She sprang it on me before breakfast.
There in seven words you have a complete character
sketch of my Aunt Agatha. I could go on indefinitely
about brutality and lack of consideration. I merely
say that she routed me out of bed to listen to her
painful story somewhere in the small hours. It
can’t have been half past eleven when Jeeves,
my man, woke me out of the dreamless and broke the
news:
‘Mrs Gregson to see you, sir.’
I thought she must be walking in her
sleep, but I crawled out of bed and got into a dressing-gown.
I knew Aunt Agatha well enough to know that, if she
had come to see me, she was going to see me. That’s
the sort of woman she is.
She was sitting bolt upright in a
chair, staring into space. When I came in she
looked at me in that darn critical way that always
makes me feel as if I had gelatine where my spine
ought to be. Aunt Agatha is one of those strong-minded
women. I should think Queen Elizabeth must have
been something like her. She bosses her husband,
Spencer Gregson, a battered little chappie on the
Stock Exchange. She bosses my cousin, Gussie
Mannering-Phipps. She bosses her sister-in-law,
Gussie’s mother. And, worst of all, she
bosses me. She has an eye like a man-eating fish,
and she has got moral suasion down to a fine point.
I dare say there are fellows in the
world men of blood and iron, don’t
you know, and all that sort of thing whom
she couldn’t intimidate; but if you’re
a chappie like me, fond of a quiet life, you simply
curl into a ball when you see her coming, and hope
for the best. My experience is that when Aunt
Agatha wants you to do a thing you do it, or else you
find yourself wondering why those fellows in the olden
days made such a fuss when they had trouble with the
Spanish Inquisition.
‘Halloa, Aunt Agatha!’ I said
‘Bertie,’ she said, ‘you look a
sight. You look perfectly dissipated.’
I was feeling like a badly wrapped
brown-paper parcel. I’m never at my best
in the early morning. I said so.
’Early morning! I had breakfast
three hours ago, and have been walking in the park
ever since, trying to compose my thoughts.’
If I ever breakfasted at half past
eight I should walk on the Embankment, trying to end
it all in a watery grave.
‘I am extremely worried, Bertie.
That is why I have come to you.’
And then I saw she was going to start
something, and I bleated weakly to Jeeves to bring
me tea. But she had begun before I could get it.
‘What are your immediate plans, Bertie?’
’Well, I rather thought of tottering
out for a bite of lunch later on, and then possibly
staggering round to the club, and after that, if I
felt strong enough, I might trickle off to Walton Heath
for a round of golf.’
I am not interested in your totterings
and tricklings. I mean, have you any important
engagements in the next week or so?’
I scented danger.
‘Rather,’ I said. ‘Heaps!
Millions! Booked solid!’
‘What are they?’
‘I er well, I don’t
quite know.’
’I thought as much. You
have no engagements. Very well, then, I want
you to start immediately for America.’
‘America!’
Do not lose sight of the fact that
all this was taking place on an empty stomach, shortly
after the rising of the lark.
‘Yes, America. I suppose even you have
heard of America?’
‘But why America?’
’Because that is where your
Cousin Gussie is. He is in New York, and I can’t
get at him.’
‘What’s Gussie been doing?’
‘Gussie is making a perfect idiot of himself.’
To one who knew young Gussie as well
as I did, the words opened up a wide field for speculation.
‘In what way?’
‘He has lost his head over a creature.’
On past performances this rang true.
Ever since he arrived at man’s estate Gussie
had been losing his head over creatures. He’s
that sort of chap. But, as the creatures never
seemed to lose their heads over him, it had never
amounted to much.
’I imagine you know perfectly
well why Gussie went to America, Bertie. You
know how wickedly extravagant your Uncle Cuthbert was.’
She alluded to Gussie’s governor,
the late head of the family, and I am bound to say
she spoke the truth. Nobody was fonder of old
Uncle Cuthbert than I was, but everybody knows that,
where money was concerned, he was the most complete
chump in the annals of the nation. He had an
expensive thirst. He never backed a horse that
didn’t get housemaid’s knee in the middle
of the race. He had a system of beating the bank
at Monte Carlo which used to make the administration
hang out the bunting and ring the joy-bells when he
was sighted in the offing. Take him for all in
all, dear old Uncle Cuthbert was as willing a spender
as ever called the family lawyer a bloodsucking vampire
because he wouldn’t let Uncle Cuthbert cut down
the timber to raise another thousand.
