The makings were neatly laid out on
a side-table, and to pour into a glass an inch or
so of the raw spirit and shoosh some soda-water on
top of it was with me the work of a moment. This
done, I retired to an arm-chair and put my feet up,
sipping the mixture with carefree enjoyment, rather
like Cæsar having one in his tent the day he overcame
the Nervii.
As I let the mind dwell on what must
even now be taking place in that peaceful garden,
I felt bucked and uplifted. Though never for an
instant faltering in my opinion that Augustus Fink-Nottle
was Nature’s final word in cloth-headed guffins,
I liked the man, wished him well, and could not have
felt more deeply involved in the success of his wooing
if I, and not he, had been under the ether.
The thought that by this time he might
quite easily have completed the preliminary pourparlers
and be deep in an informal discussion of honeymoon
plans was very pleasant to me.
Of course, considering the sort of
girl Madeline Bassett was stars and rabbits
and all that, I mean you might say that
a sober sadness would have been more fitting.
But in these matters you have got to realize that
tastes differ. The impulse of right-thinking men
might be to run a mile when they saw the Bassett,
but for some reason she appealed to the deeps in Gussie,
so that was that.
I had reached this point in my meditations,
when I was aroused by the sound of the door opening.
Somebody came in and started moving like a leopard
toward the side-table and, lowering the feet, I perceived
that it was Tuppy Glossop.
The sight of him gave me a momentary
twinge of remorse, reminding me, as it did, that in
the excitement of getting Gussie fixed up I had rather
forgotten about this other client. It is often
that way when you’re trying to run two cases
at once.
However, Gussie now being off my mind,
I was prepared to devote my whole attention to the
Glossop problem.
I had been much pleased by the way
he had carried out the task assigned him at the dinner-table.
No easy one, I can assure you, for the browsing and
sluicing had been of the highest quality, and there
had been one dish in particular I allude
to the nonnettes de poulet Agnes Sorel which
might well have broken down the most iron resolution.
But he had passed it up like a professional fasting
man, and I was proud of him.
“Oh, hullo, Tuppy,” I said, “I wanted
to see you.”
He turned, snifter in hand, and it
was easy to see that his privations had tried him
sorely. He was looking like a wolf on the steppes
of Russia which has seen its peasant shin up a high
tree.
“Yes?” he said, rather unpleasantly.
“Well, here I am.”
“Well?”
“How do you mean well?”
“Make your report.”
“What report?”
“Have you nothing to tell me about Angela?”
“Only that she’s a blister.”
I was concerned.
“Hasn’t she come clustering round you
yet?”
“She has not.”
“Very odd.”
“Why odd?”
“She must have noted your lack of appetite.”
He barked raspingly, as if he were
having trouble with the tonsils of the soul.
“Lack of appetite! I’m as hollow
as the Grand Canyon.”
“Courage, Tuppy! Think of Gandhi.”
“What about Gandhi?”
“He hasn’t had a square meal for years.”
“Nor have I. Or I could swear I hadn’t.
Gandhi, my left foot.”
I saw that it might be best to let
the Gandhi motif slide. I went back to
where we had started.
“She’s probably looking for you now.”
“Who is? Angela?”
“Yes. She must have noticed your supreme
sacrifice.”
“I don’t suppose she noticed
it at all, the little fathead. I’ll bet
it didn’t register in any way whatsoever.”
“Come, Tuppy,” I urged,
“this is morbid. Don’t take this gloomy
view. She must at least have spotted that you
refused those nonnettes de poulet Agnes Sorel.
It was a sensational renunciation and stuck out like
a sore thumb. And the cèpes a la Rossini ”
A hoarse cry broke from his twisted lips:
“Will you stop it, Bertie!
Do you think I am made of marble? Isn’t
it bad enough to have sat watching one of Anatole’s
supremest dinners flit by, course after course, without
having you making a song about it? Don’t
remind me of those nonnettes. I can’t
stand it.”
