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Authors: P. G. Wodehouse

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BOOK: Joy in the Morning
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Far less serious offences on my part in the past had brought the old relative leaping after me with her hatchet, like a Red Indian on the warpath, howling for my blood.
I mentioned this to Boko as we fetched up at journey’s end, and he patted me on the shoulder. Well meant, no doubt, and a kindly gesture, but one that accomplished little or nothing in the way of stiffening my
morale.
‘If you’re copped,’ said Boko, ‘just pass it off.’
‘Pass it off?’
‘That’s right. Nonchalantly. Got the treacle?’
I said I had got the treacle.
‘And the paper?’
‘Yes.’
‘Then I’ll take a stroll for ten minutes. That will give you eight minutes to screw your courage to the sticking-point, one minute to break window and one to make getaway.’
This treacle idea was Boko’s. He had insisted upon it as an indispensable adjunct to the proceedings, claiming that it would lend the professional touch at which we were aiming. According to him, and he is a chap who has studied these things, the knowledgeable burglar’s first act is to equip himself with treacle and brown paper. He glues the latter to the window by means of the former, and then hauls off and busts the glass with a sharp buffet of the fist.
What a way to earn a living! I suppose I must have used up quite three minutes of my ten in meditating on these hardy fellows and wondering what made them go in for such an exacting life work. Large profits, no doubt, and virtually no overhead, but think what they must have to spend on nerve specialists and rest cures. Some sort of tonic alone must form a heavy item of a burglar’s expenses.
I could have gone on for quite a while musing along these lines, but was obliged to dismiss the subject from my mind, for time was passing and I might expect Boko’s return at any minute. And I shrank from the prospect of having to explain to him that I had been frittering away in daydreaming the moments which should have been earmarked for action.
Feeling, therefore, that if the thing was to be smacked into, ‘twere well ‘twere smacked into quickly, as Shakespeare says, I treacled the paper and attached it to the window. All that now remained to be done was to deliver the sharp buffet. And it was at this point that I suddenly came over all cat-in-the-adage-y. The chilliness of the feet became intensified, and I began to hover, as Stilton had done outside that jeweller’s shop.
I had thought, while watching him on that occasion, that he had accomplished what you might call the last word in backing and filling, but I now realized that he had merely scratched the surface. Compared with mine at this juncture, Stilton’s hovering could scarcely be termed hovering at all. I moved towards my objective and away from my objective, and some of the time I moved sideways. To an observer, had one been present, it might have seemed that I was trying out the intricate steps of some rhythmic dance.
Finally, however, stiffening the sinews and summoning up all the splendid Wooster courage, I made a quick forward movement and was in the act of raising my fist, when it was as if a stick of dynamite had been touched off beneath me. The hair rose in a solid mass, and every nerve in the body stood straight up, curling at the ends. There have been moments in his career, many of them, when Bertram Wooster has not felt at his ease, but this one was the top.
From somewhere above, a voice had spoken.
‘Coo!’ it said. ‘Who’s there?’
If it hadn’t been for that ‘Coo!’ I might have supposed it the voice of Conscience. As it was, I was enabled to ticket it correctly as that of young blasted Edwin. Glued against the wall, as if I had been a bit of treacled paper, I could just see him leaning out of an adjacent window. And when I reflected that, after all I had gone through, I was now being set upon by Boy Scouts, I don’t mind admitting that the iron entered into my soul. Very bitter, the whole thing.
After he had said ‘Who’s there?’ he was silent for a space, as if pausing for a reply, though you would have thought even a cloth-headed kid like that would have known that it’s hopeless to expect burglars to keep the conversation going.
‘Who’s that?’ he said, at length.
I maintained a prudent reserve. He then said ‘I can see you all right,’ but in an uncertain voice which told me he was lying in his teeth. The one thing that was serving to buoy me up and still the fluttering heart-strings at this most unpleasant moment was the fact that it was a dark night, without a moon or any rot of that sort. Stars, yes. Moon, no. A lynx might have seen me, but only a lynx, and it would have had to be a pretty sharpsighted lynx, at that.
