THE INIMITABLE JEEVES
PART 15
CHAPTER XV
THE METROPOLITAN TOUCH
Nobody is more
alive than I am to the fact that young Bingo Little is in many respects a sound
old egg. In one way and another he has made life pretty interesting for me at
intervals ever since we were at school. As a companion for a cheery hour I
think I would choose him before anybody. On the other hand, I'm bound to say
that there are things about him that could be improved. His habit of falling in
love with every second girl he sees is one of them; and another is his way of
letting the world in on the secrets of his heart. If you want shrinking
reticence, don't go to Bingo, because he's got about as much of it as a
soap-advertisement.
I mean to
say—well, here's the telegram I got from him one evening in November, about a
month after I'd got back to town from my visit to Twing Hall:
I say Bertie
old man I am in love at last. She is the most wonderful girl Bertie old man.
This is the real thing at last Bertie. Come here at once and bring Jeeves. Oh I
say you know that tobacco shop in Bond Street on the left side as you go up.
Will you get me a hundred of their special cigarettes and send them to me here.
I have run out. I know when you see her you will think she is the most wonderful girl. Mind you bring
Jeeves. Don't forget the cigarettes.—Bingo.
It had been
handed in at Twing Post Office. In other words, he had submitted that frightful
rot to the goggling eye of a village post-mistress who was probably the main
spring of local gossip and would have the place ringing with the news before
nightfall. He couldn't have given himself away more completely if he had hired
the town-crier. When I was a kid, I used to read stories about knights and
vikings and that species of chappie who would get up without a blush in the
middle of a crowded banquet and loose off a song about how perfectly priceless
they thought their best girl. I've often felt that those days would have suited
young Bingo down to the ground.
Jeeves had
brought the thing in with the evening drink, and I slung it over to him.
"It's
about due, of course," I said. "Young Bingo hasn't been in love for
at least a couple of months. I wonder who it is this time?"
"Miss Mary
Burgess, sir," said Jeeves, "the niece of the Reverend Mr.
Heppenstall. She is staying at Twing Vicarage."
"Great
Scott!" I knew that Jeeves knew practically everything in the world, but
this sounded like second-sight. "How do you know that?"
"When we
were visiting Twing Hall in the summer, sir, I formed a somewhat close
friendship with Mr. Heppenstall's butler. He is good enough to keep me abreast
of the local news from time to time. From his account, sir, the young lady
appears to be a very estimable young lady. Of a somewhat serious nature, I
understand. Mr. Little is very épris, sir. Brookfield, my correspondent,
writes that last week he observed him in the
moonlight at an advanced hour gazing up at his window."
"Whose
window! Brookfield's?"
"Yes, sir.
Presumably under the impression that it was the young lady's."
"But what
the deuce is he doing at Twing at all?"
"Mr.
Little was compelled to resume his old position as tutor to Lord Wickhammersley's
son at Twing Hall, sir. Owing to having been unsuccessful in some speculations
at Hurst Park at the end of October."
"Good
Lord, Jeeves! Is there anything you don't know?"
"I could
not say, sir."
I picked up the
telegram.
"I suppose
he wants us to go down and help him out a bit?"
"That
would appear to be his motive in dispatching the message, sir."
"Well,
what shall we do? Go?"
"I would
advocate it, sir. If I may say so, I think that Mr. Little should be encouraged
in this particular matter."
"You think
he's picked a winner this time?"
"I hear
nothing but excellent reports of the young lady, sir. I think it is beyond
question that she would be an admirable influence for Mr. Little, should the
affair come to a happy conclusion. Such a union would also, I fancy, go far to
restore Mr. Little to the good graces of his uncle, the young lady being well
connected and possessing private means. In short, sir, I think that if there is
anything that we can do we should do it."
"Well,
with you behind him," I said, "I don't see how he can fail to
click."
"You are
very good, sir," said Jeeves. "The tribute is much appreciated."
Bingo met us at
Twing station next day, and insisted on my sending Jeeves on in the car with
the bags while he and I walked. He started in about the female the moment we
had begun to hoof it.
"She is
very wonderful, Bertie. She is not one of these flippant, shallow-minded modern
girls. She is sweetly grave and beautifully earnest. She reminds me of—what is
the name I want?"
"Marie
Lloyd?"
"Saint
Cecilia," said young Bingo, eyeing me with a good deal of loathing.
"She reminds me of Saint Cecilia. She makes me yearn to be a better,
nobler, deeper, broader man."
