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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of Psmith in the City, by P. G. Wodehouse
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  • Title: Psmith in the City
  • Author: P. G. Wodehouse
  • Release Date: October, 2004 [EBook #6753]
  • First Posted: January 23, 2003
  • Last Updated: October 8, 2012
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PSMITH IN THE CITY ***
  • Produced by Suzanne L. Shell, Charles Franks and the Online
  • Distributed Proofreading Team.
  • Psmith in the City
  • by P. G. Wodehouse
  • [Dedication]
  • to Leslie Havergal Bradshaw
  • Contents
  • 1. Mr Bickersdyke Walks behind the Bowler's Arm
  • 2. Mike Hears Bad News
  • 3. The New Era Begins
  • 4. First Steps in a Business Career
  • 5. The Other Man
  • 6. Psmith Explains
  • 7. Going into Winter Quarters
  • 8. The Friendly Native
  • 9. The Haunting of Mr Bickersdyke
  • 10. Mr Bickersdyke Addresses His Constituents
  • 11. Misunderstood
  • 12. In a Nutshell
  • 13. Mike is Moved On
  • 14. Mr Waller Appears in a New Light
  • 15. Stirring Times on the Common
  • 16. Further Developments
  • 17. Sunday Supper
  • 18. Psmith Makes a Discovery
  • 19. The Illness of Edward
  • 20. Concerning a Cheque
  • 21. Psmith Makes Inquiries
  • 22. And Takes Steps
  • 23. Mr Bickersdyke Makes a Concession
  • 24. The Spirit of Unrest
  • 25. At the Telephone
  • 26. Breaking the News
  • 27. At Lord's
  • 28. Psmith Arranges His Future
  • 29. And Mike's
  • 30. The Last Sad Farewells
  • 1. Mr Bickersdyke Walks behind the Bowler's Arm
  • Considering what a prominent figure Mr John Bickersdyke was to be in
  • Mike Jackson's life, it was only appropriate that he should make a
  • dramatic entry into it. This he did by walking behind the bowler's arm
  • when Mike had scored ninety-eight, causing him thereby to be clean
  • bowled by a long-hop.
  • It was the last day of the Ilsworth cricket week, and the house team
  • were struggling hard on a damaged wicket. During the first two matches
  • of the week all had been well. Warm sunshine, true wickets, tea in the
  • shade of the trees. But on the Thursday night, as the team champed
  • their dinner contentedly after defeating the Incogniti by two wickets,
  • a pattering of rain made itself heard upon the windows. By bedtime it
  • had settled to a steady downpour. On Friday morning, when the team of
  • the local regiment arrived in their brake, the sun was shining once
  • more in a watery, melancholy way, but play was not possible before
  • lunch. After lunch the bowlers were in their element. The regiment,
  • winning the toss, put together a hundred and thirty, due principally to
  • a last wicket stand between two enormous corporals, who swiped at
  • everything and had luck enough for two whole teams. The house team
  • followed with seventy-eight, of which Psmith, by his usual golf
  • methods, claimed thirty. Mike, who had gone in first as the star bat of
  • the side, had been run out with great promptitude off the first ball of
  • the innings, which his partner had hit in the immediate neighbourhood
  • of point. At close of play the regiment had made five without loss.
  • This, on the Saturday morning, helped by another shower of rain which
  • made the wicket easier for the moment, they had increased to a hundred
  • and forty-eight, leaving the house just two hundred to make on a pitch
  • which looked as if it were made of linseed.
  • It was during this week that Mike had first made the acquaintance of
  • Psmith's family. Mr Smith had moved from Shropshire, and taken Ilsworth
  • Hall in a neighbouring county. This he had done, as far as could be
  • ascertained, simply because he had a poor opinion of Shropshire
  • cricket. And just at the moment cricket happened to be the pivot of his
  • life.
  • 'My father,' Psmith had confided to Mike, meeting him at the station in
  • the family motor on the Monday, 'is a man of vast but volatile brain.
  • He has not that calm, dispassionate outlook on life which marks your
  • true philosopher, such as myself. I--'
  • 'I say,' interrupted Mike, eyeing Psmith's movements with apprehension,
  • 'you aren't going to drive, are you?'
  • 'Who else? As I was saying, I am like some contented spectator of a
  • Pageant. My pater wants to jump in and stage-manage. He is a man of
  • hobbies. He never has more than one at a time, and he never has that
  • long. But while he has it, it's all there. When I left the house this
  • morning he was all for cricket. But by the time we get to the ground he
  • may have chucked cricket and taken up the Territorial Army. Don't be
  • surprised if you find the wicket being dug up into trenches, when we
  • arrive, and the pro. moving in echelon towards the pavilion. No,' he
  • added, as the car turned into the drive, and they caught a glimpse of
  • white flannels and blazers in the distance, and heard the sound of bat
  • meeting ball, 'cricket seems still to be topping the bill. Come along,
  • and I'll show you your room. It's next to mine, so that, if brooding on
  • Life in the still hours of the night, I hit on any great truth, I shall
  • pop in and discuss it with you.'
  • While Mike was changing, Psmith sat on his bed, and continued to
  • discourse.
  • 'I suppose you're going to the 'Varsity?' he said.
  • 'Rather,' said Mike, lacing his boots. 'You are, of course? Cambridge,
  • I hope. I'm going to King's.'
  • 'Between ourselves,' confided Psmith, 'I'm dashed if I know what's
  • going to happen to me. I am the thingummy of what's-its-name.'
  • 'You look it,' said Mike, brushing his hair.
  • 'Don't stand there cracking the glass,' said Psmith. 'I tell you I am
  • practically a human three-shies-a-penny ball. My father is poising me
  • lightly in his hand, preparatory to flinging me at one of the milky
  • cocos of Life. Which one he'll aim at I don't know. The least thing
  • fills him with a whirl of new views as to my future. Last week we were
  • out shooting together, and he said that the life of the gentleman-farmer
  • was the most manly and independent on earth, and that he had a good
  • mind to start me on that. I pointed out that lack of early training
  • had rendered me unable to distinguish between a threshing-machine and
  • a mangel-wurzel, so he chucked that. He has now worked round to
  • Commerce. It seems that a blighter of the name of Bickersdyke is
  • coming here for the week-end next Saturday. As far as I can say
  • without searching the Newgate Calendar, the man Bickersdyke's career
  • seems to have been as follows. He was at school with my pater, went
  • into the City, raked in a certain amount of doubloons--probably
  • dishonestly--and is now a sort of Captain of Industry, manager of some
  • bank or other, and about to stand for Parliament. The result of these
  • excesses is that my pater's imagination has been fired, and at time of
  • going to press he wants me to imitate Comrade Bickersdyke. However,
  • there's plenty of time. That's one comfort. He's certain to change his
  • mind again. Ready? Then suppose we filter forth into the arena?'
  • Out on the field Mike was introduced to the man of hobbies. Mr Smith,
  • senior, was a long, earnest-looking man who might have been Psmith in a
  • grey wig but for his obvious energy. He was as wholly on the move as
  • Psmith was wholly statuesque. Where Psmith stood like some dignified
  • piece of sculpture, musing on deep questions with a glassy eye, his
  • father would be trying to be in four places at once. When Psmith
  • presented Mike to him, he shook hands warmly with him and started a
  • sentence, but broke off in the middle of both performances to dash
  • wildly in the direction of the pavilion in an endeavour to catch an
  • impossible catch some thirty yards away. The impetus so gained carried
  • him on towards Bagley, the Ilsworth Hall ground-man, with whom a moment
  • later he was carrying on an animated discussion as to whether he had or
  • had not seen a dandelion on the field that morning. Two minutes
  • afterwards he had skimmed away again. Mike, as he watched him, began to
  • appreciate Psmith's reasons for feeling some doubt as to what would be
  • his future walk in life.
  • At lunch that day Mike sat next to Mr Smith, and improved his
  • acquaintance with him; and by the end of the week they were on
  • excellent terms. Psmith's father had Psmith's gift of getting on well
  • with people.
  • On this Saturday, as Mike buckled on his pads, Mr Smith bounded up,
  • full of advice and encouragement.
  • 'My boy,' he said, 'we rely on you. These others'--he indicated with a
  • disparaging wave of the hand the rest of the team, who were visible
  • through the window of the changing-room--'are all very well. Decent
  • club bats. Good for a few on a billiard-table. But you're our hope on a
  • wicket like this. I have studied cricket all my life'--till that summer
  • it is improbable that Mr Smith had ever handled a bat--'and I know a
  • first-class batsman when I see one. I've seen your brothers play. Pooh,
  • you're better than any of them. That century of yours against the Green
  • Jackets was a wonderful innings, wonderful. Now look here, my boy. I
  • want you to be careful. We've a lot of runs to make, so we mustn't take
  • any risks. Hit plenty of boundaries, of course, but be careful.
  • Careful. Dash it, there's a youngster trying to climb up the elm. He'll
  • break his neck. It's young Giles, my keeper's boy. Hi! Hi, there!'
  • He scudded out to avert the tragedy, leaving Mike to digest his expert
  • advice on the art of batting on bad wickets.
  • Possibly it was the excellence of this advice which induced Mike to
  • play what was, to date, the best innings of his life. There are moments
  • when the batsman feels an almost super-human fitness. This came to Mike
  • now. The sun had begun to shine strongly. It made the wicket more
  • difficult, but it added a cheerful touch to the scene. Mike felt calm
  • and masterful. The bowling had no terrors for him. He scored nine off
  • his first over and seven off his second, half-way through which he lost
  • his partner. He was to undergo a similar bereavement several times that
  • afternoon, and at frequent intervals. However simple the bowling might
  • seem to him, it had enough sting in it to worry the rest of the team
  • considerably. Batsmen came and went at the other end with such rapidity
  • that it seemed hardly worth while their troubling to come in at all.
  • Every now and then one would give promise of better things by lifting
  • the slow bowler into the pavilion or over the boundary, but it always
  • happened that a similar stroke, a few balls later, ended in an easy
  • catch. At five o'clock the Ilsworth score was eighty-one for seven
  • wickets, last man nought, Mike not out fifty-nine. As most of the house
  • team, including Mike, were dispersing to their homes or were due for
  • visits at other houses that night, stumps were to be drawn at six. It
  • was obvious that they could not hope to win. Number nine on the list,
  • who was Bagley, the ground-man, went in with instructions to play for a
  • draw, and minute advice from Mr Smith as to how he was to do it. Mike
  • had now begun to score rapidly, and it was not to be expected that he
  • could change his game; but Bagley, a dried-up little man of the type
  • which bowls for five hours on a hot August day without exhibiting any
  • symptoms of fatigue, put a much-bound bat stolidly in front of every
  • ball he received; and the Hall's prospects of saving the game grew
  • brighter.
  • At a quarter to six the professional left, caught at very silly point
  • for eight. The score was a hundred and fifteen, of which Mike had made
  • eighty-five.
  • A lengthy young man with yellow hair, who had done some good fast
  • bowling for the Hall during the week, was the next man in. In previous
  • matches he had hit furiously at everything, and against the Green
  • Jackets had knocked up forty in twenty minutes while Mike was putting
  • the finishing touches to his century. Now, however, with his host's
  • warning ringing in his ears, he adopted the unspectacular, or Bagley,
  • style of play. His manner of dealing with the ball was that of one
  • playing croquet. He patted it gingerly back to the bowler when it was
  • straight, and left it icily alone when it was off the wicket. Mike,
  • still in the brilliant vein, clumped a half-volley past point to the
  • boundary, and with highly scientific late cuts and glides brought his
  • score to ninety-eight. With Mike's score at this, the total at a
  • hundred and thirty, and the hands of the clock at five minutes to six,
  • the yellow-haired croquet exponent fell, as Bagley had fallen, a victim
  • to silly point, the ball being the last of the over.
  • Mr Smith, who always went in last for his side, and who so far had not
  • received a single ball during the week, was down the pavilion steps and
  • half-way to the wicket before the retiring batsman had taken half a
  • dozen steps.
  • 'Last over,' said the wicket-keeper to Mike. 'Any idea how many you've
  • got? You must be near your century, I should think.'
  • 'Ninety-eight,' said Mike. He always counted his runs.
  • 'By Jove, as near as that? This is something like a finish.'
  • Mike left the first ball alone, and the second. They were too wide of
  • the off-stump to be hit at safely. Then he felt a thrill as the third
  • ball left the bowler's hand. It was a long-hop. He faced square to pull
  • it.
  • And at that moment Mr John Bickersdyke walked into his life across the
  • bowling-screen.
  • He crossed the bowler's arm just before the ball pitched. Mike lost
  • sight of it for a fraction of a second, and hit wildly. The next moment
  • his leg stump was askew; and the Hall had lost the match.
  • 'I'm sorry,' he said to Mr Smith. 'Some silly idiot walked across the
  • screen just as the ball was bowled.'
  • 'What!' shouted Mr Smith. 'Who was the fool who walked behind the
  • bowler's arm?' he yelled appealingly to Space.
  • 'Here he comes, whoever he is,' said Mike.
  • A short, stout man in a straw hat and a flannel suit was walking
  • towards them. As he came nearer Mike saw that he had a hard, thin-lipped
  • mouth, half-hidden by a rather ragged moustache, and that behind a pair
  • of gold spectacles were two pale and slightly protruding eyes, which,
  • like his mouth, looked hard.
  • 'How are you, Smith,' he said.
  • 'Hullo, Bickersdyke.' There was a slight internal struggle, and then Mr
  • Smith ceased to be the cricketer and became the host. He chatted
  • amiably to the new-comer.
  • 'You lost the game, I suppose,' said Mr Bickersdyke.
  • The cricketer in Mr Smith came to the top again, blended now, however,
  • with the host. He was annoyed, but restrained in his annoyance.
  • 'I say, Bickersdyke, you know, my dear fellow,' he said complainingly,
  • 'you shouldn't have walked across the screen. You put Jackson off, and
  • made him get bowled.'
  • 'The screen?'
  • 'That curious white object,' said Mike. 'It is not put up merely as an
  • ornament. There's a sort of rough idea of giving the batsman a chance
  • of seeing the ball, as well. It's a great help to him when people come
  • charging across it just as the bowler bowls.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke turned a slightly deeper shade of purple, and was about
  • to reply, when what sporting reporters call 'the veritable ovation'
  • began.
  • Quite a large crowd had been watching the game, and they expressed
  • their approval of Mike's performance.
  • There is only one thing for a batsman to do on these occasions. Mike
  • ran into the pavilion, leaving Mr Bickersdyke standing.
  • 2. Mike Hears Bad News
  • It seemed to Mike, when he got home, that there was a touch of gloom in
  • the air. His sisters were as glad to see him as ever. There was a good
  • deal of rejoicing going on among the female Jacksons because Joe had
  • scored his first double century in first-class cricket. Double
  • centuries are too common, nowadays, for the papers to take much notice
  • of them; but, still, it is not everybody who can make them, and the
  • occasion was one to be marked. Mike had read the news in the evening
  • paper in the train, and had sent his brother a wire from the station,
  • congratulating him. He had wondered whether he himself would ever
  • achieve the feat in first-class cricket. He did not see why he should
  • not. He looked forward through a long vista of years of county cricket.
  • He had a birth qualification for the county in which Mr Smith had
  • settled, and he had played for it once already at the beginning of the
  • holidays. His _debut_ had not been sensational, but it had been
  • promising. The fact that two members of the team had made centuries,
  • and a third seventy odd, had rather eclipsed his own twenty-nine not
  • out; but it had been a faultless innings, and nearly all the papers had
  • said that here was yet another Jackson, evidently well up to the family
  • standard, who was bound to do big things in the future.
  • The touch of gloom was contributed by his brother Bob to a certain
  • extent, and by his father more noticeably. Bob looked slightly
  • thoughtful. Mr Jackson seemed thoroughly worried.
  • Mike approached Bob on the subject in the billiard-room after dinner.
  • Bob was practising cannons in rather a listless way.
  • 'What's up, Bob?' asked Mike.
  • Bob laid down his cue.
  • 'I'm hanged if I know,' said Bob. 'Something seems to be. Father's
  • worried about something.'
  • 'He looked as if he'd got the hump rather at dinner.'
  • 'I only got here this afternoon, about three hours before you did. I
  • had a bit of a talk with him before dinner. I can't make out what's up.
  • He seemed awfully keen on my finding something to do now I've come down
  • from Oxford. Wanted to know whether I couldn't get a tutoring job or a
  • mastership at some school next term. I said I'd have a shot. I don't
  • see what all the hurry's about, though. I was hoping he'd give me a bit
  • of travelling on the Continent somewhere before I started in.'
  • 'Rough luck,' said Mike. 'I wonder why it is. Jolly good about Joe,
  • wasn't it? Let's have fifty up, shall we?'
  • Bob's remarks had given Mike no hint of impending disaster. It seemed
  • strange, of course, that his father, who had always been so easy-going,
  • should have developed a hustling Get On or Get Out spirit, and be
  • urging Bob to Do It Now; but it never occurred to him that there could
  • be any serious reason for it. After all, fellows had to start working
  • some time or other. Probably his father had merely pointed this out to
  • Bob, and Bob had made too much of it.
  • Half-way through the game Mr Jackson entered the room, and stood
  • watching in silence.
  • 'Want a game, father?' asked Mike.
  • 'No, thanks, Mike. What is it? A hundred up?'
  • 'Fifty.'
  • 'Oh, then you'll be finished in a moment. When you are, I wish you'd
  • just look into the study for a moment, Mike. I want to have a talk with
  • you.'
  • 'Rum,' said Mike, as the door closed. 'I wonder what's up?'
  • For a wonder his conscience was free. It was not as if a bad school-report
  • might have arrived in his absence. His Sedleigh report had come at
  • the beginning of the holidays, and had been, on the whole, fairly
  • decent--nothing startling either way. Mr Downing, perhaps through
  • remorse at having harried Mike to such an extent during the Sammy
  • episode, had exercised a studied moderation in his remarks. He had let
  • Mike down far more easily than he really deserved. So it could not be a
  • report that was worrying Mr Jackson. And there was nothing else on his
  • conscience.
  • Bob made a break of sixteen, and ran out. Mike replaced his cue, and
  • walked to the study.
  • His father was sitting at the table. Except for the very important fact
  • that this time he felt that he could plead Not Guilty on every possible
  • charge, Mike was struck by the resemblance in the general arrangement
  • of the scene to that painful ten minutes at the end of the previous
  • holidays, when his father had announced his intention of taking him
  • away from Wrykyn and sending him to Sedleigh. The resemblance was
  • increased by the fact that, as Mike entered, Mr Jackson was kicking at
  • the waste-paper basket--a thing which with him was an infallible sign
  • of mental unrest.
  • 'Sit down, Mike,' said Mr Jackson. 'How did you get on during the
  • week?'
  • 'Topping. Only once out under double figures. And then I was run out.
  • Got a century against the Green Jackets, seventy-one against the
  • Incogs, and today I made ninety-eight on a beast of a wicket, and only
  • got out because some silly goat of a chap--'
  • He broke off. Mr Jackson did not seem to be attending. There was a
  • silence. Then Mr Jackson spoke with an obvious effort.
  • 'Look here, Mike, we've always understood one another, haven't we?'
  • 'Of course we have.'
  • 'You know I wouldn't do anything to prevent you having a good time, if
  • I could help it. I took you away from Wrykyn, I know, but that was a
  • special case. It was necessary. But I understand perfectly how keen you
  • are to go to Cambridge, and I wouldn't stand in the way for a minute,
  • if I could help it.'
  • Mike looked at him blankly. This could only mean one thing. He was not
  • to go to the 'Varsity. But why? What had happened? When he had left for
  • the Smith's cricket week, his name had been down for King's, and the
  • whole thing settled. What could have happened since then?
  • 'But I can't help it,' continued Mr Jackson.
  • 'Aren't I going up to Cambridge, father?' stammered Mike.
  • 'I'm afraid not, Mike. I'd manage it if I possibly could. I'm just as
  • anxious to see you get your Blue as you are to get it. But it's kinder
  • to be quite frank. I can't afford to send you to Cambridge. I won't go
  • into details which you would not understand; but I've lost a very large
  • sum of money since I saw you last. So large that we shall have to
  • economize in every way. I shall let this house and take a much smaller
  • one. And you and Bob, I'm afraid, will have to start earning your
  • living. I know it's a terrible disappointment to you, old chap.'
  • 'Oh, that's all right,' said Mike thickly. There seemed to be something
  • sticking in his throat, preventing him from speaking.
  • 'If there was any possible way--'
  • 'No, it's all right, father, really. I don't mind a bit. It's awfully
  • rough luck on you losing all that.'
