THE INIMITABLE JEEVES
PART
CHAPTER XVIII
ALL'S WELL
I stared at
him. That flower in his buttonhole.... That dazed look.... Yes, he had all the
symptoms; and yet the thing seemed incredible. The fact is, I suppose, I'd seen
so many of young Bingo's love affairs start off with a whoop and a rattle and
poof themselves out half-way down the straight that I couldn't believe he had
actually brought it off at last.
"Married!"
"Yes. This
morning at a registrar's in Holburn. I've just come from the wedding
breakfast."
I sat up in my
chair. Alert. The man of affairs. It seemed to me that this thing wanted
threshing out in all its aspects.
"Let's get
this straight," I said. "You're really married?"
"Yes."
"The same
girl you were in love with the day before yesterday?"
"What do
you mean?"
"Well, you
know what you're like. Tell me, what made you commit this rash act?"
"I wish
the deuce you wouldn't talk like that. I married her because I love her, dash
it. The best little woman," said young Bingo, "in the world."
"That's
all right, and deuced creditable, I'm sure. But have you reflected what your
uncle's going to say? The last I saw of him, he was by
no means in a confetti-scattering mood."
"Bertie,"
said Bingo, "I'll be frank with you. The little woman rather put it up to
me, if you know what I mean. I told her how my uncle felt about it, and she
said that we must part unless I loved her enough to brave the old boy's wrath
and marry her right away. So I had no alternative. I bought a buttonhole and
went to it."
"And what
do you propose to do now?"
"Oh, I've
got it all planned out! After you've seen my uncle and broken the
news...."
"What!"
"After
you've...."
"You don't
mean to say you think you're going to lug me into it?"
He looked at me
like Lilian Gish coming out of a swoon.
"Is this
Bertie Wooster talking?" he said, pained.
"Yes, it
jolly well is."
"Bertie,
old man," said Bingo, patting me gently here and there, "reflect! We
were at school——"
"Oh, all
right!"
"Good man!
I knew I could rely on you. She's waiting down below in the hall. We'll pick
her up and dash round to Pounceby Gardens right away."
I had only seen
the bride before in her waitress kit, and I was rather expecting that on her
wedding day she would have launched out into something fairly zippy in the way
of upholstery. The first gleam of hope I had felt since the start of this black
business came to me when I saw that, instead of being all velvet and scent and
flowery hat, she was dressed in dashed good taste. Quiet. Nothing loud. So far
as looks went, she might have stepped straight out of Berkeley Square.
"This is
my old pal, Bertie Wooster, darling," said Bingo. "We were at school
together, weren't we, Bertie?"
"We
were!" I said. "How do you do? I think we—er—met at lunch the other
day, didn't we?"
"Oh, yes!
How do you do?"
"My uncle
eats out of Bertie's hand," explained Bingo. "So he's coming round
with us to start things off and kind of pave the way. Hi, taxi!"
We didn't talk
much on the journey. Kind of tense feeling. I was glad when the cab stopped at
old Bittlesham's wigwam and we all hopped out. I left Bingo and wife in the
hall while I went upstairs to the drawing-room, and the butler toddled off to
dig out the big chief.
While I was
prowling about the room waiting for him to show up, I suddenly caught sight of
that bally "Woman Who Braved All" lying on one of the tables. It was
open at page two hundred and fifteen, and a passage heavily marked in pencil
caught my eye. And directly I read it I saw that it was all to the mustard and
was going to help me in my business.
This was the
passage:
"What
can prevail"—Millicent's eyes flashed as she faced the stern old
man—"what can prevail against a pure and all-consuming love? Neither principalities
nor powers, my lord, nor all the puny prohibitions of guardians and parents. I
love your son, Lord Mindermere, and nothing can keep us apart. Since time first
began this love of ours was fated, and who are you to pit yourself against the
decrees of Fate?"
The earl
looked at her keenly from beneath his bushy eyebrows.
"Humph!"
he said.
Before I had
time to refresh my memory as to what Millicent's come-back had been to that
remark, the door opened and old Bittlesham rolled in. All over me, as usual.
"My dear
Mr. Wooster, this is an unexpected pleasure. Pray take a seat. What can I do
for you?"
"Well, the
fact is, I'm more or less in the capacity of a jolly old ambassador at the
moment. Representing young Bingo, you know."
His geniality sagged
a trifle, I thought, but he didn't heave me out, so I pushed on.
"The way I
always look at it," I said, "is that it's dashed difficult for
anything to prevail against what you might call a pure and all-consuming love.
I mean, can it be done? I doubt it."
My eyes didn't
exactly flash as I faced the stern old man, but I sort of waggled my eyebrows.
He puffed a bit and looked doubtful.