"What
beats me," I said, following up a train of thought, "is what
principle you pick them on. The girls you fall in love with, I mean. I mean to
say, what's your system? As far as I can see, no two of them are alike. First
it was Mabel the waitress, then Honoria Glossop, then that fearful blister
Charlotte Corday Rowbotham——"
I own that
Bingo had the decency to shudder. Thinking of Charlotte always made me shudder,
too.
"You don't
seriously mean, Bertie, that you are intending to compare the feeling I have
for Mary Burgess, the holy devotion, the spiritual——"
"Oh, all
right, let it go," I said. "I say, old lad, aren't we going rather a
long way round?"
Considering
that we were supposed to be heading for Twing Hall, it seemed to me that we
were making a longish job of it. The Hall is about two miles from the station
by the main road, and we had cut off down a lane, gone across country for a
bit, climbed a stile or two, and were now working our way across a field that
ended in another lane.
"She
sometimes takes her little brother for a
walk round this way,"
explained Bingo. "I thought we would meet her and bow, and you could see
her, you know, and then we would walk on."
"Of
course," I said, "that's enough excitement for anyone, and
undoubtedly a corking reward for tramping three miles out of one's way over
ploughed fields with tight boots, but don't we do anything else? Don't we tack
on to the girl and buzz along with her?"
"Good
Lord!" said Bingo, honestly amazed. "You don't suppose I've got nerve
enough for that, do you? I just look at her from afar off and all that sort of
thing. Quick! Here she comes! No, I'm wrong!"
It was like
that song of Harry Lauder's where he's waiting for the girl and says "This
is her-r-r. No, it's a rabbut." Young Bingo made me stand there in the
teeth of a nor'east half-gale for ten minutes, keeping me on my toes with a
series of false alarms, and I was just thinking of suggesting that we should
lay off and give the rest of the proceedings a miss, when round the corner
there came a fox-terrier, and Bingo quivered like an aspen. Then there hove in
sight a small boy, and he shook like a jelly. Finally, like a star whose
entrance has been worked up by the personnel of the ensemble, a
girl appeared, and his emotion was painful to witness. His face got so red
that, what with his white collar and the fact that the wind had turned his nose
blue, he looked more like a French flag than anything else. He sagged from the
waist upwards, as if he had been filleted.
He was just
raising his fingers limply to his cap when he suddenly saw that the girl wasn't
alone. A chappie in clerical costume was also among those present, and the
sight of him didn't seem to do Bingo a bit of good. His face got redder and
his nose bluer, and it wasn't till they had nearly passed that he managed to
get hold of his cap.
The girl bowed,
the curate said, "Ah, Little. Rough weather," the dog barked, and
then they toddled on and the entertainment was over.
*
* *
* *
The curate was
a new factor in the situation to me. I reported his movements to Jeeves when I
got to the hall. Of course, Jeeves knew all about it already.
"That is
the Reverend Mr. Wingham, Mr. Heppenstall's new curate, sir. I gather from
Brookfield that he is Mr. Little's rival, and at the moment the young lady
appears to favour him. Mr. Wingham has the advantage of being on the premises.
He and the young lady play duets after dinner, which acts as a bond. Mr. Little
on these occasions, I understand, prowls about in the road, chafing
visibly."
"That
seems to be all the poor fish is able to do, dash it. He can chafe all right,
but there he stops. He's lost his pep. He's got no dash. Why, when we met her
just now, he hadn't even the common manly courage to say 'Good evening'!"
"I gather
that Mr. Little's affection is not unmingled with awe, sir."
"Well, how
are we to help a man when he's such a rabbit as that? Have you anything to
suggest? I shall be seeing him after dinner, and he's sure to ask first thing
what you advise."
"In my
opinion, sir, the most judicious course for Mr. Little to pursue would be to
concentrate on the young gentleman."
"The small
brother? How do you mean?"
"Make a
friend of him, sir—take him for walks and so forth."
"It doesn't
sound one of your red-hottest ideas. I must say I expected something fruitier
than that."
"It would
be a beginning, sir, and might lead to better things."
"Well,
I'll tell him. I liked the look of her, Jeeves."
"A
thoroughly estimable young lady, sir."
I slipped Bingo
the tip from the stable that night, and was glad to observe that it seemed to
cheer him up.
"Jeeves is
always right," he said. "I ought to have thought of it myself. I'll
start in to-morrow."
It was amazing
how the chappie bucked up. Long before I left for town it had become a mere
commonplace for him to speak to the girl. I mean he didn't simply look stuffed
when they met. The brother was forming a bond that was a dashed sight stronger
than the curate's duets. She and Bingo used to take him for walks together. I
asked Bingo what they talked about on these occasions, and he said Wilfred's
future. The girl hoped that Wilfred would one day become a curate, but Bingo
said no, there was something about curates he didn't quite like.