  • There was another silence. The clock ticked away energetically on the
  • mantelpiece, as if glad to make itself heard at last. Outside, a
  • plaintive snuffle made itself heard. John, the bull-dog, Mike's
  • inseparable companion, who had followed him to the study, was getting
  • tired of waiting on the mat. Mike got up and opened the door. John
  • lumbered in.
  • The movement broke the tension.
  • 'Thanks, Mike,' said Mr Jackson, as Mike started to leave the room,
  • 'you're a sportsman.'
  • 3. The New Era Begins
  • Details of what were in store for him were given to Mike next morning.
  • During his absence at Ilsworth a vacancy had been got for him in that
  • flourishing institution, the New Asiatic Bank; and he was to enter upon
  • his duties, whatever they might be, on the Tuesday of the following
  • week. It was short notice, but banks have a habit of swallowing their
  • victims rather abruptly. Mike remembered the case of Wyatt, who had had
  • just about the same amount of time in which to get used to the prospect
  • of Commerce.
  • On the Monday morning a letter arrived from Psmith. Psmith was still
  • perturbed. 'Commerce,' he wrote, 'continues to boom. My pater referred
  • to Comrade Bickersdyke last night as a Merchant Prince. Comrade B. and
  • I do not get on well together. Purely for his own good, I drew him
  • aside yesterday and explained to him at great length the frightfulness
  • of walking across the bowling-screen. He seemed restive, but I was
  • firm. We parted rather with the Distant Stare than the Friendly Smile.
  • But I shall persevere. In many ways the casual observer would say that
  • he was hopeless. He is a poor performer at Bridge, as I was compelled
  • to hint to him on Saturday night. His eyes have no animated sparkle of
  • intelligence. And the cut of his clothes jars my sensitive soul to its
  • foundations. I don't wish to speak ill of a man behind his back, but I
  • must confide in you, as my Boyhood's Friend, that he wore a made-up tie
  • at dinner. But no more of a painful subject. I am working away at him
  • with a brave smile. Sometimes I think that I am succeeding. Then he
  • seems to slip back again. However,' concluded the letter, ending on an
  • optimistic note, 'I think that I shall make a man of him yet--some
  • day.'
  • Mike re-read this letter in the train that took him to London. By this
  • time Psmith would know that his was not the only case in which Commerce
  • was booming. Mike had written to him by return, telling him of the
  • disaster which had befallen the house of Jackson. Mike wished he could
  • have told him in person, for Psmith had a way of treating unpleasant
  • situations as if he were merely playing at them for his own amusement.
  • Psmith's attitude towards the slings and arrows of outrageous Fortune
  • was to regard them with a bland smile, as if they were part of an
  • entertainment got up for his express benefit.
  • Arriving at Paddington, Mike stood on the platform, waiting for his box
  • to emerge from the luggage-van, with mixed feelings of gloom and
  • excitement. The gloom was in the larger quantities, perhaps, but the
  • excitement was there, too. It was the first time in his life that he
  • had been entirely dependent on himself. He had crossed the Rubicon. The
  • occasion was too serious for him to feel the same helplessly furious
  • feeling with which he had embarked on life at Sedleigh. It was possible
  • to look on Sedleigh with quite a personal enmity. London was too big to
  • be angry with. It took no notice of him. It did not care whether he was
  • glad to be there or sorry, and there was no means of making it care.
  • That is the peculiarity of London. There is a sort of cold
  • unfriendliness about it. A city like New York makes the new arrival
  • feel at home in half an hour; but London is a specialist in what Psmith
  • in his letter had called the Distant Stare. You have to buy London's
  • good-will.
  • Mike drove across the Park to Victoria, feeling very empty and small.
  • He had settled on Dulwich as the spot to get lodgings, partly because,
  • knowing nothing about London, he was under the impression that rooms
  • anywhere inside the four-mile radius were very expensive, but
  • principally because there was a school at Dulwich, and it would be a
  • comfort being near a school. He might get a game of fives there
  • sometimes, he thought, on a Saturday afternoon, and, in the summer,
  • occasional cricket.
  • Wandering at a venture up the asphalt passage which leads from Dulwich
  • station in the direction of the College, he came out into Acacia Road.
  • There is something about Acacia Road which inevitably suggests
  • furnished apartments. A child could tell at a glance that it was
  • bristling with bed-sitting rooms.
  • Mike knocked at the first door over which a card hung.
  • There is probably no more depressing experience in the world than the
  • process of engaging furnished apartments. Those who let furnished
  • apartments seem to take no joy in the act. Like Pooh-Bah, they do it,
  • but it revolts them.
  • In answer to Mike's knock, a female person opened the door. In
  • appearance she resembled a pantomime 'dame', inclining towards the
  • restrained melancholy of Mr Wilkie Bard rather than the joyous abandon
  • of Mr George Robey. Her voice she had modelled on the gramophone. Her
  • most recent occupation seemed to have been something with a good deal
  • of yellow soap in it. As a matter of fact--there are no secrets between
  • our readers and ourselves--she had been washing a shirt. A useful
  • occupation, and an honourable, but one that tends to produce a certain
  • homeliness in the appearance.
  • She wiped a pair of steaming hands on her apron, and regarded Mike with
  • an eye which would have been markedly expressionless in a boiled fish.
  • 'Was there anything?' she asked.
  • Mike felt that he was in for it now. He had not sufficient ease of
  • manner to back gracefully away and disappear, so he said that there was
  • something. In point of fact, he wanted a bed-sitting room.
  • 'Orkup stays,' said the pantomime dame. Which Mike interpreted to mean,
  • would he walk upstairs?
  • The procession moved up a dark flight of stairs until it came to a
  • door. The pantomime dame opened this, and shuffled through. Mike stood
  • in the doorway, and looked in.
  • It was a repulsive room. One of those characterless rooms which are
  • only found in furnished apartments. To Mike, used to the comforts of
  • his bedroom at home and the cheerful simplicity of a school dormitory,
  • it seemed about the most dismal spot he had ever struck. A sort of
  • Sargasso Sea among bedrooms.
  • He looked round in silence. Then he said: 'Yes.' There did not seem
  • much else to say.
  • 'It's a nice room,' said the pantomime dame. Which was a black lie. It
  • was not a nice room. It never had been a nice room. And it did not seem
  • at all probable that it ever would be a nice room. But it looked cheap.
  • That was the great thing. Nobody could have the assurance to charge
  • much for a room like that. A landlady with a conscience might even have
  • gone to the length of paying people some small sum by way of
  • compensation to them for sleeping in it.
  • 'About what?' queried Mike. Cheapness was the great consideration. He
  • understood that his salary at the bank would be about four pounds ten a
  • month, to begin with, and his father was allowing him five pounds a
  • month. One does not do things _en prince_ on a hundred and
  • fourteen pounds a year.
  • The pantomime dame became slightly more animated. Prefacing her remarks
  • by a repetition of her statement that it was a nice room, she went on
  • to say that she could 'do' it at seven and sixpence per week 'for
  • him'--giving him to understand, presumably, that, if the Shah of Persia
  • or Mr Carnegie ever applied for a night's rest, they would sigh in vain
  • for such easy terms. And that included lights. Coals were to be looked
  • on as an extra. 'Sixpence a scuttle.' Attendance was thrown in.
  • Having stated these terms, she dribbled a piece of fluff under the bed,
  • after the manner of a professional Association footballer, and relapsed
  • into her former moody silence.
  • Mike said he thought that would be all right. The pantomime dame
  • exhibited no pleasure.
  • ''Bout meals?' she said. 'You'll be wanting breakfast. Bacon, aigs,
  • an' that, I suppose?'
  • Mike said he supposed so.
  • 'That'll be extra,' she said. 'And dinner? A chop, or a nice steak?'
  • Mike bowed before this original flight of fancy. A chop or a nice steak
  • seemed to be about what he might want.
  • 'That'll be extra,' said the pantomime dame in her best Wilkie Bard
  • manner.
  • Mike said yes, he supposed so. After which, having put down seven and
  • sixpence, one week's rent in advance, he was presented with a grubby
  • receipt and an enormous latchkey, and the _seance_ was at an end.
  • Mike wandered out of the house. A few steps took him to the railings
  • that bounded the College grounds. It was late August, and the evenings
  • had begun to close in. The cricket-field looked very cool and spacious
  • in the dim light, with the school buildings looming vague and shadowy
  • through the slight mist. The little gate by the railway bridge was not
  • locked. He went in, and walked slowly across the turf towards the big
  • clump of trees which marked the division between the cricket and
  • football fields. It was all very pleasant and soothing after the
  • pantomime dame and her stuffy bed-sitting room. He sat down on a bench
  • beside the second eleven telegraph-board, and looked across the ground
  • at the pavilion. For the first time that day he began to feel really
  • home-sick. Up till now the excitement of a strange venture had borne
  • him up; but the cricket-field and the pavilion reminded him so sharply
  • of Wrykyn. They brought home to him with a cutting distinctness, the
  • absolute finality of his break with the old order of things. Summers
  • would come and go, matches would be played on this ground with all the
  • glory of big scores and keen finishes; but he was done. 'He was a jolly
  • good bat at school. Top of the Wrykyn averages two years. But didn't do
  • anything after he left. Went into the city or something.' That was what
  • they would say of him, if they didn't quite forget him.
  • The clock on the tower over the senior block chimed quarter after
  • quarter, but Mike sat on, thinking. It was quite late when he got up,
  • and began to walk back to Acacia Road. He felt cold and stiff and very
  • miserable.
  • 4. First Steps in a Business Career
  • The City received Mike with the same aloofness with which the more
  • western portion of London had welcomed him on the previous day. Nobody
  • seemed to look at him. He was permitted to alight at St Paul's and make
  • his way up Queen Victoria Street without any demonstration. He followed
  • the human stream till he reached the Mansion House, and eventually
  • found himself at the massive building of the New Asiatic Bank, Limited.
  • The difficulty now was to know how to make an effective entrance. There
  • was the bank, and here was he. How had he better set about breaking it
  • to the authorities that he had positively arrived and was ready to
  • start earning his four pound ten _per mensem_? Inside, the bank
  • seemed to be in a state of some confusion. Men were moving about in an
  • apparently irresolute manner. Nobody seemed actually to be working. As
  • a matter of fact, the business of a bank does not start very early in
  • the morning. Mike had arrived before things had really begun to move.
  • As he stood near the doorway, one or two panting figures rushed up the
  • steps, and flung themselves at a large book which stood on the counter
  • near the door. Mike was to come to know this book well. In it, if you
  • were an _employe_ of the New Asiatic Bank, you had to inscribe
  • your name every morning. It was removed at ten sharp to the
  • accountant's room, and if you reached the bank a certain number of
  • times in the year too late to sign, bang went your bonus.
  • After a while things began to settle down. The stir and confusion
  • gradually ceased. All down the length of the bank, figures could be
  • seen, seated on stools and writing hieroglyphics in large letters. A
  • benevolent-looking man, with spectacles and a straggling grey beard,
  • crossed the gangway close to where Mike was standing. Mike put the
  • thing to him, as man to man.
  • 'Could you tell me,' he said, 'what I'm supposed to do? I've just
  • joined the bank.' The benevolent man stopped, and looked at him with a
  • pair of mild blue eyes. 'I think, perhaps, that your best plan would be
  • to see the manager,' he said. 'Yes, I should certainly do that. He will
  • tell you what work you have to do. If you will permit me, I will show
  • you the way.'
  • 'It's awfully good of you,' said Mike. He felt very grateful. After his
  • experience of London, it was a pleasant change to find someone who
  • really seemed to care what happened to him. His heart warmed to the
  • benevolent man.
  • 'It feels strange to you, perhaps, at first, Mr--'
  • 'Jackson.'
  • 'Mr Jackson. My name is Waller. I have been in the City some time, but
  • I can still recall my first day. But one shakes down. One shakes down
  • quite quickly. Here is the manager's room. If you go in, he will tell
  • you what to do.'
  • 'Thanks awfully,' said Mike.
  • 'Not at all.' He ambled off on the quest which Mike had interrupted,
  • turning, as he went, to bestow a mild smile of encouragement on the new
  • arrival. There was something about Mr Waller which reminded Mike
  • pleasantly of the White Knight in 'Alice through the Looking-glass.'
  • Mike knocked at the managerial door, and went in.
  • Two men were sitting at the table. The one facing the door was writing
  • when Mike went in. He continued to write all the time he was in the
  • room. Conversation between other people in his presence had apparently
  • no interest for him, nor was it able to disturb him in any way.
  • The other man was talking into a telephone. Mike waited till he had
  • finished. Then he coughed. The man turned round. Mike had thought, as
  • he looked at his back and heard his voice, that something about his
  • appearance or his way of speaking was familiar. He was right. The man
  • in the chair was Mr Bickersdyke, the cross-screen pedestrian.
  • These reunions are very awkward. Mike was frankly unequal to the
  • situation. Psmith, in his place, would have opened the conversation,
  • and relaxed the tension with some remark on the weather or the state of
  • the crops. Mike merely stood wrapped in silence, as in a garment.
  • That the recognition was mutual was evident from Mr Bickersdyke's look.
  • But apart from this, he gave no sign of having already had the pleasure
  • of making Mike's acquaintance. He merely stared at him as if he were a
  • blot on the arrangement of the furniture, and said, 'Well?'
  • The most difficult parts to play in real life as well as on the stage
  • are those in which no 'business' is arranged for the performer. It was
  • all very well for Mr Bickersdyke. He had been 'discovered sitting'. But
  • Mike had had to enter, and he wished now that there was something he
  • could do instead of merely standing and speaking.
  • 'I've come,' was the best speech he could think of. It was not a good
  • speech. It was too sinister. He felt that even as he said it. It was
  • the sort of thing Mephistopheles would have said to Faust by way of
  • opening conversation. And he was not sure, either, whether he ought not
  • to have added, 'Sir.'
  • Apparently such subtleties of address were not necessary, for Mr
  • Bickersdyke did not start up and shout, 'This language to me!' or
  • anything of that kind. He merely said, 'Oh! And who are you?'
  • 'Jackson,' said Mike. It was irritating, this assumption on Mr
  • Bickersdyke's part that they had never met before.
  • 'Jackson? Ah, yes. You have joined the staff?'
  • Mike rather liked this way of putting it. It lent a certain dignity to
  • the proceedings, making him feel like some important person for whose
  • services there had been strenuous competition. He seemed to see the
  • bank's directors being reassured by the chairman. ('I am happy to say,
  • gentlemen, that our profits for the past year are 3,000,006-2-2 1/2
  • pounds--(cheers)--and'--impressively--'that we have finally succeeded
  • in inducing Mr Mike Jackson--(sensation)--to--er--in fact, to join the
  • staff!' (Frantic cheers, in which the chairman joined.)
  • 'Yes,' he said.
  • Mr Bickersdyke pressed a bell on the table beside him, and picking up a
  • pen, began to write. Of Mike he took no further notice, leaving that
  • toy of Fate standing stranded in the middle of the room.
  • After a few moments one of the men in fancy dress, whom Mike had seen
  • hanging about the gangway, and whom he afterwards found to be
  • messengers, appeared. Mr Bickersdyke looked up.
  • 'Ask Mr Bannister to step this way,' he said.
  • The messenger disappeared, and presently the door opened again to admit
  • a shock-headed youth with paper cuff-protectors round his wrists.
  • 'This is Mr Jackson, a new member of the staff. He will take your place
  • in the postage department. You will go into the cash department, under
  • Mr Waller. Kindly show him what he has to do.'
  • Mike followed Mr Bannister out. On the other side of the door the
  • shock-headed one became communicative.
  • 'Whew!' he said, mopping his brow. 'That's the sort of thing which
  • gives me the pip. When William came and said old Bick wanted to see me,
  • I said to him, "William, my boy, my number is up. This is the sack." I
  • made certain that Rossiter had run me in for something. He's been
  • waiting for a chance to do it for weeks, only I've been as good as gold
  • and haven't given it him. I pity you going into the postage. There's
  • one thing, though. If you can stick it for about a month, you'll get
  • through all right. Men are always leaving for the East, and then you
  • get shunted on into another department, and the next new man goes into
  • the postage. That's the best of this place. It's not like one of those
  • banks where you stay in London all your life. You only have three years
  • here, and then you get your orders, and go to one of the branches in
  • the East, where you're the dickens of a big pot straight away, with a
  • big screw and a dozen native Johnnies under you. Bit of all right,
  • that. I shan't get my orders for another two and a half years and more,
  • worse luck. Still, it's something to look forward to.'
  • 'Who's Rossiter?' asked Mike.
  • 'The head of the postage department. Fussy little brute. Won't leave
  • you alone. Always trying to catch you on the hop. There's one thing,
  • though. The work in the postage is pretty simple. You can't make many
  • mistakes, if you're careful. It's mostly entering letters and stamping
  • them.'
  • They turned in at the door in the counter, and arrived at a desk which
  • ran parallel to the gangway. There was a high rack running along it, on
  • which were several ledgers. Tall, green-shaded electric lamps gave it
  • rather a cosy look.
  • As they reached the desk, a little man with short, black whiskers
  • buzzed out from behind a glass screen, where there was another desk.
  • 'Where have you been, Bannister, where have you been? You must not
  • leave your work in this way. There are several letters waiting to be
  • entered. Where have you been?'
  • 'Mr Bickersdyke sent for me,' said Bannister, with the calm triumph of
  • one who trumps an ace.
  • 'Oh! Ah! Oh! Yes, very well. I see. But get to work, get to work. Who
  • is this?'
  • 'This is a new man. He's taking my place. I've been moved on to the
  • cash.'
  • 'Oh! Ah! Is your name Smith?' asked Mr Rossiter, turning to Mike.
  • Mike corrected the rash guess, and gave his name. It struck him as a
  • curious coincidence that he should be asked if his name were Smith, of
  • all others. Not that it is an uncommon name.
  • 'Mr Bickersdyke told me to expect a Mr Smith. Well, well, perhaps there
  • are two new men. Mr Bickersdyke knows we are short-handed in this
  • department. But, come along, Bannister, come along. Show Jackson what
  • he has to do. We must get on. There is no time to waste.'
  • He buzzed back to his lair. Bannister grinned at Mike. He was a
  • cheerful youth. His normal expression was a grin.
  • 'That's a sample of Rossiter,' he said. 'You'd think from the fuss he's
  • made that the business of the place was at a standstill till we got to
  • work. Perfect rot! There's never anything to do here till after lunch,
  • except checking the stamps and petty cash, and I've done that ages ago.
  • There are three letters. You may as well enter them. It all looks like
  • work. But you'll find the best way is to wait till you get a couple of
  • dozen or so, and then work them off in a batch. But if you see Rossiter
  • about, then start stamping something or writing something, or he'll run
  • you in for neglecting your job. He's a nut. I'm jolly glad I'm under
  • old Waller now. He's the pick of the bunch. The other heads of
  • departments are all nuts, and Bickersdyke's the nuttiest of the lot.
  • Now, look here. This is all you've got to do. I'll just show you, and
  • then you can manage for yourself. I shall have to be shunting off to my
  • own work in a minute.'
  • 5. The Other Man
  • As Bannister had said, the work in the postage department was not
  • intricate. There was nothing much to do except enter and stamp letters,
  • and, at intervals, take them down to the post office at the end of the
  • street. The nature of the work gave Mike plenty of time for reflection.
  • His thoughts became gloomy again. All this was very far removed from
  • the life to which he had looked forward. There are some people who take
  • naturally to a life of commerce. Mike was not of these. To him the
  • restraint of the business was irksome. He had been used to an open-air
  • life, and a life, in its way, of excitement. He gathered that he would
  • not be free till five o'clock, and that on the following day he would
  • come at ten and go at five, and the same every day, except Saturdays
  • and Sundays, all the year round, with a ten days' holiday. The monotony
  • of the prospect appalled him. He was not old enough to know what a
  • narcotic is Habit, and that one can become attached to and interested
  • in the most unpromising jobs. He worked away dismally at his letters
  • till he had finished them. Then there was nothing to do except sit and
  • wait for more.
  • He looked through the letters he had stamped, and re-read the
  • addresses. Some of them were directed to people living in the country,
  • one to a house which he knew quite well, near to his own home in
  • Shropshire. It made him home-sick, conjuring up visions of shady
  • gardens and country sounds and smells, and the silver Severn gleaming
  • in the distance through the trees. About now, if he were not in this
  • dismal place, he would be lying in the shade in the garden with a book,
  • or wandering down to the river to boat or bathe. That envelope
  • addressed to the man in Shropshire gave him the worst moment he had
  • experienced that day.
