THE ARRIVAL OF NEMESIS
Some people do not believe in presentiments.
They attribute that curious feeling that something
unpleasant is going to happen to such mundane causes
as liver, or a chill, or the weather. For my own
part, I think there is more in the matter than the
casual observer might imagine.
I awoke three days after my meeting
with the professor at the club-house, filled with
a dull foreboding. Somehow I seemed to know that
that day was going to turn out badly for me. It
may have been liver or a chill, but it was certainly
not the weather. The morning was perfect, the
most glorious of a glorious summer. There was
a haze over the valley and out to sea which suggested
a warm noon, when the sun should have begun the serious
duties of the day. The birds were singing in
the trees and breakfasting on the lawn, while Edwin,
seated on one of the flower-beds, watched them with
the eye of a connoisseur. Occasionally, when
a sparrow hopped in his direction, he would make a
sudden spring, and the bird would fly away to the other
side of the lawn. I had never seen Edwin catch
a sparrow. I believe they looked on him as a
bit of a crank, and humoured him by coming within springing
distance, just to keep him amused. Dashing young
cock-sparrows would show off before their particular
hen-sparrows, and earn a cheap reputation for dare-devilry
by going within so many years of Edwin’s lair,
and then darting away. Bob was in his favourite
place on the gravel. I took him with me down
to the Cob to watch me bathe.
“What’s the matter with
me to-day, Robert, old son?” I asked him, as
I dried myself.
He blinked lazily, but contributed no suggestion.
“It’s no good looking
bored,” I went on, “because I’m going
to talk about myself, however much it bores you.
Here am I, as fit as a prize-fighter, living in the
open air for I don’t know how long, eating good
plain food bathing every morning sea-bathing,
mind you and yet what’s the result?
I feel beastly.”
Bob yawned, and gave a little whine.
“Yes,” I said, “I
know I’m in love. But that can’t be
it, because I was in love just as much a week ago,
and I felt all right then. But isn’t she
an angel, Bob? Eh? Isn’t she?
And didn’t you feel bucked when she patted you?
Of course you did. Anybody would. But how
about Tom Chase? Don’t you think he’s
a dangerous man? He calls her by her Christian
name, you know, and behaves generally as if she belonged
to him. And then he sees her every day, while
I have to trust to meeting her at odd times, and then
I generally feel such a fool I can’t think of
anything to talk about except golf and the weather.
He probably sings duets with her after dinner, and
you know what comes of duets after dinner.”
Here Bob, who had been trying for
some time to find a decent excuse for getting away,
pretended to see something of importance at the other
end of the Cob, and trotted off to investigate it,
leaving me to finish dressing by myself.
“Of course,” I said to
myself, “It may be merely hunger. I may
be all right after breakfast. But at present
I seem to be working up for a really fine fit of the
blues. I feel bad.”
I whistled to Bob, and started for
home. On the beach I saw the professor some little
distance away, and waved my towel in a friendly manner.
He made no reply.
Of course, it was possible that he
had not seen me; but for some reason his attitude
struck me as ominous. As far as I could see, he
was looking straight at me, and he was not a short-sighted
man. I could think of no reason why he should
cut me. We had met on the links on the previous
morning, and he had been friendliness itself.
He had called me “me dear boy,” supplied
me with a gin and gingerbeer at the clubhouse, and
generally behaved as if he had been David and I Jonathan.
Yet in certain moods we are inclined to make mountains
out of molehills, and I went on my way, puzzled and
uneasy, with a distinct impression that I had received
the cut direct.
I felt hurt. What had I done
that Providence should make things so unpleasant for
me? It would be a little hard, as Ukridge would
have said, if, after all my trouble, the professor
had discovered some fresh grievance against me.
Perhaps Ukridge had been irritating him again.
I wished he would not identify me so completely with
Ukridge. I could not be expected to control the
man. Then I reflected that they could hardly
have met in the few hours between my parting from the
professor at the club-house and my meeting with him
on the beach. Ukridge rarely left the farm.
When he was not working among the fowls, he was lying
on his back in the paddock, resting his massive mind.
I came to the conclusion that after
all the professor had not seen me.
“I’m an idiot, Bob,”
I said, as we turned in at the farm gate, “and
I let my imagination run away with me.”