My silence seemed to discourage him. These one-sided conversations always flag fairly quickly. He brooded over the scene a bit longer – Jeeves would have spotted a resemblance to the Blessed Damozel gazing out from the gold bar of heaven – then drew his head in, and I was alone at last.
Not, however, for long. A moment later, Boko hove alongside.
‘All set?’ he asked, in a hearty voice that seemed to boom through the garden like a costermonger calling attention to his brussels sprouts, and I grabbed him feverishly, begging him to pipe down a bit.
‘Not so loud!’
‘What’s the matter?’
‘Edwin.’
‘Edwin?’
‘He just poked his foul head out of a window and wanted to know who was there.’
‘Did you tell him?’
‘No.’
‘Excellent. Very wise move. He’s probably gone to sleep again.’
‘Boy Scouts never sleep.’
‘Of course they do. In droves. Have you smashed the window?’
‘No.’
‘Why not?’
‘Because of Edwin.’
He clicked his tongue, causing me to quiver from stem to stern. To me, a little nervous at the moment, as I have shown, it sounded like a mass meeting of Spanish dancers playing the castanets.
‘You mustn’t let yourself be diverted from the task in hand by trifles, Bertie. I can’t help wondering if you’re taking this thing with the proper seriousness. I may be wrong, but there seems to me something frivolous in your attitude. Do pull yourself together and try to remember what this means to Nobby and me.’
‘But I can’t smash windows, with Edwin lurking above.’
‘Of course you can. I can’t see your difficulty. Pay no attention whatever to Edwin. If he is on the alert, so much the better. It will all help when the moment comes for me to put on my act. His story will support mine. I’ll give you another ten minutes, and then I really must insist on a little action. Got a cigarette?’
‘No.’
‘Then I shall simply have to go on smoking mine. That’s what it amounts to,’ said Boko, and breezed off.
Now, reading the above splash of dialogue, you will have noticed something. I don’t know if you happen to know the meaning of the French expression
sang-froid,
but, if you do, you can scarcely have failed to observe to what an extraordinary extent the recent Fittleworth had been exhibiting this quality. While I trembled and twittered, he remained as cool and calm as a turbot on ice, and it now occurred to me that the reason for this might very possibly be that he was keeping on the move.
It helps on these occasions to be able to circulate freely instead of standing on point duty outside scullery windows, and it was quite on the cards, I felt, that a short stroll might do something towards keying up my sagging nervous system. With this end in view, I wandered off round the house.
Any hope I may have entertained, however, that the vibrating ganglions would cease to quiver and the fluttering feeling in the pit of the stomach simmer down was shattered before I had gone a dozen yards. A dim figure suddenly loomed up before me in the darkness, causing me to leap perhaps five feet in the air and utter a sharp yip.
My composure was somewhat restored – not altogether, but somewhat – when the dim f spoke, and I recognized Jeeves’s voice.
CHAPTER 14

G
ood evening, sir,’ he said.
‘Good evening, Jeeves,’ I responded.
‘You gave me quite a start, sir.’
‘Nothing to the one you gave me. I thought the top of my head had come off.’
‘I am sorry to have been the cause of your experiencing any discomfort, sir. I was unable to herald my approach, the encounter being quite unforeseen. You are up late, sir.’
‘Yes.’
‘One could scarcely desire more delightful conditions for a nocturnal ramble.’
‘That is your view, is it?’
‘It is indeed, sir. I always feel that nothing is so soothing as a walk in a garden at night.’
‘Ha!’
‘The cool air. The scent of growing things. That is tobacco plant which you can smell, sir.’
‘Is it?’
‘The stars, sir.’
‘Stars?’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘What about them?’
‘I was merely directing your attention to them, sir. Look how the floor of heaven is thick inlaid with patines of bright gold.’
‘Jeeves—’
‘There’s not the smallest orb which thou beholdest, sir, but in his motion like an angel sings, still quiring to the young-eyed cherubims.’
‘Jeeves—’
‘Such harmony is in immortal souls. But whilst this muddy vesture of decay doth grossly close it in, we cannot hear it.’
‘Jeeves—’
‘Sir?’
