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I'm not absolutely certain of my facts, but I rather fancy it's
Shakespeare—or, if not, it's some equally brainy lad—who says that it's always
just when a chappie is feeling particularly top-hole, and more than usually
braced with things in general that Fate sneaks up behind him with a bit of lead
piping. There's no doubt the man's right. It's absolutely that way with me.
Take, for instance, the fairly rummy matter of Lady Malvern and her son Wilmot.
A moment before they turned up, I was just thinking how thoroughly all right
everything was.
It was one of those topping mornings, and I had just climbed out from under
the cold shower, feeling like a two-year-old. As a matter of fact, I was
especially bucked just then because the day before I had asserted myself with
Jeeves—absolutely asserted myself, don't you know. You see, the way things had
been going on I was rapidly becoming a dashed serf. The man had jolly well
oppressed me. I didn't so much mind when he made me give up one of my new suits,
because, Jeeves's judgment about suits is sound. But I as near as a toucher
rebelled when he wouldn't let me wear a pair of cloth-topped boots which I loved
like a couple of brothers. And when he tried to tread on me like a worm in the
matter of a hat, I jolly well put my foot down and showed him who was who. It's
a long story, and I haven't time to tell you now, but the point is that he
wanted me to wear the Longacre—as worn by John Drew—when I had set my heart on
the Country Gentleman—as worn by another famous actor chappie—and the end of the
matter was that, after a rather painful scene, I bought the Country Gentleman.
So that's how things stood on this particular morning, and I was feeling kind of
manly and independent.
Well, I was in the bathroom, wondering what there was going to be for
breakfast while I massaged the good old spine with a rough towel and sang
slightly, when there was a tap at the door. I stopped singing and opened the
door an inch.
“What ho without there!”
“Lady Malvern wishes to see you, sir,” said Jeeves.
“Eh?”
“Lady Malvern, sir. She is waiting in the sitting-room.”
“Pull yourself together, Jeeves, my man,” I said, rather severely, for I bar
practical jokes before breakfast. “You know perfectly well there's no one
waiting for me in the sitting-room. How could there be when it's barely ten
o'clock yet?”
“I gathered from her ladyship, sir, that she had landed from an ocean liner
at an early hour this morning.”
This made the thing a bit more plausible. I remembered that when I had
arrived in America about a year before, the proceedings had begun at some
ghastly hour like six, and that I had been shot out on to a foreign shore
considerably before eight.
“Who the deuce is Lady Malvern, Jeeves?”
“Her ladyship did not confide in me, sir.”
“Is she alone?”
“Her ladyship is accompanied by a Lord Pershore, sir. I fancy that his
lordship would be her ladyship's son.”
“Oh, well, put out rich raiment of sorts, and I'll be dressing.”
“Our heather-mixture lounge is in readiness, sir.”
“Then lead me to it.”
While I was dressing I kept trying to think who on earth Lady Malvern could
be. It wasn't till I had climbed through the top of my shirt and was reaching
out for the studs that I remembered.
“I've placed her, Jeeves. She's a pal of my Aunt Agatha.”
“Indeed, sir?”
“Yes. I met her at lunch one Sunday before I left London. A very vicious
specimen. Writes books. She wrote a book on social conditions in India when she
came back from the Durbar.”
“Yes, sir? Pardon me, sir, but not that tie!”
“Eh?”
“Not that tie with the heather-mixture lounge, sir!”
It was a shock to me. I thought I had quelled the fellow. It was rather a
solemn moment. What I mean is, if I weakened now, all my good work the night
before would be thrown away. I braced myself.
“What's wrong with this tie? I've seen you give it a nasty look before. Speak
out like a man! What's the matter with it?”
“Too ornate, sir.”
“Nonsense! A cheerful pink. Nothing more.”
“Unsuitable, sir.”
“Jeeves, this is the tie I wear!”
“Very good, sir.”
Dashed unpleasant. I could see that the man was wounded. But I was firm. I
tied the tie, got into the coat and waistcoat, and went into the
sitting-room.
“Halloa! Halloa! Halloa!” I said. “What?”
“Ah! How do you do, Mr. Wooster? You have never met my son, Wilmot, I think?
Motty, darling, this is Mr. Wooster.”