  • The time crept slowly on to one o'clock. At two minutes past Mike awoke
  • from a day-dream to find Mr Waller standing by his side. The cashier
  • had his hat on.
  • 'I wonder,' said Mr Waller, 'if you would care to come out to lunch. I
  • generally go about this time, and Mr Rossiter, I know, does not go out
  • till two. I thought perhaps that, being unused to the City, you might
  • have some difficulty in finding your way about.'
  • 'It's awfully good of you,' said Mike. 'I should like to.'
  • The other led the way through the streets and down obscure alleys till
  • they came to a chop-house. Here one could have the doubtful pleasure of
  • seeing one's chop in its various stages of evolution. Mr Waller ordered
  • lunch with the care of one to whom lunch is no slight matter. Few
  • workers in the City do regard lunch as a trivial affair. It is the
  • keynote of their day. It is an oasis in a desert of ink and ledgers.
  • Conversation in city office deals, in the morning, with what one is
  • going to have for lunch, and in the afternoon with what one has had for
  • lunch.
  • At intervals during the meal Mr Waller talked. Mike was content to
  • listen. There was something soothing about the grey-bearded one.
  • 'What sort of a man is Bickersdyke?' asked Mike.
  • 'A very able man. A very able man indeed. I'm afraid he's not popular
  • in the office. A little inclined, perhaps, to be hard on mistakes. I
  • can remember the time when he was quite different. He and I were fellow
  • clerks in Morton and Blatherwick's. He got on better than I did. A
  • great fellow for getting on. They say he is to be the Unionist
  • candidate for Kenningford when the time comes. A great worker, but
  • perhaps not quite the sort of man to be generally popular in an
  • office.'
  • 'He's a blighter,' was Mike's verdict. Mr Waller made no comment. Mike
  • was to learn later that the manager and the cashier, despite the fact
  • that they had been together in less prosperous days--or possibly
  • because of it--were not on very good terms. Mr Bickersdyke was a man of
  • strong prejudices, and he disliked the cashier, whom he looked down
  • upon as one who had climbed to a lower rung of the ladder than he
  • himself had reached.
  • As the hands of the chop-house clock reached a quarter to two, Mr
  • Waller rose, and led the way back to the office, where they parted for
  • their respective desks. Gratitude for any good turn done to him was a
  • leading characteristic of Mike's nature, and he felt genuinely grateful
  • to the cashier for troubling to seek him out and be friendly to him.
  • His three-quarters-of-an-hour absence had led to the accumulation of a
  • small pile of letters on his desk. He sat down and began to work them
  • off. The addresses continued to exercise a fascination for him. He was
  • miles away from the office, speculating on what sort of a man J. B.
  • Garside, Esq, was, and whether he had a good time at his house in
  • Worcestershire, when somebody tapped him on the shoulder.
  • He looked up.
  • Standing by his side, immaculately dressed as ever, with his eye-glass
  • fixed and a gentle smile on his face, was Psmith.
  • Mike stared.
  • 'Commerce,' said Psmith, as he drew off his lavender gloves, 'has
  • claimed me for her own. Comrade of old, I, too, have joined this
  • blighted institution.'
  • As he spoke, there was a whirring noise in the immediate neighbourhood,
  • and Mr Rossiter buzzed out from his den with the _esprit_ and
  • animation of a clock-work toy.
  • 'Who's here?' said Psmith with interest, removing his eye-glass,
  • polishing it, and replacing it in his eye.
  • 'Mr Jackson,' exclaimed Mr Rossiter. 'I really must ask you to be good
  • enough to come in from your lunch at the proper time. It was fully
  • seven minutes to two when you returned, and--'
  • 'That little more,' sighed Psmith, 'and how much is it!'
  • 'Who are you?' snapped Mr Rossiter, turning on him.
  • 'I shall be delighted, Comrade--'
  • 'Rossiter,' said Mike, aside.
  • 'Comrade Rossiter. I shall be delighted to furnish you with particulars
  • of my family history. As follows. Soon after the Norman Conquest, a
  • certain Sieur de Psmith grew tired of work--a family failing,
  • alas!--and settled down in this country to live peacefully for the
  • remainder of his life on what he could extract from the local
  • peasantry. He may be described as the founder of the family which
  • ultimately culminated in Me. Passing on--'
  • Mr Rossiter refused to pass on.
  • 'What are you doing here? What have you come for?'
  • 'Work,' said Psmith, with simple dignity. 'I am now a member of the
  • staff of this bank. Its interests are my interests. Psmith, the
  • individual, ceases to exist, and there springs into being Psmith, the
  • cog in the wheel of the New Asiatic Bank; Psmith, the link in the
  • bank's chain; Psmith, the Worker. I shall not spare myself,' he
  • proceeded earnestly. 'I shall toil with all the accumulated energy of
  • one who, up till now, has only known what work is like from hearsay.
  • Whose is that form sitting on the steps of the bank in the morning,
  • waiting eagerly for the place to open? It is the form of Psmith, the
  • Worker. Whose is that haggard, drawn face which bends over a ledger
  • long after the other toilers have sped blithely westwards to dine at
  • Lyons' Popular Cafe? It is the face of Psmith, the Worker.'
  • 'I--' began Mr Rossiter.
  • 'I tell you,' continued Psmith, waving aside the interruption and
  • tapping the head of the department rhythmically in the region of the
  • second waistcoat-button with a long finger, 'I tell _you_, Comrade
  • Rossiter, that you have got hold of a good man. You and I together, not
  • forgetting Comrade Jackson, the pet of the Smart Set, will toil early
  • and late till we boost up this Postage Department into a shining model
  • of what a Postage Department should be. What that is, at present, I do
  • not exactly know. However. Excursion trains will be run from distant
  • shires to see this Postage Department. American visitors to London will
  • do it before going on to the Tower. And now,' he broke off, with a
  • crisp, businesslike intonation, 'I must ask you to excuse me. Much as I
  • have enjoyed this little chat, I fear it must now cease. The time has
  • come to work. Our trade rivals are getting ahead of us. The whisper
  • goes round, "Rossiter and Psmith are talking, not working," and other
  • firms prepare to pinch our business. Let me Work.'
  • Two minutes later, Mr Rossiter was sitting at his desk with a dazed
  • expression, while Psmith, perched gracefully on a stool, entered
  • figures in a ledger.
  • 6. Psmith Explains
  • For the space of about twenty-five minutes Psmith sat in silence,
  • concentrated on his ledger, the picture of the model bank-clerk. Then
  • he flung down his pen, slid from his stool with a satisfied sigh, and
  • dusted his waistcoat. 'A commercial crisis,' he said, 'has passed. The
  • job of work which Comrade Rossiter indicated for me has been completed
  • with masterly skill. The period of anxiety is over. The bank ceases to
  • totter. Are you busy, Comrade Jackson, or shall we chat awhile?'
  • Mike was not busy. He had worked off the last batch of letters, and
  • there was nothing to do but to wait for the next, or--happy thought--to
  • take the present batch down to the post, and so get out into the
  • sunshine and fresh air for a short time. 'I rather think I'll nip down
  • to the post-office,' said he, 'You couldn't come too, I suppose?'
  • 'On the contrary,' said Psmith, 'I could, and will. A stroll will just
  • restore those tissues which the gruelling work of the last half-hour
  • has wasted away. It is a fearful strain, this commercial toil. Let us
  • trickle towards the post office. I will leave my hat and gloves as a
  • guarantee of good faith. The cry will go round, "Psmith has gone! Some
  • rival institution has kidnapped him!" Then they will see my hat,'--he
  • built up a foundation of ledgers, planted a long ruler in the middle,
  • and hung his hat on it--'my gloves,'--he stuck two pens into the desk
  • and hung a lavender glove on each--'and they will sink back swooning
  • with relief. The awful suspense will be over. They will say, "No, he
  • has not gone permanently. Psmith will return. When the fields are white
  • with daisies he'll return." And now, Comrade Jackson, lead me to this
  • picturesque little post-office of yours of which I have heard so much.'
  • Mike picked up the long basket into which he had thrown the letters
  • after entering the addresses in his ledger, and they moved off down the
  • aisle. No movement came from Mr Rossiter's lair. Its energetic occupant
  • was hard at work. They could just see part of his hunched-up back.
  • 'I wish Comrade Downing could see us now,' said Psmith. 'He always set
  • us down as mere idlers. Triflers. Butterflies. It would be a wholesome
  • corrective for him to watch us perspiring like this in the cause of
  • Commerce.'
  • 'You haven't told me yet what on earth you're doing here,' said Mike.
  • 'I thought you were going to the 'Varsity. Why the dickens are you in a
  • bank? Your pater hasn't lost his money, has he?'
  • 'No. There is still a tolerable supply of doubloons in the old oak
  • chest. Mine is a painful story.'
  • 'It always is,' said Mike.
  • 'You are very right, Comrade Jackson. I am the victim of Fate. Ah, so
  • you put the little chaps in there, do you?' he said, as Mike, reaching
  • the post-office, began to bundle the letters into the box. 'You seem to
  • have grasped your duties with admirable promptitude. It is the same
  • with me. I fancy we are both born men of Commerce. In a few years we
  • shall be pinching Comrade Bickersdyke's job. And talking of Comrade B.
  • brings me back to my painful story. But I shall never have time to tell
  • it to you during our walk back. Let us drift aside into this tea-shop.
  • We can order a buckwheat cake or a butter-nut, or something equally
  • succulent, and carefully refraining from consuming these dainties, I
  • will tell you all.'
  • 'Right O!' said Mike.
  • 'When last I saw you,' resumed Psmith, hanging Mike's basket on the
  • hat-stand and ordering two portions of porridge, 'you may remember that
  • a serious crisis in my affairs had arrived. My father inflamed with the
  • idea of Commerce had invited Comrade Bickersdyke--'
  • 'When did you know he was a manager here?' asked Mike.
  • 'At an early date. I have my spies everywhere. However, my pater
  • invited Comrade Bickersdyke to our house for the weekend. Things turned
  • out rather unfortunately. Comrade B. resented my purely altruistic
  • efforts to improve him mentally and morally. Indeed, on one occasion he
  • went so far as to call me an impudent young cub, and to add that he
  • wished he had me under him in his bank, where, he asserted, he would
  • knock some of the nonsense out of me. All very painful. I tell you,
  • Comrade Jackson, for the moment it reduced my delicately vibrating
  • ganglions to a mere frazzle. Recovering myself, I made a few blithe
  • remarks, and we then parted. I cannot say that we parted friends, but
  • at any rate I bore him no ill-will. I was still determined to make him
  • a credit to me. My feelings towards him were those of some kindly
  • father to his prodigal son. But he, if I may say so, was fairly on the
  • hop. And when my pater, after dinner the same night, played into his
  • hands by mentioning that he thought I ought to plunge into a career of
  • commerce, Comrade B. was, I gather, all over him. Offered to make a
  • vacancy for me in the bank, and to take me on at once. My pater,
  • feeling that this was the real hustle which he admired so much, had me
  • in, stated his case, and said, in effect, "How do we go?" I intimated
  • that Comrade Bickersdyke was my greatest chum on earth. So the thing
  • was fixed up and here I am. But you are not getting on with your
  • porridge, Comrade Jackson. Perhaps you don't care for porridge? Would
  • you like a finnan haddock, instead? Or a piece of shortbread? You have
  • only to say the word.'
  • 'It seems to me,' said Mike gloomily, 'that we are in for a pretty
  • rotten time of it in this bally bank. If Bickersdyke's got his knife
  • into us, he can make it jolly warm for us. He's got his knife into me
  • all right about that walking-across-the-screen business.'
  • 'True,' said Psmith, 'to a certain extent. It is an undoubted fact that
  • Comrade Bickersdyke will have a jolly good try at making life a
  • nuisance to us; but, on the other hand, I propose, so far as in me
  • lies, to make things moderately unrestful for him, here and there.'
  • 'But you can't,' objected Mike. 'What I mean to say is, it isn't like a
  • school. If you wanted to score off a master at school, you could always
  • rag and so on. But here you can't. How can you rag a man who's sitting
  • all day in a room of his own while you're sweating away at a desk at
  • the other end of the building?'
  • 'You put the case with admirable clearness, Comrade Jackson,' said
  • Psmith approvingly. 'At the hard-headed, common-sense business you
  • sneak the biscuit every time with ridiculous ease. But you do not know
  • all. I do not propose to do a thing in the bank except work. I shall be
  • a model as far as work goes. I shall be flawless. I shall bound to do
  • Comrade Rossiter's bidding like a highly trained performing dog. It is
  • outside the bank, when I have staggered away dazed with toil, that I
  • shall resume my attention to the education of Comrade Bickersdyke.'
  • 'But, dash it all, how can you? You won't see him. He'll go off home,
  • or to his club, or--'
  • Psmith tapped him earnestly on the chest.
  • 'There, Comrade Jackson,' he said, 'you have hit the bull's-eye, rung
  • the bell, and gathered in the cigar or cocoanut according to choice. He
  • _will_ go off to his club. And I shall do precisely the same.'
  • 'How do you mean?'
  • 'It is this way. My father, as you may have noticed during your stay at
  • our stately home of England, is a man of a warm, impulsive character.
  • He does not always do things as other people would do them. He has his
  • own methods. Thus, he has sent me into the City to do the hard-working,
  • bank-clerk act, but at the same time he is allowing me just as large an
  • allowance as he would have given me if I had gone to the 'Varsity.
  • Moreover, while I was still at Eton he put my name up for his clubs,
  • the Senior Conservative among others. My pater belongs to four
  • clubs altogether, and in course of time, when my name comes up for
  • election, I shall do the same. Meanwhile, I belong to one, the Senior
  • Conservative. It is a bigger club than the others, and your name comes
  • up for election sooner. About the middle of last month a great yell of
  • joy made the West End of London shake like a jelly. The three thousand
  • members of the Senior Conservative had just learned that I had been
  • elected.'
  • Psmith paused, and ate some porridge.
  • 'I wonder why they call this porridge,' he observed with mild interest.
  • 'It would be far more manly and straightforward of them to give it its
  • real name. To resume. I have gleaned, from casual chit-chat with my
  • father, that Comrade Bickersdyke also infests the Senior Conservative.
  • You might think that that would make me, seeing how particular I am
  • about whom I mix with, avoid the club. Error. I shall go there every
  • day. If Comrade Bickersdyke wishes to emend any little traits in my
  • character of which he may disapprove, he shall never say that I did not
  • give him the opportunity. I shall mix freely with Comrade Bickersdyke
  • at the Senior Conservative Club. I shall be his constant companion. I
  • shall, in short, haunt the man. By these strenuous means I shall, as it
  • were, get a bit of my own back. And now,' said Psmith, rising, 'it
  • might be as well, perhaps, to return to the bank and resume our
  • commercial duties. I don't know how long you are supposed to be allowed
  • for your little trips to and from the post-office, but, seeing that the
  • distance is about thirty yards, I should say at a venture not more than
  • half an hour. Which is exactly the space of time which has flitted by
  • since we started out on this important expedition. Your devotion to
  • porridge, Comrade Jackson, has led to our spending about twenty-five
  • minutes in this hostelry.'
  • 'Great Scott,' said Mike, 'there'll be a row.'
  • 'Some slight temporary breeze, perhaps,' said Psmith. 'Annoying to men
  • of culture and refinement, but not lasting. My only fear is lest we may
  • have worried Comrade Rossiter at all. I regard Comrade Rossiter as an
  • elder brother, and would not cause him a moment's heart-burning for
  • worlds. However, we shall soon know,' he added, as they passed into the
  • bank and walked up the aisle, 'for there is Comrade Rossiter waiting to
  • receive us in person.'
  • The little head of the Postage Department was moving restlessly about
  • in the neighbourhood of Psmith's and Mike's desk.
  • 'Am I mistaken,' said Psmith to Mike, 'or is there the merest suspicion
  • of a worried look on our chief's face? It seems to me that there is the
  • slightest soupcon of shadow about that broad, calm brow.'
  • 7. Going into Winter Quarters
  • There was.
  • Mr Rossiter had discovered Psmith's and Mike's absence about five
  • minutes after they had left the building. Ever since then, he had been
  • popping out of his lair at intervals of three minutes, to see whether
  • they had returned. Constant disappointment in this respect had rendered
  • him decidedly jumpy. When Psmith and Mike reached the desk, he was a
  • kind of human soda-water bottle. He fizzed over with questions,
  • reproofs, and warnings.
  • 'What does it mean? What does it mean?' he cried. 'Where have you been?
  • Where have you been?'
  • 'Poetry,' said Psmith approvingly.
  • 'You have been absent from your places for over half an hour. Why? Why?
  • Why? Where have you been? Where have you been? I cannot have this. It
  • is preposterous. Where have you been? Suppose Mr Bickersdyke had
  • happened to come round here. I should not have known what to say to
  • him.'
  • 'Never an easy man to chat with, Comrade Bickersdyke,' agreed Psmith.
  • 'You must thoroughly understand that you are expected to remain in your
  • places during business hours.'
  • 'Of course,' said Psmith, 'that makes it a little hard for Comrade
  • Jackson to post letters, does it not?'
  • 'Have you been posting letters?'
  • 'We have,' said Psmith. 'You have wronged us. Seeing our absent places
  • you jumped rashly to the conclusion that we were merely gadding about
  • in pursuit of pleasure. Error. All the while we were furthering the
  • bank's best interests by posting letters.'
  • 'You had no business to leave your place. Jackson is on the posting
  • desk.'
  • 'You are very right,' said Psmith, 'and it shall not occur again. It
  • was only because it was the first day, Comrade Jackson is not used to
  • the stir and bustle of the City. His nerve failed him. He shrank from
  • going to the post-office alone. So I volunteered to accompany him.
  • And,' concluded Psmith, impressively, 'we won safely through. Every
  • letter has been posted.'
  • 'That need not have taken you half an hour.'
  • 'True. And the actual work did not. It was carried through swiftly and
  • surely. But the nerve-strain had left us shaken. Before resuming our
  • more ordinary duties we had to refresh. A brief breathing-space, a
  • little coffee and porridge, and here we are, fit for work once more.'
  • 'If it occurs again, I shall report the matter to Mr Bickersdyke.'
  • 'And rightly so,' said Psmith, earnestly. 'Quite rightly so.
  • Discipline, discipline. That is the cry. There must be no shirking of
  • painful duties. Sentiment must play no part in business. Rossiter, the
  • man, may sympathise, but Rossiter, the Departmental head, must be
  • adamant.'
  • Mr Rossiter pondered over this for a moment, then went off on a
  • side-issue.
  • 'What is the meaning of this foolery?' he asked, pointing to Psmith's
  • gloves and hat. 'Suppose Mr Bickersdyke had come round and seen them,
  • what should I have said?'
  • 'You would have given him a message of cheer. You would have said, "All
  • is well. Psmith has not left us. He will come back. And Comrade
  • Bickersdyke, relieved, would have--"'
  • 'You do not seem very busy, Mr Smith.'
  • Both Psmith and Mr Rossiter were startled.
  • Mr Rossiter jumped as if somebody had run a gimlet into him, and even
  • Psmith started slightly. They had not heard Mr Bickersdyke approaching.
  • Mike, who had been stolidly entering addresses in his ledger during the
  • latter part of the conversation, was also taken by surprise.
  • Psmith was the first to recover. Mr Rossiter was still too confused for
  • speech, but Psmith took the situation in hand.
  • 'Apparently no,' he said, swiftly removing his hat from the ruler. 'In
  • reality, yes. Mr Rossiter and I were just scheming out a line of work
  • for me as you came up. If you had arrived a moment later, you would
  • have found me toiling.'
  • 'H'm. I hope I should. We do not encourage idling in this bank.'
  • 'Assuredly not,' said Psmith warmly. 'Most assuredly not. I would not
  • have it otherwise. I am a worker. A bee, not a drone. A
  • _Lusitania,_ not a limpet. Perhaps I have not yet that grip on my
  • duties which I shall soon acquire; but it is coming. It is coming. I
  • see daylight.'
  • 'H'm. I have only your word for it.' He turned to Mr Rossiter, who had
  • now recovered himself, and was as nearly calm as it was in his nature
  • to be. 'Do you find Mr Smith's work satisfactory, Mr Rossiter?'
  • Psmith waited resignedly for an outburst of complaint respecting the
  • small matter that had been under discussion between the head of the
  • department and himself; but to his surprise it did not come.