The day we
left, Bingo came to see us off with Wilfred frisking about him like an old
college chum. The last I saw of them, Bingo was standing him chocolates out of
the slot-machine. A scene of peace and cheery good-will. Dashed promising, I
thought.
*
* *
* *
Which made it
all the more of a jar, about a fortnight later, when his telegram arrived. As
follows:—
Bertie old
man I say Bertie could you possibly come down here at once. Everything gone
wrong hang it all.
Dash it Bertie you simply must come. I am in a state of absolute despair and
heart-broken. Would you mind sending another hundred of those cigarettes. Bring
Jeeves when you come Bertie. You simply must come Bertie. I rely on you. Don't
forget to bring Jeeves. Bingo.
For a chap
who's perpetually hard-up, I must say that young Bingo is the most wasteful
telegraphist I ever struck. He's got no notion of condensing. The silly ass
simply pours out his wounded soul at twopence a word, or whatever it is,
without a thought.
"How about
it, Jeeves?" I said. "I'm getting a bit fed up. I can't go chucking
all my engagements every second week in order to biff down to Twing and rally
round young Bingo. Send him a wire telling him to end it all in the village
pond."
"If you
could spare me for the night, sir, I should be glad to run down and
investigate."
"Oh, dash
it! Well, I suppose there's nothing else to be done. After all, you're the
fellow he wants. All right, carry on."
Jeeves got back
late the next day.
"Well?"
I said.
Jeeves appeared
perturbed. He allowed his left eyebrow to flicker upwards in a concerned sort
of manner.
"I have
done what I could, sir," he said, "but I fear Mr. Little's chances do
not appear bright. Since our last visit, sir, there has been a decidedly
sinister and disquieting development."
"Oh,
what's that?"
"You may
remember Mr. Steggles, sir—the young gentleman who was studying for an
examination with Mr. Heppenstall at the Vicarage?"
"What's
Steggles got to do with it?" I asked.
"I gather
from Brookfield, sir, who chanced to overhear a conversation, that Mr. Steggles
is interesting himself in the affair."
"Good
Lord! What, making a book on it?"
"I
understand that he is accepting wagers from those in his immediate circle, sir.
Against Mr. Little, whose chances he does not seem to fancy."
"I don't
like that, Jeeves."
"No, sir.
It is sinister."
"From what
I know of Steggles there will be dirty work."
"It has
already occurred, sir."
"Already?"
"Yes, sir.
It seems that, in pursuance of the policy which he had been good enough to
allow me to suggest to him, Mr. Little escorted Master Burgess to the church
bazaar, and there met Mr. Steggles, who was in the company of young Master
Heppenstall, the Reverend Mr. Heppenstall's second son, who is home from Rugby
just now, having recently recovered from an attack of mumps. The encounter took
place in the refreshment-room, where Mr. Steggles was at that moment
entertaining Master Heppenstall. To cut a long story short, sir, the two
gentlemen became extremely interested in the hearty manner in which the lads
were fortifying themselves; and Mr. Steggles offered to back his nominee in a
weight-for-age eating contest against Master Burgess for a pound a side. Mr.
Little admitted to me that he was conscious of a certain hesitation as to what
the upshot might be, should Miss Burgess get to hear of the matter, but his
sporting blood was too much for him and he agreed to the contest. This was duly
carried out, both lads exhibiting the utmost willingness and enthusiasm, and
eventually Master Burgess justified Mr. Little's confidence by winning, but
only after a bitter struggle. Next day both contestants
were in considerable pain; inquiries were made and confessions extorted, and
Mr. Little—I learn from Brookfield, who happened to be near the door of the
drawing-room at the moment—had an extremely unpleasant interview with the young
lady, which ended in her desiring him never to speak to her again."
There's no
getting away from the fact that, if ever a man required watching, it's
Steggles. Machiavelli could have taken his correspondence course.
"It was a
put-up job, Jeeves!" I said. "I mean, Steggles worked the whole thing
on purpose. It's his old nobbling game."
"There
would seem to be no doubt about that, sir."
"Well, he
seems to have dished poor old Bingo all right."
"That is
the prevalent opinion, sir. Brookfield tells me that down in the village at the
'Cow and Horses' seven to one is being freely offered on Mr. Wingham and
finding no takers."
"Good
Lord! Are they betting about it down in the village, too?"
"Yes, sir.