Lady Malvern was a hearty, happy, healthy, overpowering sort of dashed
female, not so very tall but making up for it by measuring about six feet from
the O.P. to the Prompt Side. She fitted into my biggest arm-chair as if it had
been built round her by someone who knew they were wearing arm-chairs tight
about the hips that season. She had bright, bulging eyes and a lot of yellow
hair, and when she spoke she showed about fifty-seven front teeth. She was one
of those women who kind of numb a fellow's faculties. She made me feel as if I
were ten years old and had been brought into the drawing-room in my Sunday
clothes to say how-d'you-do. Altogether by no means the sort of thing a chappie
would wish to find in his sitting-room before breakfast.
Motty, the son, was about twenty-three, tall and thin and meek-looking. He
had the same yellow hair as his mother, but he wore it plastered down and parted
in the middle. His eyes bulged, too, but they weren't bright. They were a dull
grey with pink rims. His chin gave up the struggle about half-way down, and he
didn't appear to have any eyelashes. A mild, furtive, sheepish sort of blighter,
in short.
“Awfully glad to see you,” I said. “So you've popped over, eh? Making a long
stay in America?”
“About a month. Your aunt gave me your address and told me to be sure and
call on you.”
I was glad to hear this, as it showed that Aunt Agatha was beginning to come
round a bit. There had been some unpleasantness a year before, when she had sent
me over to New York to disentangle my Cousin Gussie from the clutches of a girl
on the music-hall stage. When I tell you that by the time I had finished my
operations, Gussie had not only married the girl but had gone on the stage
himself, and was doing well, you'll understand that Aunt Agatha was upset to no
small extent. I simply hadn't dared go back and face her, and it was a relief to
find that time had healed the wound and all that sort of thing enough to make
her tell her pals to look me up. What I mean is, much as I liked America, I
didn't want to have England barred to me for the rest of my natural; and,
believe me, England is a jolly sight too small for anyone to live in with Aunt
Agatha, if she's really on the warpath. So I braced on hearing these kind words
and smiled genially on the assemblage.
“Your aunt said that you would do anything that was in your power to be of
assistance to us.”
“Rather? Oh, rather! Absolutely!”
“Thank you so much. I want you to put dear Motty up for a little while.”
I didn't get this for a moment.
“Put him up? For my clubs?”
“No, no! Darling Motty is essentially a home bird. Aren't you, Motty
darling?”
Motty, who was sucking the knob of his stick, uncorked himself.
“Yes, mother,” he said, and corked himself up again.
“I should not like him to belong to clubs. I mean put him up here. Have him
to live with you while I am away.”
These frightful words trickled out of her like honey. The woman simply didn't
seem to understand the ghastly nature of her proposal. I gave Motty the swift
east-to-west. He was sitting with his mouth nuzzling the stick, blinking at the
wall. The thought of having this planted on me for an indefinite period appalled
me. Absolutely appalled me, don't you know. I was just starting to say that the
shot wasn't on the board at any price, and that the first sign Motty gave of
trying to nestle into my little home I would yell for the police, when she went
on, rolling placidly over me, as it were.
There was something about this woman that sapped a chappie's will-power.
“I am leaving New York by the midday train, as I have to pay a visit to
Sing-Sing prison. I am extremely interested in prison conditions in America.
After that I work my way gradually across to the coast, visiting the points of
interest on the journey. You see, Mr. Wooster, I am in America principally on
business. No doubt you read my book, India and the Indians? My publishers
are anxious for me to write a companion volume on the United States. I shall not
be able to spend more than a month in the country, as I have to get back for the
season, but a month should be ample. I was less than a month in India, and my
dear friend Sir Roger Cremorne wrote his America from Within after a stay
of only two weeks. I should love to take dear Motty with me, but the poor boy
gets so sick when he travels by train. I shall have to pick him up on my
return.”
From where I sat I could see Jeeves in the dining-room, laying the
breakfast-table. I wished I could have had a minute with him alone. I felt
certain that he would have been able to think of some way of putting a stop to
this woman.
“It will be such a relief to know that Motty is safe with you, Mr. Wooster. I
know what the temptations of a great city are. Hitherto dear Motty has been
sheltered from them. He has lived quietly with me in the country. I know that
you will look after him carefully, Mr. Wooster. He will give very little
trouble.” She talked about the poor blighter as if he wasn't there. Not that
Motty seemed to mind. He had stopped chewing his walking-stick and was sitting
there with his mouth open. “He is a vegetarian and a teetotaller and is devoted
to reading. Give him a nice book and he will be quite contented.” She got up.