  • 'Oh--ah--quite, quite, Mr Bickersdyke. I think he will very soon pick
  • things up.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke turned away. He was a conscientious bank manager, and
  • one can only suppose that Mr Rossiter's tribute to the earnestness of
  • one of his _employes_ was gratifying to him. But for that, one would have
  • said that he was disappointed.
  • 'Oh, Mr Bickersdyke,' said Psmith.
  • The manager stopped.
  • 'Father sent his kind regards to you,' said Psmith benevolently.
  • Mr Bickersdyke walked off without comment.
  • 'An uncommonly cheery, companionable feller,' murmured Psmith, as he
  • turned to his work.
  • The first day anywhere, if one spends it in a sedentary fashion, always
  • seemed unending; and Mike felt as if he had been sitting at his desk
  • for weeks when the hour for departure came. A bank's day ends
  • gradually, reluctantly, as it were. At about five there is a sort of
  • stir, not unlike the stir in a theatre when the curtain is on the point
  • of falling. Ledgers are closed with a bang. Men stand about and talk
  • for a moment or two before going to the basement for their hats and
  • coats. Then, at irregular intervals, forms pass down the central aisle
  • and out through the swing doors. There is an air of relaxation over the
  • place, though some departments are still working as hard as ever under
  • a blaze of electric light. Somebody begins to sing, and an instant
  • chorus of protests and maledictions rises from all sides. Gradually,
  • however, the electric lights go out. The procession down the centre
  • aisle becomes more regular; and eventually the place is left to
  • darkness and the night watchman.
  • The postage department was one of the last to be freed from duty. This
  • was due to the inconsiderateness of the other departments, which
  • omitted to disgorge their letters till the last moment. Mike as he grew
  • familiar with the work, and began to understand it, used to prowl round
  • the other departments during the afternoon and wrest letters from them,
  • usually receiving with them much abuse for being a nuisance and not
  • leaving honest workers alone. Today, however, he had to sit on till
  • nearly six, waiting for the final batch of correspondence.
  • Psmith, who had waited patiently with him, though his own work was
  • finished, accompanied him down to the post office and back again to the
  • bank to return the letter basket; and they left the office together.
  • 'By the way,' said Psmith, 'what with the strenuous labours of the bank
  • and the disturbing interviews with the powers that be, I have omitted
  • to ask you where you are digging. Wherever it is, of course you must
  • clear out. It is imperative, in this crisis, that we should be
  • together. I have acquired a quite snug little flat in Clement's Inn.
  • There is a spare bedroom. It shall be yours.'
  • 'My dear chap,' said Mike, 'it's all rot. I can't sponge on you.'
  • 'You pain me, Comrade Jackson. I was not suggesting such a thing. We
  • are business men, hard-headed young bankers. I make you a business
  • proposition. I offer you the post of confidential secretary and adviser
  • to me in exchange for a comfortable home. The duties will be light. You
  • will be required to refuse invitations to dinner from crowned heads,
  • and to listen attentively to my views on Life. Apart from this, there
  • is little to do. So that's settled.'
  • 'It isn't,' said Mike. 'I--'
  • 'You will enter upon your duties tonight. Where are you suspended at
  • present?'
  • 'Dulwich. But, look here--'
  • 'A little more, and you'll get the sack. I tell you the thing is
  • settled. Now, let us hail yon taximeter cab, and desire the stern-faced
  • aristocrat on the box to drive us to Dulwich. We will then collect a
  • few of your things in a bag, have the rest off by train, come back in
  • the taxi, and go and bite a chop at the Carlton. This is a momentous
  • day in our careers, Comrade Jackson. We must buoy ourselves up.'
  • Mike made no further objections. The thought of that bed-sitting room
  • in Acacia Road and the pantomime dame rose up and killed them. After
  • all, Psmith was not like any ordinary person. There would be no
  • question of charity. Psmith had invited him to the flat in exactly the
  • same spirit as he had invited him to his house for the cricket week.
  • 'You know,' said Psmith, after a silence, as they flitted through the
  • streets in the taximeter, 'one lives and learns. Were you so wrapped up
  • in your work this afternoon that you did not hear my very entertaining
  • little chat with Comrade Bickersdyke, or did it happen to come under
  • your notice? It did? Then I wonder if you were struck by the singular
  • conduct of Comrade Rossiter?'
  • 'I thought it rather decent of him not to give you away to that
  • blighter Bickersdyke.'
  • 'Admirably put. It was precisely that that struck me. He had his
  • opening, all ready made for him, but he refrained from depositing me in
  • the soup. I tell you, Comrade Jackson, my rugged old heart was touched.
  • I said to myself, "There must be good in Comrade Rossiter, after all. I
  • must cultivate him." I shall make it my business to be kind to our
  • Departmental head. He deserves the utmost consideration. His action
  • shone like a good deed in a wicked world. Which it was, of course. From
  • today onwards I take Comrade Rossiter under my wing. We seem to be
  • getting into a tolerably benighted quarter. Are we anywhere near?
  • "Through Darkest Dulwich in a Taximeter."'
  • The cab arrived at Dulwich station, and Mike stood up to direct the
  • driver. They whirred down Acacia Road. Mike stopped the cab and got
  • out. A brief and somewhat embarrassing interview with the pantomime
  • dame, during which Mike was separated from a week's rent in lieu of
  • notice, and he was in the cab again, bound for Clement's Inn.
  • His feelings that night differed considerably from the frame of mind in
  • which he had gone to bed the night before. It was partly a very
  • excellent dinner and partly the fact that Psmith's flat, though at
  • present in some disorder, was obviously going to be extremely
  • comfortable, that worked the change. But principally it was due to his
  • having found an ally. The gnawing loneliness had gone. He did not look
  • forward to a career of Commerce with any greater pleasure than before;
  • but there was no doubt that with Psmith, it would be easier to get
  • through the time after office hours. If all went well in the bank he
  • might find that he had not drawn such a bad ticket after all.
  • 8. The Friendly Native
  • 'The first principle of warfare,' said Psmith at breakfast next
  • morning, doling out bacon and eggs with the air of a medieval monarch
  • distributing largesse, 'is to collect a gang, to rope in allies, to
  • secure the cooperation of some friendly native. You may remember that
  • at Sedleigh it was partly the sympathetic cooperation of that record
  • blitherer, Comrade Jellicoe, which enabled us to nip the pro-Spiller
  • movement in the bud. It is the same in the present crisis. What Comrade
  • Jellicoe was to us at Sedleigh, Comrade Rossiter must be in the City.
  • We must make an ally of that man. Once I know that he and I are as
  • brothers, and that he will look with a lenient and benevolent eye on
  • any little shortcomings in my work, I shall be able to devote my
  • attention whole-heartedly to the moral reformation of Comrade
  • Bickersdyke, that man of blood. I look on Comrade Bickersdyke as a
  • bargee of the most pronounced type; and anything I can do towards
  • making him a decent member of Society shall be done freely and
  • ungrudgingly. A trifle more tea, Comrade Jackson?'
  • 'No, thanks,' said Mike. 'I've done. By Jove, Smith, this flat of yours
  • is all right.'
  • 'Not bad,' assented Psmith, 'not bad. Free from squalor to a great
  • extent. I have a number of little objects of _vertu_ coming down
  • shortly from the old homestead. Pictures, and so on. It will be by no
  • means un-snug when they are up. Meanwhile, I can rough it. We are old
  • campaigners, we Psmiths. Give us a roof, a few comfortable chairs, a
  • sofa or two, half a dozen cushions, and decent meals, and we do not
  • repine. Reverting once more to Comrade Rossiter--'
  • 'Yes, what about him?' said Mike. 'You'll have a pretty tough job
  • turning him into a friendly native, I should think. How do you mean to
  • start?'
  • Psmith regarded him with a benevolent eye.
  • 'There is but one way,' he said. 'Do you remember the case of Comrade
  • Outwood, at Sedleigh? How did we corral him, and become to him
  • practically as long-lost sons?'
  • 'We got round him by joining the Archaeological Society.'
  • 'Precisely,' said Psmith. 'Every man has his hobby. The thing is to
  • find it out. In the case of comrade Rossiter, I should say that it
  • would be either postage stamps, dried seaweed, or Hall Caine. I shall
  • endeavour to find out today. A few casual questions, and the thing is
  • done. Shall we be putting in an appearance at the busy hive now? If we
  • are to continue in the running for the bonus stakes, it would be well
  • to start soon.'
  • Mike's first duty at the bank that morning was to check the stamps and
  • petty cash. While he was engaged on this task, he heard Psmith
  • conversing affably with Mr Rossiter.
  • 'Good morning,' said Psmith.
  • 'Morning,' replied his chief, doing sleight-of-hand tricks with a
  • bundle of letters which lay on his desk. 'Get on with your work,
  • Psmith. We have a lot before us.'
  • 'Undoubtedly. I am all impatience. I should say that in an institution
  • like this, dealing as it does with distant portions of the globe, a
  • philatelist would have excellent opportunities of increasing his
  • collection. With me, stamp-collecting has always been a positive craze.
  • I--'
  • 'I have no time for nonsense of that sort myself,' said Mr Rossiter. 'I
  • should advise you, if you mean to get on, to devote more time to your
  • work and less to stamps.'
  • 'I will start at once. Dried seaweed, again--'
  • 'Get on with your work, Smith.'
  • Psmith retired to his desk.
  • 'This,' he said to Mike, 'is undoubtedly something in the nature of a
  • set-back. I have drawn blank. The papers bring out posters, "Psmith
  • Baffled." I must try again. Meanwhile, to work. Work, the hobby of the
  • philosopher and the poor man's friend.'
  • The morning dragged slowly on without incident. At twelve o'clock Mike
  • had to go out and buy stamps, which he subsequently punched in the
  • punching-machine in the basement, a not very exhilarating job in which
  • he was assisted by one of the bank messengers, who discoursed learnedly
  • on roses during the _seance_. Roses were his hobby. Mike began to
  • see that Psmith had reason in his assumption that the way to every
  • man's heart was through his hobby. Mike made a firm friend of William,
  • the messenger, by displaying an interest and a certain knowledge of
  • roses. At the same time the conversation had the bad effect of leading
  • to an acute relapse in the matter of homesickness. The rose-garden at
  • home had been one of Mike's favourite haunts on a summer afternoon. The
  • contrast between it and the basement of the new Asiatic Bank, the
  • atmosphere of which was far from being roselike, was too much for his
  • feelings. He emerged from the depths, with his punched stamps, filled
  • with bitterness against Fate.
  • He found Psmith still baffled.
  • 'Hall Caine,' said Psmith regretfully, 'has also proved a frost. I
  • wandered round to Comrade Rossiter's desk just now with a rather brainy
  • excursus on "The Eternal City", and was received with the Impatient
  • Frown rather than the Glad Eye. He was in the middle of adding up a
  • rather tricky column of figures, and my remarks caused him to drop a
  • stitch. So far from winning the man over, I have gone back. There now
  • exists between Comrade Rossiter and myself a certain coldness. Further
  • investigations will be postponed till after lunch.'
  • The postage department received visitors during the morning. Members of
  • other departments came with letters, among them Bannister. Mr Rossiter
  • was away in the manager's room at the time.
  • 'How are you getting on?' said Bannister to Mike.
  • 'Oh, all right,' said Mike.
  • 'Had any trouble with Rossiter yet?'
  • 'No, not much.'
  • 'He hasn't run you in to Bickersdyke?'
  • 'No.'
  • 'Pardon my interrupting a conversation between old college chums,' said
  • Psmith courteously, 'but I happened to overhear, as I toiled at my
  • desk, the name of Comrade Rossiter.'
  • Bannister looked somewhat startled. Mike introduced them.
  • 'This is Smith,' he said. 'Chap I was at school with. This is
  • Bannister, Smith, who used to be on here till I came.'
  • 'In this department?' asked Psmith.
  • 'Yes.'
  • 'Then, Comrade Bannister, you are the very man I have been looking for.
  • Your knowledge will be invaluable to us. I have no doubt that, during
  • your stay in this excellently managed department, you had many
  • opportunities of observing Comrade Rossiter?'
  • 'I should jolly well think I had,' said Bannister with a laugh. 'He saw
  • to that. He was always popping out and cursing me about something.'
  • 'Comrade Rossiter's manners are a little restive,' agreed Psmith. 'What
  • used you to talk to him about?'
  • 'What used I to talk to him about?'
  • 'Exactly. In those interviews to which you have alluded, how did you
  • amuse, entertain Comrade Rossiter?'
  • 'I didn't. He used to do all the talking there was.'
  • Psmith straightened his tie, and clicked his tongue, disappointed.
  • 'This is unfortunate,' he said, smoothing his hair. 'You see, Comrade
  • Bannister, it is this way. In the course of my professional duties, I
  • find myself continually coming into contact with Comrade Rossiter.'
  • 'I bet you do,' said Bannister.
  • 'On these occasions I am frequently at a loss for entertaining
  • conversation. He has no difficulty, as apparently happened in your
  • case, in keeping up his end of the dialogue. The subject of my
  • shortcomings provides him with ample material for speech. I, on the
  • other hand, am dumb. I have nothing to say.'
  • 'I should think that was a bit of a change for you, wasn't it?'
  • 'Perhaps, so,' said Psmith, 'perhaps so. On the other hand, however
  • restful it may be to myself, it does not enable me to secure Comrade
  • Rossiter's interest and win his esteem.'
  • 'What Smith wants to know,' said Mike, 'is whether Rossiter has any
  • hobby of any kind. He thinks, if he has, he might work it to keep in
  • with him.'
  • Psmith, who had been listening with an air of pleased interest, much as
  • a father would listen to his child prattling for the benefit of a
  • visitor, confirmed this statement.
  • 'Comrade Jackson,' he said, 'has put the matter with his usual
  • admirable clearness. That is the thing in a nutshell. Has Comrade
  • Rossiter any hobby that you know of? Spillikins, brass-rubbing, the
  • Near Eastern Question, or anything like that? I have tried him with
  • postage-stamps (which you'd think, as head of a postage department, he
  • ought to be interested in), and dried seaweed, Hall Caine, but I have
  • the honour to report total failure. The man seems to have no pleasures.
  • What does he do with himself when the day's toil is ended? That giant
  • brain must occupy itself somehow.'
  • 'I don't know,' said Bannister, 'unless it's football. I saw him once
  • watching Chelsea. I was rather surprised.'
  • 'Football,' said Psmith thoughtfully, 'football. By no means a scaly
  • idea. I rather fancy, Comrade Bannister, that you have whanged the nail
  • on the head. Is he strong on any particular team? I mean, have you ever
  • heard him, in the intervals of business worries, stamping on his desk
  • and yelling, "Buck up Cottagers!" or "Lay 'em out, Pensioners!" or
  • anything like that? One moment.' Psmith held up his hand. 'I will get
  • my Sherlock Holmes system to work. What was the other team in the
  • modern gladiatorial contest at which you saw Comrade Rossiter?'
  • 'Manchester United.'
  • 'And Comrade Rossiter, I should say, was a Manchester man.'
  • 'I believe he is.'
  • 'Then I am prepared to bet a small sum that he is nuts on Manchester
  • United. My dear Holmes, how--! Elementary, my dear fellow, quite
  • elementary. But here comes the lad in person.'
  • Mr Rossiter turned in from the central aisle through the counter-door,
  • and, observing the conversational group at the postage-desk, came
  • bounding up. Bannister moved off.
  • 'Really, Smith,' said Mr Rossiter, 'you always seem to be talking. I
  • have overlooked the matter once, as I did not wish to get you into
  • trouble so soon after joining; but, really, it cannot go on. I must
  • take notice of it.'
  • Psmith held up his hand.
  • 'The fault was mine,' he said, with manly frankness. 'Entirely mine.
  • Bannister came in a purely professional spirit to deposit a letter with
  • Comrade Jackson. I engaged him in conversation on the subject of the
  • Football League, and I was just trying to correct his view that
  • Newcastle United were the best team playing, when you arrived.'
  • 'It is perfectly absurd,' said Mr Rossiter, 'that you should waste the
  • bank's time in this way. The bank pays you to work, not to talk about
  • professional football.'
  • 'Just so, just so,' murmured Psmith.
  • 'There is too much talking in this department.'
  • 'I fear you are right.'
  • 'It is nonsense.'
  • 'My own view,' said Psmith, 'was that Manchester United were by far the
  • finest team before the public.'
  • 'Get on with your work, Smith.'
  • Mr Rossiter stumped off to his desk, where he sat as one in thought.
  • 'Smith,' he said at the end of five minutes.
  • Psmith slid from his stool, and made his way deferentially towards him.
  • 'Bannister's a fool,' snapped Mr Rossiter.
  • 'So I thought,' said Psmith.
  • 'A perfect fool. He always was.'
  • Psmith shook his head sorrowfully, as who should say, 'Exit Bannister.'
  • 'There is no team playing today to touch Manchester United.'
  • 'Precisely what I said to Comrade Bannister.'
  • 'Of course. You know something about it.'
  • 'The study of League football,' said Psmith, 'has been my relaxation
  • for years.'
  • 'But we have no time to discuss it now.'
  • 'Assuredly not, sir. Work before everything.'
  • 'Some other time, when--'
  • '--We are less busy. Precisely.'
  • Psmith moved back to his seat.
  • 'I fear,' he said to Mike, as he resumed work, 'that as far as Comrade
  • Rossiter's friendship and esteem are concerned, I have to a certain
  • extent landed Comrade Bannister in the bouillon; but it was in a good
  • cause. I fancy we have won through. Half an hour's thoughtful perusal
  • of the "Footballers' Who's Who", just to find out some elementary facts
  • about Manchester United, and I rather think the friendly Native is
  • corralled. And now once more to work. Work, the hobby of the hustler
  • and the deadbeat's dread.'
  • 9. The Haunting of Mr Bickersdyke
  • Anything in the nature of a rash and hasty move was wholly foreign to
  • Psmith's tactics. He had the patience which is the chief quality of the
  • successful general. He was content to secure his base before making any
  • offensive movement. It was a fortnight before he turned his attention
  • to the education of Mr Bickersdyke. During that fortnight he conversed
  • attractively, in the intervals of work, on the subject of League
  • football in general and Manchester United in particular. The subject is
  • not hard to master if one sets oneself earnestly to it; and Psmith
  • spared no pains. The football editions of the evening papers are not
  • reticent about those who play the game: and Psmith drank in every
  • detail with the thoroughness of the conscientious student. By the end
  • of the fortnight he knew what was the favourite breakfast-food of J.
  • Turnbull; what Sandy Turnbull wore next his skin; and who, in the
  • opinion of Meredith, was England's leading politician. These facts,
  • imparted to and discussed with Mr Rossiter, made the progress of the
  • _entente cordiale_ rapid. It was on the eighth day that Mr
  • Rossiter consented to lunch with the Old Etonian. On the tenth he
  • played the host. By the end of the fortnight the flapping of the white
  • wings of Peace over the Postage Department was setting up a positive
  • draught. Mike, who had been introduced by Psmith as a distant relative
  • of Moger, the goalkeeper, was included in the great peace.
  • 'So that now,' said Psmith, reflectively polishing his eye-glass, 'I
  • think that we may consider ourselves free to attend to Comrade
  • Bickersdyke. Our bright little Mancunian friend would no more run us in
  • now than if we were the brothers Turnbull. We are as inside forwards to
  • him.'
  • The club to which Psmith and Mr Bickersdyke belonged was celebrated for
  • the steadfastness of its political views, the excellence of its
  • cuisine, and the curiously Gorgonzolaesque marble of its main
  • staircase. It takes all sorts to make a world. It took about four
  • thousand of all sorts to make the Senior Conservative Club. To be
  • absolutely accurate, there were three thousand seven hundred and
  • eighteen members.
  • To Mr Bickersdyke for the next week it seemed as if there was only one.
  • There was nothing crude or overdone about Psmith's methods. The
  • ordinary man, having conceived the idea of haunting a fellow clubman,
  • might have seized the first opportunity of engaging him in
  • conversation. Not so Psmith. The first time he met Mr Bickersdyke in
  • the club was on the stairs after dinner one night. The great man,
  • having received practical proof of the excellence of cuisine referred
  • to above, was coming down the main staircase at peace with all men,
  • when he was aware of a tall young man in the 'faultless evening dress'
  • of which the female novelist is so fond, who was regarding him with a
  • fixed stare through an eye-glass. The tall young man, having caught his
  • eye, smiled faintly, nodded in a friendly but patronizing manner, and
  • passed on up the staircase to the library. Mr Bickersdyke sped on in
  • search of a waiter.
  • As Psmith sat in the library with a novel, the waiter entered, and
  • approached him.
  • 'Beg pardon, sir,' he said. 'Are you a member of this club?'