"We
discussed this matter at our last meeting, Mr. Wooster. And on that
occasion...."
"Yes. But
there have been developments, as it were, since then. The fact of the matter
is," I said, coming to the point, "this morning young Bingo went and
jumped off the dock."
"Good
heavens!" He jerked himself to his feet with his mouth open. "Why?
Where? Which dock?"
I saw that he
wasn't quite on.
"I was
speaking metaphorically," I explained, "if that's the word I want. I
mean he got married."
"Married!"
"Absolutely
hitched up. I hope you aren't ratty about it, what? Young blood, you know. Two
loving hearts, and all that."
He panted in a
rather overwrought way.
"But who
are you to pit yourself against the decrees of Fate?" I said, taking a
look at the prompt book out of the corner of my eye.
"Eh?"
"You see,
this love of theirs was fated. Since time began, you know."
I'm bound to
admit that if he'd said "Humph!" at this juncture, he would have had
me stymied. Luckily it didn't occur to him. There was a silence, during which
he appeared to brood a bit. Then his eye fell on the book and he gave a sort of
start.
"Why,
bless my soul, Mr. Wooster, you have been quoting!"
"More or
less."
"I thought
your words sounded familiar." His whole appearance changed and he gave a
sort of gurgling chuckle. "Dear me, dear me, you know my weak spot!"
He picked up the book and buried himself in it for quite a while. I began to
think he had forgotten I was there. After a bit, however, he put it down again,
and wiped his eyes. "Ah, well!" he said.
I shuffled my
feet and hoped for the best.
"Ah,
well," he said again. "I must not be like Lord Windermere, must I,
Mr. Wooster? Tell me, did you draw that haughty old man from a living
model?"
"Oh, no!
Just thought of him and bunged him down, you know."
"Genius!"
murmured old Bittlesham. "Genius! Well, Mr. Wooster, you have won me over.
Who, as you say, am I to pit myself against the decrees of Fate? I will write
to Richard to-night and inform him of my consent to his marriage."
"You can
slip him the glad news in person," I said. "He's waiting downstairs,
with wife complete. I'll pop down and send them up. Cheerio, and thanks very
much. Bingo will be most awfully bucked."
I shot out and
went downstairs. Bingo and Mrs. were sitting on a couple of chairs like
patients in a dentist's waiting-room.
"Well?"
said Bingo eagerly.
"All over
except the hand-clasping," I replied, slapping the old crumpet on the
back. "Charge up and get matey. Toodle-oo, old things. You know where to
find me, if wanted. A thousand congratulations, and all that sort of rot."
And I pipped,
not wishing to be fawned upon.
*
* *
* *
You never can
tell in this world. If ever I felt that something attempted, something done had
earned a night's repose, it was when I got back to the flat and shoved my feet
up on the mantelpiece and started to absorb the cup of tea which Jeeves had
brought in. Used as I am to seeing Life's sitters blow up in the home stretch
and finish nowhere, I couldn't see any cause for alarm in this affair of young
Bingo's. All he had to do when I left him in Pounceby Gardens was to walk
upstairs with the little missus and collect the blessing. I was so convinced of
this that when, about half an hour later, he came galloping into my
sitting-room, all I thought was that he wanted to thank me in broken accents
and tell me what a good chap I had been. I merely beamed benevolently on the
old creature as he entered, and was just going to offer him a cigarette when I
observed that he seemed to have something on his mind. In fact, he looked as if
something solid had hit him in the solar plexus.
"My dear
old soul," I said, "what's up?"
Bingo plunged
about the room.
"I will
be calm!" he said, knocking over an occasional table. "Calm,
dammit!" He upset a chair.
"Surely
nothing has gone wrong?"
Bingo uttered
one of those hollow, mirthless yelps.
"Only
every bally thing that could go wrong. What do you think happened after you
left us? You know that beastly book you insisted on sending my uncle?"
It wasn't the
way I should have put it myself, but I saw the poor old bean was upset for some
reason or other, so I didn't correct him.
"'The
Woman Who Braved All'?" I said. "It came in dashed useful. It was by
quoting bits out of it that I managed to talk him round."
"Well, it
didn't come in useful when we got into the room. It was lying on the table, and
after we had started to chat a bit and everything was going along nicely the
little woman spotted it. 'Oh, have you read this, Lord Bittlesham?' she said.
'Three times already,' said my uncle. 'I'm so glad,' said the little woman.
'Why, are you also an admirer of Rosie M. Banks?' asked the old boy, beaming.
'I am Rosie M. Banks!' said the little woman."
"Oh, my
aunt! Not really?"
"Yes."
"But how
could she be? I mean, dash it, she was slinging the foodstuffs at the Senior
Liberal Club."
