Blanding Castle Omnibus

Home > Fiction > Blanding Castle Omnibus > Page 236
Blanding Castle Omnibus Page 236

by P. G. Wodehouse


  ‘Where are you?’

  ‘I’m phoning from the Beetle and Wedge, Sir Gregory. And I was wondering, Sir Gregory,’ proceeded George Cyril Wellbeloved, a pleading note creeping into his voice, ‘if under the circs, it being such a warm day and me all worn out from toiling in your interests, I might have a glass of beer.’

  ‘Certainly, certainly,’ said Gally heartily. ‘Have all you want and tell them to charge it to me.’

  There was a silence. It seemed for a moment that the pig man had swooned. When he resumed, it was plain from the new animation with which he spoke that he was feeling that there had been a great improvement in his employer since they had last met. This, he seemed to be saying to himself, was something like sweetness and light.

  ‘Well, sir,’ he said, sunnily, ‘I’ve found her.’

  ‘Eh?’

  ‘The Queen, sir.’

  Gally reeled. The words had been like a blow between his eyes. He had been so sure that his secret was safe from the world, and here he was, unmasked by a pig man. For a long instant he stood speechless. Then he managed to utter.

  ‘Good God!’

  ‘Yes, sir, it took a bit of doing, but I did it, and I came along here to the Beetle and Wedge to apprise you of her whereabouts. Following your instructions, sir, I proceeded to Blandings Castle … About that beer,’ said George Cyril Wellbeloved, digressing for a moment. ‘Would it run to a spot of gin in it, sir?’

  ‘Yes, yes, yes.’

  ‘Thank you, sir. I find it improves the flavour. Well, sir, as I was saying, I proceeded to Blandings Castle and proceeded to lurk unseen. What had occurred to me, thinking it over, was that if the Queen was being held in durance vile – that’s an expression they use, sir, I don’t know if it’s familiar to you – somebody would have to be feeding her pretty soon, and this, I presumed, would be done by an underling, if you understand the word, effecting an egress through the back door. So I lurked near the back door, and sure enough out came Mr Beach, the butler, carrying in his hand a substantial pail and glancing very nervous from side to side as much as to say “Am I observed?” Well, sir, to cut a long story short, he proceeded to proceed to what is known as the west wood – which is a wood lying in a westerly direction – and there fetched up at an edifice which I assumed to have been at one time the residence of one of the gamekeepers. He went in. He effected an entrance,’ said George Cyril Wellbeloved, correcting himself, ‘and I crope up secretly and looked in through the window, and there was the Queen, sir, as large as life. And then I took my departure and proceeded here and rang you up on the telephone so as to apprise you of what had transpired and leave it to you to take what steps you may consider germane to the issue, trusting I have given satisfaction as is my constant endeavour. And, now, sir, with your permission, I will be ringing off and going and securing the beer you have so kindly donated. Thank you, sir.’

  ‘Hey!’ shouted Gally.

  ‘Sir?’

  ‘Where’s the Empress?’

  ‘Why, just where we left her, sir,’ said George Cyril Wellbeloved, surprised, and hung up.

  Gally replaced the receiver, and stood dazed and numb. He was thinking hard thoughts of George Cyril Wellbeloved and wondering a little that such men were permitted to roam at large in a civilized country. If at that moment he had learned that George Cyril Wellbeloved had tripped over a hole in the Beetle and Wedge’s linoleum and broken his neck, he would, like Pollyanna, have been glad, glad, glad.

  But men of the stamp of the Hon. Galahad Threepwood do not remain dazed and numb for long. Another moment, and he was lifting the receiver and asking for the number of Blandings Castle. And presently Beach’s voice came over the wire.

  ‘Hullo? Lord Emsworth’s residence. Beach, the butler, speaking.’

  ‘Beach,’ said Gally, wasting no time in courteous preliminaries, ‘pick up those flat feet of yours and race like a mustang to the west wood and remove that pig. That blasted Wellbeloved was tailing you up when you went to feed the animal, and has just been making his report to me, thinking that I was the man Parsloe. We’ve got to find another resting place for it before he realizes his error, and most fortunately I know of one that will be ideal. Do you remember Fruity Biffen? Don’t be an ass, Beach, of course you remember Fruity Biffen. My friend Admiral Biffen. Until a few days ago he was living in a house on the Shrewsbury road. You can’t mistake it. It’s got a red roof, and it’s called Sunnybrae. Take this pig there and deposit it in the kitchen. What do you mean, what will Admiral Biffen say? He isn’t there. He went back to London, leaving the place empty. So put the pig … What’s that? How? Use a wheelbarrow, man, use a wheelbarrow.’

