Love Among the Chickens P. G. Wodehouse (ink ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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âI canât help looking respectable.â
âWhat are you going to do about it?â
âThatâs where I wanted your advice. Youâre a man of resource. What would you do in my place?â
Ukridge tapped me impressively on the shoulder.
âLaddie,â he said, âthereâs one thing thatâll carry you through any mess.â
âAnd that isâ â?â
âCheek, my boy, cheek. Gall. Nerve. Why, take my case. I never told you how I came to marry, did I? I thought not. Well, it was this way. Itâll do you a bit of good, perhaps, to hear the story, for, mark you, blessings werenât going cheap in my case either. You know Millieâs Aunt Elizabeth, the female who wrote that letter? Well, when I tell you that she was Millieâs nearest relative and that it was her consent I had to snaffle, youâll see that I was faced with a bit of a problem.â
âLetâs have it,â I said.
âWell, the first time I ever saw Millie was in a first-class carriage on the underground. Iâd got a third-class ticket, by the way. The carriage was full, and I got up and gave her my seat, and, as I hung suspended over her by a strap, damme, I fell in love with her then and there. Youâve no conception, laddie, how indescribably ripping she looked, in a sort of blue dress with a bit of red in it and a hat with thingummies. Well, we both got out at South Kensington. By that time I was gasping for air and saw that the thing wanted looking into. Iâd never had much time to bother about women, but I realised that this must not be missed. I was in love, old horse. It comes over you quite suddenly, like a tidal waveâ ââ âŠâ
âI know! I know! Good Heavens, you canât tell me anything about that.â
âWell, I followed her. She went to a house in Thurloe Square. I waited outside and thought it over. I had got to get into that shanty and make her acquaintance, if they threw me out on my ear. So I rang the bell. âIs Lady Lichenhall at home?â I asked. You spot the devilish cunning of the ruse, what? My asking for a female with a title was to make âem think I was one of the Upper Ten.â
âHow were you dressed?â I could not help asking.
âOh, it was one of my frock-coat days. Iâd been to see a man about tutoring his son, and by a merciful dispensation of Providence there was a fellow living in the same boardinghouse with me who was about my build and had a frock-coat, and he had lent it to me. At least, he hadnât exactly lent it to me, but I knew where he kept it and he was out at the time. There was nothing the matter with my appearance. Quite the young duke, I assure you, laddie, down to the last button. âIs Lady Lichenhall at home?â I asked. âNo,â said the maid, ânobody of that name here. This is Lady Lakenheathâs house.â So, you see, I had a bit of luck at the start, because the names were a bit alike. Well, I got the maid to show me in somehow, and, once in you can bet I talked for all I was worth. Kept up a flow of conversation about being misdirected and coming to the wrong house. Went away, and called a few days later. Gradually wormed my way in. Called regularly. Spied on their movements, met âem at every theatre they went to, and bowed, and finally got away with Millie before her aunt knew what was happening or who I was or what I was doing or anything.â
âAnd whatâs the moral?â
âWhy, go in like a mighty, rushing wind! Bustle âem! Donât give âem a momentâs rest or time to think or anything. Why, if Iâd given Millieâs Aunt Elizabeth time to think, where should we have been? Not at Combe Regis together, Iâll bet. You heard that letter, and know what she thinks of me now, on reflection. If Iâd gone slow and played a timid waiting-game, sheâd have thought that before I married Millie, instead of afterwards. I give you my honest word, laddie, that there was a time, towards the middle of our acquaintanceâ âafter she had stopped mixing me up with the man who came to wind the clocksâ âwhen that woman ate out of my hand! Twiceâ âon two separate occasionsâ âshe actually asked my advice about feeding her toy Pomeranian! Well, that shows you! Bustle âem, laddie! Bustle âem!â
âUkridge,â I said, âyou inspire me. You would inspire a caterpillar. I will go to the professorâ âI was going anyhow, but now I shall go aggressively. I will prise a fatherâs blessing out of him, if I have to do it with a crowbar.â
âThatâs the way to talk, old horse. Donât beat about the bush. Tell him exactly what you want and stand no nonsense. If you donât see what you want in the window, ask for it. Where did you think of tackling him?â
âPhyllis tells me that he always goes for a swim before breakfast. I thought of going down tomorrow and waylaying him.â
âYou couldnât do better. By Jove!â said Ukridge suddenly. âIâll tell you what Iâll do, laddie. I wouldnât do it for everybody, but I look on you as a favourite son. Iâll come with you, and help break the ice.â
âWhat!â
âDonât you be under any delusion, old horse,â said Ukridge paternally. âYou havenât got an easy job in front of you, and what youâll need more than anything else, when you really get down to brass-tacks, is a wise, kindly man of the world at your elbow, to whoop you on when your nerve fails you and generally stand in your corner and see that you get a fair show.â
âBut itâs rather an intimate businessâ ââ âŠâ
âNever mind! Take my tip and have me at your side. I can say things about you that you would
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