’He left your Aunt Julia very
little money for a woman in her position. Beechwood
requires a great deal of keeping up, and poor dear
Spencer, though he does his best to help, has not
unlimited resources. It was clearly understood
why Gussie went to America. He is not clever,
but he is very good-looking, and, though he has no
title, the Mannering-Phippses are one of the best
and oldest families in England. He had some excellent
letters of introduction, and when he wrote home to
say that he had met the most charming and beautiful
girl in the world I felt quite happy. He continued
to rave about her for several mails, and then this
morning a letter has come from him in which he says,
quite casually as a sort of afterthought, that he
knows we are broadminded enough not to think any the
worse of her because she is on the vaudeville stage.’
‘Oh, I say!’
’It was like a thunderbolt.
The girl’s name, it seems, is Ray Denison, and
according to Gussie she does something which he describes
as a single on the big time. What this degraded
performance may be I have not the least notion.
As a further recommendation he states that she lifted
them out of their seats at Mosenstein’s last
week. Who she may be, and how or why, and who
or what Mr Mosenstein may be, I cannot tell you.’
‘By jove,’ I said, ’it’s
like a sort of thingummybob, isn’t it? A
sort of fate, what?’
‘I fail to understand you.’
’Well, Aunt Julia, you know,
don’t you know? Heredity, and so forth.
What’s bred in the bone will come out in the
wash, and all that kind of thing, you know.’
‘Don’t be absurd, Bertie.’
That was all very well, but it was
a coincidence for all that. Nobody ever mentions
it, and the family have been trying to forget it for
twenty-five years, but it’s a known fact that
my Aunt Julia, Gussie’s mother, was a vaudeville
artist once, and a very good one, too, I’m told.
She was playing in pantomime at Drury Lane when Uncle
Cuthbert saw her first. It was before my time,
of course, and long before I was old enough to take
notice the family had made the best of it, and Aunt
Agatha had pulled up her socks and put in a lot of
educative work, and with a microscope you couldn’t
tell Aunt Julia from a genuine dyed-in-the-wool aristocrat.
Women adapt themselves so quickly!
I have a pal who married Daisy Trimble
of the Gaiety, and when I meet her now I feel like
walking out of her presence backwards. But there
the thing was, and you couldn’t get away from
it. Gussie had vaudeville blood in him, and it
looked as if he were reverting to type, or whatever
they call it.
‘By Jove,’ I said, for
I am interested in this heredity stuff, ’perhaps
the thing is going to be a regular family tradition,
like you read about in books a sort of
Curse of the Mannering-Phippses, as it were.
Perhaps each head of the family’s going to marry
into vaudeville for ever and ever. Unto the what-d’you-call-it
generation, don’t you know?’
’Please do not be quite idiotic,
Bertie. There is one head of the family who is
certainly not going to do it, and that is Gussie.
And you are going to America to stop him.’
‘Yes, but why me?’
’Why you? You are too vexing,
Bertie. Have you no sort of feeling for the family?
You are too lazy to try to be a credit to yourself,
but at least you can exert yourself to prevent Gussie’s
disgracing us. You are going to America because
you are Gussie’s cousin, because you have always
been his closest friend, because you are the only one
of the family who has absolutely nothing to occupy
his time except golf and night clubs.’
‘I play a lot of auction.’
’And as you say, idiotic gambling
in low dens. If you require another reason, you
are going because I ask you as a personal favour.’
What she meant was that, if I refused,
she would exert the full bent of her natural genius
to make life a Hades for me. She held me with
her glittering eye. I have never met anyone who
can give a better imitation of the Ancient Mariner.
‘So you will start at once, won’t you,
Bertie?’
I didn’t hesitate.
‘Rather!’ I said. ‘Of course
I will’
Jeeves came in with the tea.
‘Jeeves,’ I said, ‘we start for
America on Saturday.’
‘Very good, sir,’ he said; ‘which
suit will you wear?’
New York is a large city conveniently
situated on the edge of America, so that you step
off the liner right on to it without an effort.
You can’t lose your way. You go out of
a barn and down some stairs, and there you are, right
in among it. The only possible objection any
reasonable chappie could find to the place is that
they loose you into it from the boat at such an ungodly
hour.
I left Jeeves to get my baggage safely
past an aggregation of suspicious-minded pirates who
were digging for buried treasures among my new shirts,
and drove to Gussie’s hotel, where I requested
the squad of gentlemanly clerks behind the desk to
produce him.
That’s where I got my first
shock. He wasn’t there. I pleaded with
them to think again, and they thought again, but it
was no good. No Augustus Mannering-Phipps on
the premises.
