Short Fiction P. G. Wodehouse (good books to read in english .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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âWell?â
âSheâs left me.â
âLeft you!â
âAbsolutely flat. Buzzed off, and the note pinned to the pincushion. Sheâs now at the Savoy and wonât let me come near her; and Iâm at a service-flat in King Street, eating my jolly old heart out, if you know what I mean.â
Lord Emsworth uttered a deep sigh. He gazed drearily at his son, marvelling that it should be in the power of any young man, even a specialist like Freddie, so consistently to make a mess of his affairs. By what amounted to a miracle this offspring of his had contrived to lure a millionaireâs daughter into marrying him; and now, it seemed, he had let her get away. Years before, when a boy, and romantic as most boys are, his lordship had sometimes regretted that the Emsworths, though an ancient clan, did not possess a Family Curse. How little he had suspected that he was shortly about to become the father of it!
âThe fault,â he said, tonelessly, âwas, I suppose, yours?â
âIn a way, yes. Butâ ââ
âWhat precisely occurred?â
âWell, it was like this, guvânor. You know how keen Iâve always been on the movies. Going to every picture I could manage, and so forth. Well, one night, as I was lying awake, I suddenly got the idea for a scenario of my own. And dashed good it was, too. It was about a poor man who had an accident, and the coves at the hospital said that an operation was the only thing that could save his life. But they wouldnât operate without five hundred dollars down in advance, and he hadnât got five hundred dollars. So his wife got hold of a millionaire.â
âWhat,â inquired Lord Emsworth, âis all this drivel?â
âDrivel, guvânor?â said Freddie, wounded. âIâm only telling you my scenario.â
âI have no wish to hear it. What I am anxious to learn from youâ âin as few words as possibleâ âis the reason for the breach between your wife and yourself.â
âWell, Iâm telling you. It all started with the scenario. When Iâd written it, I naturally wanted to sell it to somebody; and just about then Pauline Petite came East and took a house at Great Neck, and a pal of mine introduced me to her.â
âWho is Pauline Petite?â
âGood heavens, guvânor!â Freddie stared, amazed. âYou donât mean to sit there and tell me youâve never heard of Pauline Petite! The movie star. Didnât you see Passionâs Slaves?â
âI did not.â
âNor Silken Fetters?â
âNever.â
âNor Purple Passion? Nor Bonds of Gold? Nor Seduction? Great Scott, guvânor, you havenât lived!â
âWhat about this woman?â
âWell, a pal introduced me to her, you see, and I started to pave the way to getting her interested in this scenario of mine. Because, if she liked it, of course it meant everything. Well, this involved seeing a good deal of her, you understand, and one night Jane Yorke happened to come on us having a bite together at an inn.â
âGood God!â
âOh, it was all perfectly respectable, guvânor. All strictly on the up-and-up. Purely a business relationship. But the trouble was I had kept the thing from Aggie because I wanted to surprise her. I wanted to be able to come to her with the scenario accepted and tell her I wasnât such a fool as I looked.â
âAny woman capable of believing thatâ ââ
âAnd most unfortunately I had said that I had to go to Chicago that night on business. So, what with one thing and anotherâ âWell, as I said just now, sheâs at the Savoy and Iâmâ ââ
âWho is Jane Yorke?â
A scowl marred Freddieâs smooth features.
âA pill, guvânor. One of the worst. A Jebusite and Amalekite. If it hadnât been for her, I believe I could have fixed the thing. But she got hold of Aggie and whisked her away and poisoned her mind. This woman, guvânor, has got a brother in the background, and she wanted Aggie to marry the brother. And my belief is that she is trying to induce Aggie to pop over to Paris and get a divorce, so as to give the blighted brother another look in, dash him! So now, guvânor, is the time for action. Now is the moment to rally round as never before. I rely on you.â
âMe? What on earth do you expect me to do?â
âWhy, go to her and plead with her. They do it in the movies. Iâve seen thousands of pictures where the white-haired old fatherâ ââ
âStuff and nonsense!â said Lord Emsworth, stung to the quickâ âfor, like so many well-preserved men of ripe years, he was under the impression that he was merely slightly brindled. âYou have made your bed, and you must stew in it.â
âEh?â
âI mean, you must stew in your own juice. You have brought this trouble on yourself by your own idiotic behaviour, and you must bear the consequences.â
âYou mean you wonât go and plead?â
âNo.â
âYou mean yes?â
âI mean no.â
âNot plead?â said Freddie, desiring to get this thing clear.
âI refuse to allow myself to be drawn into the matter.â
âYou wonât even give her a ring on the telephone?â
âI will not.â
âOh, come, guvânor. Be a sport. Her suiteâs Number Sixty-Seven. You can get her in a second and state my case, all for the cost of twopence. Have a pop at it.â
âNo.â
Freddie rose with set face. He looked like a sheep that has had bad news.
âVery well,â he said, tensely. âThen I may as well tell you, guvânor, that my life is as good as over. The future holds nothing for me. I am a spent egg. If Aggie goes to Paris and gets that divorce, I shall retire to some quiet spot and there pass the few remaining years of my existence, a blighted wreck. Goodbye, guvânor.â
âGoodbye.â
âHonk-honk!â said Freddie, moodily.
As a general rule, Lord Emsworth was an early and a sound sleeper, one of the few qualities which he shared with Napoleon Bonaparte
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