“Thank you so much, Mr. Wooster! I don't know what I should have done without
your help. Come, Motty! We have just time to see a few of the sights before my
train goes. But I shall have to rely on you for most of my information about New
York, darling. Be sure to keep your eyes open and take notes of your
impressions! It will be such a help. Good-bye, Mr. Wooster. I will send Motty
back early in the afternoon.”
They went out, and I howled for Jeeves.
“Jeeves! What about it?”
“Sir?”
“What's to be done? You heard it all, didn't you? You were in the dining-room
most of the time. That pill is coming to stay here.”
“Pill, sir?”
“The excrescence.”
“I beg your pardon, sir?”
I looked at Jeeves sharply. This sort of thing wasn't like him. It was as if
he were deliberately trying to give me the pip. Then I understood. The man was
really upset about that tie. He was trying to get his own back.
“Lord Pershore will be staying here from to-night, Jeeves,” I said
coldly.
“Very good, sir. Breakfast is ready, sir.”
I could have sobbed into the bacon and eggs. That there wasn't any sympathy
to be got out of Jeeves was what put the lid on it. For a moment I almost
weakened and told him to destroy the hat and tie if he didn't like them, but I
pulled myself together again. I was dashed if I was going to let Jeeves treat me
like a bally one-man chain-gang!
But, what with brooding on Jeeves and brooding on Motty, I was in a pretty
reduced sort of state. The more I examined the situation, the more blighted it
became. There was nothing I could do. If I slung Motty out, he would report to
his mother, and she would pass it on to Aunt Agatha, and I didn't like to think
what would happen then. Sooner or later, I should be wanting to go back to
England, and I didn't want to get there and find Aunt Agatha waiting on the quay
for me with a stuffed eelskin. There was absolutely nothing for it but to put
the fellow up and make the best of it.
About midday Motty's luggage arrived, and soon afterward a large parcel of
what I took to be nice books. I brightened up a little when I saw it. It was one
of those massive parcels and looked as if it had enough in it to keep the
chappie busy for a year. I felt a trifle more cheerful, and I got my Country
Gentleman hat and stuck it on my head, and gave the pink tie a twist, and reeled
out to take a bite of lunch with one or two of the lads at a neighbouring
hostelry; and what with excellent browsing and sluicing and cheery conversation
and what-not, the afternoon passed quite happily. By dinner-time I had almost
forgotten blighted Motty's existence.
I dined at the club and looked in at a show afterward, and it wasn't till
fairly late that I got back to the flat. There were no signs of Motty, and I
took it that he had gone to bed.
It seemed rummy to me, though, that the parcel of nice books was still there
with the string and paper on it. It looked as if Motty, after seeing mother off
at the station, had decided to call it a day.
Jeeves came in with the nightly whisky-and-soda. I could tell by the
chappie's manner that he was still upset.
“Lord Pershore gone to bed, Jeeves?” I asked, with reserved hauteur and
what-not.
“No, sir. His lordship has not yet returned.”
“Not returned? What do you mean?”
“His lordship came in shortly after six-thirty, and, having dressed, went out
again.”
At this moment there was a noise outside the front door, a sort of scrabbling
noise, as if somebody were trying to paw his way through the woodwork. Then a
sort of thud.
“Better go and see what that is, Jeeves.”
“Very good, sir.”
He went out and came back again.
“If you would not mind stepping this way, sir, I think we might be able to
carry him in.”
“Carry him in?”
“His lordship is lying on the mat, sir.”
I went to the front door. The man was right. There was Motty huddled up
outside on the floor. He was moaning a bit.
“He's had some sort of dashed fit,” I said. I took another look. “Jeeves!
Someone's been feeding him meat!”
“Sir?”
“He's a vegetarian, you know. He must have been digging into a steak or
something. Call up a doctor!”
“I hardly think it will be necessary, sir. If you would take his lordship's
legs, while I——”
“Great Scot, Jeeves! You don't think—he can't be——”
“I am inclined to think so, sir.”
And, by Jove, he was right! Once on the right track, you couldn't mistake it.
