Right Ho, Jeeves P. G. Wodehouse (ereader with android txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
Book online «Right Ho, Jeeves P. G. Wodehouse (ereader with android txt) đ». Author P. G. Wodehouse
âA whisky and soda, eh? You couldnât have done better.â
âSoda?â said Gussie thoughtfully. âI knew there was something I had forgotten.â
âDidnât you put any soda in it?â
âIt never occurred to me. I just nipped into the dining-room and drank out of the decanter.â
âHow much?â
âOh, about ten swallows. Twelve, maybe. Or fourteen. Say sixteen medium-sized gulps. Gosh, Iâm thirsty.â
He moved over to the washstand and drank deeply out of the water bottle. I cast a covert glance at Uncle Tomâs photograph behind his back. For the first time since it had come into my life, I was glad that it was so large. It hid its secret well. If Gussie had caught sight of that jug of orange juice, he would unquestionably have been on to it like a knife.
âWell, Iâm glad youâre feeling braced,â I said.
He moved buoyantly from the wash-hand stand, and endeavoured to slosh me on the back again. Foiled by my nimble footwork, he staggered to the bed and sat down upon it.
âBraced? Did I say I could bite a tiger?â
âYou did.â
âMake it two tigers. I could chew holes in a steel door. What an ass you must have thought me out there in the garden. I see now you were laughing in your sleeve.â
âNo, no.â
âYes,â insisted Gussie. âThat very sleeve,â he said, pointing. âAnd I donât blame you. I canât imagine why I made all that fuss about a potty job like distributing prizes at a rotten little country grammar school. Can you imagine, Bertie?â
âNo.â
âExactly. Nor can I imagine. Thereâs simply nothing to it. I just shin up on the platform, drop a few gracious words, hand the little blighters their prizes, and hop down again, admired by all. Not a suggestion of split trousers from start to finish. I mean, why should anybody split his trousers? I canât imagine. Can you imagine?â
âNo.â
âNor can I imagine. I shall be a riot. I know just the sort of stuff thatâs neededâ âsimple, manly, optimistic stuff straight from the shoulder. This shoulder,â said Gussie, tapping. âWhy I was so nervous this morning I canât imagine. For anything simpler than distributing a few footling books to a bunch of grimy-faced kids I canât imagine. Still, for some reason I canât imagine, I was feeling a little nervous, but now I feel fine, Bertieâ âfine, fine, fineâ âand I say this to you as an old friend. Because thatâs what you are, old man, when all the smoke has cleared awayâ âan old friend. I donât think Iâve ever met an older friend. How long have you been an old friend of mine, Bertie?â
âOh, years and years.â
âImagine! Though, of course, there must have been a time when you were a new friend.â ââ ⊠Hullo, the luncheon gong. Come on, old friend.â
And, rising from the bed like a performing flea, he made for the door.
I followed rather pensively. What had occurred was, of course, so much velvet, as you might say. I mean, I had wanted a braced Fink-Nottleâ âindeed, all my plans had had a braced Fink-Nottle as their end and aimâ âbut I found myself wondering a little whether the Fink-Nottle now sliding down the banister wasnât, perhaps, a shade too braced. His demeanour seemed to me that of a man who might quite easily throw bread about at lunch.
Fortunately, however, the settled gloom of those round him exercised a restraining effect upon him at the table. It would have needed a far more plastered man to have been rollicking at such a gathering. I had told the Bassett that there were aching hearts in Brinkley Court, and it now looked probable that there would shortly be aching tummies. Anatole, I learned, had retired to his bed with a fit of the vapours, and the meal now before us had been cooked by the kitchen maidâ âas C3 a performer as ever wielded a skillet.
This, coming on top of their other troubles, induced in the company a pretty unanimous silenceâ âa solemn stillness, as you might sayâ âwhich even Gussie did not seem prepared to break. Except, therefore, for one short snatch of song on his part, nothing untoward marked the occasion, and presently we rose, with instructions from Aunt Dahlia to put on festal raiment and be at Market Snodsbury not later than 3:30. This leaving me ample time to smoke a gasper or two in a shady bower beside the lake, I did so, repairing to my room round about the hour of three.
Jeeves was on the job, adding the final polish to the old topper, and I was about to apprise him of the latest developments in the matter of Gussie, when he forestalled me by observing that the latter had only just concluded an agreeable visit to the Wooster bedchamber.
âI found Mr. Fink-Nottle seated here when I arrived to lay out your clothes, sir.â
âIndeed, Jeeves? Gussie was in here, was he?â
âYes, sir. He left only a few moments ago. He is driving to the school with Mr. and Mrs. Travers in the large car.â
âDid you give him your story of the two Irishmen?â
âYes, sir. He laughed heartily.â
âGood. Had you any other contributions for him?â
âI ventured to suggest that he might mention to the young gentlemen that education is a drawing out, not a putting in. The late Lord Brancaster was much addicted to presenting prizes at schools, and he invariably employed this dictum.â
âAnd how did he react to that?â
âHe laughed heartily, sir.â
âThis surprised you, no doubt? This practically incessant merriment, I mean.â
âYes, sir.â
âYou thought it odd in one who, when you last saw him, was well up in Group A of the defeatists.â
âYes, sir.â
âThere is a ready explanation, Jeeves. Since you last saw him, Gussie has been on a bender. Heâs as tight as an owl.â
âIndeed, sir?â
âAbsolutely. His nerve cracked under the strain, and he sneaked into the dining-room and started
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