Uneasy Money P. G. Wodehouse (books to read in your 20s female txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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Elizabeth, such was her absorption in her thoughts, was not even aware of his presence till he spoke to her.
âI beg your pardon, is this Flackâs?â
She looked up and met that sunny eyeglass.
âThis is Flackâs,â she said.
âThank you,â said the young man.
The automobile, a stout, silent man at the helm, throbbed in the nervous way automobiles have when standing still, suggesting somehow that it were best to talk quick, as they can give you only a few minutes before dashing on to keep some other appointment. Either this or a natural volatility lent a breezy rapidity to the visitorâs speech. He looked at Elizabeth across the gate, which it had not occurred to her to open, as if she were just what he had expected her to be and a delight to his eyes, and burst into speech.
âMy nameâs Nicholsâ âJ. Nichols. I expect you remember getting a letter from me a week or two ago?â
The name struck Elizabeth as familiar. But he had gone on to identify himself before she could place it in her mind.
âLawyer, donât you know? Wrote you a letter telling you that your Uncle Ira Nutcombe had left all his money to Lord Dawlish.â
âOh, yes,â said Elizabeth, and was about to invite him to pass the barrier when he began to speak again.
âYou know, I want to explain that letter. Wrote it on a sudden impulse, donât you know. The more I have to do with the law, the more it seems to hit me that a lawyer oughtnât to act on impulse. At the moment, you see, it seemed to me the decent thing to doâ âput you out of your misery, and so forthâ âstop you entertaining hopes never to be realized, what, and all that sort of thing. You see, it was like this: Billâ âI mean Lord Dawlishâ âis a great pal of mine, a dear old chap. You ought to know him. Well, being in the know, you understand, through your uncle having deposited the will with us, I gave Bill the tip directly I heard of Mr. Nutcombeâs death. I sent him a telephone message to come to the office, and I said: âBill, old man, this old busterâ âI beg your pardonâ âthis old gentleman has left you all his money.â Quite informal, donât you know. And at the same time, in the same informal spirit, I wrote you the letter.â He dammed the torrent for a moment. âBy the way, of course you are Miss Elizabeth Boyd, what?â
âYes.â
The young man seemed relieved.
âIâm glad of that,â he said. âFunny if you hadnât been. Youâd have wondered what on earth I was talking about.â
In spite of her identity this was precisely what Elizabeth was doing. Her mind, still under a cloud, had been unable to understand one word of Mr. Nicholsâ discourse. Judging from his appearance, which was that of a bewildered hosepipe or a snake whose brain is being momentarily overtaxed, Nutty was in the same difficulty. He had joined the group at the gate, abandoning the pebble which he had been kicking in the background, and was now leaning on the top bar, a picture of silent perplexity.
âYou see, the trouble is,â resumed the young man, âmy governor, whoâs the head of the firm, is all for doing things according to precedent. He loves red tapeâ âwears it wrapped round him in winter instead of flannel. Heâs all for doing things in the proper legal way, which, as I dare say you know, takes months. And, meanwhile, everybodyâs wondering whatâs happened and who has got the money, and so on and so forth. I thought I would skip all that and let you know right away exactly where you stood, so I wrote you that letter. I donât think my temperamentâs quite suited to the law, donât you know, and if he ever hears that I wrote you that letter I have a notion that the governor will think so too. So I came over here to ask you, if you donât mind, not to mention it when you get in touch with the governor. I frankly admit that letter, written with the best intentions, was a bloomer.â
With which manly admission the young man paused, and allowed the rays of his eyeglass to play upon Elizabeth in silence. Elizabeth tried to piece together what little she understood of his monologue.
âYou mean that you want me not to tell your father that I got a letter from you?â
âExactly that. And thanks very much for not saying âwithout prejudice,â or anything of that kind. The governor would have done it.â
âBut I donât understand. Why should you think that I should ever mention anything to your father?â
âMight slip out, you know, without your meaning it.â
âBut when? I shall never meet your father.â
âYou might quite easily. He might want to see you about the money.â
âThe money?â
The eyebrow above the eyeglass rose, surprised.
âHavenât you had a letter from the governor?â
âNo.â
The young man made a despairing gesture.
âI took it for granted that it had come on the same boat that I did. There you have the governorâs methods! Couldnât want a better example! I suppose some legal formality or other has cropped up and laid him a stymie, and heâs waiting to get round it. You really mean he hasnât written? Why, dash it,â said the young man, as one to whom all is revealed, âthen you canât have understood a word of what Iâve been saying!â
For the first time Elizabeth found herself capable of smiling. She liked this incoherent young man.
âI havenât,â she said.
âYou donât know about the will?â
âOnly what you told me in your letter.â
âWell, Iâm hanged! Tell meâ âI hadnât the honor of knowing him personallyâ âwas the late Mr. Nutcombeâs whole life as eccentric as his will-making? It seems to meâ ââ
Nutty spoke.
âUncle Iraâs middle name,â he said, âwas Bloomingdale. That,â he proceeded bitterly, âis the frightful injustice of it all. I had to suffer from it right along, and all
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