Motty was under the surface.
It was the deuce of a shock.
“You never can tell, Jeeves!”
“Very seldom, sir.”
“Remove the eye of authority and where are you?”
“Precisely, sir.”
“Where is my wandering boy to-night and all that sort of thing, what?”
“It would seem so, sir.”
“Well, we had better bring him in, eh?”
“Yes, sir.”
So we lugged him in, and Jeeves put him to bed, and I lit a cigarette and sat
down to think the thing over. I had a kind of foreboding. It seemed to me that I
had let myself in for something pretty rocky.
Next morning, after I had sucked down a thoughtful cup of tea, I went into
Motty's room to investigate. I expected to find the fellow a wreck, but there he
was, sitting up in bed, quite chirpy, reading Gingery stories.
“What ho!” I said.
“What ho!” said Motty.
“What ho! What ho!”
“What ho! What ho! What ho!”
After that it seemed rather difficult to go on with the conversation.
“How are you feeling this morning?” I asked.
“Topping!” replied Motty, blithely and with abandon. “I say, you know, that
fellow of yours—Jeeves, you know—is a corker. I had a most frightful headache
when I woke up, and he brought me a sort of rummy dark drink, and it put me
right again at once. Said it was his own invention. I must see more of that lad.
He seems to me distinctly one of the ones!”
I couldn't believe that this was the same blighter who had sat and sucked his
stick the day before.
“You ate something that disagreed with you last night, didn't you?” I said,
by way of giving him a chance to slide out of it if he wanted to. But he
wouldn't have it, at any price.
“No!” he replied firmly. “I didn't do anything of the kind. I drank too much!
Much too much. Lots and lots too much! And, what's more, I'm going to do it
again! I'm going to do it every night. If ever you see me sober, old top,” he
said, with a kind of holy exaltation, “tap me on the shoulder and say, 'Tut!
Tut!' and I'll apologize and remedy the defect.”
“But I say, you know, what about me?”
“What about you?”
“Well, I'm so to speak, as it were, kind of responsible for you. What I mean
to say is, if you go doing this sort of thing I'm apt to get in the soup
somewhat.”
“I can't help your troubles,” said Motty firmly. “Listen to me, old thing:
this is the first time in my life that I've had a real chance to yield to the
temptations of a great city. What's the use of a great city having temptations
if fellows don't yield to them? Makes it so bally discouraging for a great city.
Besides, mother told me to keep my eyes open and collect impressions.”
I sat on the edge of the bed. I felt dizzy.
“I know just how you feel, old dear,” said Motty consolingly. “And, if my
principles would permit it, I would simmer down for your sake. But duty first!
This is the first time I've been let out alone, and I mean to make the most of
it. We're only young once. Why interfere with life's morning? Young man, rejoice
in thy youth! Tra-la! What ho!”
Put like that, it did seem reasonable.
“All my bally life, dear boy,” Motty went on, “I've been cooped up in the
ancestral home at Much Middlefold, in Shropshire, and till you've been cooped up
in Much Middlefold you don't know what cooping is! The only time we get any
excitement is when one of the choir-boys is caught sucking chocolate during the
sermon. When that happens, we talk about it for days. I've got about a month of
New York, and I mean to store up a few happy memories for the long winter
evenings. This is my only chance to collect a past, and I'm going to do it. Now
tell me, old sport, as man to man, how does one get in touch with that very
decent chappie Jeeves? Does one ring a bell or shout a bit? I should like to
discuss the subject of a good stiff b.-and-s. with him!”
* * * * *
I had had a sort of vague idea, don't you know, that if I stuck close to
Motty and went about the place with him, I might act as a bit of a damper on the
gaiety. What I mean is, I thought that if, when he was being the life and soul
of the party, he were to catch my reproving eye he might ease up a trifle on the
revelry. So the next night I took him along to supper with me. It was the last
time. I'm a quiet, peaceful sort of chappie who has lived all his life in
London, and I can't stand the pace these swift sportsmen from the rural
districts set. What I mean to say is this, I'm all for rational enjoyment and so
forth, but I think a chappie makes himself conspicuous when he throws
soft-boiled eggs at the electric fan. And decent mirth and all that sort of
thing are all right, but I do bar dancing on tables and having to dash all over
the place dodging waiters, managers, and chuckers-out, just when you want to sit
still and digest.