I admit I was hard hit. There
I was alone in a strange city and no signs of Gussie.
What was the next step? I am never one of the
master minds in the early morning; the old bean doesn’t
somehow seem to get into its stride till pretty late
in the p.m.s, and I couldn’t think what to do.
However, some instinct took me through a door at the
back of the lobby, and I found myself in a large room
with an enormous picture stretching across the whole
of one wall, and under the picture a counter, and
behind the counter divers chappies in white, serving
drinks. They have barmen, don’t you
know, in New York, not barmaids. Rum idea!
I put myself unreservedly into the
hands of one of the white chappies. He was a
friendly soul, and I told him the whole state of affairs.
I asked him what he thought would meet the case.
He said that in a situation of that
sort he usually prescribed a ‘lightning whizzer’,
an invention of his own. He said this was what
rabbits trained on when they were matched against grizzly
bears, and there was only one instance on record of
the bear having lasted three rounds. So I tried
a couple, and, by Jove! the man was perfectly right.
As I drained the second a great load seemed to fall
from my heart, and I went out in quite a braced way
to have a look at the city.
I was surprised to find the streets
quite full. People were bustling along as if
it were some reasonable hour and not the grey dawn.
In the tramcars they were absolutely standing on each
other’s necks. Going to business or something,
I take it. Wonderful johnnies!
The odd part of it was that after
the first shock of seeing all this frightful energy
the thing didn’t seem so strange. I’ve
spoken to fellows since who have been to New York,
and they tell me they found it just the same.
Apparently there’s something in the air, either
the ozone or the phosphates or something, which makes
you sit up and take notice. A kind of zip, as
it were. A sort of bally freedom, if you know
what I mean, that gets into your blood and bucks you
up, and makes you feel that
God’s in His Heaven:
All’s right with the
world,
and you don’t care if you’ve
got odd socks on. I can’t express it better
than by saying that the thought uppermost in my mind,
as I walked about the place they call Times Square,
was that there were three thousand miles of deep water
between me and my Aunt Agatha.
It’s a funny thing about looking
for things. If you hunt for a needle in a haystack
you don’t find it. If you don’t give
a darn whether you ever see the needle or not it runs
into you the first time you lean against the stack.
By the time I had strolled up and down once or twice,
seeing the sights and letting the white chappie’s
corrective permeate my system, I was feeling that
I wouldn’t care if Gussie and I never met again,
and I’m dashed if I didn’t suddenly catch
sight of the old lad, as large as life, just turning
in at a doorway down the street.
I called after him, but he didn’t
hear me, so I legged it in pursuit and caught him
going into an office on the first floor. The name
on the door was Abe Riesbitter, Vaudeville Agent,
and from the other side of the door came the sound
of many voices.
He turned and stared at me.
’Bertie! What on earth
are you doing? Where have you sprung from?
When did you arrive?’
’Landed this morning. I
went round to your hotel, but they said you weren’t
there. They had never heard of you.’
‘I’ve changed my name. I call myself
George Wilson.’
‘Why on earth?’
’Well, you try calling yourself
Augustus Mannering-Phipps over here, and see how it
strikes you. You feel a perfect ass. I don’t
know what it is about America, but the broad fact
is that it’s not a place where you can call
yourself Augustus Mannering-Phipps. And there’s
another reason. I’ll tell you later.
Bertie, I’ve fallen in love with the dearest
girl in the world.’
The poor old nut looked at me in such
a deuced cat-like way, standing with his mouth open,
waiting to be congratulated, that I simply hadn’t
the heart to tell him that I knew all about that already,
and had come over to the country for the express purpose
of laying him a stymie.
So I congratulated him.
‘Thanks awfully, old man,’
he said. ’It’s a bit premature, but
I fancy it’s going to be all right. Come
along in here, and I’ll tell you about it.’
‘What do you want in this place? It looks
a rummy spot.’
‘Oh, that’s part of the story. I’ll
tell you the whole thing.’
We opened the door marked ‘Waiting
Room’. I never saw such a crowded place
in my life. The room was packed till the walls
bulged.
Gussie explained.
‘Pros,’ he said, ’music-hall
artistes, you know, waiting to see old Abe Riesbitter.
This is September the first, vaudeville’s opening
day. The early fall,’ said Gussie, who
is a bit of a poet in his way, ’is vaudeville’s
springtime. All over the country, as August wanes,
sparkling comediennes burst into bloom, the sap stirs
in the veins of tramp cyclists, and last year’s
contortionists, waking from their summer sleep, tie
themselves tentatively into knots. What I mean
is, this is the beginning of the new season, and everybody’s
out hunting for bookings.’
