Something New P. G. Wodehouse (best classic books .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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âMr. Marson, permit me to introduce you to Mr. Ferris, Lord Stockheathâs gentleman.â
Mr. Ferris, a dark, cynical man, with a high forehead, shook Ashe by the hand.
âHappy to meet you, Mr. Marson.â
âMiss Willoughby, this is Mr. Marson, who will take you in to dinner. Miss Willoughby is Lady Mildred Mantâs lady. As of course you are aware, Lady Mildred, our eldest daughter, married Colonel Horace Mant, of the Scots Guards.â
Ashe was not aware, and he was rather surprised that Mrs. Twemlow should have a daughter whose name was Lady Mildred; but reason, coming to his rescue, suggested that by our she meant the offspring of the Earl of Emsworth and his late countess. Miss Willoughby was a lighthearted damsel, with a smiling face and chestnut hair, done low over her forehead.
Since etiquette forbade that he should take Joan in to dinner, Ashe was glad that at least an apparently pleasant substitute had been provided. He had just been introduced to an appallingly statuesque lady of the name of Chester, Lady Ann Warblingtonâs own maid, and his somewhat hazy recollections of Joanâs lecture on below-stairs precedence had left him with the impression that this was his destined partner. He had frankly quailed at the prospect of being linked to so much aristocratic hauteur.
When the final introduction had been made conversation broke out again. It dealt almost exclusively, so far as Ashe could follow it, with the idiosyncrasies of the employers of those present. He took it that this happened down the entire social scale below stairs. Probably the lower servants in the servantsâ hall discussed the upper servants in the room, and the still lower servants in the housemaidsâ sitting-room discussed their superiors of the servantsâ hall, and the stillroom gossiped about the housemaidsâ sitting-room.
He wondered which was the bottom circle of all, and came to the conclusion that it was probably represented by the small respectful boy who had acted as his guide a short while before. This boy, having nobody to discuss anybody with, presumably sat in solitary meditation, brooding on the odd-job man.
He thought of mentioning this theory to Miss Willoughby, but decided that it was too abstruse for her, and contented himself with speaking of some of the plays he had seen before leaving London. Miss Willoughby was an enthusiast on the drama; and, Colonel Mantâs military duties keeping him much in town, she had had wide opportunities of indulging her tastes. Miss Willoughby did not like the country. She thought it dull.
âDonât you think the country dull, Mr. Marson?â
âI shanât find it dull here,â said Ashe; and he was surprised to discover, through the medium of a pleased giggle, that he was considered to have perpetrated a compliment.
Mr. Beach appeared in due season, a little distrait, as becomes a man who has just been engaged on important and responsible duties.
âAlfred spilled the hock!â Ashe heard him announce to Mrs. Twemlow in a bitter undertone. âWithin half an inch of his lordshipâs arm he spilled it.â
Mrs. Twemlow murmured condolences. Mr. Beachâs set expression was of one who is wondering how long the strain of existence can be supported.
âMr. Beach, if you please, dinner is served.â
The butler crushed down sad thoughts and crooked his elbow.
âMrs. Twemlow!â
Ashe, miscalculating degrees of rank in spite of all his caution, was within a step of leaving the room out of his proper turn; but the startled pressure of Miss Willoughbyâs hand on his arm warned him in time. He stopped, to allow the statuesque Miss Chester to sail out under escort of a wizened little man with a horseshoe pin in his tie, whose name, in company with nearly all the others that had been spoken to him since he came into the room, had escaped Asheâs memory.
âYou were nearly making a bloomer!â said Miss Willoughby brightly. âYou must be absentminded, Mr. Marsonâ âlike his lordship.â
âIs Lord Emsworth absentminded?â
Miss Willoughby laughed.
âWhy, he forgets his own name sometimes! If it wasnât for Mr. Baxter, goodness knows what would happen to him.â
âI donât think I know Mr. Baxter.â
âYou will if you stay here long. You canât get away from him if youâre in the same house. Donât tell anyone I said so; but heâs the real master here. His lordshipâs secretary he calls himself; but heâs really everything rolled into oneâ âlike the man in the play.â
Ashe, searching in his dramatic memories for such a person in a play, inquired whether Miss Willoughby meant Pooh-Bah, in The Mikado of which there had been a revival in London recently. Miss Willoughby did mean Pooh-Bah.
âBut Nosy Parker is what I call him,â she said. âHe minds everybodyâs business as well as his own.â
The last of the procession trickled into the stewardâs room. Mr. Beach said grace somewhat patronizingly. The meal began.
âYouâve seen Miss Peters, of course, Mr. Marson?â said Miss Willoughby, resuming conversation with the soup.
âJust for a few minutes at Paddington.â
âOh! You havenât been with Mr. Peters long, then?â
Ashe began to wonder whether everybody he met was going to ask him this dangerous question.
âOnly a day or so.â
âWhere were you before that?â
Ashe was conscious of a prickly sensation. A little more of this and he might as well reveal his true mission at the castle and have done with it.
âOh, I wasâ âthat is to sayâ ââ
âHow are you feeling after the journey, Mr. Marson?â said a voice from the other side of the table; and Ashe, looking up gratefully, found Joanâs eyes looking into his with a curiously amused expression.
He was too grateful for the interruption to try to account for this. He replied that he was feeling very well, which was not the case. Miss Willoughbyâs interest was diverted to a discussion of the defects of the various railroad systems of Great Britain.
At the head of the table Mr. Beach had started an intimate conversation with Mr. Ferris, the valet of Lord Stockheath, the Honorable Freddieâs âpoor old Percyââ âa cousin, Ashe had gathered, of Aline Petersâ husband-to-be. The butler spoke in more measured tones even
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