  • Psmith fumbled in his pocket and produced his eye-glass, through which
  • he examined the waiter, button by button.
  • 'I am Psmith,' he said simply.
  • 'A member, sir?'
  • '_The_ member,' said Psmith. 'Surely you participated in the
  • general rejoicings which ensued when it was announced that I had been
  • elected? But perhaps you were too busy working to pay any attention. If
  • so, I respect you. I also am a worker. A toiler, not a flatfish. A
  • sizzler, not a squab. Yes, I am a member. Will you tell Mr Bickersdyke
  • that I am sorry, but I have been elected, and have paid my entrance fee
  • and subscription.'
  • 'Thank you, sir.'
  • The waiter went downstairs and found Mr Bickersdyke in the lower
  • smoking-room.
  • 'The gentleman says he is, sir.'
  • 'H'm,' said the bank-manager. 'Coffee and Benedictine, and a cigar.'
  • 'Yes, sir.'
  • On the following day Mr Bickersdyke met Psmith in the club three times,
  • and on the day after that seven. Each time the latter's smile was
  • friendly, but patronizing. Mr Bickersdyke began to grow restless.
  • On the fourth day Psmith made his first remark. The manager was reading
  • the evening paper in a corner, when Psmith sinking gracefully into a
  • chair beside him, caused him to look up.
  • 'The rain keeps off,' said Psmith.
  • Mr Bickersdyke looked as if he wished his employee would imitate the
  • rain, but he made no reply.
  • Psmith called a waiter.
  • 'Would you mind bringing me a small cup of coffee?' he said. 'And for
  • you,' he added to Mr Bickersdyke.
  • 'Nothing,' growled the manager.
  • 'And nothing for Mr Bickersdyke.'
  • The waiter retired. Mr Bickersdyke became absorbed in his paper.
  • 'I see from my morning paper,' said Psmith, affably, 'that you are to
  • address a meeting at the Kenningford Town Hall next week. I shall come
  • and hear you. Our politics differ in some respects, I fear--I incline
  • to the Socialist view--but nevertheless I shall listen to your remarks
  • with great interest, great interest.'
  • The paper rustled, but no reply came from behind it.
  • 'I heard from father this morning,' resumed Psmith.
  • Mr Bickersdyke lowered his paper and glared at him.
  • 'I don't wish to hear about your father,' he snapped.
  • An expression of surprise and pain came over Psmith's face.
  • 'What!' he cried. 'You don't mean to say that there is any coolness
  • between my father and you? I am more grieved than I can say. Knowing,
  • as I do, what a genuine respect my father has for your great talents, I
  • can only think that there must have been some misunderstanding. Perhaps
  • if you would allow me to act as a mediator--'
  • Mr Bickersdyke put down his paper and walked out of the room.
  • Psmith found him a quarter of an hour later in the card-room. He sat
  • down beside his table, and began to observe the play with silent
  • interest. Mr Bickersdyke, never a great performer at the best of times,
  • was so unsettled by the scrutiny that in the deciding game of the
  • rubber he revoked, thereby presenting his opponents with the rubber by
  • a very handsome majority of points. Psmith clicked his tongue
  • sympathetically.
  • Dignified reticence is not a leading characteristic of the
  • bridge-player's manner at the Senior Conservative Club on occasions
  • like this. Mr Bickersdyke's partner did not bear his calamity with
  • manly resignation. He gave tongue on the instant. 'What on earth's',
  • and 'Why on earth's' flowed from his mouth like molten lava. Mr
  • Bickersdyke sat and fermented in silence. Psmith clicked his tongue
  • sympathetically throughout.
  • Mr Bickersdyke lost that control over himself which every member of a
  • club should possess. He turned on Psmith with a snort of frenzy.
  • 'How can I keep my attention fixed on the game when you sit staring at
  • me like a--like a--'
  • 'I am sorry,' said Psmith gravely, 'if my stare falls short in any way
  • of your ideal of what a stare should be; but I appeal to these
  • gentlemen. Could I have watched the game more quietly?'
  • 'Of course not,' said the bereaved partner warmly. 'Nobody could have
  • any earthly objection to your behaviour. It was absolute carelessness.
  • I should have thought that one might have expected one's partner at a
  • club like this to exercise elementary--'
  • But Mr Bickersdyke had gone. He had melted silently away like the
  • driven snow.
  • Psmith took his place at the table.
  • 'A somewhat nervous excitable man, Mr Bickersdyke, I should say,' he
  • observed.
  • 'A somewhat dashed, blanked idiot,' emended the bank-manager's late
  • partner. 'Thank goodness he lost as much as I did. That's some light
  • consolation.'
  • Psmith arrived at the flat to find Mike still out. Mike had repaired to
  • the Gaiety earlier in the evening to refresh his mind after the labours
  • of the day. When he returned, Psmith was sitting in an armchair with
  • his feet on the mantelpiece, musing placidly on Life.
  • 'Well?' said Mike.
  • 'Well? And how was the Gaiety? Good show?'
  • 'Jolly good. What about Bickersdyke?'
  • Psmith looked sad.
  • 'I cannot make Comrade Bickersdyke out,' he said. 'You would think that
  • a man would be glad to see the son of a personal friend. On the
  • contrary, I may be wronging Comrade B., but I should almost be inclined
  • to say that my presence in the Senior Conservative Club tonight
  • irritated him. There was no _bonhomie_ in his manner. He seemed to
  • me to be giving a spirited imitation of a man about to foam at the
  • mouth. I did my best to entertain him. I chatted. His only reply was to
  • leave the room. I followed him to the card-room, and watched his very
  • remarkable and brainy tactics at bridge, and he accused me of causing
  • him to revoke. A very curious personality, that of Comrade Bickersdyke.
  • But let us dismiss him from our minds. Rumours have reached me,' said
  • Psmith, 'that a very decent little supper may be obtained at a quaint,
  • old-world eating-house called the Savoy. Will you accompany me thither
  • on a tissue-restoring expedition? It would be rash not to probe these
  • rumours to their foundation, and ascertain their exact truth.'
  • 10. Mr Bickersdyke Addresses His Constituents
  • It was noted by the observant at the bank next morning that Mr
  • Bickersdyke had something on his mind. William, the messenger, knew it,
  • when he found his respectful salute ignored. Little Briggs, the
  • accountant, knew it when his obsequious but cheerful 'Good morning' was
  • acknowledged only by a 'Morn'' which was almost an oath. Mr Bickersdyke
  • passed up the aisle and into his room like an east wind. He sat down at
  • his table and pressed the bell. Harold, William's brother and
  • co-messenger, entered with the air of one ready to duck if any missile
  • should be thrown at him. The reports of the manager's frame of mind had
  • been circulated in the office, and Harold felt somewhat apprehensive.
  • It was on an occasion very similar to this that George Barstead,
  • formerly in the employ of the New Asiatic Bank in the capacity of
  • messenger, had been rash enough to laugh at what he had taken for a
  • joke of Mr Bickersdyke's, and had been instantly presented with the
  • sack for gross impertinence.
  • 'Ask Mr Smith--' began the manager. Then he paused. 'No, never mind,'
  • he added.
  • Harold remained in the doorway, puzzled.
  • 'Don't stand there gaping at me, man,' cried Mr Bickersdyke, 'Go away.'
  • Harold retired and informed his brother, William, that in his,
  • Harold's, opinion, Mr Bickersdyke was off his chump.
  • 'Off his onion,' said William, soaring a trifle higher in poetic
  • imagery.
  • 'Barmy,' was the terse verdict of Samuel Jakes, the third messenger.
  • 'Always said so.' And with that the New Asiatic Bank staff of
  • messengers dismissed Mr Bickersdyke and proceeded to concentrate
  • themselves on their duties, which consisted principally of hanging
  • about and discussing the prophecies of that modern seer, Captain Coe.
  • What had made Mr Bickersdyke change his mind so abruptly was the sudden
  • realization of the fact that he had no case against Psmith. In his
  • capacity of manager of the bank he could not take official notice of
  • Psmith's behaviour outside office hours, especially as Psmith had done
  • nothing but stare at him. It would be impossible to make anybody
  • understand the true inwardness of Psmith's stare. Theoretically, Mr
  • Bickersdyke had the power to dismiss any subordinate of his whom he did
  • not consider satisfactory, but it was a power that had to be exercised
  • with discretion. The manager was accountable for his actions to the
  • Board of Directors. If he dismissed Psmith, Psmith would certainly
  • bring an action against the bank for wrongful dismissal, and on the
  • evidence he would infallibly win it. Mr Bickersdyke did not welcome the
  • prospect of having to explain to the Directors that he had let the
  • shareholders of the bank in for a fine of whatever a discriminating
  • jury cared to decide upon, simply because he had been stared at while
  • playing bridge. His only hope was to catch Psmith doing his work badly.
  • He touched the bell again, and sent for Mr Rossiter.
  • The messenger found the head of the Postage Department in conversation
  • with Psmith. Manchester United had been beaten by one goal to nil on
  • the previous afternoon, and Psmith was informing Mr Rossiter that the
  • referee was a robber, who had evidently been financially interested in
  • the result of the game. The way he himself looked at it, said Psmith,
  • was that the thing had been a moral victory for the United. Mr Rossiter
  • said yes, he thought so too. And it was at this moment that Mr
  • Bickersdyke sent for him to ask whether Psmith's work was satisfactory.
  • The head of the Postage Department gave his opinion without hesitation.
  • Psmith's work was about the hottest proposition he had ever struck.
  • Psmith's work--well, it stood alone. You couldn't compare it with
  • anything. There are no degrees in perfection. Psmith's work was
  • perfect, and there was an end to it.
  • He put it differently, but that was the gist of what he said.
  • Mr Bickersdyke observed he was glad to hear it, and smashed a nib by
  • stabbing the desk with it.
  • It was on the evening following this that the bank-manager was due to
  • address a meeting at the Kenningford Town Hall.
  • He was looking forward to the event with mixed feelings. He had stood
  • for Parliament once before, several years back, in the North. He had
  • been defeated by a couple of thousand votes, and he hoped that the
  • episode had been forgotten. Not merely because his defeat had been
  • heavy. There was another reason. On that occasion he had stood as a
  • Liberal. He was standing for Kenningford as a Unionist. Of course, a
  • man is at perfect liberty to change his views, if he wishes to do so,
  • but the process is apt to give his opponents a chance of catching him
  • (to use the inspired language of the music-halls) on the bend. Mr
  • Bickersdyke was rather afraid that the light-hearted electors of
  • Kenningford might avail themselves of this chance.
  • Kenningford, S.E., is undoubtedly by way of being a tough sort of
  • place. Its inhabitants incline to a robust type of humour, which finds
  • a verbal vent in catch phrases and expends itself physically in
  • smashing shop-windows and kicking policemen. He feared that the meeting
  • at the Town Hall might possibly be a trifle rowdy.
  • All political meetings are very much alike. Somebody gets up and
  • introduces the speaker of the evening, and then the speaker of the
  • evening says at great length what he thinks of the scandalous manner in
  • which the Government is behaving or the iniquitous goings-on of the
  • Opposition. From time to time confederates in the audience rise and ask
  • carefully rehearsed questions, and are answered fully and
  • satisfactorily by the orator. When a genuine heckler interrupts, the
  • orator either ignores him, or says haughtily that he can find him
  • arguments but cannot find him brains. Or, occasionally, when the
  • question is an easy one, he answers it. A quietly conducted political
  • meeting is one of England's most delightful indoor games. When the
  • meeting is rowdy, the audience has more fun, but the speaker a good
  • deal less.
  • Mr Bickersdyke's introducer was an elderly Scotch peer, an excellent
  • man for the purpose in every respect, except that he possessed a very
  • strong accent.
  • The audience welcomed that accent uproariously. The electors of
  • Kenningford who really had any definite opinions on politics were
  • fairly equally divided. There were about as many earnest Liberals as
  • there were earnest Unionists. But besides these there was a strong
  • contingent who did not care which side won. These looked on elections
  • as Heaven-sent opportunities for making a great deal of noise. They
  • attended meetings in order to extract amusement from them; and they
  • voted, if they voted at all, quite irresponsibly. A funny story at the
  • expense of one candidate told on the morning of the polling, was quite
  • likely to send these brave fellows off in dozens filling in their
  • papers for the victim's opponent.
  • There was a solid block of these gay spirits at the back of the hall.
  • They received the Scotch peer with huge delight. He reminded them of
  • Harry Lauder and they said so. They addressed him affectionately as
  • 'Arry', throughout his speech, which was rather long. They implored him
  • to be a pal and sing 'The Saftest of the Family'. Or, failing that, 'I
  • love a lassie'. Finding they could not induce him to do this, they did
  • it themselves. They sang it several times. When the peer, having
  • finished his remarks on the subject of Mr Bickersdyke, at length sat
  • down, they cheered for seven minutes, and demanded an encore.
  • The meeting was in excellent spirits when Mr Bickersdyke rose to
  • address it.
  • The effort of doing justice to the last speaker had left the free and
  • independent electors at the back of the hall slightly limp. The
  • bank-manager's opening remarks were received without any demonstration.
  • Mr Bickersdyke spoke well. He had a penetrating, if harsh, voice, and
  • he said what he had to say forcibly. Little by little the audience came
  • under his spell. When, at the end of a well-turned sentence, he paused
  • and took a sip of water, there was a round of applause, in which many
  • of the admirers of Mr Harry Lauder joined.
  • He resumed his speech. The audience listened intently. Mr Bickersdyke,
  • having said some nasty things about Free Trade and the Alien Immigrant,
  • turned to the Needs of the Navy and the necessity of increasing the
  • fleet at all costs.
  • 'This is no time for half-measures,' he said. 'We must do our utmost.
  • We must burn our boats--'
  • 'Excuse me,' said a gentle voice.
  • Mr Bickersdyke broke off. In the centre of the hall a tall figure had
  • risen. Mr Bickersdyke found himself looking at a gleaming eye-glass
  • which the speaker had just polished and inserted in his eye.
  • The ordinary heckler Mr Bickersdyke would have taken in his stride. He
  • had got his audience, and simply by continuing and ignoring the
  • interruption, he could have won through in safety. But the sudden
  • appearance of Psmith unnerved him. He remained silent.
  • 'How,' asked Psmith, 'do you propose to strengthen the Navy by burning
  • boats?'
  • The inanity of the question enraged even the pleasure-seekers at the
  • back.
  • 'Order! Order!' cried the earnest contingent.
  • 'Sit down, fice!' roared the pleasure-seekers.
  • Psmith sat down with a patient smile.
  • Mr Bickersdyke resumed his speech. But the fire had gone out of it. He
  • had lost his audience. A moment before, he had grasped them and played
  • on their minds (or what passed for minds down Kenningford way) as on a
  • stringed instrument. Now he had lost his hold.
  • He spoke on rapidly, but he could not get into his stride. The trivial
  • interruption had broken the spell. His words lacked grip. The dead
  • silence in which the first part of his speech had been received, that
  • silence which is a greater tribute to the speaker than any applause,
  • had given place to a restless medley of little noises; here a cough;
  • there a scraping of a boot along the floor, as its wearer moved
  • uneasily in his seat; in another place a whispered conversation. The
  • audience was bored.
  • Mr Bickersdyke left the Navy, and went on to more general topics. But
  • he was not interesting. He quoted figures, saw a moment later that he
  • had not quoted them accurately, and instead of carrying on boldly, went
  • back and corrected himself.
  • 'Gow up top!' said a voice at the back of the hall, and there was a
  • general laugh.
  • Mr Bickersdyke galloped unsteadily on. He condemned the Government. He
  • said they had betrayed their trust.
  • And then he told an anecdote.
  • 'The Government, gentlemen,' he said, 'achieves nothing worth
  • achieving, and every individual member of the Government takes all the
  • credit for what is done to himself. Their methods remind me, gentlemen,
  • of an amusing experience I had while fishing one summer in the Lake
  • District.'
  • In a volume entitled 'Three Men in a Boat' there is a story of how the
  • author and a friend go into a riverside inn and see a very large trout
  • in a glass case. They make inquiries about it, have men assure them,
  • one by one, that the trout was caught by themselves. In the end the
  • trout turns out to be made of plaster of Paris.
  • Mr Bickersdyke told that story as an experience of his own while
  • fishing one summer in the Lake District.
  • It went well. The meeting was amused. Mr Bickersdyke went on to draw a
  • trenchant comparison between the lack of genuine merit in the trout and
  • the lack of genuine merit in the achievements of His Majesty's
  • Government.
  • There was applause.
  • When it had ceased, Psmith rose to his feet again.
  • 'Excuse me,' he said.
  • 11. Misunderstood
  • Mike had refused to accompany Psmith to the meeting that evening,
  • saying that he got too many chances in the ordinary way of business of
  • hearing Mr Bickersdyke speak, without going out of his way to make
  • more. So Psmith had gone off to Kenningford alone, and Mike, feeling
  • too lazy to sally out to any place of entertainment, had remained at
  • the flat with a novel.
  • He was deep in this, when there was the sound of a key in the latch,
  • and shortly afterwards Psmith entered the room. On Psmith's brow there
  • was a look of pensive care, and also a slight discoloration. When he
  • removed his overcoat, Mike saw that his collar was burst and hanging
  • loose and that he had no tie. On his erstwhile speckless and gleaming
  • shirt front were number of finger-impressions, of a boldness and
  • clearness of outline which would have made a Bertillon expert leap with
  • joy.
  • 'Hullo!' said Mike dropping his book.
  • Psmith nodded in silence, went to his bedroom, and returned with a
  • looking-glass. Propping this up on a table, he proceeded to examine
  • himself with the utmost care. He shuddered slightly as his eye fell on
  • the finger-marks; and without a word he went into his bathroom again.
  • He emerged after an interval of ten minutes in sky-blue pyjamas,
  • slippers, and an Old Etonian blazer. He lit a cigarette; and, sitting
  • down, stared pensively into the fire.
  • 'What the dickens have you been playing at?' demanded Mike.
  • Psmith heaved a sigh.
  • 'That,' he replied, 'I could not say precisely. At one moment it seemed
  • to be Rugby football, at another a jiu-jitsu _seance_. Later, it
  • bore a resemblance to a pantomime rally. However, whatever it was, it
  • was all very bright and interesting. A distinct experience.'
  • 'Have you been scrapping?' asked Mike. 'What happened? Was there a
  • row?'
  • 'There was,' said Psmith, 'in a measure what might be described as a
  • row. At least, when you find a perfect stranger attaching himself to
  • your collar and pulling, you begin to suspect that something of that
  • kind is on the bill.'
  • 'Did they do that?'
  • Psmith nodded.
  • 'A merchant in a moth-eaten bowler started warbling to a certain extent
  • with me. It was all very trying for a man of culture. He was a man who
  • had, I should say, discovered that alcohol was a food long before the
  • doctors found it out. A good chap, possibly, but a little boisterous in
  • his manner. Well, well.'
  • Psmith shook his head sadly.
  • 'He got you one on the forehead,' said Mike, 'or somebody did. Tell us
  • what happened. I wish the dickens I'd come with you. I'd no notion
  • there would be a rag of any sort. What did happen?'
  • 'Comrade Jackson,' said Psmith sorrowfully, 'how sad it is in this life
  • of ours to be consistently misunderstood. You know, of course, how
  • wrapped up I am in Comrade Bickersdyke's welfare. You know that all my
  • efforts are directed towards making a decent man of him; that, in
  • short, I am his truest friend. Does he show by so much as a word that
  • he appreciates my labours? Not he. I believe that man is beginning to
  • dislike me, Comrade Jackson.'
  • 'What happened, anyhow? Never mind about Bickersdyke.'
  • 'Perhaps it was mistaken zeal on my part.... Well, I will tell you all.
  • Make a long arm for the shovel, Comrade Jackson, and pile on a few more
  • coals. I thank you. Well, all went quite smoothly for a while. Comrade
  • B. in quite good form. Got his second wind, and was going strong for the
  • tape, when a regrettable incident occurred. He informed the meeting,
  • that while up in the Lake country, fishing, he went to an inn and saw
  • a remarkably large stuffed trout in a glass case. He made inquiries,
  • and found that five separate and distinct people had caught--'
  • 'Why, dash it all,' said Mike, 'that's a frightful chestnut.'
  • Psmith nodded.
  • 'It certainly has appeared in print,' he said. 'In fact I should have
  • said it was rather a well-known story. I was so interested in Comrade
  • Bickersdyke's statement that the thing had happened to himself that,
  • purely out of good-will towards him, I got up and told him that I
  • thought it was my duty, as a friend, to let him know that a man named
  • Jerome had pinched his story, put it in a book, and got money by it.
