Ukridge Stories P. G. Wodehouse (jenna bush book club txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
Book online «Ukridge Stories P. G. Wodehouse (jenna bush book club txt) đ». Author P. G. Wodehouse
âFrom the sound of her voice, the only time I ever got near her, I should say she hadnât one.â
âThatâs where you make your error, old son. Butter her up about her beastly novels, and a child could eat out of her hand. When Tuppy let me down I just lit a pipe and had a good think. And then suddenly I got it. I went to a pal of mine, a thorough sportsmanâ âyou donât know him. I must introduce you some dayâ âand he wrote my aunt a letter from you, asking if you could come and interview her for Womanâs Sphere. Itâs a weekly paper, which I happen to know she takes in regularly. Now, listen, laddie. Donât interrupt for a moment. I want you to get the devilish shrewdness of this. You go and interview her, and sheâs all over you. Tickled to death. Of course, youâll have to do a good deal of Young Disciple stuff, but you wonât mind that. After youâve soft-soaped her till sheâs purring like a dynamo, you get up to go. âWell,â you say, âthis has been the proudest occasion of my life, meeting one whose work I have so long admired.â And she says, âThe pleasure is mine, old horse.â And you slop over each other a bit more. Then you say sort of casually, as if it had just occurred to you, âOh, by the way, I believe my cousinâ âor sisterâ âNo, better make it cousinâ âI believe my cousin, Miss Dora Mason, is your secretary, isnât she?â âShe isnât any such damâ thing,â replies my aunt. âI sacked her three days ago.â Thatâs your cue, laddie. Your face falls, you register concern, youâre frightfully cut up. You start in to ask her to let Dora come back. And youâre such pals by this time that she can refuse you nothing. And there you are! My dear old son, you can take it from me that if you only keep your head and do the Young Disciple stuff properly the thing canât fail. Itâs an ironclad scheme. There isnât a flaw in it.â
âThere is one.â
âI think youâre wrong. Iâve gone over the thing very carefully. What is it?â
âThe flaw is that Iâm not going anywhere near your infernal aunt. So you can trot back to your forger chum and tell him heâs wasted a good sheet of letter paper.â
A pair of pince-nez tinkled into a plate. Two pained eyes blinked at me across the table. Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge was wounded to the quick.
âYou donât mean to say youâre backing out?â he said, in a low, quivering voice.
âI never was in.â
âLaddie,â said Ukridge, weightily, resting an elbow on his last slice of bacon, âI want to ask you one question. Just one simple question. Have you ever let me down? Has there been one occasion in our long friendship when I have relied upon you and been deceived? Not one!â
âEverythingâs got to have a beginning. Iâm starting now.â
âBut think of her. Dora! Poor little Dora. Think of poor little Dora.â
âIf this business teaches her to keep away from you, it will be a blessing in the end.â
âBut, laddieâ ââ
I suppose there is some fatal weakness in my character, or else the brand of bacon which Bowles cooked possessed a peculiarly mellowing quality. All I know is that, after being adamant for a good ten minutes, I finished breakfast committed to a task from which my soul revolted. After all, as Ukridge said, it was rough on the girl. Chivalry is chivalry. We must strive to lend a helping hand as we go through this world of ours, and all that sort of thing. Four oâclock on the following afternoon found me entering a cab and giving the driver the address of Heath House, Wimbledon Common.
My emotions on entering Heath House were such as I would have felt had I been keeping a tryst with a dentist who by some strange freak happened also to be a duke. From the moment when a butler of super-Bowles dignity opened the door and, after regarding me with ill-concealed dislike, started to conduct me down a long hall, I was in the grip of both fear and humility. Heath House is one of the stately homes of Wimbledon; how beautiful they stand, as the poet says: and after the humble drabness of Ebury Street it frankly overawed me. Its keynote was an extreme neatness which seemed to sneer at my squashy collar and reproach my baggy trouser-leg. The farther I penetrated over the polished floor, the more vividly was it brought home to me that I was one of the submerged tenth and could have done with a haircut. I had not been aware when I left home that my hair was unusually long, but now I seemed to be festooned by a matted and offensive growth. A patch on my left shoe which had had a rather comfortable look in Ebury Street stood out like a blot on the landscape. No, I was not at my ease; and when I reflected that in a few moments I was to meet Ukridgeâs aunt, that legendary figure, face to face, a sort of wistful admiration filled me for the beauty of the nature of one who would go through all this to help a girl he had never even met. There was no doubt about itâ âthe facts spoke for themselvesâ âI was one of the finest fellows I had ever known. Nevertheless, there was no getting away from it, my trousers did bag at the knee.
âMr. Corcoran,â announced the butler, opening the drawing-room door. He spoke with just that intonation of voice that seemed to disclaim all responsibility.
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