And in adjoining hamlets also. The affair has caused widespread interest. I am
told that there is a certain sporting reaction in even so distant a spot as
Lower Bingley."
"Well, I
don't see what there is to do. If Bingo is such a chump——"
"One is
fighting a losing battle, I fear, sir, but I did venture to indicate to Mr.
Little a course of action which might prove of advantage. I recommended him to
busy himself with good works."
"Good
works?"
"About the
village, sir. Reading to the bedridden—chatting with the sick—that sort of
thing, sir. We can but trust that good results will
ensue."
"Yes, I
suppose so," I said doubtfully. "But, by gosh, if I was a sick man
I'd hate to have a looney like young Bingo coming and gibbering at my
bedside."
"There is
that aspect of the matter, sir," said Jeeves.
*
* *
* *
I didn't hear a
word from Bingo for a couple of weeks, and I took it after a while that he had
found the going too hard and had chucked in the towel. And then, one night not
long before Christmas, I came back to the flat pretty latish, having been out
dancing at the Embassy. I was fairly tired, having swung a practically non-stop
shoe from shortly after dinner till two a.m., and bed seemed to be indicated.
Judge of my chagrin and all that sort of thing, therefore, when, tottering to
my room and switching on the light, I observed the foul features of young Bingo
all over the pillow. The blighter had appeared from nowhere and was in my bed,
sleeping like an infant with a sort of happy, dreamy smile on his map.
A bit thick I
mean to say! We Woosters are all for the good old mediæval hosp. and all that,
but when it comes to finding chappies collaring your bed, the thing becomes a
trifle too mouldy. I hove a shoe, and Bingo sat up, gurgling.
"'s
matter? 's matter?" said young Bingo.
"What the
deuce are you doing in my bed?" I said.
"Oh,
hallo, Bertie! So there you are!"
"Yes, here
I am. What are you doing in my bed?"
"I came up
to town for the night on business."
"Yes, but
what are you doing in my bed?"
"Dash it
all, Bertie," said young Bingo querulously, "don't keep harping on
your beastly bed. There's another made up in the spare room. I saw Jeeves make
it with my own eyes. I believe he meant it for me, but I knew what a perfect
host you were, so I just turned in here. I say, Bertie, old man," said
Bingo, apparently fed up with the discussion about sleeping-quarters, "I
see daylight."
"Well,
it's getting on for three in the morning."
"I was
speaking figuratively, you ass. I meant that hope has begun to dawn. About Mary
Burgess, you know. Sit down and I'll tell you all about it."
"I won't.
I'm going to sleep."
"To begin
with," said young Bingo, settling himself comfortably against the pillows
and helping himself to a cigarette from my special private box, "I must
once again pay a marked tribute to good old Jeeves. A modern Solomon. I was
badly up against it when I came to him for advice, but he rolled up with a tip
which has put me—I use the term advisedly and in a conservative spirit—on
velvet. He may have told you that he recommended me to win back the lost ground
by busying myself with good works? Bertie, old man," said young Bingo
earnestly, "for the last two weeks I've been comforting the sick to such
an extent that, if I had a brother and you brought him to me on a sick-bed at
this moment, by Jove, old man, I'd heave a brick at him. However, though it
took it out of me like the deuce, the scheme worked splendidly. She softened
visibly before I'd been at it a week. Started to bow again when we met in the
street, and so forth. About a couple of days ago she distinctly smiled—in a
sort of faint, saint-like kind of way, you know—when I ran into her outside the Vicarage. And yesterday—I say, you
remember that curate chap, Wingham? Fellow with a long nose."
"Of course
I remember him. Your rival."
"Rival?"
Bingo raised his eyebrows. "Oh, well, I suppose you could have called him
that at one time. Though it sounds a little far-fetched."
"Does
it?" I said, stung by the sickening complacency of the chump's manner.
"Well, let me tell you that the last I heard was that at the 'Cow and
Horses' in Twing village and all over the place as far as Lower Bingley they
were offering seven to one on the curate and finding no takers."
Bingo started
violently, and sprayed cigarette-ash all over my bed.
"Betting!"
he gargled. "Betting! You don't mean that they're betting on this holy,
sacred—— Oh, I say, dash it all! Haven't people any sense of decency and
reverence? Is nothing safe from their beastly, sordid graspingness? I
wonder," said young Bingo thoughtfully, "if there's a chance of my
getting any of that seven-to-one money? Seven to one! What a price! Who's
offering it, do you know? Oh, well, I suppose it wouldn't do. No, I suppose it
wouldn't be quite the thing."
