A COUNCIL OF WAR
“The fact is,” said Ukridge,
“if things go on as they are now, my lad, we
shall be in the cart. This business wants bucking
up. We don’t seem to be making headway.
Why it is, I don’t know, but we are not
making headway. Of course, what we want is time.
If only these scoundrels of tradesmen would leave
us alone for a spell we could get things going properly.
But we’re hampered and rattled and worried all
the time. Aren’t we, Millie?”
“Yes, dear.”
“You don’t let me see
the financial side of the thing enough,” I complained.
“Why don’t you keep me thoroughly posted?
I didn’t know we were in such a bad way.
The fowls look fit enough, and Edwin hasn’t had
one for a week.”
“Edwin knows as well as possible
when he’s done wrong, Mr. Garnet,” said
Mrs. Ukridge. “He was so sorry after he
had killed those other two.”
“Yes,” said Ukridge, “I saw to that.”
“As far as I can see,”
I continued, “we’re going strong.
Chicken for breakfast, lunch, and dinner is a shade
monotonous, perhaps, but look at the business we’re
doing. We sold a whole heap of eggs last week.”
“But not enough, Garny old man.
We aren’t making our presence felt. England
isn’t ringing with our name. We sell a dozen
eggs where we ought to be selling them by the hundred,
carting them off in trucks for the London market and
congesting the traffic. Harrod’s and Whiteley’s
and the rest of them are beginning to get on their
hind legs and talk. That’s what they’re
doing. Devilish unpleasant they’re making
themselves. You see, laddie, there’s no
denying it we did touch them for
the deuce of a lot of things on account, and they agreed
to take it out in eggs. All they’ve done
so far is to take it out in apologetic letters from
Millie. Now, I don’t suppose there’s
a woman alive who can write a better apologetic letter
than her nibs, but, if you’re broad-minded and
can face facts, you can’t help seeing that the
juiciest apologetic letter is not an egg. I meant
to say, look at it from their point of view.
Harrod or Whiteley comes into
his store in the morning, rubbing his hands expectantly.
‘Well,’ he says, ’how many eggs
from Combe Regis to-day?’ And instead of leading
him off to a corner piled up with bursting crates,
they show him a four-page letter telling him it’ll
all come right in the future. I’ve never
run a store myself, but I should think that would
jar a chap. Anyhow, the blighters seem to be
getting tired of waiting.”
“The last letter from Harrod’s
was quite pathetic,” said Mrs. Ukridge sadly.
I had a vision of an eggless London.
I seemed to see homes rendered desolate and lives
embittered by the slump, and millionaires bidding
against one another for the few rare specimens which
Ukridge had actually managed to despatch to Brompton
and Bayswater.
Ukridge, having induced himself to
be broad-minded for five minutes, now began to slip
back to his own personal point of view and became
once more the man with a grievance. His fleeting
sympathy with the wrongs of Mr. Harrod and Mr. Whiteley
disappeared.
“What it all amounts to,”
he said complainingly, “is that they’re
infernally unreasonable. I’ve done everything
possible to meet them. Nothing could have been
more manly and straightforward than my attitude.
I told them in my last letter but three that I proposed
to let them have the eggs on the Times instalment
system, and they said I was frivolous. They said
that to send thirteen eggs as payment for goods supplied
to the value of 25 pounds 1 1/2 d. was mere trifling.
Trifling, I’ll trouble you! That’s
the spirit in which they meet my suggestions.
It was Harrod who did that. I’ve never met
Harrod personally, but I’d like to, just to
ask him if that’s his idea of cementing amiable
business relations. He knows just as well as anyone
else that without credit commerce has no elasticity.
It’s an elementary rule. I’ll bet
he’d have been sick if chappies had refused to
let him have tick when he was starting his store.
Do you suppose Harrod, when he started in business,
paid cash down on the nail for everything? Not
a bit of it. He went about taking people by the
coat-button and asking them to be good chaps and wait
till Wednesday week. Trifling! Why, those
thirteen eggs were absolutely all we had over after
Mrs. Beale had taken what she wanted for the kitchen.
As a matter of fact, if it’s anybody’s
fault, it’s Mrs. Beale’s. That woman
literally eats eggs.”
“The habit is not confined to her,” I
said.
“Well, what I mean to say is, she seems to bathe
in them.”
“She says she needs so many
for puddings, dear,” said Mrs. Ukridge.
“I spoke to her about it yesterday. And
of course, we often have omelettes.”
“She can’t make omelettes without
breaking eggs,” I urged.
“She can’t make them without
breaking us, dammit,” said Ukridge. “One
or two more omelettes, and we’re done for.