‘But what do you want here?’
’Oh, I’ve just got to
see Abe about something. If you see a fat man
with about fifty-seven chins come out of that door
there grab him, for that’ll be Abe. He’s
one of those fellows who advertise each step up they
take in the world by growing another chin. I’m
told that way back in the nineties he only had two.
If you do grab Abe, remember that he knows me as George
Wilson.’
’You said that you were going
to explain that George Wilson business to me, Gussie,
old man.’
‘Well, it’s this way ’
At this juncture dear old Gussie broke
off short, rose from his seat, and sprang with indescribable
vim at an extraordinarily stout chappie who had suddenly
appeared. There was the deuce of a rush for him,
but Gussie had got away to a good start, and the rest
of the singers, dancers, jugglers, acrobats, and refined
sketch teams seemed to recognize that he had won the
trick, for they ebbed back into their places again,
and Gussie and I went into the inner room.
Mr Riesbitter lit a cigar, and looked
at us solemnly over his zareba of chins.
‘Now, let me tell ya something,’
he said to Gussie. ‘You lizzun t’
me.’
Gussie registered respectful attention.
Mr Riesbitter mused for a moment and shelled the cuspidor
with indirect fire over the edge of the desk.
‘Lizzun t’ me,’
he said again. ’I seen you rehearse, as
I promised Miss Denison I would. You ain’t
bad for an amateur. You gotta lot to learn, but
it’s in you. What it comes to is that I
can fix you up in the four-a-day, if you’ll
take thirty-five per. I can’t do better
than that, and I wouldn’t have done that if
the little lady hadn’t of kep’ after me.
Take it or leave it. What do you say?’
‘I’ll take it,’ said Gussie, huskily.
‘Thank you.’
In the passage outside, Gussie gurgled
with joy and slapped me on the back. ’Bertie,
old man, it’s all right. I’m the happiest
man in New York.’
‘Now what?’
’Well, you see, as I was telling
you when Abe came in, Ray’s father used to be
in the profession. He was before our time, but
I remember hearing about him Joe Danby.
He used to be well known in London before he came
over to America. Well, he’s a fine old boy,
but as obstinate as a mule, and he didn’t like
the idea of Ray marrying me because I wasn’t
in the profession. Wouldn’t hear of it.
Well, you remember at Oxford I could always sing a
song pretty well; so Ray got hold of old Riesbitter
and made him promise to come and hear me rehearse and
get me bookings if he liked my work. She stands
high with him. She coached me for weeks, the
darling. And now, as you heard him say, he’s
booked me in the small time at thirty-five dollars
a week.’
I steadied myself against the wall.
The effects of the restoratives supplied by my pal
at the hotel bar were beginning to work off, and I
felt a little weak. Through a sort of mist I seemed
to have a vision of Aunt Agatha hearing that the head
of the Mannering-Phippses was about to appear on the
vaudeville stage. Aunt Agatha’s worship
of the family name amounts to an obsession. The
Mannering-Phippses were an old-established clan when
William the Conqueror was a small boy going round
with bare legs and a catapult. For centuries they
have called kings by their first names and helped
dukes with their weekly rent; and there’s practically
nothing a Mannering-Phipps can do that doesn’t
blot his escutcheon. So what Aunt Agatha would
say beyond saying that it was all my fault when
she learned the horrid news, it was beyond me to imagine.
‘Come back to the hotel, Gussie,’
I said. ’There’s a sportsman there
who mixes things he calls “lightning whizzers”.
Something tells me I need one now. And excuse
me for one minute, Gussie. I want to send a cable.’
It was clear to me by now that Aunt
Agatha had picked the wrong man for this job of disentangling
Gussie from the clutches of the American vaudeville
profession. What I needed was reinforcements.
For a moment I thought of cabling Aunt Agatha to come
over, but reason told me that this would be overdoing
it. I wanted assistance, but not so badly as
that. I hit what seemed to me the happy mean.
I cabled to Gussie’s mother and made it urgent.
‘What were you cabling about?’ asked Gussie,
later.
‘Oh just to say I had arrived
safely, and all that sort of tosh,’ I answered.
Gussie opened his vaudeville career
on the following Monday at a rummy sort of place uptown
where they had moving pictures some of the time and,
in between, one or two vaudeville acts. It had
taken a lot of careful handling to bring him up to
scratch. He seemed to take my sympathy and assistance
for granted, and I couldn’t let him down.