"You seem
dashed confident," I said. "I'd always thought that Wingham——"
"Oh, I'm
not worried about him," said Bingo. "I was just going to tell you.
Wingham's got the mumps, and won't be out and about for weeks. And, jolly as
that is in itself, it's not all. You see, he was producing the Village School
Christmas Entertainment, and now I've taken over the job. I went to old
Heppenstall last night and clinched the contract. Well, you see what that
means. It means that I shall be absolutely the centre of the village life and
thought for three solid weeks, with a terrific triumph to wind up with. Everybody
looking up to me and fawning on me, don't you see, and all that. It's bound to
have a powerful effect on Mary's mind. It will show her that I am capable of
serious effort; that there is a solid foundation of worth in me; that, mere
butterfly as she may once have thought me, I am in reality——"
"Oh, all
right, let it go!"
"It's a
big thing, you know, this Christmas Entertainment. Old Heppenstall is very much
wrapped up in it. Nibs from all over the countryside rolling up. The Squire
present, with family. A big chance for me, Bertie, my boy, and I mean to make
the most of it. Of course, I'm handicapped a bit by not having been in on the
thing from the start. Will you credit it that that uninspired doughnut of a
curate wanted to give the public some rotten little fairy play out of a book
for children published about fifty years ago without one good laugh or the
semblance of a gag in it? It's too late to alter the thing entirely, but at
least I can jazz it up. I'm going to write them in something zippy to brighten
the thing up a bit."
"You can't
write."
"Well,
when I say write, I mean pinch. That's why I've popped up to town. I've been to
see that revue, 'Cuddle Up!' at the Palladium, to-night. Full of good stuff. Of
course, it's rather hard to get anything in the nature of a big spectacular
effect in the Twing Village Hall, with no scenery to speak of and a chorus of
practically imbecile kids of ages ranging from nine to fourteen, but I think I
see my way. Have you seen 'Cuddle Up'?"
"Yes.
Twice."
"Well,
there's some good stuff in the first act, and I can lift practically all the
numbers. Then there's that show at the Palace. I can see the matinée
of that to-morrow before I leave. There's sure to be some decent bits in that.
Don't you worry about my not being able to write a hit. Leave it to me, laddie,
leave it to me. And now, my dear old chap," said young Bingo, snuggling
down cosily, "you mustn't keep me up talking all night. It's all right for
you fellows who have nothing to do, but I'm a busy man. Good night, old thing.
Close the door quietly after you and switch out the light. Breakfast about ten
to-morrow, I suppose, what? Right-o. Good night."
*
* *
* *
For the next three
weeks I didn't see Bingo. He became a sort of Voice Heard Off, developing a
habit of ringing me up on long-distance and consulting me on various points
arising at rehearsal, until the day when he got me out of bed at eight in the
morning to ask whether I thought "Merry Christmas!" was a good title.
I told him then that this nuisance must now cease, and after that he cheesed
it, and practically passed out of my life, till one afternoon when I got back
to the flat to dress for dinner and found Jeeves inspecting a whacking big
poster sort of thing which he had draped over the back of an arm-chair.
"Good
Lord, Jeeves!" I said. I was feeling rather weak that day, and the thing
shook me. "What on earth's that?"
"Mr.
Little sent it to me, sir, and desired me to bring it to your notice."
"Well,
you've certainly done it!"
I took another
look at the object. There was no doubt about it, he caught the eye. It was
about seven feet long, and most of the lettering in about as bright red ink as
I ever struck.
This was how it
ran:
TWING VILLAGE HALL,
Friday, December rd,
RICHARD LITTLE
presents
A New and Original Revue
Entitled
WHAT HO, TWING!!
Book by
RICHARD LITTLE
Lyrics by
RICHARD LITTLE
Music by
RICHARD LITTLE.
With the Full Twing Juvenile
Company and Chorus.
Scenic Effects by
RICHARD LITTLE
Produced by
RICHARD LITTLE.
Friday, December rd,
RICHARD LITTLE
presents
A New and Original Revue
Entitled
WHAT HO, TWING!!
Book by
RICHARD LITTLE
Lyrics by
RICHARD LITTLE
Music by
RICHARD LITTLE.
With the Full Twing Juvenile
Company and Chorus.
Scenic Effects by
RICHARD LITTLE
Produced by
RICHARD LITTLE.
"What do
you make of it, Jeeves?" I said.
"I confess
I am a little doubtful, sir. I think Mr. Little would have done better to
follow my advice and confine himself to good works about the village."
"You think
the things will be a frost?"