  4

  In his office in Long Island City, N.Y., Mr Donaldson of Donaldson’s Dog Joy was dictating a cable to his secretary.

  ‘Lady Constance Keeble, Blandings Castle, Shropshire, England. Got that?’

  ‘Yes, Mr Donaldson.’

  Mr Donaldson thought for a moment. The divine afflatus descended on him, and he spoke rapidly.

  ‘“Cannot understand your letter just received saying you find my old friend Mrs Bunbury so charming. Stop. Where do you get that old friend Mrs Bunbury stuff. Query mark. I never had an old friend Mrs Bunbury. Stop. If person calling self Mrs Bunbury has insinuated self into Blandings Castle claiming to be old friend of mine, comma, she is a goshdarned impostor and strongly advocate throwing her out on her … ” What’s the word, Miss Horwitt?’

  ‘Keister, Mr Donaldson.’

  ‘Thank you, Miss Horwitt. “Strongly advocate throwing her out on her keister or calling police reserves. Stop. Old friend of mine forsooth. Stop. The idea. Stop. Never heard of such a thing. Stop.”’

  ‘Shall I add “Hoity-toity”, Mr Donaldson?’

  ‘No. Just kindest regards.’

  ‘Yes, Mr Donaldson.’

  ‘Right. Send it direct.’

  CHAPTER 7

  THE ANNUAL BINGE or jamboree of the Shropshire, Herefordshire and South Wales Pig Breeders’ Association is always rather a long time breaking up. Pig breeders are of an affectionate nature and hate to tear themselves away from other pig breeders. The proceedings concluded, they like to linger and light pipes and stand around asking the boys if they know the one about the young man of Calcutta. It was consequently not till late in the afternoon that the car which had taken Lord Emsworth and Maudie to Wolverhampton – Alfred Voules, chauffeur, at the wheel – began its return journey.

  Stress was laid earlier in this narrative on the fact that the conscientious historian, when recording any given series of events, is not at liberty to wander off down byways, however attractive, but is compelled to keep plodding steadily along the dusty high road of his story, and this must now be emphasized again to explain why the chronicler does not at this point diverge from his tale to give a word for word transcript of Lord Emsworth’s speech. It would have been a congenial task, calling out all the best in him, but it cannot be done. Fortunately the loss to Literature is not irreparable. A full report will be found in the Bridgnorth, Shifnal and Albrighton Argus (with which is incorporated the Wheat Growers’ Intelligencer and Stock Breeders’ Gazetteer), which is in every home.

  Nor is he able to reveal the details of the conversation in the car, because there was no conversation in the car. It was Lord Emsworth’s custom, when travelling, to fall asleep at the start of the journey and remain asleep throughout. Possibly on a special occasion like this a strong man’s passion might have kept him awake, at least for the first mile or two, but the cold from which he was suffering lowered his resistance and he had had a tiring day trying to keep his top hat balanced on his head. So Nature took its toll, and Maudie, watching him, was well pleased, for his insensibility fitted in neatly with her plans. She was contemplating a course of action which she would have found difficult to carry out with a wakeful host prattling at her side.

  As the car neared the home stretch and his thoughts, like drifting thistledown, had begun to turn to supper
and beer, Alfred Voules heard the glass panel slide back behind him and a hushed voice say ‘Hey!’

  ‘Listen,’ whispered Maudie. ‘Do you know a place called Matchingham Hall? And don’t yell, or you’ll wake Lord Emsworth.’

  Alfred Voules knew Matchingham Hall well. He replied in a hoarse undertone that it was just round the next bend in the road and they would be coming to it in a couple of ticks.

  ‘Stop there, will you. I want to see Sir Gregory Parsloe about something.’

  ‘Shall I wait, ma’am?’

  ‘No, don’t wait. I don’t know how long I shall be,’ said Maudie, feeling that hours – nay days – might well elapse before she had finished saying to Tubby Parsloe all the good things which had been accumulating inside her through the years. Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, and when a woman scorned starts talking, she likes to take plenty of time. She does not want to have to be watching the clock all the while.