My only hope, which grew as I listened to him rehearsing,
was that he would be such a frightful frost at his
first appearance that he would never dare to perform
again; and, as that would automatically squash the
marriage, it seemed best to me to let the thing go
on.
He wasn’t taking any chances.
On the Saturday and Sunday we practically lived in
a beastly little music-room at the offices of the publishers
whose songs he proposed to use. A little chappie
with a hooked nose sucked a cigarette and played the
piano all day. Nothing could tire that lad.
He seemed to take a personal interest in the thing.
Gussie would cleat his throat and begin:
‘There’s a great big choo-choo waiting
at the deepo.’
The chappie (playing chords): ‘Is
that so? What’s it waiting for?’
Gussie (rather rattled at the interruption):
‘Waiting for me.’
The chappie (surprised): For you?’
Gussie (sticking to it): ‘Waiting
for me-e-ee!’
The chappie (sceptically): ‘You
don’t say!’
Gussie: ‘For I’m off to Tennessee.’
The chappie (conceding a point): ‘Now,
I live at Yonkers.’
He did this all through the song.
At first poor old Gussie asked him to stop, but the
chappie said, No, it was always done. It helped
to get pep into the thing. He appealed to me
whether the thing didn’t want a bit of pep,
and I said it wanted all the pep it could get.
And the chappie said to Gussie, ‘There you are!’
So Gussie had to stand it.
The other song that he intended to
sing was one of those moon songs. He told me
in a hushed voice that he was using it because it was
one of the songs that the girl Ray sang when lifting
them out of their seats at Mosenstein’s and
elsewhere. The fact seemed to give it sacred
associations for him.
You will scarcely believe me, but
the management expected Gussie to show up and start
performing at one o’clock in the afternoon.
I told him they couldn’t be serious, as they
must know that he would be rolling out for a bit of
lunch at that hour, but Gussie said this was the usual
thing in the four-a-day, and he didn’t suppose
he would ever get any lunch again until he landed
on the big time. I was just condoling with him,
when I found that he was taking it for granted that
I should be there at one o’clock, too. My
idea had been that I should look in at night, when if
he survived he would be coming up for the
fourth time; but I’ve never deserted a pal in
distress, so I said good-bye to the little lunch I’d
been planning at a rather decent tavern I’d
discovered on Fifth Avenue, and trailed along.
They were showing pictures when I reached my seat.
It was one of those Western films, where the cowboy
jumps on his horse and rides across country at a hundred
and fifty miles an hour to escape the sheriff, not
knowing, poor chump! that he might just as well stay
where he is, the sheriff having a horse of his own
which can do three hundred miles an hour without coughing.
I was just going to close my eyes and try to forget
till they put Gussie’s name up when I discovered
that I was sitting next to a deucedly pretty girl.
No, let me be honest. When I
went in I had seen that there was a deucedly pretty
girl sitting in that particular seat, so I had taken
the next one. What happened now was that I began,
as it were, to drink her in. I wished they would
turn the lights up so that I could see her better.
She was rather small, with great big eyes and a ripping
smile. It was a shame to let all that run to
seed, so to speak, in semi-darkness.
Suddenly the lights did go up, and
the orchestra began to play a tune which, though I
haven’t much of an ear for music, seemed somehow
familiar. The next instant out pranced old Gussie
from the wings in a purple frock-coat and a brown
top-hat, grinned feebly at the audience, tripped over
his feet blushed, and began to sing the Tennessee song.
It was rotten. The poor nut had
got stage fright so badly that it practically eliminated
his voice. He sounded like some far-off echo of
the past ‘yodelling’ through a woollen
blanket.
For the first time since I had heard
that he was about to go into vaudeville I felt a faint
hope creeping over me. I was sorry for the wretched
chap, of course, but there was no denying that the
thing had its bright side. No management on earth
would go on paying thirty-five dollars a week for
this sort of performance. This was going to be
Gussie’s first and only. He would have to
leave the profession. The old boy would say,
‘Unhand my daughter’. And, with decent
luck, I saw myself leading Gussie on to the next England-bound
liner and handing him over intact to Aunt Agatha.
He got through the song somehow and
limped off amidst roars of silence from the audience.
There was a brief respite, then out he came again.
He sang this time as if nobody loved
him. As a song, it was not a very pathetic song,
being all about coons spooning in June under the moon,
and so on and so forth, but Gussie handled it in such
a sad, crushed way that there was genuine anguish
in every line. By the time he reached the refrain
I was nearly in tears. It seemed such a rotten
sort of world with all that kind of thing going on
in it.