Directly I managed to tear myself away that night and get home, I made up my
mind that this was jolly well the last time that I went about with Motty. The
only time I met him late at night after that was once when I passed the door of
a fairly low-down sort of restaurant and had to step aside to dodge him as he
sailed through the air en route for the opposite pavement, with a
muscular sort of looking chappie peering out after him with a kind of gloomy
satisfaction.
In a way, I couldn't help sympathizing with the fellow. He had about four
weeks to have the good time that ought to have been spread over about ten years,
and I didn't wonder at his wanting to be pretty busy. I should have been just
the same in his place. Still, there was no denying that it was a bit thick. If
it hadn't been for the thought of Lady Malvern and Aunt Agatha in the
background, I should have regarded Motty's rapid work with an indulgent smile.
But I couldn't get rid of the feeling that, sooner or later, I was the lad who
was scheduled to get it behind the ear. And what with brooding on this prospect,
and sitting up in the old flat waiting for the familiar footstep, and putting it
to bed when it got there, and stealing into the sick-chamber next morning to
contemplate the wreckage, I was beginning to lose weight. Absolutely becoming
the good old shadow, I give you my honest word. Starting at sudden noises and
what-not.
And no sympathy from Jeeves. That was what cut me to the quick. The man was
still thoroughly pipped about the hat and tie, and simply wouldn't rally round.
One morning I wanted comforting so much that I sank the pride of the Woosters
and appealed to the fellow direct.
“Jeeves,” I said, “this is getting a bit thick!”
“Sir?” Business and cold respectfulness.
“You know what I mean. This lad seems to have chucked all the principles of a
well-spent boyhood. He has got it up his nose!”
“Yes, sir.”
“Well, I shall get blamed, don't you know. You know what my Aunt Agatha
is!”
“Yes, sir.”
“Very well, then.”
I waited a moment, but he wouldn't unbend.
“Jeeves,” I said, “haven't you any scheme up your sleeve for coping with this
blighter?”
“No, sir.”
And he shimmered off to his lair. Obstinate devil! So dashed absurd, don't
you know. It wasn't as if there was anything wrong with that Country Gentleman
hat. It was a remarkably priceless effort, and much admired by the lads. But,
just because he preferred the Longacre, he left me flat.
It was shortly after this that young Motty got the idea of bringing pals back
in the small hours to continue the gay revels in the home. This was where I
began to crack under the strain. You see, the part of town where I was living
wasn't the right place for that sort of thing. I knew lots of chappies down
Washington Square way who started the evening at about 2 a.m.—artists and
writers and what-not, who frolicked considerably till checked by the arrival of
the morning milk. That was all right. They like that sort of thing down there.
The neighbours can't get to sleep unless there's someone dancing Hawaiian dances
over their heads. But on Fifty-seventh Street the atmosphere wasn't right, and
when Motty turned up at three in the morning with a collection of hearty lads,
who only stopped singing their college song when they started singing “The Old
Oaken Bucket,” there was a marked peevishness among the old settlers in the
flats. The management was extremely terse over the telephone at breakfast-time,
and took a lot of soothing.
The next night I came home early, after a lonely dinner at a place which I'd
chosen because there didn't seem any chance of meeting Motty there. The
sitting-room was quite dark, and I was just moving to switch on the light, when
there was a sort of explosion and something collared hold of my trouser-leg.
Living with Motty had reduced me to such an extent that I was simply unable to
cope with this thing. I jumped backward with a loud yell of anguish, and tumbled
out into the hall just as Jeeves came out of his den to see what the matter
was.
“Did you call, sir?”
“Jeeves! There's something in there that grabs you by the leg!”
“That would be Rollo, sir.”
“Eh?”
“I would have warned you of his presence, but I did not hear you come in. His
temper is a little uncertain at present, as he has not yet settled down.”
“Who the deuce is Rollo?”
“His lordship's bull-terrier, sir. His lordship won him in a raffle, and tied
him to the leg of the table. If you will allow me, sir, I will go in and switch
on the light.”