‘You couldn’t possibly switch it off, could you?’
‘Certainly, sir, if you wish it.’
‘I’m not in the mood.’
‘Very good, sir.’
‘You know how one isn’t, sometimes.’
‘Yes, sir. I quite understand. I procured the brooch, sir.’
‘Brooch?’
‘The one which you wished me to purchase in place of the trinket lost in the fire, sir. Lady Florence’s birthday present.’
‘Oh, ah.’ It will give you some rough indication of how what he had called this nocturnal ramble of mine had affected me, when I say that I had completely forgotten about the damn’ thing. ‘You got it, eh?’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘And handed it in?’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘Good. That’s offmy mind, then. And, believe me, Jeeves, the more I can get offmy mind at this juncture, the better I shall like it, because it’s already loaded down well above the Plimsoll mark.’
‘I am sorry to hear that, sir.’
‘Do you know why I’m prowling about this garden?’
‘I was hoping that you might enlighten me, sir.’
‘I will. This is no careless saunter on which you find me engaged, Jeeves, but an enterprise whose consequences may well stagger humanity.’
He listened attentively while I sketched out the events which had led up to the tragedy, interrupting only with a respectful intake of the breath as I spoke of Uncle Percy, Boko and the Joke Goods. It was plain that my story had gripped him.
‘An eccentric young gentleman, Mr Fittleworth, sir,’ was his comment, as I concluded.
‘Loony to the eyebrows,’ I agreed.
‘The scheme which he has formulated is not, however, without its ingenuity. His lordship would undoubtedly be most grateful to anyone whom he supposed to have foiled a raid on the premises on this particular night. I happen to be aware that, despite her ladyship’s repeated instructions to him to attend to the matter, he forgot to post the letter renewing his burglary insurance.’
‘How do you know that?’
‘I had the facts from his lordship in person, sir. Ascertaining that I was about to drive to London this afternoon, he gave me the communication to dispatch in the metropolitan area, so that it should reach its destination to-morrow morning by the first delivery. His emotion, as he urged me not to fail him and alluded to what her ladyship would say if she ever discovered his negligence, was very noticeable. He shook visibly.’
I was amazed.
‘You don’t mean he’s scared of Aunt Agatha?’
‘Intensely, sir.’
‘A tough bird like him? Practically a bucko mate of a tramp steamer?’
‘Even bucko mates stand in awe of the captains of their vessels, sir.’
‘Well, you absolutely astound me. I should have thought that if ever there was a bimbo who was master in his own home, that bimbo was Percival, Lord Worplesdon.’
‘I am inclined to doubt whether the gentleman exists who could be master in a home that contained her ladyship, sir.’
‘Perhaps you’re right.’
‘Yes, sir.’
I breathed deeply. For the first time since Boko had outlined the night’s programme, I was conscious of a relaxation of the strain. It would be paltering with the truth to say that even now Bertram Wooster looked forward with any actual relish to busting that scullery window, but it was stimulating to feel that the action was likely to produce solid results.
‘Then you think this scheme of Boko’s will drag home the gravy?’
‘Quite conceivably, sir.’
‘That’s a comfort.’
‘On the other hand—’
‘Oh, golly, Jeeves. What’s wrong now?’
‘I was merely about to say that Mr Fittleworth has selected a somewhat unfortunate moment for his enterprise, sir. It tends to clash with his lordship’s arrangements.’
‘How do you mean?’
‘By an unfortunate coincidence, his lordship will in a few moments from now be proceeding to the potting shed to confer with Mr Chichester Clam.’
‘Chichester Clam?’
‘Yes, sir.’
I shook the head.
‘I think the strain to which I have been subjected must have affected my hearing. You sound to me just as if you were saying Chichester Clam.’
‘Yes, sir. Mr J. Chichester Clam, managing director of the Clam Line.’
‘What on earth’s a clam line?’
‘The shipping line, sir, which, if you remember, is on the eve of being merged with his lordship’s Pink Funnel.’
I got it at last.
‘You mean the chap Uncle Percy is trying to get together with? The ancient mariner from America?’
BOOK: Joy in the Morning
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