He started the refrain, and then the
most frightful thing happened. The girl next
to me got up in her seat, chucked her head back, and
began to sing too. I say ‘too’, but
it wasn’t really too, because her first note
stopped Gussie dead, as if he had been pole-axed.
I never felt so bally conspicuous
in my life. I huddled down in my seat and wished
I could turn my collar up. Everybody seemed to
be looking at me.
In the midst of my agony I caught
sight of Gussie. A complete change had taken
place in the old lad. He was looking most frightfully
bucked. I must say the girl was singing most
awfully well, and it seemed to act on Gussie like
a tonic. When she came to the end of the refrain,
he took it up, and they sang it together, and the
end of it was that he went off the popular hero.
The audience yelled for more, and were only quieted
when they turned down the lights and put on a film.
When I had recovered I tottered round
to see Gussie. I found him sitting on a box behind
the stage, looking like one who had seen visions.
‘Isn’t she a wonder, Bertie?’
he said, devoutly. ’I hadn’t a notion
she was going to be there. She’s playing
at the Auditorium this week, and she can only just
have had time to get back to her matinee.
She risked being late, just to come and see me through.
She’s my good angel, Bertie. She saved
me. If she hadn’t helped me out I don’t
know what would have happened. I was so nervous
I didn’t know what I was doing. Now that
I’ve got through the first show I shall be all
right.’
I was glad I had sent that cable to
his mother. I was going to need her. The
thing had got beyond me.
During the next week I saw a lot of
old Gussie, and was introduced to the girl. I
also met her father, a formidable old boy with quick
eyebrows and a sort of determined expression.
On the following Wednesday Aunt Julia arrived.
Mrs Mannering-Phipps, my aunt Julia, is, I think,
the most dignified person I know. She lacks Aunt
Agatha’s punch, but in a quiet way she has always
contrived to make me feel, from boyhood up, that I
was a poor worm. Not that she harries me like
Aunt Agatha. The difference between the two is
that Aunt Agatha conveys the impression that she considers
me personally responsible for all the sin and sorrow
in the world, while Aunt Julia’s manner seems
to suggest that I am more to be pitied than censured.
If it wasn’t that the thing
was a matter of historical fact, I should be inclined
to believe that Aunt Julia had never been on the vaudeville
stage. She is like a stage duchess.
She always seems to me to be in a
perpetual state of being about to desire the butler
to instruct the head footman to serve lunch in the
blue-room overlooking the west terrace. She exudes
dignity. Yet, twenty-five years ago, so I’ve
been told by old boys who were lads about town in
those days, she was knocking them cold at the Tivoli
in a double act called ‘Fun in a Tea-Shop’,
in which she wore tights and sang a song with a chorus
that began, ‘Rumpty-tiddley-umpty-ay’.
There are some things a chappie’s
mind absolutely refuses to picture, and Aunt Julia
singing ‘Rumpty-tiddley-umpty-ay’ is one
of them.
She got straight to the point within
five minutes of our meeting.
‘What is this about Gussie?
Why did you cable for me, Bertie?’
‘It’s rather a long story,’
I said, ’and complicated. If you don’t
mind, I’ll let you have it in a series of motion
pictures. Suppose we look in at the Auditorium
for a few minutes.’
The girl, Ray, had been re-engaged
for a second week at the Auditorium, owing to the
big success of her first week. Her act consisted
of three songs. She did herself well in the matter
of costume and scenery. She had a ripping voice.
She looked most awfully pretty; and altogether the
act was, broadly speaking, a pippin.
Aunt Julia didn’t speak till
we were in our seats. Then she gave a sort of
sigh.
‘It’s twenty-five years since I was in
a music-hall!’
She didn’t say any more, but
sat there with her eyes glued on the stage.
After about half an hour the johnnies
who work the card-index system at the side of the
stage put up the name of Ray Denison, and there was
a good deal of applause.
‘Watch this act, Aunt Julia,’ I said.
She didn’t seem to hear me.
‘Twenty-five years! What did you say, Bertie?’
‘Watch this act and tell me what you think of
it.’
‘Who is it? Ray. Oh!’
‘Exhibit A,’ I said. ‘The girl
Gussie’s engaged to.’
The girl did her act, and the house
rose at her. They didn’t want to let her
go. She had to come back again and again.
When she had finally disappeared I turned to Aunt
Julia.
‘Well?’ I said.
‘I like her work. She’s an artist.’