There really is nobody like Jeeves. He walked straight into the sitting-room,
the biggest feat since Daniel and the lions' den, without a quiver. What's more,
his magnetism or whatever they call it was such that the dashed animal, instead
of pinning him by the leg, calmed down as if he had had a bromide, and rolled
over on his back with all his paws in the air. If Jeeves had been his rich uncle
he couldn't have been more chummy. Yet directly he caught sight of me again, he
got all worked up and seemed to have only one idea in life—to start chewing me
where he had left off.
“Rollo is not used to you yet, sir,” said Jeeves, regarding the bally
quadruped in an admiring sort of way. “He is an excellent watchdog.”
“I don't want a watchdog to keep me out of my rooms.”
“No, sir.”
“Well, what am I to do?”
“No doubt in time the animal will learn to discriminate, sir. He will learn
to distinguish your peculiar scent.”
“What do you mean—my peculiar scent? Correct the impression that I intend to
hang about in the hall while life slips by, in the hope that one of these days
that dashed animal will decide that I smell all right.” I thought for a bit.
“Jeeves!”
“Sir?”
“I'm going away—to-morrow morning by the first train. I shall go and stop
with Mr. Todd in the country.”
“Do you wish me to accompany you, sir?”
“No.”
“Very good, sir.”
“I don't know when I shall be back. Forward my letters.”
“Yes, sir.”
* * * * *
As a matter of fact, I was back within the week. Rocky Todd, the pal I went
to stay with, is a rummy sort of a chap who lives all alone in the wilds of Long
Island, and likes it; but a little of that sort of thing goes a long way with
me. Dear old Rocky is one of the best, but after a few days in his cottage in
the woods, miles away from anywhere, New York, even with Motty on the premises,
began to look pretty good to me. The days down on Long Island have forty-eight
hours in them; you can't get to sleep at night because of the bellowing of the
crickets; and you have to walk two miles for a drink and six for an evening
paper. I thanked Rocky for his kind hospitality, and caught the only train they
have down in those parts. It landed me in New York about dinner-time. I went
straight to the old flat. Jeeves came out of his lair. I looked round cautiously
for Rollo.
“Where's that dog, Jeeves? Have you got him tied up?”
“The animal is no longer here, sir. His lordship gave him to the porter, who
sold him. His lordship took a prejudice against the animal on account of being
bitten by him in the calf of the leg.”
I don't think I've ever been so bucked by a bit of news. I felt I had
misjudged Rollo. Evidently, when you got to know him better, he had a lot of
intelligence in him.
“Ripping!” I said. “Is Lord Pershore in, Jeeves?”
“No, sir.”
“Do you expect him back to dinner?”
“No, sir.”
“Where is he?”
“In prison, sir.”
Have you ever trodden on a rake and had the handle jump up and hit you?
That's how I felt then.
“In prison!”
“Yes, sir.”
“You don't mean—in prison?”
“Yes, sir.”
I lowered myself into a chair.
“Why?” I said.
“He assaulted a constable, sir.”
“Lord Pershore assaulted a constable!”
“Yes, sir.”
I digested this.
“But, Jeeves, I say! This is frightful!”
“Sir?”
“What will Lady Malvern say when she finds out?”
“I do not fancy that her ladyship will find out, sir.”
“But she'll come back and want to know where he is.”
“I rather fancy, sir, that his lordship's bit of time will have run out by
then.”
“But supposing it hasn't?”
“In that event, sir, it may be judicious to prevaricate a little.”
“How?”
“If I might make the suggestion, sir, I should inform her ladyship that his
lordship has left for a short visit to Boston.”
“Why Boston?”
“Very interesting and respectable centre, sir.”
“Jeeves, I believe you've hit it.”
“I fancy so, sir.”
“Why, this is really the best thing that could have happened. If this hadn't
turned up to prevent him, young Motty would have been in a sanatorium by the
time Lady Malvern got back.”
“Exactly, sir.”
The more I looked at it in that way, the sounder this prison wheeze seemed to
me. There was no doubt in the world that prison was just what the doctor ordered
for Motty. It was the only thing that could have pulled him up. I was sorry for
the poor blighter, but, after all, I reflected, a chappie who had lived all his
life with Lady Malvern, in a small village in the interior of Shropshire,
wouldn't have much to kick at in a prison. Altogether, I began to feel
absolutely braced again. Life became like what the poet Johnnie says—one grand,
sweet song. Things went on so comfortably and peacefully for a couple of weeks
that I give you my word that I'd almost forgotten such a person as Motty
existed. The only flaw in the scheme of things was that Jeeves was still pained
and distant. It wasn't anything he said or did, mind you, but there was a rummy
something about him all the time. Once when I was tying the pink tie I caught
sight of him in the looking-glass. There was a kind of grieved look in his
eye.