  • Money, mark you, that should by rights have been Comrade Bickersdyke's.
  • He didn't appear to care much about sifting the matter thoroughly. In
  • fact, he seemed anxious to get on with his speech, and slur the matter
  • over. But, tactlessly perhaps, I continued rather to harp on the thing.
  • I said that the book in which the story had appeared was published in
  • 1889. I asked him how long ago it was that he had been on his fishing
  • tour, because it was important to know in order to bring the charge
  • home against Jerome. Well, after a bit, I was amazed, and pained, too,
  • to hear Comrade Bickersdyke urging certain bravoes in the audience to
  • turn me out. If ever there was a case of biting the hand that fed
  • him.... Well, well.... By this time the meeting had begun to take sides
  • to some extent. What I might call my party, the Earnest Investigators,
  • were whistling between their fingers, stamping on the floor, and
  • shouting, "Chestnuts!" while the opposing party, the bravoes, seemed to
  • be trying, as I say, to do jiu-jitsu tricks with me. It was a painful
  • situation. I know the cultivated man of affairs should have passed the
  • thing off with a short, careless laugh; but, owing to the
  • above-mentioned alcohol-expert having got both hands under my collar,
  • short, careless laughs were off. I was compelled, very reluctantly, to
  • conclude the interview by tapping the bright boy on the jaw. He took
  • the hint, and sat down on the floor. I thought no more of the matter,
  • and was making my way thoughtfully to the exit, when a second man of
  • wrath put the above on my forehead. You can't ignore a thing like that.
  • I collected some of his waistcoat and one of his legs, and hove him
  • with some vim into the middle distance. By this time a good many of the
  • Earnest Investigators were beginning to join in; and it was just there
  • that the affair began to have certain points of resemblance to a
  • pantomime rally. Everybody seemed to be shouting a good deal and
  • hitting everybody else. It was no place for a man of delicate culture,
  • so I edged towards the door, and drifted out. There was a cab in the
  • offing. I boarded it. And, having kicked a vigorous politician in the
  • stomach, as he was endeavouring to climb in too, I drove off home.'
  • Psmith got up, looked at his forehead once more in the glass, sighed,
  • and sat down again.
  • 'All very disturbing,' he said.
  • 'Great Scott,' said Mike, 'I wish I'd come. Why on earth didn't you
  • tell me you were going to rag? I think you might as well have done. I
  • wouldn't have missed it for worlds.'
  • Psmith regarded him with raised eyebrows.
  • 'Rag!' he said. 'Comrade Jackson, I do not understand you. You surely
  • do not think that I had any other object in doing what I did than to
  • serve Comrade Bickersdyke? It's terrible how one's motives get
  • distorted in this world of ours.'
  • 'Well,' said Mike, with a grin, 'I know one person who'll jolly well
  • distort your motives, as you call it, and that's Bickersdyke.'
  • Psmith looked thoughtful.
  • 'True,' he said, 'true. There is that possibility. I tell you, Comrade
  • Jackson, once more that my bright young life is being slowly blighted
  • by the frightful way in which that man misunderstands me. It seems
  • almost impossible to try to do him a good turn without having the
  • action misconstrued.'
  • 'What'll you say to him tomorrow?'
  • 'I shall make no allusion to the painful affair. If I happen to meet
  • him in the ordinary course of business routine, I shall pass some
  • light, pleasant remark--on the weather, let us say, or the Bank
  • rate--and continue my duties.'
  • 'How about if he sends for you, and wants to do the light, pleasant
  • remark business on his own?'
  • 'In that case I shall not thwart him. If he invites me into his private
  • room, I shall be his guest, and shall discuss, to the best of my
  • ability, any topic which he may care to introduce. There shall be no
  • constraint between Comrade Bickersdyke and myself.'
  • 'No, I shouldn't think there would be. I wish I could come and hear
  • you.'
  • 'I wish you could,' said Psmith courteously.
  • 'Still, it doesn't matter much to you. You don't care if you do get
  • sacked.'
  • Psmith rose.
  • 'In that way possibly, as you say, I am agreeably situated. If the New
  • Asiatic Bank does not require Psmith's services, there are other
  • spheres where a young man of spirit may carve a place for himself. No,
  • what is worrying me, Comrade Jackson, is not the thought of the push.
  • It is the growing fear that Comrade Bickersdyke and I will never
  • thoroughly understand and appreciate one another. A deep gulf lies
  • between us. I do what I can do to bridge it over, but he makes no
  • response. On his side of the gulf building operations appear to be at
  • an entire standstill. That is what is carving these lines of care on my
  • forehead, Comrade Jackson. That is what is painting these purple
  • circles beneath my eyes. Quite inadvertently to be disturbing Comrade
  • Bickersdyke, annoying him, preventing him from enjoying life. How sad
  • this is. Life bulges with these tragedies.'
  • Mike picked up the evening paper.
  • 'Don't let it keep you awake at night,' he said. 'By the way, did you
  • see that Manchester United were playing this afternoon? They won. You'd
  • better sit down and sweat up some of the details. You'll want them
  • tomorrow.'
  • 'You are very right, Comrade Jackson,' said Psmith, reseating himself.
  • 'So the Mancunians pushed the bulb into the meshes beyond the uprights
  • no fewer than four times, did they? Bless the dear boys, what spirits
  • they do enjoy, to be sure. Comrade Jackson, do not disturb me. I must
  • concentrate myself. These are deep waters.'
  • 12. In a Nutshell
  • Mr Bickersdyke sat in his private room at the New Asiatic Bank with a
  • pile of newspapers before him. At least, the casual observer would have
  • said that it was Mr Bickersdyke. In reality, however, it was an active
  • volcano in the shape and clothes of the bank-manager. It was freely
  • admitted in the office that morning that the manager had lowered all
  • records with ease. The staff had known him to be in a bad temper
  • before--frequently; but his frame of mind on all previous occasions had
  • been, compared with his present frame of mind, that of a rather
  • exceptionally good-natured lamb. Within ten minutes of his arrival the
  • entire office was on the jump. The messengers were collected in a
  • pallid group in the basement, discussing the affair in whispers and
  • endeavouring to restore their nerve with about sixpenn'orth of the
  • beverage known as 'unsweetened'. The heads of departments, to a man,
  • had bowed before the storm. Within the space of seven minutes and a
  • quarter Mr Bickersdyke had contrived to find some fault with each of
  • them. Inward Bills was out at an A.B.C. shop snatching a hasty cup of
  • coffee, to pull him together again. Outward Bills was sitting at his
  • desk with the glazed stare of one who has been struck in the thorax by
  • a thunderbolt. Mr Rossiter had been torn from Psmith in the middle of a
  • highly technical discussion of the Manchester United match, just as he
  • was showing--with the aid of a ball of paper--how he had once seen
  • Meredith centre to Sandy Turnbull in a Cup match, and was now leaping
  • about like a distracted grasshopper. Mr Waller, head of the Cash
  • Department, had been summoned to the Presence, and after listening
  • meekly to a rush of criticism, had retired to his desk with the air of
  • a beaten spaniel.
  • Only one man of the many in the building seemed calm and happy--Psmith.
  • Psmith had resumed the chat about Manchester United, on Mr Rossiter's
  • return from the lion's den, at the spot where it had been broken off;
  • but, finding that the head of the Postage Department was in no mood for
  • discussing football (or any thing else), he had postponed his remarks
  • and placidly resumed his work.
  • Mr Bickersdyke picked up a paper, opened it, and began searching the
  • columns. He had not far to look. It was a slack season for the
  • newspapers, and his little trouble, which might have received a
  • paragraph in a busy week, was set forth fully in three-quarters of a
  • column.
  • The column was headed, 'Amusing Heckling'.
  • Mr Bickersdyke read a few lines, and crumpled the paper up with a
  • snort.
  • The next he examined was an organ of his own shade of political
  • opinion. It too, gave him nearly a column, headed 'Disgraceful Scene at
  • Kenningford'. There was also a leaderette on the subject.
  • The leaderette said so exactly what Mr Bickersdyke thought himself that
  • for a moment he was soothed. Then the thought of his grievance
  • returned, and he pressed the bell.
  • 'Send Mr Smith to me,' he said.
  • William, the messenger, proceeded to inform Psmith of the summons.
  • Psmith's face lit up.
  • 'I am always glad to sweeten the monotony of toil with a chat with
  • Little Clarence,' he said. 'I shall be with him in a moment.'
  • He cleaned his pen very carefully, placed it beside his ledger, flicked
  • a little dust off his coatsleeve, and made his way to the manager's
  • room.
  • Mr Bickersdyke received him with the ominous restraint of a tiger
  • crouching for its spring. Psmith stood beside the table with languid
  • grace, suggestive of some favoured confidential secretary waiting for
  • instructions.
  • A ponderous silence brooded over the room for some moments. Psmith
  • broke it by remarking that the Bank Rate was unchanged. He mentioned
  • this fact as if it afforded him a personal gratification.
  • Mr Bickersdyke spoke.
  • 'Well, Mr Smith?' he said.
  • 'You wished to see me about something, sir?' inquired Psmith,
  • ingratiatingly.
  • 'You know perfectly well what I wished to see you about. I want to hear
  • your explanation of what occurred last night.'
  • 'May I sit, sir?'
  • He dropped gracefully into a chair, without waiting for permission,
  • and, having hitched up the knees of his trousers, beamed winningly at
  • the manager.
  • 'A deplorable affair,' he said, with a shake of his head. 'Extremely
  • deplorable. We must not judge these rough, uneducated men too harshly,
  • however. In a time of excitement the emotions of the lower classes are
  • easily stirred. Where you or I would--'
  • Mr Bickersdyke interrupted.
  • 'I do not wish for any more buffoonery, Mr Smith--'
  • Psmith raised a pained pair of eyebrows.
  • 'Buffoonery, sir!'
  • 'I cannot understand what made you act as you did last night, unless
  • you are perfectly mad, as I am beginning to think.'
  • 'But, surely, sir, there was nothing remarkable in my behaviour? When a
  • merchant has attached himself to your collar, can you do less than
  • smite him on the other cheek? I merely acted in self-defence. You saw
  • for yourself--'
  • 'You know what I am alluding to. Your behaviour during my speech.'
  • 'An excellent speech,' murmured Psmith courteously.
  • 'Well?' said Mr Bickersdyke.
  • 'It was, perhaps, mistaken zeal on my part, sir, but you must remember
  • that I acted purely from the best motives. It seemed to me--'
  • 'That is enough, Mr Smith. I confess that I am absolutely at a loss to
  • understand you--'
  • 'It is too true, sir,' sighed Psmith.
  • 'You seem,' continued Mr Bickersdyke, warming to his subject, and
  • turning gradually a richer shade of purple, 'you seem to be determined
  • to endeavour to annoy me.' ('No no,' from Psmith.) 'I can only assume
  • that you are not in your right senses. You follow me about in my club--'
  • 'Our club, sir,' murmured Psmith.
  • 'Be good enough not to interrupt me, Mr Smith. You dog my footsteps in
  • my club--'
  • 'Purely accidental, sir. We happen to meet--that is all.'
  • 'You attend meetings at which I am speaking, and behave in a perfectly
  • imbecile manner.'
  • Psmith moaned slightly.
  • 'It may seem humorous to you, but I can assure you it is extremely bad
  • policy on your part. The New Asiatic Bank is no place for humour, and I
  • think--'
  • 'Excuse me, sir,' said Psmith.
  • The manager started at the familiar phrase. The plum-colour of his
  • complexion deepened.
  • 'I entirely agree with you, sir,' said Psmith, 'that this bank is no
  • place for humour.'
  • 'Very well, then. You--'
  • 'And I am never humorous in it. I arrive punctually in the morning,
  • and I work steadily and earnestly till my labours are completed. I
  • think you will find, on inquiry, that Mr Rossiter is satisfied with my
  • work.'
  • 'That is neither here nor--'
  • 'Surely, sir,' said Psmith, 'you are wrong? Surely your jurisdiction
  • ceases after office hours? Any little misunderstanding we may have at
  • the close of the day's work cannot affect you officially. You could
  • not, for instance, dismiss me from the service of the bank if we were
  • partners at bridge at the club and I happened to revoke.'
  • 'I can dismiss you, let me tell you, Mr Smith, for studied insolence,
  • whether in the office or not.'
  • 'I bow to superior knowledge,' said Psmith politely, 'but I confess I
  • doubt it. And,' he added, 'there is another point. May I continue to
  • some extent?'
  • 'If you have anything to say, say it.'
  • Psmith flung one leg over the other, and settled his collar.
  • 'It is perhaps a delicate matter,' he said, 'but it is best to be
  • frank. We should have no secrets. To put my point quite clearly, I must
  • go back a little, to the time when you paid us that very welcome
  • week-end visit at our house in August.'
  • 'If you hope to make capital out of the fact that I have been a guest
  • of your father--'
  • 'Not at all,' said Psmith deprecatingly. 'Not at all. You do not take
  • me. My point is this. I do not wish to revive painful memories, but it
  • cannot be denied that there was, here and there, some slight bickering
  • between us on that occasion. The fault,' said Psmith magnanimously,
  • 'was possibly mine. I may have been too exacting, too capricious.
  • Perhaps so. However, the fact remains that you conceived the happy
  • notion of getting me into this bank, under the impression that, once I
  • was in, you would be able to--if I may use the expression--give me
  • beans. You said as much to me, if I remember. I hate to say it, but
  • don't you think that if you give me the sack, although my work is
  • satisfactory to the head of my department, you will be by way of
  • admitting that you bit off rather more than you could chew? I merely
  • make the suggestion.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke half rose from his chair.
  • 'You--'
  • 'Just so, just so, but--to return to the main point--don't you? The
  • whole painful affair reminds me of the story of Agesilaus and the
  • Petulant Pterodactyl, which as you have never heard, I will now proceed
  • to relate. Agesilaus--'
  • Mr Bickersdyke made a curious clucking noise in his throat.
  • 'I am boring you,' said Psmith, with ready tact. 'Suffice it to say
  • that Comrade Agesilaus interfered with the pterodactyl, which was doing
  • him no harm; and the intelligent creature, whose motto was "Nemo me
  • impune lacessit", turned and bit him. Bit him good and hard, so that
  • Agesilaus ever afterwards had a distaste for pterodactyls. His
  • reluctance to disturb them became quite a byword. The Society papers of
  • the period frequently commented upon it. Let us draw the parallel.'
  • Here Mr Bickersdyke, who had been clucking throughout this speech,
  • essayed to speak; but Psmith hurried on.
  • 'You are Agesilaus,' he said. 'I am the Petulant Pterodactyl. You, if I
  • may say so, butted in of your own free will, and took me from a happy
  • home, simply in order that you might get me into this place under you,
  • and give me beans. But, curiously enough, the major portion of that
  • vegetable seems to be coming to you. Of course, you can administer the
  • push if you like; but, as I say, it will be by way of a confession that
  • your scheme has sprung a leak. Personally,' said Psmith, as one friend
  • to another, 'I should advise you to stick it out. You never know what
  • may happen. At any moment I may fall from my present high standard of
  • industry and excellence; and then you have me, so to speak, where the
  • hair is crisp.'
  • He paused. Mr Bickersdyke's eyes, which even in their normal state
  • protruded slightly, now looked as if they might fall out at any moment.
  • His face had passed from the plum-coloured stage to something beyond.
  • Every now and then he made the clucking noise, but except for that he
  • was silent. Psmith, having waited for some time for something in the
  • shape of comment or criticism on his remarks, now rose.
  • 'It has been a great treat to me, this little chat,' he said affably,
  • 'but I fear that I must no longer allow purely social enjoyments to
  • interfere with my commercial pursuits. With your permission, I will
  • rejoin my department, where my absence is doubtless already causing
  • comment and possibly dismay. But we shall be meeting at the club
  • shortly, I hope. Good-bye, sir, good-bye.'
  • He left the room, and walked dreamily back to the Postage Department,
  • leaving the manager still staring glassily at nothing.
  • 13. Mike is Moved On
  • This episode may be said to have concluded the first act of the
  • commercial drama in which Mike and Psmith had been cast for leading
  • parts. And, as usually happens after the end of an act, there was a
  • lull for a while until things began to work up towards another climax.
  • Mike, as day succeeded day, began to grow accustomed to the life of the
  • bank, and to find that it had its pleasant side after all. Whenever a
  • number of people are working at the same thing, even though that thing
  • is not perhaps what they would have chosen as an object in life, if
  • left to themselves, there is bound to exist an atmosphere of
  • good-fellowship; something akin to, though a hundred times weaker
  • than, the public school spirit. Such a community lacks the main motive
  • of the public school spirit, which is pride in the school and its
  • achievements. Nobody can be proud of the achievements of a bank. When
  • the business of arranging a new Japanese loan was given to the New
  • Asiatic Bank, its employees did not stand on stools, and cheer. On the
  • contrary, they thought of the extra work it would involve; and they
  • cursed a good deal, though there was no denying that it was a big thing
  • for the bank--not unlike winning the Ashburton would be to a school.
  • There is a cold impersonality about a bank. A school is a living thing.
  • Setting aside this important difference, there was a good deal of the
  • public school about the New Asiatic Bank. The heads of departments were
  • not quite so autocratic as masters, and one was treated more on a
  • grown-up scale, as man to man; but, nevertheless, there remained a
  • distinct flavour of a school republic. Most of the men in the bank,
  • with the exception of certain hard-headed Scotch youths drafted in from
  • other establishments in the City, were old public school men. Mike
  • found two Old Wrykinians in the first week. Neither was well known to
  • him. They had left in his second year in the team. But it was pleasant
  • to have them about, and to feel that they had been educated at the
  • right place.
  • As far as Mike's personal comfort went, the presence of these two
  • Wrykinians was very much for the good. Both of them knew all about his
  • cricket, and they spread the news. The New Asiatic Bank, like most
  • London banks, was keen on sport, and happened to possess a cricket team
  • which could make a good game with most of the second-rank clubs. The
  • disappearance to the East of two of the best bats of the previous
  • season caused Mike's advent to be hailed with a good deal of
  • enthusiasm. Mike was a county man. He had only played once for his
  • county, it was true, but that did not matter. He had passed the barrier
  • which separates the second-class bat from the first-class, and the bank
  • welcomed him with awe. County men did not come their way every day.
  • Mike did not like being in the bank, considered in the light of a
  • career. But he bore no grudge against the inmates of the bank, such as
  • he had borne against the inmates of Sedleigh. He had looked on the
  • latter as bound up with the school, and, consequently, enemies. His
  • fellow workers in the bank he regarded as companions in misfortune.
  • They were all in the same boat together. There were men from Tonbridge,
  • Dulwich, Bedford, St Paul's, and a dozen other schools. One or two of
  • them he knew by repute from the pages of Wisden. Bannister, his
  • cheerful predecessor in the Postage Department, was the Bannister, he
  • recollected now, who had played for Geddington against Wrykyn in his
  • second year in the Wrykyn team. Munroe, the big man in the Fixed
  • Deposits, he remembered as leader of the Ripton pack. Every day brought
  • fresh discoveries of this sort, and each made Mike more reconciled to
  • his lot. They were a pleasant set of fellows in the New Asiatic Bank,
  • and but for the dreary outlook which the future held--for Mike, unlike
  • most of his follow workers, was not attracted by the idea of a life in
  • the East--he would have been very fairly content.
  • The hostility of Mr Bickersdyke was a slight drawback. Psmith had
  • developed a habit of taking Mike with him to the club of an evening;
  • and this did not do anything towards wiping out of the manager's mind
  • the recollection of his former passage of arms with the Old Wrykinian.
  • The glass remaining Set Fair as far as Mr Rossiter's approval was
  • concerned, Mike was enabled to keep off the managerial carpet to a
  • great extent; but twice, when he posted letters without going through
  • the preliminary formality of stamping them, Mr Bickersdyke had
  • opportunities of which he availed himself. But for these incidents life
  • was fairly enjoyable. Owing to Psmith's benevolent efforts, the Postage
  • Department became quite a happy family, and ex-occupants of the postage
  • desk, Bannister especially, were amazed at the change that had come
  • over Mr Rossiter. He no longer darted from his lair like a pouncing
  • panther. To report his subordinates to the manager seemed now to be a
  • lost art with him. The sight of Psmith and Mr Rossiter proceeding high
  • and disposedly to a mutual lunch became quite common, and ceased to
  • excite remark.
  • 'By kindness,' said Psmith to Mike, after one of these expeditions. 'By
  • tact and kindness. That is how it is done. I do not despair of training
  • Comrade Rossiter one of these days to jump through paper hoops.'