I endeavoured to hearten and console.
“Be brave, Tuppy. Fix your
thoughts on that cold steak-and-kidney pie in the
larder. As the Good Book says, it cometh in the
morning.”
“Yes, in the morning. And
it’s now about half-past nine at night.
You would bring that pie up, wouldn’t you?
Just when I was trying to keep my mind off it.”
I saw what he meant. Hours must
pass before he could dig into that pie. I dropped
the subject, and we sat for a pretty good time in silence.
Then he rose and began to pace the room in an overwrought
sort of way, like a zoo lion who has heard the dinner-gong
go and is hoping the keeper won’t forget him
in the general distribution. I averted my gaze
tactfully, but I could hear him kicking chairs and
things. It was plain that the man’s soul
was in travail and his blood pressure high.
Presently he returned to his seat,
and I saw that he was looking at me intently.
There was that about his demeanour that led me to think
that he had something to communicate.
Nor was I wrong. He tapped me
significantly on the knee and spoke:
“Bertie.”
“Hullo?”
“Shall I tell you something?”
“Certainly, old bird,”
I said cordially. “I was just beginning
to feel that the scene could do with a bit more dialogue.”
“This business of Angela and me.”
“Yes?”
“I’ve been putting in a lot of solid thinking
about it.”
“Oh, yes?”
“I have analysed the situation
pitilessly, and one thing stands out as clear as dammit.
There has been dirty work afoot.”
“I don’t get you.”
“All right. Let me review
the facts. Up to the time she went to Cannes
Angela loved me. She was all over me. I was
the blue-eyed boy in every sense of the term.
You’ll admit that?”
“Indisputably.”
“And directly she came back we had this bust-up.”
“Quite.”
“About nothing.”
“Oh, dash it, old man, nothing?
You were a bit tactless, what, about her shark.”
“I was frank and candid about
her shark. And that’s my point. Do
you seriously believe that a trifling disagreement
about sharks would make a girl hand a man his hat,
if her heart were really his?”
“Certainly.”
It beats me why he couldn’t
see it. But then poor old Tuppy has never been
very hot on the finer shades. He’s one of
those large, tough, football-playing blokes who lack
the more delicate sensibilities, as I’ve heard
Jeeves call them. Excellent at blocking a punt
or walking across an opponent’s face in cleated
boots, but not so good when it comes to understanding
the highly-strung female temperament. It simply
wouldn’t occur to him that a girl might be prepared
to give up her life’s happiness rather than
waive her shark.
“Rot! It was just a pretext.”
“What was?”
“This shark business. She
wanted to get rid of me, and grabbed at the first
excuse.”
“No, no.”
“I tell you she did.”
“But what on earth would she want to get rid
of you for?”
“Exactly. That’s
the very question I asked myself. And here’s
the answer: Because she has fallen in love with
somebody else. It sticks out a mile. There’s
no other possible solution. She goes to Cannes
all for me, she comes back all off me. Obviously
during those two months, she must have transferred
her affections to some foul blister she met out there.”
“No, no.”
“Don’t keep saying ‘No,
no’. She must have done. Well, I’ll
tell you one thing, and you can take this as official.
If ever I find this slimy, slithery snake in the grass,
he had better make all the necessary arrangements
at his favourite nursing-home without delay, because
I am going to be very rough with him. I propose,
if and when found, to take him by his beastly neck,
shake him till he froths, and pull him inside out
and make him swallow himself.”
With which words he biffed off; and
I, having given him a minute or two to get out of
the way, rose and made for the drawing-room. The
tendency of females to roost in drawing-rooms after
dinner being well marked, I expected to find Angela
there. It was my intention to have a word with
Angela.