  The car slowed down and slid to a halt outside massive iron gates flanked by stone posts with heraldic animals on top of them. Beyond the gates were opulent-looking grounds and at the end of the long driveway a home of England so stately that Maudie drew her breath in with a quick ‘Coo!’ of awe. Tubby, it was plain, had struck it rich and come a long way since the old Criterion days when he used to plead with her to chalk the price of his modest refreshment up on the slate, explaining that credit was the life-blood of Commerce, without which the marts of trade could have no elasticity.

  ‘This’ll do,’ she said. ‘Drop me here.’

  2

  Sir Gregory Parsloe had just sat down at the dinner table when the door bell rang. He had had three excellent cocktails and was looking forward with bright anticipation to a meal of the sort that sticks to the ribs and brings beads of perspiration to the forehead. He had ordered it specially that morning, taking no little trouble over his selections. Some men, when jilted, take to drink. Sir Gregory was taking to food. Freed from the thrall of Gloria Salt, he intended to make up for past privations.

  Le Diner

  Smoked Salmon

  Mushroom Soup

  Filet of Sole

  Hungarian Goulash

  Mashed Potatoes

  Buttered Beets

  Buttered Beans

  Asparagus with Mayonnaise

  Ambrosia Chiffon Pie

  Cheese

  Fruit

  Petits Fours

  Ambrosia Chiffon Pie is the stuff you make with whipped cream, white of egg, powdered sugar, seeded grapes, sponge cake, shredded coconut and orange gelatin, and it had been planned by the backsliding Baronet as the final supreme gesture of independence. A man who has been ordered by his fiancée to diet and defiantly tucks into Ambrosia Chiffon Pie has formally cast off the shackles.

  He had unfastened the lower buttons of his waistcoat and was in the act of squeezing lemon juice over his smoked salmon, when the hubbub at the front door broke out. It was caused by Maudie demanding to see Sir Gregory Parsloe immediately and Binstead explaining – politely at first, then, as the argument grew more heated, in a loud and hostile voice – that Sir Gregory was at dinner and could not be disturbed. And the latter was about to intervene in the debate with a stentorian ‘What the devil’s all that noise going on out there?’ when the door flew open and Maudie burst in, with Binstead fluttering in her wake.

  The butler had given up the unequal struggle. He knew when he was licked.

  ‘Mrs Stubbs,’ he announced aloofly, and went off, washing his hands of the whole unpleasant affair and leaving his employer to deal with the situation as he thought best.

  Sir Gregory stood staring, the smoked salmon frozen on its fork. It is always disconcerting when an unexpected guest arrives at dinner time, and particularly so when such a guest is a spectre from the dead past. The historic instance, of course, of this sort of thing is the occasion when the ghost of Banquo dropped in to take pot luck with Macbeth. It gave Macbeth a start, and it was plain from Sir Gregory’s demeanour that he also had had one.

  ‘What? What? What? What? What?’ he gasped, for he was a confirmed what-whatter in times of emotion.

  Maudie’s blue eyes were burning with a dangerous light.

  ‘So there you are!’ she said, having given her teeth a little click. ‘I wonder you can look me in the face, Tubby Parsloe.’

  Sir Gregory blinked.

  ‘Me?’

  ‘Yes, you.’

  It occurred to Sir Gregory that another go at the smoked salmon might do something to fortify a brain which was feeling as if a charge of trinitrotoluol had been touched off under it. Fish, he had heard or read somewhere, was good for the brain. He took a fork-full, hoping for the best, but nothing happened. His mind still whirled. Probably smoked salmon was not the right sort of fish.

  Maudie, having achieved the meeting for which she had been waiting for ten years, wasted no time beating about the bush. She got down to the res without preamble.

  ‘A nice thing that was you did to me, Tubby Parsloe,’ she said, speaking like the voice of conscience.

  ‘Eh?’

  ‘Leaving me waiting at the church like that!’

  Once more Sir Gregory had to fight down a suspicion that his mind was darkening.

  ‘I left you waiting at the church? I don’t know what you’re talking about.’

  ‘Don’t try that stuff on me. Did you or did you not write me a letter ten years ago telling me to come and get married at St Saviour’s, Pimlico, at two o’clock sharp on June the seventh?’