  • So that, altogether, Mike's life in the bank had become very fairly
  • pleasant.
  • Out of office-hours he enjoyed himself hugely. London was strange to
  • him, and with Psmith as a companion, he extracted a vast deal of
  • entertainment from it. Psmith was not unacquainted with the West End,
  • and he proved an excellent guide. At first Mike expostulated with
  • unfailing regularity at the other's habit of paying for everything, but
  • Psmith waved aside all objections with languid firmness.
  • 'I need you, Comrade Jackson,' he said, when Mike lodged a protest on
  • finding himself bound for the stalls for the second night in
  • succession. 'We must stick together. As my confidential secretary and
  • adviser, your place is by my side. Who knows but that between the acts
  • tonight I may not be seized with some luminous thought? Could I utter
  • this to my next-door neighbour or the programme-girl? Stand by me,
  • Comrade Jackson, or we are undone.'
  • So Mike stood by him.
  • By this time Mike had grown so used to his work that he could tell to
  • within five minutes when a rush would come; and he was able to spend a
  • good deal of his time reading a surreptitious novel behind a pile of
  • ledgers, or down in the tea-room. The New Asiatic Bank supplied tea to
  • its employees. In quality it was bad, and the bread-and-butter
  • associated with it was worse. But it had the merit of giving one an
  • excuse for being away from one's desk. There were large printed notices
  • all over the tea-room, which was in the basement, informing gentlemen
  • that they were only allowed ten minutes for tea, but one took just as
  • long as one thought the head of one's department would stand, from
  • twenty-five minutes to an hour and a quarter.
  • This state of things was too good to last. Towards the beginning of the
  • New Year a new man arrived, and Mike was moved on to another
  • department.
  • 14. Mr Waller Appears in a New Light
  • The department into which Mike was sent was the Cash, or, to be more
  • exact, that section of it which was known as Paying Cashier. The
  • important task of shooting doubloons across the counter did not belong
  • to Mike himself, but to Mr Waller. Mike's work was less ostentatious,
  • and was performed with pen, ink, and ledgers in the background.
  • Occasionally, when Mr Waller was out at lunch, Mike had to act as
  • substitute for him, and cash cheques; but Mr Waller always went out at
  • a slack time, when few customers came in, and Mike seldom had any very
  • startling sum to hand over.
  • He enjoyed being in the Cash Department. He liked Mr Waller. The work
  • was easy; and when he did happen to make mistakes, they were corrected
  • patiently by the grey-bearded one, and not used as levers for boosting
  • him into the presence of Mr Bickersdyke, as they might have been in
  • some departments. The cashier seemed to have taken a fancy to Mike; and
  • Mike, as was usually the way with him when people went out of their way
  • to be friendly, was at his best. Mike at his ease and unsuspicious of
  • hostile intentions was a different person from Mike with his prickles
  • out.
  • Psmith, meanwhile, was not enjoying himself. It was an unheard-of
  • thing, he said, depriving a man of his confidential secretary without
  • so much as asking his leave.
  • 'It has caused me the greatest inconvenience,' he told Mike, drifting
  • round in a melancholy way to the Cash Department during a slack spell
  • one afternoon. 'I miss you at every turn. Your keen intelligence and
  • ready sympathy were invaluable to me. Now where am I? In the cart. I
  • evolved a slightly bright thought on life just now. There was nobody to
  • tell it to except the new man. I told it him, and the fool gaped. I
  • tell you, Comrade Jackson, I feel like some lion that has been robbed
  • of its cub. I feel as Marshall would feel if they took Snelgrove away
  • from him, or as Peace might if he awoke one morning to find Plenty
  • gone. Comrade Rossiter does his best. We still talk brokenly about
  • Manchester United--they got routed in the first round of the Cup
  • yesterday and Comrade Rossiter is wearing black--but it is not the
  • same. I try work, but that is no good either. From ledger to ledger
  • they hurry me, to stifle my regret. And when they win a smile from me,
  • they think that I forget. But I don't. I am a broken man. That new
  • exhibit they've got in your place is about as near to the Extreme Edge
  • as anything I've ever seen. One of Nature's blighters. Well, well, I
  • must away. Comrade Rossiter awaits me.'
  • Mike's successor, a youth of the name of Bristow, was causing Psmith a
  • great deal of pensive melancholy. His worst defect--which he could not
  • help--was that he was not Mike. His others--which he could--were
  • numerous. His clothes were cut in a way that harrowed Psmith's sensitive
  • soul every time he looked at them. The fact that he wore detachable
  • cuffs, which he took off on beginning work and stacked in a glistening
  • pile on the desk in front of him, was no proof of innate viciousness of
  • disposition, but it prejudiced the Old Etonian against him. It was part
  • of Psmith's philosophy that a man who wore detachable cuffs had passed
  • beyond the limit of human toleration. In addition, Bristow wore a small
  • black moustache and a ring and that, as Psmith informed Mike, put the
  • lid on it.
  • Mike would sometimes stroll round to the Postage Department to listen
  • to the conversations between the two. Bristow was always friendliness
  • itself. He habitually addressed Psmith as Smithy, a fact which
  • entertained Mike greatly but did not seem to amuse Psmith to any
  • overwhelming extent. On the other hand, when, as he generally did, he
  • called Mike 'Mister Cricketer', the humour of the thing appeared to
  • elude Mike, though the mode of address always drew from Psmith a pale,
  • wan smile, as of a broken heart made cheerful against its own
  • inclination.
  • The net result of the coming of Bristow was that Psmith spent most of
  • his time, when not actually oppressed by a rush of work, in the
  • precincts of the Cash Department, talking to Mike and Mr Waller. The
  • latter did not seem to share the dislike common among the other heads
  • of departments of seeing his subordinates receiving visitors. Unless
  • the work was really heavy, in which case a mild remonstrance escaped
  • him, he offered no objection to Mike being at home to Psmith. It was
  • this tolerance which sometimes got him into trouble with Mr
  • Bickersdyke. The manager did not often perambulate the office, but he
  • did occasionally, and the interview which ensued upon his finding
  • Hutchinson, the underling in the Cash Department at that time, with his
  • stool tilted comfortably against the wall, reading the sporting news
  • from a pink paper to a friend from the Outward Bills Department who lay
  • luxuriously on the floor beside him, did not rank among Mr Waller's
  • pleasantest memories. But Mr Waller was too soft-hearted to interfere
  • with his assistants unless it was absolutely necessary. The truth of
  • the matter was that the New Asiatic Bank was over-staffed. There were
  • too many men for the work. The London branch of the bank was really
  • only a nursery. New men were constantly wanted in the Eastern branches,
  • so they had to be put into the London branch to learn the business,
  • whether there was any work for them to do or not.
  • It was after one of these visits of Psmith's that Mr Waller displayed a
  • new and unsuspected side to his character. Psmith had come round in a
  • state of some depression to discuss Bristow, as usual. Bristow, it
  • seemed, had come to the bank that morning in a fancy waistcoat of so
  • emphatic a colour-scheme that Psmith stoutly refused to sit in the same
  • department with it.
  • 'What with Comrades Bristow and Bickersdyke combined,' said Psmith
  • plaintively, 'the work is becoming too hard for me. The whisper is
  • beginning to circulate, "Psmith's number is up--As a reformer he is
  • merely among those present. He is losing his dash." But what can I do?
  • I cannot keep an eye on both of them at the same time. The moment I
  • concentrate myself on Comrade Bickersdyke for a brief spell, and seem
  • to be doing him a bit of good, what happens? Why, Comrade Bristow
  • sneaks off and buys a sort of woollen sunset. I saw the thing
  • unexpectedly. I tell you I was shaken. It is the suddenness of that
  • waistcoat which hits you. It's discouraging, this sort of thing. I try
  • always to think well of my fellow man. As an energetic Socialist, I do
  • my best to see the good that is in him, but it's hard. Comrade
  • Bristow's the most striking argument against the equality of man I've
  • ever come across.'
  • Mr Waller intervened at this point.
  • 'I think you must really let Jackson go on with his work, Smith,' he
  • said. 'There seems to be too much talking.'
  • 'My besetting sin,' said Psmith sadly. 'Well, well, I will go back and
  • do my best to face it, but it's a tough job.'
  • He tottered wearily away in the direction of the Postage Department.
  • 'Oh, Jackson,' said Mr Waller, 'will you kindly take my place for a few
  • minutes? I must go round and see the Inward Bills about something. I
  • shall be back very soon.'
  • Mike was becoming accustomed to deputizing for the cashier for short
  • spaces of time. It generally happened that he had to do so once or
  • twice a day. Strictly speaking, perhaps, Mr Waller was wrong to leave
  • such an important task as the actual cashing of cheques to an
  • inexperienced person of Mike's standing; but the New Asiatic Bank
  • differed from most banks in that there was not a great deal of
  • cross-counter work. People came in fairly frequently to cash cheques
  • of two or three pounds, but it was rare that any very large dealings
  • took place.
  • Having completed his business with the Inward Bills, Mr Waller made his
  • way back by a circuitous route, taking in the Postage desk.
  • He found Psmith with a pale, set face, inscribing figures in a ledger.
  • The Old Etonian greeted him with the faint smile of a persecuted saint
  • who is determined to be cheerful even at the stake.
  • 'Comrade Bristow,' he said.
  • 'Hullo, Smithy?' said the other, turning.
  • Psmith sadly directed Mr Waller's attention to the waistcoat, which was
  • certainly definite in its colouring.
  • 'Nothing,' said Psmith. 'I only wanted to look at you.'
  • 'Funny ass,' said Bristow, resuming his work. Psmith glanced at Mr
  • Waller, as who should say, 'See what I have to put up with. And yet I
  • do not give way.'
  • 'Oh--er--Smith,' said Mr Waller, 'when you were talking to Jackson just
  • now--'
  • 'Say no more,' said Psmith. 'It shall not occur again. Why should I
  • dislocate the work of your department in my efforts to win a
  • sympathetic word? I will bear Comrade Bristow like a man here. After
  • all, there are worse things at the Zoo.'
  • 'No, no,' said Mr Waller hastily, 'I did not mean that. By all means
  • pay us a visit now and then, if it does not interfere with your own
  • work. But I noticed just now that you spoke to Bristow as Comrade
  • Bristow.'
  • 'It is too true,' said Psmith. 'I must correct myself of the habit. He
  • will be getting above himself.'
  • 'And when you were speaking to Jackson, you spoke of yourself as a
  • Socialist.'
  • 'Socialism is the passion of my life,' said Psmith.
  • Mr Waller's face grew animated. He stammered in his eagerness.
  • 'I am delighted,' he said. 'Really, I am delighted. I also--'
  • 'A fellow worker in the Cause?' said Psmith.
  • 'Er--exactly.'
  • Psmith extended his hand gravely. Mr Waller shook it with enthusiasm.
  • 'I have never liked to speak of it to anybody in the office,' said Mr
  • Waller, 'but I, too, am heart and soul in the movement.'
  • 'Yours for the Revolution?' said Psmith.
  • 'Just so. Just so. Exactly. I was wondering--the fact is, I am in the
  • habit of speaking on Sundays in the open air, and--'
  • 'Hyde Park?'
  • 'No. No. Clapham Common. It is--er--handier for me where I live. Now,
  • as you are interested in the movement, I was thinking that perhaps you
  • might care to come and hear me speak next Sunday. Of course, if you
  • have nothing better to do.'
  • 'I should like to excessively,' said Psmith.
  • 'Excellent. Bring Jackson with you, and both of you come to supper
  • afterwards, if you will.'
  • 'Thanks very much.'
  • 'Perhaps you would speak yourself?'
  • 'No,' said Psmith. 'No. I think not. My Socialism is rather of the
  • practical sort. I seldom speak. But it would be a treat to listen to
  • you. What--er--what type of oratory is yours?'
  • 'Oh, well,' said Mr Waller, pulling nervously at his beard, 'of course
  • I--. Well, I am perhaps a little bitter--'
  • 'Yes, yes.'
  • 'A little mordant and ironical.'
  • 'You would be,' agreed Psmith. 'I shall look forward to Sunday with
  • every fibre quivering. And Comrade Jackson shall be at my side.'
  • 'Excellent,' said Mr Waller. 'I will go and tell him now.'
  • 15. Stirring Times on the Common
  • 'The first thing to do,' said Psmith, 'is to ascertain that such a
  • place as Clapham Common really exists. One has heard of it, of course,
  • but has its existence ever been proved? I think not. Having
  • accomplished that, we must then try to find out how to get to it. I
  • should say at a venture that it would necessitate a sea-voyage. On the
  • other hand, Comrade Waller, who is a native of the spot, seems to find
  • no difficulty in rolling to the office every morning. Therefore--you
  • follow me, Jackson?--it must be in England. In that case, we will take
  • a taximeter cab, and go out into the unknown, hand in hand, trusting to
  • luck.'
  • 'I expect you could get there by tram,' said Mike.
  • Psmith suppressed a slight shudder.
  • 'I fear, Comrade Jackson,' he said, 'that the old noblesse oblige
  • traditions of the Psmiths would not allow me to do that. No. We will
  • stroll gently, after a light lunch, to Trafalgar Square, and hail a
  • taxi.'
  • 'Beastly expensive.'
  • 'But with what an object! Can any expenditure be called excessive which
  • enables us to hear Comrade Waller being mordant and ironical at the
  • other end?'
  • 'It's a rum business,' said Mike. 'I hope the dickens he won't mix us
  • up in it. We should look frightful fools.'
  • 'I may possibly say a few words,' said Psmith carelessly, 'if the
  • spirit moves me. Who am I that I should deny people a simple pleasure?'
  • Mike looked alarmed.
  • 'Look here,' he said, 'I say, if you _are_ going to play the goat,
  • for goodness' sake don't go lugging me into it. I've got heaps of
  • troubles without that.'
  • Psmith waved the objection aside.
  • 'You,' he said, 'will be one of the large, and, I hope, interested
  • audience. Nothing more. But it is quite possible that the spirit may
  • not move me. I may not feel inspired to speak. I am not one of those
  • who love speaking for speaking's sake. If I have no message for the
  • many-headed, I shall remain silent.'
  • 'Then I hope the dickens you won't have,' said Mike. Of all things he
  • hated most being conspicuous before a crowd--except at cricket, which
  • was a different thing--and he had an uneasy feeling that Psmith would
  • rather like it than otherwise.
  • 'We shall see,' said Psmith absently. 'Of course, if in the vein, I
  • might do something big in the way of oratory. I am a plain, blunt man,
  • but I feel convinced that, given the opportunity, I should haul up my
  • slacks to some effect. But--well, we shall see. We shall see.'
  • And with this ghastly state of doubt Mike had to be content.
  • It was with feelings of apprehension that he accompanied Psmith from
  • the flat to Trafalgar Square in search of a cab which should convey
  • them to Clapham Common.
  • They were to meet Mr Waller at the edge of the Common nearest the
  • old town of Clapham. On the journey down Psmith was inclined to be
  • _debonnaire_. Mike, on the other hand, was silent and apprehensive.
  • He knew enough of Psmith to know that, if half an opportunity were
  • offered him, he would extract entertainment from this affair after
  • his own fashion; and then the odds were that he himself would be
  • dragged into it. Perhaps--his scalp bristled at the mere idea--he
  • would even be let in for a speech.
  • This grisly thought had hardly come into his head, when Psmith spoke.
  • 'I'm not half sure,' he said thoughtfully, 'I sha'n't call on you for a
  • speech, Comrade Jackson.'
  • 'Look here, Psmith--' began Mike agitatedly.
  • 'I don't know. I think your solid, incisive style would rather go down
  • with the masses. However, we shall see, we shall see.'
  • Mike reached the Common in a state of nervous collapse.
  • Mr Waller was waiting for them by the railings near the pond. The
  • apostle of the Revolution was clad soberly in black, except for a tie
  • of vivid crimson. His eyes shone with the light of enthusiasm, vastly
  • different from the mild glow of amiability which they exhibited for six
  • days in every week. The man was transformed.
  • 'Here you are,' he said. 'Here you are. Excellent. You are in good
  • time. Comrades Wotherspoon and Prebble have already begun to speak. I
  • shall commence now that you have come. This is the way. Over by these
  • trees.'
  • They made their way towards a small clump of trees, near which a
  • fair-sized crowd had already begun to collect. Evidently listening
  • to the speakers was one of Clapham's fashionable Sunday amusements. Mr
  • Waller talked and gesticulated incessantly as he walked. Psmith's
  • demeanour was perhaps a shade patronizing, but he displayed interest.
  • Mike proceeded to the meeting with the air of an about-to-be-washed dog.
  • He was loathing the whole business with a heartiness worthy of a better
  • cause. Somehow, he felt he was going to be made to look a fool before
  • the afternoon was over. But he registered a vow that nothing should
  • drag him on to the small platform which had been erected for the
  • benefit of the speaker.
  • As they drew nearer, the voices of Comrades Wotherspoon and Prebble
  • became more audible. They had been audible all the time, very much so,
  • but now they grew in volume. Comrade Wotherspoon was a tall, thin man
  • with side-whiskers and a high voice. He scattered his aitches as a
  • fountain its sprays in a strong wind. He was very earnest. Comrade
  • Prebble was earnest, too. Perhaps even more so than Comrade
  • Wotherspoon. He was handicapped to some extent, however, by not having
  • a palate. This gave to his profoundest thoughts a certain weirdness, as
  • if they had been uttered in an unknown tongue. The crowd was thickest
  • round his platform. The grown-up section plainly regarded him as a
  • comedian, pure and simple, and roared with happy laughter when he urged
  • them to march upon Park Lane and loot the same without mercy or
  • scruple. The children were more doubtful. Several had broken down, and
  • been led away in tears.
  • When Mr Waller got up to speak on platform number three, his audience
  • consisted at first only of Psmith, Mike, and a fox-terrier. Gradually
  • however, he attracted others. After wavering for a while, the crowd
  • finally decided that he was worth hearing. He had a method of his own.
  • Lacking the natural gifts which marked Comrade Prebble out as an
  • entertainer, he made up for this by his activity. Where his colleagues
  • stood comparatively still, Mr Waller behaved with the vivacity
  • generally supposed to belong only to peas on shovels and cats on hot
  • bricks. He crouched to denounce the House of Lords. He bounded from
  • side to side while dissecting the methods of the plutocrats. During an
  • impassioned onslaught on the monarchical system he stood on one leg and
  • hopped. This was more the sort of thing the crowd had come to see.
  • Comrade Wotherspoon found himself deserted, and even Comrade Prebble's
  • shortcomings in the way of palate were insufficient to keep his flock
  • together. The entire strength of the audience gathered in front of the
  • third platform.
  • Mike, separated from Psmith by the movement of the crowd, listened with
  • a growing depression. That feeling which attacks a sensitive person
  • sometimes at the theatre when somebody is making himself ridiculous on
  • the stage--the illogical feeling that it is he and not the actor who is
  • floundering--had come over him in a wave. He liked Mr Waller, and it
  • made his gorge rise to see him exposing himself to the jeers of a
  • crowd. The fact that Mr Waller himself did not know that they were
  • jeers, but mistook them for applause, made it no better. Mike felt
  • vaguely furious.
  • His indignation began to take a more personal shape when the speaker,
  • branching off from the main subject of Socialism, began to touch on
  • temperance. There was no particular reason why Mr Waller should have
  • introduced the subject of temperance, except that he happened to be an
  • enthusiast. He linked it on to his remarks on Socialism by attributing
  • the lethargy of the masses to their fondness for alcohol; and the
  • crowd, which had been inclined rather to pat itself on the back during
  • the assaults on Rank and Property, finding itself assailed in its turn,
  • resented it. They were there to listen to speakers telling them that
  • they were the finest fellows on earth, not pointing out their little
  • failings to them. The feeling of the meeting became hostile. The jeers
  • grew more frequent and less good-tempered.
  • 'Comrade Waller means well,' said a voice in Mike's ear, 'but if he
  • shoots it at them like this much more there'll be a bit of an
  • imbroglio.'
  • 'Look here, Smith,' said Mike quickly, 'can't we stop him? These chaps
  • are getting fed up, and they look bargees enough to do anything.
  • They'll be going for him or something soon.'
  • 'How can we switch off the flow? I don't see. The man is wound up. He
  • means to get it off his chest if it snows. I feel we are by way of
  • being in the soup once more, Comrade Jackson. We can only sit tight and
  • look on.'
