Short Fiction P. G. Wodehouse (good books to read in english .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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Did I describe the peculiar isolation of that room on the top floor, where the portrait was? I donât think I did. It was, as a matter of fact, the only room in those parts, for, in the days when he did his amateur painting, old Harold was strong on the artistic seclusion business and hated noise, and his studio was the only room in use on that floor.
In short, to sum up, the thing was a cinch.
Punctually at ten minutes to seven, I was in readiness on the scene. There was a recess with a curtain in front of it a few yards from the door, and there I waited, fondling my little wedge, for Harold to walk up and allow the proceedings to start. It was almost pitch-dark, and that made the time of waiting seem longer. Presentlyâ âI seemed to have been there longer than ten minutesâ âI heard steps approaching. They came past where I stood, and went on into the room. The door closed, and I hopped out and sprinted up to it, and the next moment I had the good old wedge under the woodâ âas neat a job as you could imagine. And then I strolled downstairs, and toddled off to the inn.
I didnât hurry over my dinner, partly because the browsing and sluicing at the inn was really astonishingly good for a roadhouse and partly because I wanted to give Harold plenty of time for meditation. I suppose it must have been a couple of hours or more when I finally turned in at the front door. Somebody was playing the piano in the drawing room. It could only be Hilda who was playing, and I had doubts as to whether she wanted company just thenâ âmine, at any rate.
Eventually I decided to risk it, for I wanted to hear the latest about dear old Harold, so in I went, and it wasnât Hilda at all; it was Ann Selby.
âHello,â I said. âI didnât know you were coming down here.â It seemed so odd, donât you know, as it hadnât been more than ten days or so since her last visit.
âGood evening, Reggie,â she said.
âWhatâs been happening?â I asked.
âHow do you know anything has been happening?â
âI guessed it.â
âWell, youâre quite right, as it happens, Reggie. A good deal has been happening.â She went to the door, and looked out, listening. Then she shut it, and came back. âHilda has revolted!â
âRevolted?â
âYes, put her foot downâ âmade a standâ ârefused to go on meekly putting up with Haroldâs insane behavior.â
âI donât understand.â
She gave me a look of pity. âYou always were so dense, Reggie. I will tell you the whole thing from the beginning. You remember what I spoke to you about, one day when we were lunching together? Well, I donât suppose you have noticed itâ âI know what you areâ âbut things have been getting steadily worse. For one thing, Harold insisted on lengthening his visits to the top room, and naturally Ponsonby complained. Hilda tells me that she had to plead with him to induce him to stay on. Then the climax came. I donât know if you recollect Ameliaâs brother Percy? You must have met him when she was aliveâ âa perfectly unspeakable person with a loud voice and overpowering manners. Suddenly, out of a blue sky, Harold announced his intention of inviting him to stay. It was the last straw. This afternoon I received a telegram from poor Hilda, saying that she was leaving Harold and coming to stay with me, and a few hours later the poor child arrived at my apartment.â
You mustnât suppose that I stood listening silently to this speech. Every time she seemed to be going to stop for breath I tried to horn in and tell her all these things which had been happening were not mere flukes, as she seemed to think, but parts of a deuced carefully planned scheme of my own. Every time Iâd try to interrupt, Ann would wave me down, and carry on without so much as a semicolon.
But at this point I did manage a word in. âI know, I know, I know! I did it all. It was I who suggested to Harold that he should lengthen the meditations, and insisted on his inviting Percy to stay.â
I had hardly got the words out, when I saw that they were not making the hit I had anticipated. She looked at me with an expression of absolute scorn, donât you know.
âWell, really, Reggie,â she said at last, âI never have had a very high opinion of your intelligence, as you know, but this is a revelation to me. What motive you can have had, unless you did it in a spirit of pure mischiefâ ââ She stopped, and there was a glare of undiluted repulsion in her eyes. âReggie! I canât believe it! Of all the things I loathe most, a practical joker is the worst. Do you mean to tell me you did all this as a practical joke?â
âGreat Scott, no! It was like thisâ ââ
I paused for a bare second to collect my thoughts, so as to put the thing clearly to her. I might have known what would happen. She dashed right in and collared the conversation.
âWell, never mind. As it happens, there is no harm done. Quite the reverse, in fact. Hilda left a note for Harold telling him what she had done and where she had gone and why she had gone, and Harold found
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