To Tuppy’s theory that some
insinuating bird had stolen the girl’s heart
from him at Cannes I had given, as I have indicated,
little credence, considering it the mere unbalanced
apple sauce of a bereaved man. It was, of course,
the shark, and nothing but the shark, that had caused
love’s young dream to go temporarily off the
boil, and I was convinced that a word or two with
the cousin at this juncture would set everything right.
For, frankly, I thought it incredible
that a girl of her natural sweetness and tender-heartedness
should not have been moved to her foundations by what
she had seen at dinner that night. Even Seppings,
Aunt Dahlia’s butler, a cold, unemotional man,
had gasped and practically reeled when Tuppy waved
aside those nonnettes de poulet Agnes Sorel,
while the footman, standing by with the potatoes, had
stared like one seeing a vision. I simply refused
to consider the possibility of the significance of
the thing having been lost on a nice girl like Angela.
I fully expected to find her in the drawing-room with
her heart bleeding freely, all ripe for an immediate
reconciliation.
In the drawing-room, however, when
I entered, only Aunt Dahlia met the eye. It seemed
to me that she gave me rather a jaundiced look as I
hove in sight, but this, having so recently beheld
Tuppy in his agony, I attributed to the fact that
she, like him, had been going light on the menu.
You can’t expect an empty aunt to beam like a
full aunt.
“Oh, it’s you, is it?” she said.
Well, it was, of course.
“Where’s Angela?” I asked.
“Gone to bed.”
“Already?”
“She said she had a headache.”
“H’m.”
I wasn’t so sure that I liked
the sound of that so much. A girl who has observed
the sundered lover sensationally off his feed does
not go to bed with headaches if love has been reborn
in her heart. She sticks around and gives him
the swift, remorseful glance from beneath the drooping
eyelashes and generally endeavours to convey to him
that, if he wants to get together across a round table
and try to find a formula, she is all for it too.
Yes, I am bound to say I found that going-to-bed stuff
a bit disquieting.
“Gone to bed, eh?” I murmured musingly.
“What did you want her for?”
“I thought she might like a stroll and a chat.”
“Are you going for a stroll?”
said Aunt Dahlia, with a sudden show of interest.
“Where?”
“Oh, hither and thither.”
“Then I wonder if you would mind doing something
for me.”
“Give it a name.”
“It won’t take you long.
You know that path that runs past the greenhouses
into the kitchen garden. If you go along it, you
come to a pond.”
“That’s right.”
“Well, will you get a good,
stout piece of rope or cord and go down that path
till you come to the pond ”
“To the pond. Right.”
“ and look about
you till you find a nice, heavy stone. Or a fairly
large brick would do.”
“I see,” I said, though
I didn’t, being still fogged. “Stone
or brick. Yes. And then?”
“Then,” said the relative,
“I want you, like a good boy, to fasten the
rope to the brick and tie it around your damned neck
and jump into the pond and drown yourself. In
a few days I will send and have you fished up and
buried because I shall need to dance on your grave.”
I was more fogged than ever.
And not only fogged wounded and resentful.
I remember reading a book where a girl “suddenly
fled from the room, afraid to stay for fear dreadful
things would come tumbling from her lips; determined
that she would not remain another day in this house
to be insulted and misunderstood.” I felt
much about the same.
Then I reminded myself that one has
got to make allowances for a woman with only about
half a spoonful of soup inside her, and I checked the
red-hot crack that rose to the lips.
“What,” I said gently,
“is this all about? You seem pipped with
Bertram.”
“Pipped!”
“Noticeably pipped. Why this ill-concealed
animus?”
A sudden flame shot from her eyes, singeing my hair.
“Who was the ass, who was the
chump, who was the dithering idiot who talked me,
against my better judgment, into going without my dinner?
I might have guessed ”
I saw that I had divined correctly the cause of her
strange mood.
“It’s all right.
Aunt Dahlia. I know just how you’re feeling.