Bob wagged his tail in approval of the sentiment.
Breakfast was ready when I got in.
There was a cold chicken on the sideboard, devilled
chicken on the table, a trio of boiled eggs, and a
dish of scrambled eggs. As regarded quantity Mrs.
Beale never failed us.
Ukridge was sorting the letters.
“Morning, Garny,” he said. “One
for you, Millie.”
“It’s from Aunt Elizabeth,” said
Mrs. Ukridge, looking at the envelope.
I had only heard casual mention of
this relative hitherto, but I had built up a mental
picture of her partly from remarks which Ukridge had
let fall, but principally from the fact that he had
named the most malignant hen in our fowl-run after
her. A severe lady, I imagined with a cold eye.
“Wish she’d enclose a
cheque,” said Ukridge. “She could
spare it. You’ve no idea, Garny, old man,
how disgustingly and indecently rich that woman is.
She lives in Kensington on an income which would do
her well in Park Lane. But as a touching proposition
she had proved almost negligible. She steadfastly
refuses to part.”
“I think she would, dear, if
she knew how much we needed it. But I don’t
like to ask her. She’s so curious, and says
such horrid things.”
“She does,” agreed Ukridge,
gloomily. He spoke as one who had had experience.
“Two for you, Garny. All the rest for me.
Ten of them, and all bills.”
He spread the envelopes out on the
table, and drew one at a venture.
“Whiteley’s,” he
said. “Getting jumpy. Are in receipt
of my favour of the 7th inst. and are at a loss to
understand. It’s rummy about these blighters,
but they never seem able to understand a damn thing.
It’s hard! You put things in words of one
syllable for them, and they just goggle and wonder
what it all means. They want something on account.
Upon my Sam, I’m disappointed with Whiteley’s.
I’d been thinking in rather a kindly spirit
of them, and feeling that they were a more intelligent
lot than Harrod’s. I’d had half a
mind to give Harrod’s the miss-in-baulk and
hand my whole trade over to these fellows. But
not now, dash it! Whiteley’s have disappointed
me. From the way they write, you’d think
they thought I was doing it for fun. How can I
let them have their infernal money when there isn’t
any? Here’s one from Dorchester. Smith,
the chap we got the gramophone from. Wants to
know when I’m going to settle up for sixteen
records.”
“Sordid brute!”
I wanted to get on with my own correspondence,
but Ukridge held me with a glittering eye.
“The chicken-men, the dealer
people, you know, want me to pay for the first lot
of hens. Considering that they all died of roop,
and that I was going to send them back anyhow after
I’d got them to hatch out a few chickens, I
call that cool. I mean to say, business is business.
That’s what these fellows don’t seem to
understand. I can’t afford to pay enormous
sums for birds which die off quicker than I can get
them in.”
“I shall never speak to Aunt
Elizabeth again,” said Mrs. Ukridge suddenly.
She had dropped the letter she had
been reading, and was staring indignantly in front
of her. There were two little red spots on her
cheeks.
“What’s the matter, old
chap?” inquired Ukridge affectionately, glancing
up from his pile of bills and forgetting his own troubles
in an instant. “Buck up! Aunt Elizabeth
been getting on your nerves again? What’s
she been saying this time?”
Mrs. Ukridge left the room with a
sob. Ukridge sprang at the letter.
“If that demon doesn’t
stop writing her infernal letters and upsetting Millie,
I shall strangle her with my bare hands, regardless
of her age and sex.” He turned over the
pages of the letter till he came to the passage which
had caused the trouble. “Well, upon my Sam!
Listen to this, Garny, old horse. ’You
tell me nothing regarding the success of this chicken
farm of yours, and I confess that I find your silence
ominous. You know my opinion of your husband.
He is perfectly helpless in any matter requiring the
exercise of a little common-sense and business capability.’”
He stared at me, amazed. “I like that!
’Pon my soul, that is really rich! I could
have believed almost anything of that blighted female,
but I did think she had a reasonable amount of intelligence.
Why, you know that it’s just in matters requiring
common-sense and business capability that I come out
really strong.”
“Of course, old man,”
I replied dutifully. “The woman’s
a fool.”