Bingo gave the
settee a moody kick.
"She took
the job to collect material for a book she's writing called 'Mervyn Keene,
Clubman.'"
"She might
have told you."
"It made
such a hit with her when she found that I loved her for herself alone, despite
her humble station, that she kept it under her hat. She meant to spring it on
me later on, she said."
"Well,
what happened then?"
"There was
the dickens of a painful scene. The old boy nearly got apoplexy. Called her an
impostor. They both started talking at once at the top of their voices, and the
thing ended with the little woman buzzing off to her publishers to collect
proofs as a preliminary to getting a written apology from the old boy. What's
going to happen now, I don't know. Apart from the fact that my uncle will be as
mad as a wet hen when he finds out that he has been fooled, there's going to be
a lot of trouble when the little woman discovers that we worked the Rosie M.
Banks wheeze with a view to trying to get me married to somebody else. You see,
one of the things that first attracted her to me was the fact that I had never
been in love before."
"Did you
tell her that?"
"Yes."
"Great
Scott!"
"Well, I
hadn't been ... not really in love. There's all the difference in the world
between.... Well, never mind that. What am I going to do? That's the
point."
"I don't
know."
"Thanks,"
said young Bingo. "That's a lot of help."
*
* *
* *
Next morning he
rang me up on the phone just after I'd got the bacon and eggs into my
system—the one moment of the day, in short, when a chappie wishes to muse on
life absolutely undisturbed.
"Bertie!"
"Hallo?"
"Things
are hotting up."
"What's happened
now?"
"My uncle
has given the little woman's proofs the once-over and admits her claim. I've
just been having five snappy minutes with him on the telephone. He says that
you and I made a fool of him, and he could hardly speak, he was so shirty. Still,
he made it clear all right that my allowance has gone phut again."
"I'm
sorry."
"Don't
waste time being sorry for me," said young Bingo grimly. "He's coming
to call on you to-day to demand a personal explanation."
"Great
Scott!"
"And the
little woman is coming to call on you to demand a personal explanation."
"Good
Lord!"
"I shall
watch your future career with some considerable interest," said young
Bingo.
I bellowed for
Jeeves.
"Jeeves!"
"Sir?"
"I'm in
the soup."
"Indeed,
sir?"
I sketched out
the scenario for him.
"What
would you advise?"
"I think
if I were you, sir, I would accept Mr. Pitt-Waley's invitation immediately. If
you remember, sir, he invited you to shoot with him in Norfolk this week."
"So he
did! By Jove, Jeeves, you're always right. Meet me at the station with my
things the first train after lunch. I'll go and lie low at the club for the
rest of the morning."
"Would you
require my company on this visit, sir?"
"Do you
want to come?"
"If I
might suggest it, sir, I think it would be better if I remained here and kept
in touch with Mr. Little. I might possibly hit upon some method of pacifying
the various parties, sir."
"Right-o!
But, if you do, you're a marvel."
*
* *
* *
I didn't enjoy
myself much in Norfolk. It rained most of the time, and when it wasn't raining
I was so dashed jumpy I couldn't hit a thing. By the end of the week I couldn't
stand it any longer. Too bally absurd, I mean, being marooned miles away in the
country just because young Bingo's uncle and wife wanted to have a few words
with me. I made up my mind that I would pop back and do the strong, manly thing
by lying low in my flat and telling Jeeves to inform everybody who called that
I wasn't at home.
I sent Jeeves a
telegram saying I was coming, and drove straight to Bingo's place when I
reached town. I wanted to find out the general posish of affairs. But
apparently the man was out. I rang a couple of times but nothing happened, and
I was just going to leg it when I heard the sound of footsteps inside and the
door opened. It wasn't one of the cheeriest moments of my career when I found
myself peering into the globular face of Lord Bittlesham.
"Oh, er,
hallo!" I said. And there was a bit of a pause.
I don't quite know
what I had been expecting the old boy to do if, by bad luck, we should ever
meet again, but I had a sort of general idea that he would turn fairly purple
and start almost immediately to let me have it in the gizzard. It struck me as
somewhat rummy, therefore, when he simply smiled weakly.
A sort of frozen smile it was. His eyes kind of bulged and he swallowed once or
twice.
"Er...."
he said.
I waited for
him to continue, but apparently that was all there was.
"Bingo
in?" I said, after a rather embarrassing pause.
He shook his
head and smiled again. And then, suddenly, just as the flow of conversation had
begun to slacken once more, I'm dashed if he didn't make a sort of lumbering
leap back into the flat and bang the door.
I couldn't
understand it. But, as it seemed that the interview, such as it was, was over,
I thought I might as well be shifting. I had just started down the stairs when
I met young Bingo, charging up three steps at a time.