"I could
not hazard a conjecture, sir. But my experience has been that what pleases the
London public is not always so acceptable to the rural mind. The metropolitan
touch sometimes proves a trifle too exotic for the provinces."
"I suppose
I ought to go down and see the dashed thing?"
"I think
Mr. Little would be wounded were you not present, sir."
*
* *
* *
The Village
Hall at Twing is a smallish building, smelling of apples. It was full when I
turned up on the evening of the twenty-third, for I had purposely timed myself
to arrive not long before the kick-off. I had had experience of one or two of these binges, and didn't want to run any risk
of coming early and finding myself shoved into a seat in one of the front rows
where I wouldn't be able to execute a quiet sneak into the open air half-way
through the proceedings, if the occasion seemed to demand it. I secured a nice
strategic position near the door at the back of the hall.
From where I
stood I had a good view of the audience. As always on these occasions, the
first few rows were occupied by the Nibs—consisting of the Squire, a fairly
mauve old sportsman with white whiskers, his family, a platoon of local parsons
and perhaps a couple of dozen of prominent pew-holders. Then came a dense
squash of what you might call the lower middle classes. And at the back, where
I was, we came down with a jerk in the social scale, this end of the hall being
given up almost entirely to a collection of frankly Tough Eggs, who had rolled
up not so much for any love of the drama as because there was a free tea after
the show. Take it for all in all, a representative gathering of Twing life and
thought. The Nibs were whispering in a pleased manner to each other, the Lower
Middles were sitting up very straight, as if they'd been bleached, and the
Tough Eggs whiled away the time by cracking nuts and exchanging low rustic
wheezes. The girl, Mary Burgess, was at the piano playing a waltz. Beside her
stood the curate, Wingham, apparently recovered. The temperature, I should
think, was about a hundred and twenty-seven.
Somebody jabbed
me heartily in the lower ribs, and I perceived the man Steggles.
"Hallo!"
he said. "I didn't know you were coming down."
I didn't like
the chap, but we Woosters can wear the mask. I beamed a bit.
"Oh,
yes," I said. "Bingo wanted me to roll up and see his show."
"I hear
he's giving us something pretty ambitious," said the man Steggles.
"Big effects and all that sort of thing."
"I believe
so."
"Of
course, it means a lot to him, doesn't it? He's told you about the girl, of
course?"
"Yes. And
I hear you're laying seven to one against him," I said, eyeing the
blighter a trifle austerely.
He didn't even
quiver.
"Just a
little flutter to relieve the monotony of country life," he said.
"But you've got the facts a bit wrong. It's down in the village that
they're laying seven to one. I can do you better than that, if you feel in a
speculative mood. How about a tenner at a hundred to eight?"
"Good
Lord! Are you giving that?"
"Yes.
Somehow," said Steggles meditatively, "I have a sort of feeling, a
kind of premonition that something's going to go wrong to-night. You know what
Little is. A bungler, if ever there was one. Something tells me that this show
of his is going to be a frost. And if it is, of course, I should think it would
prejudice the girl against him pretty badly. His standing always was rather
shaky."
"Are you
going to try and smash up the show?" I said sternly.
"Me!"
said Steggles. "Why, what could I do? Half a minute, I want to go and
speak to a man."
He buzzed off,
leaving me distinctly disturbed. I could see from the fellow's eye that he was
meditating some of his customary rough stuff, and I thought Bingo ought to be
warned. But there wasn't time and I couldn't get at him. Almost immediately
after Steggles had left me the curtain went up.
Except as a
prompter, Bingo wasn't much in evidence in the early part of the performance.
The thing at the outset was merely one of those weird dramas which you dig out
of books published around Christmas time and entitled "Twelve Little Plays
for the Tots," or something like that. The kids drooled on in the usual
manner, the booming voice of Bingo ringing out from time to time behind the
scenes when the fatheads forgot their lines; and the audience was settling down
into the sort of torpor usual on these occasions, when the first of Bingo's
interpolated bits occurred. It was that number which What's-her-name sings in
that revue at the Palace—you would recognise the tune if I hummed it, but I can
never get hold of the dashed thing. It always got three encores at the Palace,
and it went well now, even with a squeaky-voiced child jumping on and off the
key like a chamois of the Alps leaping from crag to crag. Even the Tough Eggs
liked it. At the end of the second refrain the entire house was shouting for an
encore, and the kid with the voice like a slate-pencil took a deep breath and
started to let it go once more.
At this point
all the lights went out.
*
* *
* *
I don't know
when I've had anything so sudden and devastating happen to me before. They
didn't flicker. They just went out. The hall was in complete darkness.