No fortune on earth could stand it. We mustn’t
have any more omelettes, Millie. We must
economise. Millions of people get on all right
without omelettes. I suppose there are families
where, if you suddenly produced an omelette, the whole
strength of the company would get up and cheer, led
by father. Cancel the omelettes, old girl,
from now onward.”
“Yes, dear. But
“Well?”
“I don’t think
Mrs. Beale would like that very much, dear. She
has been complaining a good deal about chicken at
every meal. She says that the omelettes
are the only things that give her a chance. She
says there are always possibilities in an omelette.”
“In short,” I said, “what
you propose to do is deliberately to remove from this
excellent lady’s life the one remaining element
of poetry. You mustn’t do it. Give
Mrs. Beale her omelettes, and let’s hope
for a larger supply of eggs.”
“Another thing,” said
Ukridge. “It isn’t only that there’s
a shortage of eggs. That wouldn’t matter
so much if only we kept hatching out fresh squads
of chickens. I’m not saying the hens aren’t
doing their best. I take off my hat to the hens.
As nice a hard-working lot as I ever want to meet,
full of vigour and earnestness. It’s that
damned incubator that’s letting us down all
the time. The rotten thing won’t work.
I don’t know what’s the matter with
it. The long and the short of it is that it simply
declines to incubate.”
“Perhaps it’s your dodge
of letting down the temperature. You remember,
you were telling me? I forget the details.”
“My dear old boy,” he
said earnestly, “there’s nothing wrong
with my figures. It’s a mathematical certainty.
What’s the good of mathematics if not to help
you work out that sort of thing? No, there’s
something deuced wrong with the machine itself, and
I shall probably make a complaint to the people I
got it from. Where did we get the incubator,
old girl?”
“Harrod’s, I think, dear, yes,
it was Harrod’s. It came down with the
first lot of things.”
“Then,” said Ukridge,
banging the table with his fist, while his glasses
flashed triumph, “we’ve got ’em.
The Lord has delivered Harrod’s into our hand.
Write and answer that letter of theirs to-night, Millie.
Sit on them.”
“Yes, dear.”
“Tell ’em that we’d
have sent them their confounded eggs long ago, if
only their rotten, twopenny-ha’penny incubator
had worked with any approach to decency.”
He paused. “Or would you be sarcastic, Garny,
old horse? No, better put it so that they’ll
understand. Say that I consider that the manufacturer
of the thing ought to be in Colney Hatch if
he isn’t there already and that they
are scoundrels for palming off a groggy machine of
that sort on me.”
“The ceremony of opening the
morning’s letters at Harrod’s ought to
be full of interest and excitement to-morrow,”
I said.
This dashing counter-stroke seemed
to relieve Ukridge. His pessimism vanished.
He seldom looked on the dark side of things for long
at a time. He began now to speak hopefully of
the future. He planned out ingenious improvements.
Our fowls were to multiply so rapidly and consistently
that within a short space of time Dorsetshire would
be paved with them. Our eggs were to increase
in size till they broke records and got three-line
notices in the “Items of Interest” column
in the Daily Mail. Briefly, each hen was
to become a happy combination of rabbit and ostrich.
“There is certainly a good time
coming,” I said. “May it be soon.
Meanwhile, what of the local tradesmen?”
Ukridge relapsed once more into gloom.
“They are the worst of the lot.
I don’t mind the London people so much.
They only write, and a letter or two hurts nobody.
But when it comes to butchers and bakers and grocers
and fishmongers and fruiterers and what not coming
up to one’s house and dunning one in one’s
own garden, well it’s a little hard,
what?”
“Oh, then those fellows I found
you talking to yesterday were duns? I thought
they were farmers, come to hear your views on the rearing
of poultry.”
“Which were they? Little
chap with black whiskers and long, thin man with beard?
That was Dawlish, the grocer, and Curtis, the fishmonger.
The others had gone before you came.”
It may be wondered why, before things
came to such a crisis, I had not placed my balance
at the bank at the disposal of the senior partner for
use on behalf of the farm. The fact was that my
balance was at the moment small. I have not yet
in the course of this narrative gone into my pecuniary
position, but I may state here that it was an inconvenient
one. It was big with possibilities, but of ready
cash there was but a meagre supply. My parents
had been poor. But I had a wealthy uncle.
Uncles are notoriously careless of the comfort of their
nephews. Mine was no exception. He had views.
He was a great believer in matrimony, as, having married
three wives not simultaneously he
had every right to be. He was also of opinion
that the less money the young bachelor possessed,
the better. The consequence was that he announced
his intention of giving me a handsome allowance from
the day that I married, but not an instant before.
Till that glad day I would have to shift for myself.
