too. She has taken exception to a derogatory crack he made about the sunset. She thinks highly of sunsets, and he told her they made him sick. Can you believe this?’
‘Quite readily, sir. Mr. Fink-Nottle was commenting to me on the sunset yesterday evening. He said it looked so like a slice of underdone beef that it tortured him to see it. One can appreciate his feelings.’
‘I dare say, but I wish he’d keep them to himself. He also appears to have spoken disrespectfully of the Blessed Damozel. Who’s the Blessed Damozel, Jeeves? I don’t seem to have heard of her.’
‘The heroine of a poem by the late Dante Gabriel Rossetti, sir. She leaned out from the gold bar of Heaven.’
‘Yes, I gathered that. That much was specified.’
‘Her eyes were deeper than the depths of waters stilled at even. She had three lilies in her hand, and the stars in her hair were seven.’
‘Oh, were they? Well, be that as it may, Gussie said she made him sick, too, and Miss Bassett’s as sore as a sunburned neck.’
‘Most disturbing, sir.’
‘Disturbing is the word. If things go on the way they are, no bookie would give odds of less than a hundred to eight on this betrothal lasting another week. I’ve seen betrothals in my time, many of them, but never one that looked more likely to come apart at the seams than that of Augustus Fink-Nottle and Madeline, daughter of Sir Watkyn and the late Lady Bassett. The suspense is awful. Who was the chap I remember reading about somewhere, who had a sword hanging over him attached to a single hair?’
‘Damocles, sir. It is an old Greek legend.’
‘Well, I know just how he felt. And with this on my mind, I’m expected to attend a ruddy school treat. I won’t go.’
‘Your absence may cause remark, sir.’
‘I don’t care. They won’t get a smell of me. I’m oiling out, and let them make of it what they will.’
Apart from anything else, I was remembering the story I had heard Pongo Twistleton tell one night at the Drones, illustrative of how unbridled passions are apt to become at these binges. Pongo got mixed up once in a school treat down in Somersetshire, and his description of how, in order to promote a game called ‘Is Mr. Smith at Home?’ he had had to put his head in a sack and allow the younger generation to prod him with sticks had held the smoking-room spellbound. At a place like Totleigh, where even on normal days human life was not safe, still worse excesses were to be expected. The glimpse or two I had had of the local Dead End kids had told me how tough a bunch they were and how sedulously they should be avoided by the man who knew what was good for him.