‘We will now, if you don’t mind, step
a goodish way uptown.’
And we took the subway to where Gussie,
the human film, was earning his thirty-five per.
As luck would have it, we hadn’t been in the
place ten minutes when out he came.
‘Exhibit B,’ I said. ‘Gussie.’
I don’t quite know what I had
expected her to do, but I certainly didn’t expect
her to sit there without a word. She did not move
a muscle, but just stared at Gussie as he drooled
on about the moon. I was sorry for the woman,
for it must have been a shock to her to see her only
son in a mauve frockcoat and a brown top-hat, but I
thought it best to let her get a strangle-hold on
the intricacies of the situation as quickly as possible.
If I had tried to explain the affair without the aid
of illustrations I should have talked all day and left
her muddled up as to who was going to marry whom,
and why.
I was astonished at the improvement
in dear old Gussie. He had got back his voice
and was putting the stuff over well. It reminded
me of the night at Oxford when, then but a lad of
eighteen, he sang ’Let’s All Go Down the
Strand’ after a bump supper, standing the while
up to his knees in the college fountain. He was
putting just the same zip into the thing now.
When he had gone off Aunt Julia sat
perfectly still for a long time, and then she turned
to me. Her eyes shone queerly.
‘What does this mean, Bertie?’
She spoke quite quietly, but her voice shook a bit.
‘Gussie went into the business,’
I said, ’because the girl’s father wouldn’t
let him marry her unless he did. If you feel up
to it perhaps you wouldn’t mind tottering round
to One Hundred and Thirty-third Street and having
a chat with him. He’s an old boy with eyebrows,
and he’s Exhibit C on my list. When I’ve
put you in touch with him I rather fancy my share
of the business is concluded, and it’s up to
you.’
The Danbys lived in one of those big
apartments uptown which look as if they cost the earth
and really cost about half as much as a hall-room
down in the forties. We were shown into the sitting-room,
and presently old Danby came in.
‘Good afternoon, Mr Danby,’ I began.
I had got as far as that when there
was a kind of gasping cry at my elbow.
‘Joe!’ cried Aunt Julia, and staggered
against the sofa.
For a moment old Danby stared at her,
and then his mouth fell open and his eyebrows shot
up like rockets.
‘Julie!’
And then they had got hold of each
other’s hands and were shaking them till I wondered
their arms didn’t come unscrewed.
I’m not equal to this sort of
thing at such short notice. The change in Aunt
Julia made me feel quite dizzy. She had shed her
grande-dame manner completely, and was blushing
and smiling. I don’t like to say such things
of any aunt of mine, or I would go further and put
it on record that she was giggling. And old Danby,
who usually looked like a cross between a Roman emperor
and Napoleon Bonaparte in a bad temper, was behaving
like a small boy.
‘Joe!’
‘Julie!’
‘Dear old Joe! Fancy meeting you again!’
‘Wherever have you come from, Julie?’
Well, I didn’t know what it
was all about, but I felt a bit out of it. I
butted in:
‘Aunt Julia wants to have a talk with you, Mr
Danby.’
‘I knew you in a second, Joe!’
’It’s twenty-five years
since I saw you, kid, and you don’t look a day
older.’
‘Oh, Joe! I’m an old woman!’
’What are you doing over here?
I suppose’ old Danby’s cheerfulness
waned a trifle ’I suppose your husband
is with you?’
‘My husband died a long, long while ago, Joe.’
Old Danby shook his head.
’You never ought to have married
out of the profession, Julie. I’m not saying
a word against the late I can’t remember
his name; never could but you shouldn’t
have done it, an artist like you. Shall I ever
forget the way you used to knock them with “Rumpty-tiddley-umpty-ay"?’
‘Ah! how wonderful you were
in that act, Joe.’ Aunt Julia sighed.
’Do you remember the back-fall you used to do
down the steps? I always have said that you did
the best back-fall in the profession.’
‘I couldn’t do it now!’
’Do you remember how we put
it across at the Canterbury, Joe? Think of it!
The Canterbury’s a moving-picture house now,
and the old Mogul runs French revues.’
‘I’m glad I’m not there to see them.’
‘Joe, tell me, why did you leave England?’
’Well, I I wanted
a change. No I’ll tell you the truth, kid.
I wanted you, Julie. You went off and married
that whatever that stage-door johnny’s
name was and it broke me all up.’
Aunt Julia was staring at him.
She is what they call a well-preserved woman.
It’s easy to see that, twenty-five years ago,
she must have been something quite extraordinary to
look at. Even now she’s almost beautiful.