"Hallo,
Bertie!" he said. "Where did you spring from? I thought you were out
of town."
"I've just
got back. I looked in on you to see how the land lay."
"How do
you mean?"
"Why, all
that business, you know."
"Oh,
that!" said young Bingo airily. "That was all settled days ago. The
dove of peace is flapping its wings all over the place. Everything's as right
as it can be. Jeeves fixed it all up. He's a marvel, that man, Bertie, I've
always said so. Put the whole thing straight in half a minute with one of those
brilliant ideas of his."
"This is
topping!"
"I knew
you'd be pleased."
"Congratulate
you."
"Thanks."
"What did
Jeeves do? I couldn't think of any solution of the bally thing myself."
"Oh, he
took the matter in hand and smoothed it all out in a second! My uncle and the
little woman are tremendous pals now. They gas away by the hour together about
literature and all that. He's always dropping in for a chat."
This reminded
me.
"He's in
there now," I said. "I say, Bingo, how is your uncle these
days?"
"Much as
usual. How do you mean?"
"I mean he
hasn't been feeling the strain of things a bit, has he? He seemed rather
strange in his manner just now."
"Why, have
you met him?"
"He opened
the door when I rang. And then, after he had stood goggling at me for a bit, he
suddenly banged the door in my face. Puzzled me, you know. I mean, I could have
understood it if he'd ticked me off and all that, but dash it, the man seemed
absolutely scared."
Young Bingo
laughed a care-free laugh.
"Oh,
that's all right!" he said. "I forgot to tell you about that. Meant
to write, but kept putting it off. He thinks you're a looney."
"He—what!"
"Yes. That
was Jeeves's idea, you know. It's solved the whole problem splendidly. He
suggested that I should tell my uncle that I had acted in perfectly good faith
in introducing you to him as Rosie M. Banks; that I had repeatedly had it from
your own lips that you were, and that I didn't see any reason why you shouldn't
be. The idea being that you were subject to hallucinations and generally potty.
And then we got hold of Sir Roderick Glossop—you remember, the old boy whose
kid you pushed into the lake that day down at Ditteredge Hall—and he rallied
round with his story of how he had come to lunch with you and found your
bedroom full up with cats and fish, and how you had pinched his hat while you were
driving past his car in a taxi, and all that, you know. It just rounded the
whole thing off nicely. I always say, and I always shall say, that you've only
got to stand on Jeeves, and fate can't touch you."
I can stand a
good deal, but there are limits.
"Well, of
all the dashed bits of nerve I ever...."
Bingo looked at
me astonished.
"You
aren't annoyed?" he said.
"Annoyed!
At having half London going about under the impression that I'm off my chump?
Dash it all...."
"Bertie,"
said Bingo, "you amaze and wound me. If I had dreamed that you would
object to doing a trifling good turn to a fellow who's been a pal of yours for
fifteen years...."
"Yes, but,
look here...."
"Have you
forgotten," said young Bingo, "that we were at school together?"
*
* *
* *
I pushed on to
the old flat, seething like the dickens. One thing I was jolly certain of, and
that was that this was where Jeeves and I parted company. A topping valet, of
course, none better in London, but I wasn't going to allow that to weaken me. I
buzzed into the flat like an east wind ... and there was the box of cigarettes
on the small table and the illustrated weekly papers on the big table and my
slippers on the floor, and every dashed thing so bally right, if you
know what I mean, that I started to calm down in the first two seconds. It was
like one of those moments in a play where the chappie, about to steep himself
in crime, suddenly hears the soft, appealing strains of the old melody he
learned at his mother's knee. Softened, I mean to say. That's the word I
want. I was softened.
And then
through the doorway there shimmered good old Jeeves in the wake of a tray full
of the necessary ingredients, and there was something about the mere look of
the man....
However, I
steeled the old heart and had a stab at it.
"I have
just met Mr. Little, Jeeves," I said.
"Indeed,
sir?"
"He—er—he
told me you had been helping him."
"I did my
best, sir. And I am happy to say that matters now appear to be proceeding
smoothly. Whisky, sir?"
"Thanks.
Er—Jeeves."
"Sir?"
"Another
time...."
"Sir?"
"Oh,
nothing.... Not all the soda, Jeeves."
"Very
good, sir."
He started to
drift out.
"Oh,
Jeeves!"
"Sir?"
"I wish
... that is ... I think ... I mean.... Oh, nothing!"
"Very
good, sir. The cigarettes are at your elbow, sir. Dinner will be ready at a
quarter to eight precisely, unless you desire to dine out?"
"No. I'll
dine in."
"Yes, sir."
"Jeeves!"
"Sir?"
"Oh,
nothing!" I said.
"Very
good, sir," said Jeeves.