A bit on the hollow side, what? But the agony
will pass. If I were you, I’d sneak down
and raid the larder after the household have gone to
bed. I am told there’s a pretty good steak-and-kidney
pie there which will repay inspection. Have faith,
Aunt Dahlia,” I urged. “Pretty soon
Uncle Tom will be along, full of sympathy and anxious
inquiries.”
“Will he? Do you know where he is now?”
“I haven’t seen him.”
“He is in the study with his
face buried in his hands, muttering about civilization
and melting pots.”
“Eh? Why?”
“Because it has just been my
painful duty to inform him that Anatole has given
notice.”
I own that I reeled.
“What?”
“Given notice. As the result
of that drivelling scheme of yours. What did
you expect a sensitive, temperamental French cook to
do, if you went about urging everybody to refuse all
food? I hear that when the first two courses
came back to the kitchen practically untouched, his
feelings were so hurt that he cried like a child.
And when the rest of the dinner followed, he came
to the conclusion that the whole thing was a studied
and calculated insult, and decided to hand in his portfolio.”
“Golly!”
“You may well say ‘Golly!’
Anatole, God’s gift to the gastric juices, gone
like the dew off the petal of a rose, all through your
idiocy. Perhaps you understand now why I want
you to go and jump in that pond. I might have
known that some hideous disaster would strike this
house like a thunderbolt if once you wriggled your
way into it and started trying to be clever.”
Harsh words, of course, as from aunt
to nephew, but I bore her no resentment. No doubt,
if you looked at it from a certain angle, Bertram
might be considered to have made something of a floater.
“I am sorry.”
“What’s the good of being sorry?”
“I acted for what I deemed the best.”
“Another time try acting for
the worst. Then we may possibly escape with a
mere flesh wound.”
“Uncle Tom’s not feeling too bucked about
it all, you say?”
“He’s groaning like a
lost soul. And any chance I ever had of getting
that money out of him has gone.”
I stroked the chin thoughtfully.
There was, I had to admit, reason in what she said.
None knew better than I how terrible a blow the passing
of Anatole would be to Uncle Tom.
I have stated earlier in this chronicle
that this curious object of the seashore with whom
Aunt Dahlia has linked her lot is a bloke who habitually
looks like a pterodactyl that has suffered, and the
reason he does so is that all those years he spent
in making millions in the Far East put his digestion
on the blink, and the only cook that has ever been
discovered capable of pushing food into him without
starting something like Old Home Week in Moscow under
the third waistcoat button is this uniquely gifted
Anatole. Deprived of Anatole’s services,
all he was likely to give the wife of his b. was a
dirty look. Yes, unquestionably, things seemed
to have struck a somewhat rocky patch, and I must admit
that I found myself, at moment of going to press, a
little destitute of constructive ideas.
Confident, however, that these would
come ere long, I kept the stiff upper lip.
“Bad,” I conceded.
“Quite bad, beyond a doubt. Certainly a
nasty jar for one and all. But have no fear,
Aunt Dahlia, I will fix everything.”
I have alluded earlier to the difficulty
of staggering when you’re sitting down, showing
that it is a feat of which I, personally, am not capable.
Aunt Dahlia, to my amazement, now did it apparently
without an effort. She was well wedged into a
deep arm-chair, but, nevertheless, she staggered like
billy-o. A sort of spasm of horror and apprehension
contorted her face.
“If you dare to try any more of your lunatic
schemes ”
I saw that it would be fruitless to
try to reason with her. Quite plainly, she was
not in the vein. Contenting myself, accordingly,
with a gesture of loving sympathy, I left the room.
Whether she did or did not throw a handsomely bound
volume of the Works of Alfred, Lord Tennyson, at me,
I am not in a position to say. I had seen it lying
on the table beside her, and as I closed the door
I remember receiving the impression that some blunt
instrument had crashed against the woodwork, but I
was feeling too pre-occupied to note and observe.