And then Lady Malvern came back, a good bit ahead of schedule. I hadn't been
expecting her for days. I'd forgotten how time had been slipping along. She
turned up one morning while I was still in bed sipping tea and thinking of this
and that. Jeeves flowed in with the announcement that he had just loosed her
into the sitting-room. I draped a few garments round me and went in.
There she was, sitting in the same arm-chair, looking as massive as ever. The
only difference was that she didn't uncover the teeth, as she had done the first
time.
“Good morning,” I said. “So you've got back, what?”
“I have got back.”
There was something sort of bleak about her tone, rather as if she had
swallowed an east wind. This I took to be due to the fact that she probably
hadn't breakfasted. It's only after a bit of breakfast that I'm able to regard
the world with that sunny cheeriness which makes a fellow the universal
favourite. I'm never much of a lad till I've engulfed an egg or two and a beaker
of coffee.
“I suppose you haven't breakfasted?”
“I have not yet breakfasted.”
“Won't you have an egg or something? Or a sausage or something? Or
something?”
“No, thank you.”
She spoke as if she belonged to an anti-sausage society or a league for the
suppression of eggs. There was a bit of a silence.
“I called on you last night,” she said, “but you were out.”
“Awfully sorry! Had a pleasant trip?”
“Extremely, thank you.”
“See everything? Niag'ra Falls, Yellowstone Park, and the jolly old Grand
Canyon, and what-not?”
“I saw a great deal.”
There was another slightly frappe silence. Jeeves floated silently
into the dining-room and began to lay the breakfast-table.
“I hope Wilmot was not in your way, Mr. Wooster?”
I had been wondering when she was going to mention Motty.
“Rather not! Great pals! Hit it off splendidly.”
“You were his constant companion, then?”
“Absolutely! We were always together. Saw all the sights, don't you know.
We'd take in the Museum of Art in the morning, and have a bit of lunch at some
good vegetarian place, and then toddle along to a sacred concert in the
afternoon, and home to an early dinner. We usually played dominoes after dinner.
And then the early bed and the refreshing sleep. We had a great time. I was
awfully sorry when he went away to Boston.”
“Oh! Wilmot is in Boston?”
“Yes. I ought to have let you know, but of course we didn't know where you
were. You were dodging all over the place like a snipe—I mean, don't you know,
dodging all over the place, and we couldn't get at you. Yes, Motty went off to
Boston.”
“You're sure he went to Boston?”
“Oh, absolutely.” I called out to Jeeves, who was now messing about in the
next room with forks and so forth: “Jeeves, Lord Pershore didn't change his mind
about going to Boston, did he?”
“No, sir.”
“I thought I was right. Yes, Motty went to Boston.”
“Then how do you account, Mr. Wooster, for the fact that when I went
yesterday afternoon to Blackwell's Island prison, to secure material for my
book, I saw poor, dear Wilmot there, dressed in a striped suit, seated beside a
pile of stones with a hammer in his hands?”
I tried to think of something to say, but nothing came. A chappie has to be a
lot broader about the forehead than I am to handle a jolt like this. I strained
the old bean till it creaked, but between the collar and the hair parting
nothing stirred. I was dumb. Which was lucky, because I wouldn't have had a
chance to get any persiflage out of my system. Lady Malvern collared the
conversation. She had been bottling it up, and now it came out with a rush:
“So this is how you have looked after my poor, dear boy, Mr. Wooster! So this
is how you have abused my trust! I left him in your charge, thinking that I
could rely on you to shield him from evil. He came to you innocent, unversed in
the ways of the world, confiding, unused to the temptations of a large city, and
you led him astray!”
I hadn't any remarks to make. All I could think of was the picture of Aunt
Agatha drinking all this in and reaching out to sharpen the hatchet against my
return.
“You deliberately——”
Far away in the misty distance a soft voice spoke:
“If I might explain, your ladyship.”
