Short Fiction P. G. Wodehouse (good books to read in english .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
Book online «Short Fiction P. G. Wodehouse (good books to read in english .txt) đ». Author P. G. Wodehouse
âWhatever is the matter, Mr. Beach?â
The butler stared moodily out of the window. His face was drawn and he breathed heavily, as a man will who is suffering from a combination of strong emotion and adenoids. A ray of sunshine, which had been advancing jauntily along the carpet, caught sight of his face and slunk out, abashed.
âI have come to a decision, Mrs. Twemlow.â
âWhat about?â
âEver since his lordship started to grow it I have seen the writing on the wall plainer and plainer, and now I have made up my mind. The moment his lordship returns from London, I tender my resignation. Eighteen years have I served in his lordshipâs household, commencing as under-footman and rising to my present position, but now the end has come.â
âYou donât mean youâre going just because his lordship has grown a beard?â
âIt is the only way, Mrs. Twemlow. That beard is weakening his lordshipâs position throughout the entire countryside. Are you aware that at the recent Sunday-school treat I heard cries of âBeaver!â?â
âNo!â
âYes! And this spirit of mockery and disrespect will spread. And, what is more, that beard is alienating the best elements in the County. I saw Sir Gregory Parsloe-Parsloe look very sharp at it when he dined with us last Friday.â
âIt is not a handsome beard,â admitted the housekeeper.
âIt is not. It looks like some sort of fungus. And his lordship must be informed. As long as I remain in his lordshipâs service, it is impossible for me to speak. So I shall tender my resignation. Once that is done, my lips will no longer be sealed. Is that buttered toast under that dish, Mrs. Twemlow?â
âYes, Mr. Beach. Take a slice. It will cheer you up.â
âCheer me up!â said the butler, with a hollow laugh that sounded like a knell.
It was fortunate that Lord Emsworth, seated at the time of this conversation in the smoking-room of the Senior Conservative Club in London, had no suspicion of the supreme calamity that was about to fall upon him; for there was already much upon his mind.
In the last few days, indeed, everything seemed to have gone wrong. Angus McAllister, his head-gardener, had reported an alarming invasion of greenfly among the roses. A favourite and respected cow, strongly fancied for the Milk-Giving Jerseys event at the forthcoming Cattle Show, had contracted a mysterious ailment which was baffling the skill of the local vet. And on top of all this a telegram had arrived from his lordshipâs younger son, the Hon. Frederick Threepwood, announcing that he was back in England and desirous of seeing his father immediately.
This, felt Lord Emsworth, as he stared bleakly before him at the little groups of happy Senior Conservatives, was the most unkindest cut of all. What on earth was Freddie doing in England? Eighteen months before he had married the only daughter of Donaldsonâs Dog-Biscuits, of Long Island City, in the United States of America; and in Long Island City he ought now to have been, sedulously promoting the dog-biscuit industryâs best interests. Instead of which, here he was in Londonâ âand, according to his telegram, in trouble.
Lord Emsworth passed a hand over his chin, to assist thought, and was vaguely annoyed by some obstacle that intruded itself in the path of his fingers. Concentrating his faculties, such as they were, on this obstacle, he discovered it to be his beard. It irritated him. Hitherto, in moments of stress, he had always derived comfort from the feel of a clean-shaven chin. He felt now as if he were rubbing his hand over seaweed; and most unjustlyâ âfor it was certainly not that young manâs fault that he had decided to grow a beardâ âhe became aware of an added sense of grievance against the Hon. Freddie.
It was at this moment that he perceived his child approaching him across the smoking-room floor.
âHullo, guvânor!â said Freddie.
âWell, Frederick?â said Lord Emsworth.
There followed a silence. Freddie was remembering that he had not met his father since the day when he had slipped into the latterâs hand a note announcing his marriage to a girl whom Lord Emsworth had never seenâ âexcept once, through a telescope, when he, Freddie, was kissing her in the grounds of Blandings Castle. Lord Emsworth, on his side, was brooding on that phrase âin trouble,â which had formed so significant a part of his sonâs telegram. For twenty years he had been reluctantly helping Freddie out of trouble; and now, when it had seemed that he was off his hands forever, the thing had started all over again.
âDo sit down,â he said, testily.
Freddie had been standing on one leg, and his constrained attitude annoyed Lord Emsworth. It is a peculiarity of many fathers in the ranks of Britainâs aristocracy that practically every action on the part of their younger sons has the power to annoy them. Unlike the male codfish, which, suddenly becoming the parent of three million five hundred thousand little codfish, cheerfully resolves to love them all, the British aristocracy is apt to look with a jaundiced eye on its younger sons.
âRight-ho,â said Freddie, taking a chair. âI say, guvânor, since when the foliage?â
âWhat?â
âThe beard. I hardly recognized you.â
Another spasm of irritation shot through his lordship.
âNever mind my beard!â
âI donât if you donât,â said Freddie, agreeably. âIt was dashed good of you, guvânor, to come bounding up to town so promptly.â
âI came because your telegram said that you were in trouble.â
âBritish,â said Freddie, approvingly. âVery British.â
âThough what trouble you can be in I cannot imagine. It is surely not money again?â
âOh, no. Not money. If that had been all, I would have applied to the good old pop-in-law. Old Donaldsonâs an ace. He thinks the world of me.â
âIndeed? I met Mr. Donaldson only once, but he struck me as a man of sound judgment.â
âThatâs what I say. He thinks Iâm a wonder. If it were
Comments (0)