I blame myself for not having taken
into consideration the possible effects of a sudden
abstinence on the part of virtually the whole strength
of the company on one of Anatole’s impulsive
Provencal temperament. These Gauls,
I should have remembered, can’t take it.
Their tendency to fly off the handle at the slightest
provocation is well known. No doubt the man had
put his whole soul into those nonnettes de poulet,
and to see them come homing back to him must have gashed
him like a knife.
However, spilt milk blows nobody any
good, and it is useless to dwell upon it. The
task now confronting Bertram was to put matters right,
and I was pacing the lawn, pondering to this end,
when I suddenly heard a groan so lost-soulish that
I thought it must have proceeded from Uncle Tom, escaped
from captivity and come to groan in the garden.
Looking about me, however, I could
discern no uncles. Puzzled, I was about to resume
my meditations, when the sound came again. And
peering into the shadows I observed a dim form seated
on one of the rustic benches which so liberally dotted
this pleasance and another dim form standing beside
same. A second and more penetrating glance and
I had assembled the facts.
These dim forms were, in the order
named, Gussie Fink-Nottle and Jeeves. And what
Gussie was doing, groaning all over the place like
this, was more than I could understand.
Because, I mean to say, there was
no possibility of error. He wasn’t singing.
As I approached, he gave an encore, and it was beyond
question a groan. Moreover, I could now see him
clearly, and his whole aspect was definitely sand-bagged.
“Good evening, sir,” said
Jeeves. “Mr. Fink-Nottle is not feeling
well.”
Nor was I. Gussie had begun to make
a low, bubbling noise, and I could no longer disguise
it from myself that something must have gone seriously
wrong with the works. I mean, I know marriage
is a pretty solemn business and the realization that
he is in for it frequently churns a chap up a bit,
but I had never come across a case of a newly-engaged
man taking it on the chin so completely as this.
Gussie looked up. His eye was
dull. He clutched the thatch.
“Goodbye, Bertie,” he said, rising.
I seemed to spot an error.
“You mean ‘Hullo,’ don’t you?”
“No, I don’t. I mean goodbye.
I’m off.”
“Off where?”
“To the kitchen garden. To drown myself.”
“Don’t be an ass.”
“I’m not an ass.... Am I an ass,
Jeeves?”
“Possibly a little injudicious, sir.”
“Drowning myself, you mean?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You think, on the whole, not drown myself?”
“I should not advocate it, sir.”
“Very well, Jeeves. I accept
your ruling. After all, it would be unpleasant
for Mrs. Travers to find a swollen body floating in
her pond.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And she has been very kind to me.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And you have been very kind to me, Jeeves.”
“Thank you, sir.”
“So have you, Bertie. Very
kind. Everybody has been very kind to me.
Very, very kind. Very kind indeed. I have
no complaints to make. All right, I’ll
go for a walk instead.”
I followed him with bulging eyes as he tottered off
into the dark.
“Jeeves,” I said, and
I am free to admit that in my emotion I bleated like
a lamb drawing itself to the attention of the parent
sheep, “what the dickens is all this?”
“Mr. Fink-Nottle is not quite
himself, sir. He has passed through a trying
experience.”
I endeavoured to put together a brief synopsis of
previous events.
“I left him out here with Miss Bassett.”
“Yes, sir.”
“I had softened her up.”
“Yes, sir.”
“He knew exactly what he had
to do. I had coached him thoroughly in lines
and business.”
“Yes, sir. So Mr. Fink-Nottle informed
me.”
“Well, then ”
“I regret to say, sir, that there was a slight
hitch.”
“You mean, something went wrong?”
“Yes, sir.”
I could not fathom. The brain seemed to be tottering
on its throne.
“But how could anything go wrong? She loves
him, Jeeves.”
“Indeed, sir?”
“She definitely told me so. All he had
to do was propose.”
“Yes sir.”
“Well, didn’t he?”
“No, sir.”
“Then what the dickens did he talk about?”
“Newts, sir.”