Well, of
course, that sort of broke the spell, as you might put it. People started to
shout directions, and the Tough Eggs stamped their feet and settled down for a
pleasant time. And, of course, young Bingo had to make an ass of
himself. His voice suddenly shot at us out of the darkness.
"Ladies
and gentlemen, something has gone wrong with the lights——"
The Tough Eggs
were tickled by this bit of information straight from the stable. They took it
up as a sort of battle-cry. Then, after about five minutes, the lights went up
again, and the show was resumed.
It took ten
minutes after that to get the audience back into its state of coma, but
eventually they began to settle down, and everything was going nicely when a
small boy with a face like a turbot edged out in front of the curtain, which
had been lowered after a pretty painful scene about a wishing-ring or a fairy's
curse or something of that sort, and started to sing that song of George
Thingummy's out of "Cuddle Up." You know the one I mean. "Always
Listen to Mother, Girls!" it's called, and he gets the audience to join in
and sing the refrain. Quite a ripeish ballad, and one which I myself have
frequently sung in my bath with not a little vim; but by no means—as anyone but
a perfect sapheaded prune like young Bingo would have known—by no means the
sort of thing for a children's Christmas entertainment in the old village hall.
Right from the start of the first refrain the bulk of the audience had begun to
stiffen in their seats and fan themselves, and the Burgess girl at the piano
was accompanying in a stunned, mechanical sort of way, while the curate at her
side averted his gaze in a pained manner. The Tough Eggs, however, were all for
it.
At the end of
the second refrain the kid stopped and began to sidle towards the wings. Upon
which the following brief duologue took place:
Young
Bingo (Voice heard off, ringing
against the rafters): "Go on!"
The
Kid (coyly): "I don't
like to."
Young
Bingo (still louder):
"Go on, you little blighter, or I'll slay you!"
I suppose the
kid thought it over swiftly and realised that Bingo, being in a position to get
at him, had better be conciliated, whatever the harvest might be; for he
shuffled down to the front and, having shut his eyes and giggled hysterically,
said: "Ladies and gentlemen, I will now call upon Squire Tressidder to
oblige by singing the refrain!"
You know, with
the most charitable feelings towards him, there are moments when you can't help
thinking that young Bingo ought to be in some sort of a home. I suppose, poor
fish, he had pictured this as the big punch of the evening. He had imagined, I
take it, that the Squire would spring jovially to his feet, rip the song off
his chest, and all would be gaiety and mirth. Well, what happened was simply that
old Tressidder—and, mark you, I'm not blaming him—just sat where he was,
swelling and turning a brighter purple every second. The lower middle classes
remained in frozen silence, waiting for the roof to fall. The only section of
the audience that really seemed to enjoy the idea was the Tough Eggs, who
yelled with enthusiasm. It was jam for the Tough Eggs.
And then the
lights went out again.
*
* *
* *
When they went
up, some minutes later, they disclosed the Squire marching stiffly out at the
head of his family, fed up to the eyebrows; the Burgess girl at the piano with
a pale, set look; and the curate gazing at her with something in his expression
that seemed to suggest that, although all this was no doubt deplorable, he had
spotted the silver fining.
The show went
on once more. There were great chunks of Plays-for-the-Tots dialogue, and then
the girl at the piano struck up the prelude to that Orange-Girl number that's
the big hit of the Palace revue. I took it that this was to be Bingo's smashing
act one finale. The entire company was on the stage, and a clutching hand had
appeared round the edge of the curtain, ready to pull at the right moment. It looked
like the finale all right. It wasn't long before I realised that it was
something more. It was the finish.
I take it you
know that Orange number at the Palace? It goes:
Oh, won't you
something something oranges,
My something
oranges,
My something
oranges;
Oh, won't you
something something something I forget,
Something
something something tumty tumty yet:
Oh——
or words to
that effect. It's a dashed clever lyric, and the tune's good, too; but the
thing that made the number was the business where the girls take oranges out of
their baskets, you know, and toss them lightly to the audience. I don't know if
you've ever noticed it, but it always seems to tickle an audience to bits when
they get things thrown at them from the stage. Every time I've been to the
Palace the customers have simply gone wild over this number.
But at the
Palace, of course, the oranges are made of yellow wool, and the girls don't so
much chuck them as drop them limply into the first and second rows. I began to
gather that the business was going to be treated rather differently to-night
when a dashed great chunk of pips and mildew sailed
past my ear and burst on the wall behind me. Another landed with a squelch on
the neck of one of the Nibs in the third row. And then a third took me right on
the tip of the nose, and I kind of lost interest in the proceedings for awhile.