She has very large brown eyes, a mass of soft grey
hair, and the complexion of a girl of seventeen.
‘Joe, you aren’t going
to tell me you were fond of me yourself!’
’Of course I was fond of you.
Why did I let you have all the fat in “Fun in
a Tea-Shop”? Why did I hang about upstage
while you sang “Rumpty-tiddley-umpty-ay”?
Do you remember my giving you a bag of buns when we
were on the road at Bristol?’
‘Yes, but ’
‘Do you remember my giving you the ham sandwiches
at Portsmouth?’
‘Joe!’
’Do you remember my giving you
a seed-cake at Birmingham? What did you think
all that meant, if not that I loved you? Why,
I was working up by degrees to telling you straight
out when you suddenly went off and married that cane-sucking
dude. That’s why I wouldn’t let my
daughter marry this young chap, Wilson, unless he
went into the profession. She’s an artist ’
‘She certainly is, Joe.’
‘You’ve seen her? Where?’
’At the Auditorium just now.
But, Joe, you mustn’t stand in the way of her
marrying the man she’s in love with. He’s
an artist, too.’
‘In the small time.’
’You were in the small time
once, Joe. You mustn’t look down on him
because he’s a beginner. I know you feel
that your daughter is marrying beneath her, but ’
’How on earth do you know anything about young
Wilson?
‘He’s my son.’
‘Your son?’
’Yes, Joe. And I’ve
just been watching him work. Oh, Joe, you can’t
think how proud I was of him! He’s got it
in him. It’s fate. He’s my son
and he’s in the profession! Joe, you don’t
know what I’ve been through for his sake.
They made a lady of me. I never worked so hard
in my life as I did to become a real lady. They
kept telling me I had got to put it across, no matter
what it cost, so that he wouldn’t be ashamed
of me. The study was something terrible.
I had to watch myself every minute for years, and
I never knew when I might fluff my lines or fall down
on some bit of business. But I did it, because
I didn’t want him to be ashamed of me, though
all the time I was just aching to be back where I
belonged.’
Old Danby made a jump at her, and took her by the
shoulders.
‘Come back where you belong,
Julie!’ he cried. ’Your husband’s
dead, your son’s a pro. Come back!
It’s twenty-five years ago, but I haven’t
changed. I want you still. I’ve always
wanted you. You’ve got to come back, kid,
where you belong.’
Aunt Julia gave a sort of gulp and looked at him.
‘Joe!’ she said in a kind of whisper.
‘You’re here, kid,’
said Old Danby, huskily. ’You’ve come
back.... Twenty-five years!... You’ve
come back and you’re going to stay!’
She pitched forward into his arms, and he caught her.
‘Oh, Joe! Joe! Joe!’
she said. ’Hold me. Don’t let
me go. Take care of me.’
And I edged for the door and slipped
from the room. I felt weak. The old bean
will stand a certain amount, but this was too much.
I groped my way out into the street and wailed for
a taxi.
Gussie called on me at the hotel that
night. He curveted into the room as if he had
bought it and the rest of the city.
‘Bertie,’ he said, ‘I feel as if
I were dreaming.’
‘I wish I could feel like that,
old top,’ I said, and I took another glance
at a cable that had arrived half an hour ago from Aunt
Agatha. I had been looking at it at intervals
ever since.
’Ray and I got back to her flat
this evening. Who do you think was there?
The mater! She was sitting hand in hand with old
Danby.’
‘Yes?’
‘He was sitting hand in hand with her.’
‘Really?’
‘They are going to be married.’
‘Exactly.’
‘Ray and I are going to be married.’
‘I suppose so.’
’Bertie, old man, I feel immense.
I look round me, and everything seems to be absolutely
corking. The change in the mater is marvellous.
She is twenty-five years younger. She and old
Danby are talking of reviving “Fun in a Tea-Shop”,
and going out on the road with it.’
I got up.
‘Gussie, old top,’ I said,
’leave me for a while. I would be alone.
I think I’ve got brain fever or something.’
’Sorry, old man; perhaps New
York doesn’t agree with you. When do you
expect to go back to England?’
I looked again at Aunt Agatha’s cable.
‘With luck,’ I said, ‘in about ten
years.’
When he was gone I took up the cable and read it again.
‘What is happening?’ it read. ‘Shall
I come over?’
I sucked a pencil for a while, and then I wrote the
reply.
It was not an easy cable to word, but I managed it.
‘No,’ I wrote, ‘stay where you are.
Profession overcrowded.’