“Newts?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Newts?”
“Yes, sir.”
“But why did he want to talk about newts?”
“He did not want to talk about
newts, sir. As I gather from Mr. Fink-Nottle,
nothing could have been more alien to his plans.”
I simply couldn’t grasp the trend.
“But you can’t force a man to talk about
newts.”
“Mr. Fink-Nottle was the victim
of a sudden unfortunate spasm of nervousness, sir.
Upon finding himself alone with the young lady, he
admits to having lost his morale. In such circumstances,
gentlemen frequently talk at random, saying the first
thing that chances to enter their heads. This,
in Mr. Fink-Nottle’s case, would seem to have
been the newt, its treatment in sickness and in health.”
The scales fell from my eyes.
I understood. I had had the same sort of thing
happen to me in moments of crisis. I remember
once detaining a dentist with the drill at one of
my lower bicuspids and holding him up for nearly ten
minutes with a story about a Scotchman, an Irishman,
and a Jew. Purely automatic. The more he
tried to jab, the more I said “Hoots, mon,”
“Begorrah,” and “Oy, oy”.
When one loses one’s nerve, one simply babbles.
I could put myself in Gussie’s
place. I could envisage the scene. There
he and the Bassett were, alone together in the evening
stillness. No doubt, as I had advised, he had
shot the works about sunsets and fairy princesses,
and so forth, and then had arrived at the point where
he had to say that bit about having something to say
to her. At this, I take it, she lowered her eyes
and said, “Oh, yes?”
He then, I should imagine, said it
was something very important; to which her response
would, one assumes, have been something on the lines
of “Really?” or “Indeed?”
or possibly just the sharp intake of the breath.
And then their eyes met, just as mine met the dentist’s,
and something suddenly seemed to catch him in the
pit of the stomach and everything went black and he
heard his voice starting to drool about newts.
Yes, I could follow the psychology.
Nevertheless, I found myself blaming
Gussie. On discovering that he was stressing
the newt note in this manner, he ought, of course,
to have tuned out, even if it had meant sitting there
saying nothing. No matter how much of a twitter
he was in, he should have had sense enough to see
that he was throwing a spanner into the works.
No girl, when she has been led to expect that a man
is about to pour forth his soul in a fervour of passion,
likes to find him suddenly shelving the whole topic
in favour of an address on aquatic Salamandridae.
“Bad, Jeeves.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And how long did this nuisance continue?”
“For some not inconsiderable
time, I gather, sir. According to Mr. Fink-Nottle,
he supplied Miss Bassett with very full and complete
information not only with respect to the common newt,
but also the crested and palmated varieties.
He described to her how newts, during the breeding
season, live in the water, subsisting upon tadpoles,
insect larvae, and crustaceans; how, later, they make
their way to the land and eat slugs and worms; and
how the newly born newt has three pairs of long, plumlike,
external gills. And he was just observing that
newts differ from salamanders in the shape of the
tail, which is compressed, and that a marked sexual
dimorphism prevails in most species, when the young
lady rose and said that she thought she would go back
to the house.”
“And then ”
“She went, sir.”
I stood musing. More and more,
it was beginning to be borne in upon me what a particularly
difficult chap Gussie was to help. He seemed to
so marked an extent to lack snap and finish.
With infinite toil, you manoeuvred him into a position
where all he had to do was charge ahead, and he didn’t
charge ahead, but went off sideways, missing the objective
completely.
“Difficult, Jeeves.”
“Yes, sir.”
In happier circs., of course, I would
have canvassed his views on the matter. But after
what had occurred in connection with that mess-jacket,
my lips were sealed.
“Well, I must think it over.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Burnish the brain a bit and endeavour to find
the way out.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Well, good night, Jeeves.”
“Good night, sir.”
He shimmered off, leaving a pensive
Bertram Wooster standing motionless in the shadows.
It seemed to me that it was hard to know what to do
for the best.