When I had
scrubbed my face and got my eye to stop watering for a moment, I saw that the
evening's entertainment had begun to resemble one of Belfast's livelier nights.
The air was thick with shrieks and fruit. The kids on the stage, with Bingo
buzzing distractedly to and fro in their midst, were having the time of their
lives. I suppose they realised that this couldn't go on for ever, and were
making the most of their chances. The Tough Eggs had begun to pick up all the
oranges that hadn't burst and were shooting them back, so that the audience got
it both coming and going. In fact, take it all round, there was a certain
amount of confusion; and, just as things had begun really to hot up, out went
the lights again.
It seemed to me
about my time for leaving, so I slid for the door. I was hardly outside when
the audience began to stream out. They surged about me in twos and threes, and
I've never seen a public body so dashed unanimous on any point. To a man—and to
a woman—they were cursing poor old Bingo; and there was a large and rapidly
growing school of thought which held that the best thing to do would be to
waylay him as he emerged and splash him about in the village pond a bit.
There were such
a dickens of a lot of these enthusiasts and they looked so jolly determined
that it seemed to me that the only matey thing to do was to go behind and warn
young Bingo to turn his coat-collar up and breeze off snakily by some side
exit. I went behind, and found him sitting on a box in
the wings, perspiring pretty freely and looking more or less like the spot
marked with a cross where the accident happened. His hair was standing up and
his ears were hanging down, and one harsh word would undoubtedly have made him
burst into tears.
"Bertie,"
he said hollowly, as he saw me, "it was that blighter Steggles! I caught
one of the kids before he could get away and got it all out of him. Steggles
substituted real oranges for the balls of wool which with infinite sweat and at
a cost of nearly a quid I had specially prepared. Well, I will now proceed to
tear him limb from limb. It'll be something to do."
I hated to
spoil his day-dreams, but it had to be.
"Good
heavens, man," I said, "you haven't time for frivolous amusements
now. You've got to get out. And quick!"
"Bertie,"
said Bingo in a dull voice, "she was here just now. She said it was all my
fault and that she would never speak to me again. She said she had always
suspected me of being a heartless practical joker, and now she knew. She said——
Oh, well, she ticked me off properly."
"That's
the least of your troubles," I said. It seemed impossible to rouse the
poor zib to a sense of his position. "Do you realise that about two
hundred of Twing's heftiest are waiting for you outside to chuck you into the
pond?"
"No!"
"Absolutely!"
For a moment
the poor chap seemed crushed. But only for a moment. There has always been
something of the good old English bulldog breed about Bingo. A strange, sweet
smile flickered for an instant over his face.
"It's all
right," he said. "I can sneak out through the
cellar and climb over the wall at the back. They can't intimidate me!"
*
* *
* *
It couldn't
have been more than a week later when Jeeves, after he had brought me my tea,
gently steered me away from the sporting page of the Morning Post and
directed my attention to an announcement in the engagements and marriages
column.
It was a brief
statement that a marriage had been arranged and would shortly take place
between the Hon. and Rev. Hubert Wingham, third son of the Right Hon. the Earl
of Sturridge, and Mary, only daughter of the late Matthew Burgess, of Weatherly
Court, Hants.
"Of
course," I said, after I had given it the east-to-west, "I expected
this, Jeeves."
"Yes,
sir."
"She would
never forgive him what happened that night."
"No,
sir."
"Well,"
I said, as I took a sip of the fragrant and steaming, "I don't suppose it
will take old Bingo long to get over it. It's about the hundred and eleventh
time this sort of thing has happened to him. You're the man I'm sorry
for."
"Me,
sir?"
"Well,
dash it all, you can't have forgotten what a deuce of a lot of trouble you took
to bring the thing off for Bingo. It's too bad that all your work should have
been wasted."
"Not
entirely wasted, sir."
"Eh?"
"It is
true that my efforts to bring about the match between Mr. Little and the young
lady were not successful, but still I look back upon the
matter with a certain satisfaction."
"Because
you did your best, you mean?"
"Not
entirely, sir, though of course that thought also gives me pleasure. I was
alluding more particularly to the fact that I found the affair financially
remunerative."
"Financially
remunerative? What do you mean?"
"When I
learned that Mr. Steggles had interested himself in the contest, sir, I went
shares with my friend Brookfield and bought the book which had been made on the
issue by the 'Cow and Horses.' It has proved a highly profitable investment.
Your breakfast will be ready almost immediately, sir. Kidneys on toast and
mushrooms. I will bring it when you ring."