“That’s what she calls
me two lines further on. No wonder Millie was
upset. Why can’t these cats leave people
alone?”
“Oh, woman, woman!” I threw in helpfully.
“Always interfering
“Rotten!”
“And backbiting
“Awful!”
“I shan’t stand it.”
“I shouldn’t!”
“Look here! On the next page she calls
me a gaby!”
“It’s time you took a strong line.”
“And in the very next sentence
refers to me as a perfect guffin. What’s
a guffin, Garny, old boy?”
I considered the point.
“Broadly speaking, I should say, one who guffs.”
“I believe it’s actionable.”
“I shouldn’t wonder.”
Ukridge rushed to the door.
“Millie!”
He slammed the door, and I heard him dashing upstairs.
I turned to my letters. One was from Lickford,
with a Cornish postmark.
I glanced through it and laid it aside for a more
exhaustive perusal.
The other was in a strange handwriting. I looked
at the signature.
“Patrick Derrick.” This was queer.
What had the professor to say to me?
The next moment my heart seemed to spring to my throat.
“Sir,” the letter began.
A pleasant cheery opening!
Then it got off the mark, so to speak,
like lightning. There was no sparring for an
opening, no dignified parade of set phrases, leading
up to the main point. It was the letter of a
man who was almost too furious to write. It gave
me the impression that, if he had not written it,
he would have been obliged to have taken some very
violent form of exercise by way of relief to his soul.
“You will be good enough to
look on our acquaintance as closed. I have no
wish to associate with persons of your stamp.
If we should happen to meet, you will be good enough
to treat me as a total stranger, as I shall treat
you. And, if I may be allowed to give you a word
of advice, I should recommend you in future, when
you wish to exercise your humour, to do so in some
less practical manner than by bribing boatmen to upset
your (friends crossed out thickly,
and acquaintances substituted.) If you require
further enlightenment in this matter, the enclosed
letter may be of service to you.”
With which he remained mine faithfully, Patrick Derrick.
The enclosed letter was from one Jane
Muspratt. It was bright and interesting.
“DEAR SIR, My Harry,
Mr. Hawk, sas to me how it was him upsetting the
boat and you, not because he is not steady in a boat
which he is no man more so in Combe Regis, but because
one of the gentlemen what keeps chikkens up the hill,
the little one, Mr. Garnick his name is, says to him,
Hawk, I’ll give you a sovrin to upset Mr. Derick
in your boat, and my Harry being esily led was took
in and did, but he’s sory now and wishes he
hadn’t, and he sas he’ll niver do
a prackticle joke again for anyone even for a banknote. Yours
obedly.,
JANE
MUSPRATT.”
Oh, woman, woman!
At the bottom of everything!
History is full of tragedies caused by the lethal
sex. Who lost Mark Antony the world? A woman.
Who let Samson in so atrociously? Woman again.
Why did Bill Bailey leave home? Once more, because
of a woman. And here was I, Jerry Garnet, harmless,
well-meaning writer of minor novels, going through
the same old mill.
I cursed Jane Muspratt. What
chance had I with Phyllis now? Could I hope to
win over the professor again? I cursed Jane Muspratt
for the second time.
My thoughts wandered to Mr. Harry
Hawk. The villain! The scoundrel! What
business had he to betray me? ... Well, I could
settle with him. The man who lays a hand upon
a woman, save in the way of kindness, is justly disliked
by Society; so the woman Muspratt, culpable as she
was, was safe from me. But what of the man Hawk?
There no such considerations swayed me. I would
interview the man Hawk. I would give him the
most hectic ten minutes of his career. I would
say things to him the recollection of which would
make him start up shrieking in his bed in the small
hours of the night. I would arise, and be a man,
and slay him; take him grossly, full of bread, with
all his crimes broad-blown, as flush as May, at gaming,
swearing, or about some act that had no relish of
salvation in it.
The Demon!
My life ruined. My
future grey and black. My heart shattered.
And why? Because of the scoundrel, Hawk.
Phyllis would meet me in the village,
on the Cob, on the links, and pass by as if I were
the Invisible Man. And why? Because of the
reptile, Hawk. The worm, Hawk. The dastard
and varlet, Hawk.
I crammed my hat on, and hurried out
of the house towards the village.