And I am bound to admit that for an uncle it
was a remarkably sensible idea. I am also of
the opinion that it is greatly to my credit, and a
proof of my pure and unmercenary nature, that I did
not instantly put myself up to be raffled for, or rush
out into the streets and propose marriage to the first
lady I met. But I was making quite enough with
my pen to support myself, and, be it never so humble,
there is something pleasant in a bachelor existence,
or so I had thought until very recently.
I had thus no great stake in Ukridge’s
chicken farm. I had contributed a modest five
pounds to the preliminary expenses, and another five
after the roop incident. But further I could not
go with safety. When his income is dependent
on the whims of editors and publishers, the prudent
man keeps something up his sleeve against a sudden
slump in his particular wares. I did not wish
to have to make a hurried choice between matrimony
and the workhouse.
Having exhausted the subject of finance or,
rather, when I began to feel that it was exhausting
me I took my clubs, and strolled up the
hill to the links to play off a match with a sportsman
from the village. I had entered some days previously
for a competition for a trophy (I quote the printed
notice) presented by a local supporter of the game,
in which up to the present I was getting on nicely.
I had survived two rounds, and expected to beat my
present opponent, which would bring me into the semi-final.
Unless I had bad luck, I felt that I ought to get
into the final, and win it. As far as I could
gather from watching the play of my rivals, the professor
was the best of them, and I was convinced that I should
have no difficulty with him. But he had the most
extraordinary luck at golf, though he never admitted
it. He also exercised quite an uncanny influence
on his opponent. I have seen men put completely
off their stroke by his good fortune.
I disposed of my man without difficulty.
We parted a little coldly. He had decapitated
his brassy on the occasion of his striking Dorsetshire
instead of his ball, and he was slow in recovering
from the complex emotions which such an episode induces.
In the club-house I met the professor,
whose demeanour was a welcome contrast to that of
my late opponent. The professor had just routed
his opponent, and so won through to the semi-final.
He was warm, but jubilant.
I congratulated him, and left the place.
Phyllis was waiting outside. She often went round
the course with him.
“Good afternoon,” I said. “Have
you been round with the professor?”
“Yes. We must have been in front of you.
Father won his match.”
“So he was telling me. I was very glad
to hear it.”
“Did you win, Mr. Garnet?”
“Yes. Pretty easily.
My opponent had bad luck all through. Bunkers
seemed to have a magnetic attraction for him.”
“So you and father are both
in the semi-final? I hope you will play very
badly.”
“Thank you,” I said.
“Yes, it does sound rude, doesn’t
it? But father has set his heart on winning this
year. Do you know that he has played in the final
round two years running now?”
“Really?”
“Both times he was beaten by the same man.”
“Who was that? Mr. Derrick
plays a much better game than anybody I have seen
on these links.”
“It was nobody who is here now.
It was a Colonel Jervis. He has not come to Combe
Regis this year. That’s why father is hopeful.”
“Logically,” I said, “he ought to
be certain to win.”
“Yes; but, you see, you were not playing last
year, Mr. Garnet.”
“Oh, the professor can make rings round me,”
I said.
“What did you go round in to-day?”
“We were playing match-play,
and only did the first dozen holes; but my average
round is somewhere in the late eighties.”
“The best father has ever done
is ninety, and that was only once. So you see,
Mr. Garnet, there’s going to be another tragedy
this year.”
“You make me feel a perfect
brute. But it’s more than likely, you must
remember, that I shall fail miserably if I ever do
play your father in the final. There are days
when I play golf as badly as I play tennis. You’ll
hardly believe me.”
She smiled reminiscently.
“Tom is much too good at tennis. His service
is perfectly dreadful.”
“It’s a little terrifying on first acquaintance.”
“But you’re better at
golf than at tennis, Mr. Garnet. I wish you were
not.”
“This is special pleading,”
I said. “It isn’t fair to appeal to
my better feelings, Miss Derrick.”
“I didn’t know golfers
had any where golf was concerned. Do you really
have your off-days?”
“Nearly always. There are
days when I slice with my driver as if it were a bread-knife.”
“Really?”
“And when I couldn’t putt to hit a haystack.”
“Then I hope it will be on one of those days
that you play father.”
“I hope so, too,” I said.
“You hope so?”
“Yes.”
“But don’t you want to win?”
“I should prefer to please you.”
“Really, how very unselfish
of you, Mr. Garnet,” she replied, with a laugh.
“I had no idea that such chivalry existed.
I thought a golfer would sacrifice anything to win
a game.”
“Most things.”
“And trample on the feelings of anybody.”
“Not everybody,” I said.
At this point the professor joined us.