Short Fiction P. G. Wodehouse (good books to read in english .txt) š
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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Imagine my chagrin. To visit them in London is the one thing I desire to do. But how? I accept gratefully, but I ask myself how it is to be done? I am poor blighter with no profession and nine āundred francs. He āas taken it for granted that I am wealthy.
What shall I do? I spend the afternoon trying to form a plan. And then I am resolved. I will go to my uncle and say: āUncle, I have the magnificent chance to marry the daughter of wealthy English landowner. Already I āave her gratitude. Soonā āfor I am young, āandsome, debonairā āI shall āave her love. Give me one more chance, uncle. Be decent old buck, and put up the money for this affair.ā
These words I have resolved to say to my uncle.
I go back to the hotel. I enter his private office. I reveal no secret when I say that he is not cordial.
āTen thousand devils!ā he has cried. āWhat do you here?ā
I āasten to tell him all, and plead with him to be decent old buck. He does not believe.
Who is he? he asks. This English landowner? How did I meet him? And where?
I tell him. He is amazed.
āYou āad the infernal impudence to take room in my hotel?ā he has cried.
I am crafty. I am diplomat.
āWhere else, dear uncle?ā I say. āIn all Paris there is no such āome from āome. The cuisineā āmarvellous! The bedsā āof rose-leaves! The attendanceā āsuperb! If only for one night, I have said to myself, I must stay in this of all hotels.ā
I āaveā āwhat do you say?ā ātouched the spot.
āIn what you say,ā he has said, more calmly, āthere is certainly something. It is a good hotel, this of mine!ā
The only hotel, I have assured him. The Meurice? Chut! I snap my fingers. The Ritz? Bah! Once again I snap my fingers. āIn all Paris there is no hotel like this.ā
He āas simmered down. His shirt is tucked in. āTell me again this plan of yours, Jean.ā
When I leave āim we have come to an understanding. It is agreed between us that I am to āave one last chance. He will not spoil this promising ship for the āaāporth of tar. He will give me money for my purpose. But he has said, as we part, if I fail, his āands shall be washed of me. He cannot now forget that I am his dear brotherās child; but if I fail to accomplish the conquest of the divine Miss Marion, he thinks he will be able to.
It is well. A week later I follow the āEndersons to London.
For the next few days, monsieur, I am in Paradise. My āost has much nice āouse in Eaton Square. He is rich, popular. There is much society. And Iā āI have the succes fou. I am young, āandsome, debonair. I cannot speak the English very wellā ānot so well as I now speak āimā ābut I manage. I get along. I am intelligent, amiable. Everyone loves me.
No, not everyone. Captain Bassett, he does not love me. And why? Because he loves the charming Miss Marion, and observes that already I am succeeding with her like a āouse on fire. He is ami de famille. He is captain in your Garde Ecossais, and my āost told me āe has distinguished himself as soldier pretty much. It may be so. As soldier, perāaps. But at conversation he is not so good. He is quite nice fellow, you understandā āāandsome, yes; distinguished, yes. But he does not sparkle. He has not my verve, my elan. Iā āhow do you say?ā āI make the rings round him.
But, Chut! At that moment I would have made the rings round the āole British Army. Yes, and also the Corps Diplomatique. For I am inspired. Love āas inspired me. I am conqueror.
But I will not weary you, monsieur, with the details of my wooing. You are sympathetic, but I must not weary you. Let us say that I āave in four days or five made progress the most remarkable, and proceed to the tragic end.
Almost could I tell it in four words. In them one would say that it is set forth. There was in London at that time popular a song, a comic, vulgar song of the āAlls, āThe Cat Came Back.ā You āave āeard it? Yes? I āeard it myself, and without emotion. It had no sinister warning for me. It did not strike me as omen. Yet, in those four words, monsieur, is my tragedy.
How? I shall tell you. Every word is a sword twisted in my āeart, but I shall tell you.
One afternoon we are at tea. All is well. I am vivacious, gay; Miss Marion, charming, gracious. There is present also an aunt, Mr. āEndersonās sister; but āer I do not much notice. It is to Marion I speakā āboth with my lips and also with my eyes.
As we sit, Captain Bassett is announced.
He has entered. We have greeted each other politely but coldly, for we are rivals. There is in his manner also a something which I do not much likeā āa species of suppressed triumph, of elation.
I am uneasyā ābut only yet vaguely, you will understand. I have not the foreboding that he is about to speak my death-sentence.
He addresses Miss Marion. There is joy in his voice. āMiss āEnderson,ā he has said, āI have for you the bally good news. You will remember, isnāt it, the cat belonging to the American woman in the hotel at Paris, of which you have spoken to me? Last night at dinner I have been seated beside her. At first I am not certain is it she. Then I say that there cannot be two Mrs. Balderstone Rockmettlers in Europe, so I mention to her the cat. And, to cut the long story short, I have ventured to purchase for you as a little present the cat Alexander.ā
I have uttered a cry of horror, but it is
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