Jeeves had projected himself in from the dining-room and materialized on the
rug. Lady Malvern tried to freeze him with a look, but you can't do that sort of
thing to Jeeves. He is look-proof.
“I fancy, your ladyship, that you have misunderstood Mr. Wooster, and that he
may have given you the impression that he was in New York when his lordship—was
removed. When Mr. Wooster informed your ladyship that his lordship had gone to
Boston, he was relying on the version I had given him of his lordship's
movements. Mr. Wooster was away, visiting a friend in the country, at the time,
and knew nothing of the matter till your ladyship informed him.”
Lady Malvern gave a kind of grunt. It didn't rattle Jeeves.
“I feared Mr. Wooster might be disturbed if he knew the truth, as he is so
attached to his lordship and has taken such pains to look after him, so I took
the liberty of telling him that his lordship had gone away for a visit. It might
have been hard for Mr. Wooster to believe that his lordship had gone to prison
voluntarily and from the best motives, but your ladyship, knowing him better,
will readily understand.”
“What!” Lady Malvern goggled at him. “Did you say that Lord Pershore went to
prison voluntarily?”
“If I might explain, your ladyship. I think that your ladyship's parting
words made a deep impression on his lordship. I have frequently heard him speak
to Mr. Wooster of his desire to do something to follow your ladyship's
instructions and collect material for your ladyship's book on America. Mr.
Wooster will bear me out when I say that his lordship was frequently extremely
depressed at the thought that he was doing so little to help.”
“Absolutely, by Jove! Quite pipped about it!” I said.
“The idea of making a personal examination into the prison system of the
country—from within—occurred to his lordship very suddenly one night. He
embraced it eagerly. There was no restraining him.”
Lady Malvern looked at Jeeves, then at me, then at Jeeves again. I could see
her struggling with the thing.
“Surely, your ladyship,” said Jeeves, “it is more reasonable to suppose that
a gentleman of his lordship's character went to prison of his own volition than
that he committed some breach of the law which necessitated his arrest?”
Lady Malvern blinked. Then she got up.
“Mr. Wooster,” she said, “I apologize. I have done you an injustice. I should
have known Wilmot better. I should have had more faith in his pure, fine
spirit.”
“Absolutely!” I said.
“Your breakfast is ready, sir,” said Jeeves.
I sat down and dallied in a dazed sort of way with a poached egg.
“Jeeves,” I said, “you are certainly a life-saver!”
“Thank you, sir.”
“Nothing would have convinced my Aunt Agatha that I hadn't lured that
blighter into riotous living.”
“I fancy you are right, sir.”
I champed my egg for a bit. I was most awfully moved, don't you know, by the
way Jeeves had rallied round. Something seemed to tell me that this was an
occasion that called for rich rewards. For a moment I hesitated. Then I made up
my mind.
“Jeeves!”
“Sir?”
“That pink tie!”
“Yes, sir?”
“Burn it!”
“Thank you, sir.”
“And, Jeeves!”
“Yes, sir?”
“Take a taxi and get me that Longacre hat, as worn by John Drew!”
“Thank you very much, sir.”
I felt most awfully braced. I felt as if the clouds had rolled away and all
was as it used to be. I felt like one of those chappies in the novels who calls
off the fight with his wife in the last chapter and decides to forget and
forgive. I felt I wanted to do all sorts of other things to show Jeeves that I
appreciated him.
“Jeeves,” I said, “it isn't enough. Is there anything else you would
like?”
“Yes, sir. If I may make the suggestion—fifty dollars.”
“Fifty dollars?”
“It will enable me to pay a debt of honour, sir. I owe it to his
lordship.”
“You owe Lord Pershore fifty dollars?”
“Yes, sir. I happened to meet him in the street the night his lordship was
arrested. I had been thinking a good deal about the most suitable method of
inducing him to abandon his mode of living, sir. His lordship was a little
over-excited at the time and I fancy that he mistook me for a friend of his. At
any rate when I took the liberty of wagering him fifty dollars that he would not
punch a passing policeman in the eye, he accepted the bet very cordially and won
it.”
I produced my pocket-book and counted out a hundred.
“Take this, Jeeves,” I said; “fifty isn't enough. Do you know, Jeeves,
you're—well, you absolutely stand alone!”
“I endeavour to give satisfaction, sir,” said Jeeves.
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