  ‘June the what?’

  ‘You heard.’

  ‘I did nothing of the sort. You’re crazy.’

  Maudie laughed a hard, bitter laugh. She had been expecting some such attitude as this. Trust Tubby Parsloe to try to wriggle out of it. Fortunately she had come armed to the teeth with indisputable evidence, and she now produced it from her bag.

  ‘You didn’t, eh? Well, here’s the letter. I kept it all these years in case I ever ran into you. Here you are. Look for yourself.’

  Sir Gregory studied the document dazedly.

  ‘Is that your handwriting?’

  ‘Yes, that’s my handwriting.’

  ‘Well, read what it says.’

  ‘“Darling Maudie –”’

  ‘Not that. Over the page.’

  Sir Gregory turned the page.

  ‘There you are. “Two o’clock sharp, June seven”.’

  Sir Gregory uttered a cry.

  ‘You’re cock-eyed, old girl.’

  ‘How do you mean, I’m cock-eyed?’

  ‘That’s not a seven.’

  ‘What’s not a seven?’

  ‘That thing there.’

  ‘Why isn’t it a seven?’

  ‘Because it’s a four. June 4, as plain as a pikestaff. Anyone who could take it for a … Lord love a duck! You don’t mean you went to that church on June the seventh?’

  ‘Certainly I went to that church on June the seventh.’

  With a hollow groan Sir Gregory took another fork-full of smoked salmon. A blinding light had shone upon him, and he realized how unjustified had been those hard thoughts he had been thinking about this woman all these years. He had supposed that she had betrayed him with a cold, mocking callousness which had shaken his faith in the female sex to its foundations. He saw now that what had happened had been one of those unfortunate misunderstandings which are so apt to sunder hearts, the sort of thing Thomas Hardy used to write about.

  ‘I was there on June the fourth,’ he said.

  ‘What!’

  Sir Gregory nodded sombrely. He was not a man of great sensibility, but he could appreciate the terrific drama of the thing.

  ‘In a top hat,’ he went on, his voice trembling, ‘and, what’s more, a top hat which I had had pressed or blocked or whatever they call it and in addition had rubbed with stout to make it glossy. And when you didn’t show up and after about a couple of hours it suddenly struck me that you weren’t going to show up, I took t
hat hat off and jumped on it. I was dashed annoyed about the whole business. I mean to say, when a man tells a girl to meet a fellow at two o’clock sharp on June the fourth at St Saviour’s, Pimlico, and marry him and so on, and he gets there and there isn’t a sign of her, can a chap be blamed for feeling a bit upset? Well, as I was saying, I jumped on the hat, reducing it to a mere wreck of its former self, and went off to Paris on one of the tickets I’d bought for the honeymoon. I was luckily able to get a refund on the other. I had quite a good time in Paris, I remember. Missed you, of course,’ said Sir Gregory gallantly.

  Maudie was staring, round-eyed, the tip of her nose wiggling.

  ‘Is that true?’

  ‘Of course it’s true. Dash it all, you don’t suppose I could make up a story like that on the spur of the moment? You don’t think I’m a ruddy novelist or something, do you?’

  This was so reasonable that Maudie’s last doubts were resolved. She gulped, her eyes wet with unshed tears, and when he offered her a piece of smoked salmon, waved it away with a broken cry.

  ‘Oh, Tubby! How awful!’

  ‘Yes. Unfortunate, the whole thing.’

  ‘I thought you had blown in the honeymoon money at the races.’

  ‘Well, I did venture a portion of it at Sandown Park, as a matter of fact, now you mention it, but by great good luck I picked a winner. Bounding Bertie in the two-thirty at twenty to one. What a beauty! I won a hundred quid. That is what enabled me to buy that hat. The money came in handy in Paris, too. Very expensive city, Paris. Never believe anyone who tells you living’s cheap there. They soak you at every turn. Though, mark you, the food’s worth it, the way they cook it over there.’

  There was a silence. Maudie, like Gloria Salt, was thinking of what might have been, and Sir Gregory, his mind back in the days of his solitary honeymoon, was trying to remember the name of that little restaurant behind the Madeleine, where he had had the most amazingly good dinner one night. The first time, he recalled, that he had ever tasted bouillabaisse.

 

‹ Prev