Something New P. G. Wodehouse (best classic books .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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âWe were all extremely sorry, Mr. Ferris, to read of your misfortune.â
Ashe wondered what had been happening to Mr. Ferris.
âYes, Mr. Beach,â replied the valet, âitâs a fact we made a pretty poor show.â He took a sip from his glass. âThere is no concealing the factâ âI have never tried to conceal itâ âthat poor Percy is not bright.â
Miss Chester entered the conversation.
âI couldnât see where the girlâ âwhatâs her name?â âwas so very pretty. All the papers had pieces where it said she was attractive, and whatnot; but she didnât look anything special to me from her photograph in the Mirror. What his lordship could see in her I canât understand.â
âThe photo didnât quite do her justice, Miss Chester. I was present in court, and I must admit she was svelteâ âdecidedly svelte. And you must recollect that Percy, from childhood up, has always been a highly susceptible young nut. I speak as one who knows him.â
Mr. Beach turned to Joan.
âWe are speaking of the Stockheath breach-of-promise case, Miss Simpson, of which you doubtless read in the newspapers. Lord Stockheath is a nephew of ours. I fancy his lordship was greatly shocked at the occurrence.â
âHe was,â chimed in Mr. Judson from down the table. âI happened to overhear him speaking of it to young Freddie. It was in the library on the morning when the judge made his final summing up and slipped it into Lord Stockheath so proper. âIf ever anything of this sort happens to you, you young scalawag,â he says to Freddieâ ââ
Mr. Beach coughed. âMr. Judson!â
âOh, itâs all right, Mr. Beach; weâre all in the family here, in a manner of speaking. It wasnât as though I was telling it to a lot of outsiders. Iâm sure none of these ladies or gentlemen will let it go beyond this room?â
The company murmured virtuous acquiescence.
âHe says to Freddie: âYou young scalawag, if ever anything of this sort happens to you, you can pack up and go off to Canada, for Iâll have nothing more to do with you!ââ âor words to that effect. And Freddie says: âOh, dash it all, govânor, you knowâ âwhat?âââ
However short Mr. Judsonâs imitation of his masterâs voice may have fallen of histrionic perfection, it pleased the company. The room shook with mirth.
âMr. Judson is clever, isnât he, Mr. Marson?â whispered Miss Willoughby, gazing with adoring eyes at the speaker.
Mr. Beach thought it expedient to deflect the conversation. By the unwritten law of the room every individual had the right to speak as freely as he wished about his own personal employer; but Judson, in his opinion, sometimes went a trifle too far.
âTell me, Mr. Ferris,â he said, âdoes his lordship seem to bear it well?â
âOh, Percy is bearing it well enough.â
Ashe noted as a curious fact that, though the actual valet of any person under discussion spoke of him almost affectionately by his Christian name, the rest of the company used the greatest ceremony and gave him his title with all respect. Lord Stockheath was Percy to Mr. Ferris, and the Honorable Frederick Threepwood was Freddie to Mr. Judson; but to Ferris, Mr. Judsonâs Freddie was the Honorable Frederick, and to Judson Mr. Ferrisâ Percy was Lord Stockheath. It was rather a pleasant form of etiquette, and struck Ashe as somehow vaguely feudal.
âPercy,â went on Mr. Ferris, âis bearing it like a little Britonâ âthe damages not having come out of his pocket! Itâs his old fatherâ âwho had to pay themâ âthatâs taking it to heart. You might say heâs doing himself proud. He says itâs brought on his gout again, and thatâs why heâs gone to Droitwich instead of coming here. I dare say Percy isnât sorry.â
âIt has been,â said Mr. Beach, summing up, âa most unfortunate occurrence. The modern tendency of the lower classes to get above themselves is becoming more marked every day. The young female in this case was, I understand, a barmaid. It is deplorable that our young men should allow themselves to get into such entanglements.â
âThe wonder to me,â said the irrepressible Mr. Judson, âis that more of these young chaps donât get put through it. His lordship wasnât so wide of the mark when he spoke like that to Freddie in the library that time. I give you my word, itâs a mercy young Freddie hasnât been up against it! When we were in London, Freddie and I,â he went on, cutting through Mr. Beachâs disapproving cough, âbefore what you might call the crash, when his lordship cut off supplies and had him come back and live here, Freddie was asking for itâ âbelieve me! Fell in love with a girl in the chorus of one of the theaters. Used to send me to the stage door with notes and flowers every night for weeks, as regular as clockwork.
âWhat was her name? Itâs on the tip of my tongue. Funny how you forget these things! Freddie was pretty far gone. I recollect once, happening to be looking round his room in his absence, coming on a poem he had written to her. It was hot stuffâ âvery hot! If that girl has kept those letters itâs my belief we shall see Freddie following in Lord Stockheathâs footsteps.â
There was a hush of delighted horror round the table.
âGooâ,â said Miss Chesterâs escort with unction. âYou donât say so, Mr. Judson! It wouldnât half make them look silly if the Honorable Frederick was sued for breach just now, with the wedding coming on!â
âThere is no danger of that.â
It was Joanâs voice, and she had spoken with such decision that she had the ear of the table immediately. All eyes looked in her direction. Ashe was struck with her expression. Her eyes were shining as though she were angry; and there was a flush on her face. A phrase he had used in the train came back to him. She looked like a princess in disguise.
âWhat makes you say that, Miss Simpson?â inquired Judson, annoyed. He had been at pains to make the companyâs flesh creep, and it appeared to be Joanâs aim to undo his work.
It seemed to Ashe that Joan made
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