  • The crowd was becoming more threatening every minute. A group of young
  • men of the loafer class who stood near Mike were especially fertile in
  • comment. Psmith's eyes were on the speaker; but Mike was watching this
  • group closely. Suddenly he saw one of them, a thick-set youth wearing a
  • cloth cap and no collar, stoop.
  • When he rose again there was a stone in his hand.
  • The sight acted on Mike like a spur. Vague rage against nobody in
  • particular had been simmering in him for half an hour. Now it
  • concentrated itself on the cloth-capped one.
  • Mr Waller paused momentarily before renewing his harangue. The man in
  • the cloth cap raised his hand. There was a swirl in the crowd, and the
  • first thing that Psmith saw as he turned was Mike seizing the would-be
  • marksman round the neck and hurling him to the ground, after the manner
  • of a forward at football tackling an opponent during a line-out from
  • touch.
  • There is one thing which will always distract the attention of a crowd
  • from any speaker, and that is a dispute between two of its units. Mr
  • Waller's views on temperance were forgotten in an instant. The audience
  • surged round Mike and his opponent.
  • The latter had scrambled to his feet now, and was looking round for his
  • assailant.
  • 'That's 'im, Bill!' cried eager voices, indicating Mike.
  • ''E's the bloke wot 'it yer, Bill,' said others, more precise in
  • detail.
  • Bill advanced on Mike in a sidelong, crab-like manner.
  • ''Oo're you, I should like to know?' said Bill.
  • Mike, rightly holding that this was merely a rhetorical question and
  • that Bill had no real thirst for information as to his family history,
  • made no reply. Or, rather, the reply he made was not verbal. He waited
  • till his questioner was within range, and then hit him in the eye. A
  • reply far more satisfactory, if not to Bill himself, at any rate to the
  • interested onlookers, than any flow of words.
  • A contented sigh went up from the crowd. Their Sunday afternoon was
  • going to be spent just as they considered Sunday afternoons should be
  • spent.
  • 'Give us your coat,' said Psmith briskly, 'and try and get it over
  • quick. Don't go in for any fancy sparring. Switch it on, all you know,
  • from the start. I'll keep a thoughtful eye open to see that none of his
  • friends and relations join in.'
  • Outwardly Psmith was unruffled, but inwardly he was not feeling so
  • composed. An ordinary turn-up before an impartial crowd which could be
  • relied upon to preserve the etiquette of these matters was one thing.
  • As regards the actual little dispute with the cloth-capped Bill, he
  • felt that he could rely on Mike to handle it satisfactorily. But there
  • was no knowing how long the crowd would be content to remain mere
  • spectators. There was no doubt which way its sympathies lay. Bill, now
  • stripped of his coat and sketching out in a hoarse voice a scenario of
  • what he intended to do--knocking Mike down and stamping him into the
  • mud was one of the milder feats he promised to perform for the
  • entertainment of an indulgent audience--was plainly the popular
  • favourite.
  • Psmith, though he did not show it, was more than a little apprehensive.
  • Mike, having more to occupy his mind in the immediate present, was not
  • anxious concerning the future. He had the great advantage over Psmith
  • of having lost his temper. Psmith could look on the situation as a
  • whole, and count the risks and possibilities. Mike could only see Bill
  • shuffling towards him with his head down and shoulders bunched.
  • 'Gow it, Bill!' said someone.
  • 'Pliy up, the Arsenal!' urged a voice on the outskirts of the crowd.
  • A chorus of encouragement from kind friends in front: 'Step up, Bill!'
  • And Bill stepped.
  • 16. Further Developments
  • Bill (surname unknown) was not one of your ultra-scientific fighters.
  • He did not favour the American crouch and the artistic feint. He had a
  • style wholly his own. It seemed to have been modelled partly on a
  • tortoise and partly on a windmill. His head he appeared to be trying to
  • conceal between his shoulders, and he whirled his arms alternately in
  • circular sweeps.
  • Mike, on the other hand, stood upright and hit straight, with the
  • result that he hurt his knuckles very much on his opponent's skull,
  • without seeming to disturb the latter to any great extent. In the
  • process he received one of the windmill swings on the left ear. The
  • crowd, strong pro-Billites, raised a cheer.
  • This maddened Mike. He assumed the offensive. Bill, satisfied for the
  • moment with his success, had stepped back, and was indulging in some
  • fancy sparring, when Mike sprang upon him like a panther. They
  • clinched, and Mike, who had got the under grip, hurled Bill forcibly
  • against a stout man who looked like a publican. The two fell in a heap,
  • Bill underneath.
  • At the same time Bill's friends joined in.
  • The first intimation Mike had of this was a violent blow across the
  • shoulders with a walking-stick. Even if he had been wearing his
  • overcoat, the blow would have hurt. As he was in his jacket it hurt
  • more than anything he had ever experienced in his life. He leapt up
  • with a yell, but Psmith was there before him. Mike saw his assailant
  • lift the stick again, and then collapse as the old Etonian's right took
  • him under the chin.
  • He darted to Psmith's side.
  • 'This is no place for us,' observed the latter sadly. 'Shift ho, I
  • think. Come on.'
  • They dashed simultaneously for the spot where the crowd was thinnest.
  • The ring which had formed round Mike and Bill had broken up as the
  • result of the intervention of Bill's allies, and at the spot for which
  • they ran only two men were standing. And these had apparently made up
  • their minds that neutrality was the best policy, for they made no
  • movement to stop them. Psmith and Mike charged through the gap, and
  • raced for the road.
  • The suddenness of the move gave them just the start they needed. Mike
  • looked over his shoulder. The crowd, to a man, seemed to be following.
  • Bill, excavated from beneath the publican, led the field. Lying a good
  • second came a band of three, and after them the rest in a bunch.
  • They reached the road in this order.
  • Some fifty yards down the road was a stationary tram. In the ordinary
  • course of things it would probably have moved on long before Psmith and
  • Mike could have got to it; but the conductor, a man with sporting blood
  • in him, seeing what appeared to be the finish of some Marathon Race,
  • refrained from giving the signal, and moved out into the road to
  • observe events more clearly, at the same time calling to the driver,
  • who joined him. Passengers on the roof stood up to get a good view.
  • There was some cheering.
  • Psmith and Mike reached the tram ten yards to the good; and, if it had
  • been ready to start then, all would have been well. But Bill and his
  • friends had arrived while the driver and conductor were both out in the
  • road.
  • The affair now began to resemble the doings of Horatius on the bridge.
  • Psmith and Mike turned to bay on the platform at the foot of the tram
  • steps. Bill, leading by three yards, sprang on to it, grabbed Mike, and
  • fell with him on to the road. Psmith, descending with a dignity
  • somewhat lessened by the fact that his hat was on the side of his head,
  • was in time to engage the runners-up.
  • Psmith, as pugilist, lacked something of the calm majesty which
  • characterized him in the more peaceful moments of life, but he was
  • undoubtedly effective. Nature had given him an enormous reach and a
  • lightness on his feet remarkable in one of his size; and at some time
  • in his career he appeared to have learned how to use his hands. The
  • first of the three runners, the walking-stick manipulator, had the
  • misfortune to charge straight into the old Etonian's left. It was a
  • well-timed blow, and the force of it, added to the speed at which the
  • victim was running, sent him on to the pavement, where he spun round
  • and sat down. In the subsequent proceedings he took no part.
  • The other two attacked Psmith simultaneously, one on each side. In
  • doing so, the one on the left tripped over Mike and Bill, who were
  • still in the process of sorting themselves out, and fell, leaving
  • Psmith free to attend to the other. He was a tall, weedy youth. His
  • conspicuous features were a long nose and a light yellow waistcoat.
  • Psmith hit him on the former with his left and on the latter with his
  • right. The long youth emitted a gurgle, and collided with Bill, who had
  • wrenched himself free from Mike and staggered to his feet. Bill, having
  • received a second blow in the eye during the course of his interview on
  • the road with Mike, was not feeling himself. Mistaking the other for an
  • enemy, he proceeded to smite him in the parts about the jaw. He had
  • just upset him, when a stern official voice observed, ''Ere, now,
  • what's all this?'
  • There is no more unfailing corrective to a scene of strife than the
  • 'What's all this?' of the London policeman. Bill abandoned his
  • intention of stamping on the prostrate one, and the latter, sitting up,
  • blinked and was silent.
  • 'What's all this?' asked the policeman again. Psmith, adjusting his hat
  • at the correct angle again, undertook the explanations.
  • 'A distressing scene, officer,' he said. 'A case of that unbridled
  • brawling which is, alas, but too common in our London streets. These
  • two, possibly till now the closest friends, fall out over some point,
  • probably of the most trivial nature, and what happens? They brawl.
  • They--'
  • 'He 'it me,' said the long youth, dabbing at his face with a
  • handkerchief and pointing an accusing finger at Psmith, who regarded
  • him through his eyeglass with a look in which pity and censure were
  • nicely blended.
  • Bill, meanwhile, circling round restlessly, in the apparent hope of
  • getting past the Law and having another encounter with Mike, expressed
  • himself in a stream of language which drew stern reproof from the
  • shocked constable.
  • 'You 'op it,' concluded the man in blue. 'That's what you do. You 'op
  • it.'
  • 'I should,' said Psmith kindly. 'The officer is speaking in your best
  • interests. A man of taste and discernment, he knows what is best. His
  • advice is good, and should be followed.'
  • The constable seemed to notice Psmith for the first time. He turned and
  • stared at him. Psmith's praise had not had the effect of softening him.
  • His look was one of suspicion.
  • 'And what might _you_ have been up to?' he inquired coldly. 'This
  • man says you hit him.'
  • Psmith waved the matter aside.
  • 'Purely in self-defence,' he said, 'purely in self-defence. What else
  • could the man of spirit do? A mere tap to discourage an aggressive
  • movement.'
  • The policeman stood silent, weighing matters in the balance. He
  • produced a notebook and sucked his pencil. Then he called the conductor
  • of the tram as a witness.
  • 'A brainy and admirable step,' said Psmith, approvingly. 'This rugged,
  • honest man, all unused to verbal subtleties, shall give us his plain
  • account of what happened. After which, as I presume this tram--little
  • as I know of the habits of trams--has got to go somewhere today, I
  • would suggest that we all separated and moved on.'
  • He took two half-crowns from his pocket, and began to clink them
  • meditatively together. A slight softening of the frigidity of the
  • constable's manner became noticeable. There was a milder beam in the
  • eyes which gazed into Psmith's.
  • Nor did the conductor seem altogether uninfluenced by the sight.
  • The conductor deposed that he had bin on the point of pushing on,
  • seeing as how he'd hung abart long enough, when he see'd them two
  • gents, the long 'un with the heye-glass (Psmith bowed) and t'other 'un,
  • a-legging of it dahn the road towards him, with the other blokes
  • pelting after 'em. He added that, when they reached the trem, the two
  • gents had got aboard, and was then set upon by the blokes. And after
  • that, he concluded, well, there was a bit of a scrap, and that's how it
  • was.
  • 'Lucidly and excellently put,' said Psmith. 'That is just how it was.
  • Comrade Jackson, I fancy we leave the court without a stain on our
  • characters. We win through. Er--constable, we have given you a great
  • deal of trouble. Possibly--?'
  • 'Thank you, sir.' There was a musical clinking. 'Now then, all of you,
  • you 'op it. You're all bin poking your noses in 'ere long enough. Pop
  • off. Get on with that tram, conductor.' Psmith and Mike settled
  • themselves in a seat on the roof. When the conductor came along, Psmith
  • gave him half a crown, and asked after his wife and the little ones at
  • home. The conductor thanked goodness that he was a bachelor, punched
  • the tickets, and retired.
  • 'Subject for a historical picture,' said Psmith. 'Wounded leaving the
  • field after the Battle of Clapham Common. How are your injuries,
  • Comrade Jackson?'
  • 'My back's hurting like blazes,' said Mike. 'And my ear's all sore
  • where that chap got me. Anything the matter with you?'
  • 'Physically,' said Psmith, 'no. Spiritually much. Do you realize,
  • Comrade Jackson, the thing that has happened? I am riding in a tram. I,
  • Psmith, have paid a penny for a ticket on a tram. If this should get
  • about the clubs! I tell you, Comrade Jackson, no such crisis has ever
  • occurred before in the course of my career.'
  • 'You can always get off, you know,' said Mike.
  • 'He thinks of everything,' said Psmith, admiringly. 'You have touched
  • the spot with an unerring finger. Let us descend. I observe in the
  • distance a cab. That looks to me more the sort of thing we want. Let us
  • go and parley with the driver.'
  • 17. Sunday Supper
  • The cab took them back to the flat, at considerable expense, and Psmith
  • requested Mike to make tea, a performance in which he himself was
  • interested purely as a spectator. He had views on the subject of
  • tea-making which he liked to expound from an armchair or sofa, but he
  • never got further than this. Mike, his back throbbing dully from the
  • blow he had received, and feeling more than a little sore all over,
  • prepared the Etna, fetched the milk, and finally produced the finished
  • article.
  • Psmith sipped meditatively.
  • 'How pleasant,' he said, 'after strife is rest. We shouldn't have
  • appreciated this simple cup of tea had our sensibilities remained
  • unstirred this afternoon. We can now sit at our ease, like warriors
  • after the fray, till the time comes for setting out to Comrade Waller's
  • once more.'
  • Mike looked up.
  • 'What! You don't mean to say you're going to sweat out to Clapham
  • again?'
  • 'Undoubtedly. Comrade Waller is expecting us to supper.'
  • 'What absolute rot! We can't fag back there.'
  • 'Noblesse oblige. The cry has gone round the Waller household, "Jackson
  • and Psmith are coming to supper," and we cannot disappoint them now.
  • Already the fatted blanc-mange has been killed, and the table creaks
  • beneath what's left of the midday beef. We must be there; besides,
  • don't you want to see how the poor man is? Probably we shall find him
  • in the act of emitting his last breath. I expect he was lynched by the
  • enthusiastic mob.'
  • 'Not much,' grinned Mike. 'They were too busy with us. All right, I'll
  • come if you really want me to, but it's awful rot.'
  • One of the many things Mike could never understand in Psmith was his
  • fondness for getting into atmospheres that were not his own. He would
  • go out of his way to do this. Mike, like most boys of his age, was
  • never really happy and at his ease except in the presence of those of
  • his own years and class. Psmith, on the contrary, seemed to be bored by
  • them, and infinitely preferred talking to somebody who lived in quite
  • another world. Mike was not a snob. He simply had not the ability to be
  • at his ease with people in another class from his own. He did not know
  • what to talk to them about, unless they were cricket professionals.
  • With them he was never at a loss.
  • But Psmith was different. He could get on with anyone. He seemed to
  • have the gift of entering into their minds and seeing things from their
  • point of view.
  • As regarded Mr Waller, Mike liked him personally, and was prepared, as
  • we have seen, to undertake considerable risks in his defence; but he
  • loathed with all his heart and soul the idea of supper at his house. He
  • knew that he would have nothing to say. Whereas Psmith gave him the
  • impression of looking forward to the thing as a treat.
  • * * * * *
  • The house where Mr Waller lived was one of a row of semi-detached
  • villas on the north side of the Common. The door was opened to them by
  • their host himself. So far from looking battered and emitting last
  • breaths, he appeared particularly spruce. He had just returned from
  • Church, and was still wearing his gloves and tall hat. He squeaked with
  • surprise when he saw who were standing on the mat.
  • 'Why, dear me, dear me,' he said. 'Here you are! I have been wondering
  • what had happened to you. I was afraid that you might have been
  • seriously hurt. I was afraid those ruffians might have injured you.
  • When last I saw you, you were being--'
  • 'Chivvied,' interposed Psmith, with dignified melancholy. 'Do not let
  • us try to wrap the fact up in pleasant words. We were being chivvied.
  • We were legging it with the infuriated mob at our heels. An ignominious
  • position for a Shropshire Psmith, but, after all, Napoleon did the
  • same.'
  • 'But what happened? I could not see. I only know that quite suddenly
  • the people seemed to stop listening to me, and all gathered round you
  • and Jackson. And then I saw that Jackson was engaged in a fight with a
  • young man.'
  • 'Comrade Jackson, I imagine, having heard a great deal about all men
  • being equal, was anxious to test the theory, and see whether Comrade
  • Bill was as good a man as he was. The experiment was broken off
  • prematurely, but I personally should be inclined to say that Comrade
  • Jackson had a shade the better of the exchanges.'
  • Mr Waller looked with interest at Mike, who shuffled and felt awkward.
  • He was hoping that Psmith would say nothing about the reason of his
  • engaging Bill in combat. He had an uneasy feeling that Mr Waller's
  • gratitude would be effusive and overpowering, and he did not wish to
  • pose as the brave young hero. There are moments when one does not feel
  • equal to the _role_.
  • Fortunately, before Mr Waller had time to ask any further questions,
  • the supper-bell sounded, and they went into the dining-room.
  • Sunday supper, unless done on a large and informal scale, is probably
  • the most depressing meal in existence. There is a chill discomfort in
  • the round of beef, an icy severity about the open jam tart. The
  • blancmange shivers miserably.
  • Spirituous liquor helps to counteract the influence of these things,
  • and so does exhilarating conversation. Unfortunately, at Mr Waller's
  • table there was neither. The cashier's views on temperance were not
  • merely for the platform; they extended to the home. And the company was
  • not of the exhilarating sort. Besides Psmith and Mike and their host,
  • there were four people present--Comrade Prebble, the orator; a young
  • man of the name of Richards; Mr Waller's niece, answering to the name
  • of Ada, who was engaged to Mr Richards; and Edward.
  • Edward was Mr Waller's son. He was ten years old, wore a very tight
  • Eton suit, and had the peculiarly loathsome expression which a snub
  • nose sometimes gives to the young.
  • It would have been plain to the most casual observer that Mr Waller was
  • fond and proud of his son. The cashier was a widower, and after five
  • minutes' acquaintance with Edward, Mike felt strongly that Mrs Waller
  • was the lucky one. Edward sat next to Mike, and showed a tendency to
  • concentrate his conversation on him. Psmith, at the opposite end of the
  • table, beamed in a fatherly manner upon the pair through his eyeglass.
  • Mike got on with small girls reasonably well. He preferred them at a
  • distance, but, if cornered by them, could put up a fairly good show.
  • Small boys, however, filled him with a sort of frozen horror. It was
  • his view that a boy should not be exhibited publicly until he reached
  • an age when he might be in the running for some sort of colours at a
  • public school.
  • Edward was one of those well-informed small boys. He opened on Mike
  • with the first mouthful.
  • 'Do you know the principal exports of Marseilles?' he inquired.
  • 'What?' said Mike coldly.
  • 'Do you know the principal exports of Marseilles? I do.'
  • 'Oh?' said Mike.
  • 'Yes. Do you know the capital of Madagascar?'
  • Mike, as crimson as the beef he was attacking, said he did not.
  • 'I do.'
  • 'Oh?' said Mike.
  • 'Who was the first king--'
  • 'You mustn't worry Mr Jackson, Teddy,' said Mr Waller, with a touch of
  • pride in his voice, as who should say 'There are not many boys of his
  • age, I can tell you, who _could_ worry you with questions like
  • that.'
  • 'No, no, he likes it,' said Psmith, unnecessarily. 'He likes it. I
  • always hold that much may be learned by casual chit-chat across the
  • dinner-table. I owe much of my own grasp of--'
  • 'I bet _you_ don't know what's the capital of Madagascar,'
  • interrupted Mike rudely.
  • 'I do,' said Edward. 'I can tell you the kings of Israel?' he added,
  • turning to Mike. He seemed to have no curiosity as to the extent of
  • Psmith's knowledge. Mike's appeared to fascinate him.
  • Mike helped himself to beetroot in moody silence.
  • His mouth was full when Comrade Prebble asked him a question. Comrade
  • Prebble, as has been pointed out in an earlier part of the narrative,
  • was a good chap, but had no roof to his mouth.
  • 'I beg your pardon?' said Mike.
  • Comrade Prebble repeated his observation. Mike looked helplessly at
  • Psmith, but Psmith's eyes were on his plate.
  • Mike felt he must venture on some answer.
  • 'No,' he said decidedly.
  • Comrade Prebble seemed slightly taken aback. There was an awkward
  • pause. Then Mr Waller, for whom his fellow Socialist's methods of
  • conversation held no mysteries, interpreted.
  • 'The mustard, Prebble? Yes, yes. Would you mind passing Prebble the
  • mustard, Mr Jackson?'
  • 'Oh, sorry,' gasped Mike, and, reaching out, upset the water-jug into
  • the open jam-tart.
  • Through the black mist which rose before his eyes as he leaped to his
  • feet and stammered apologies came the dispassionate voice of Master
  • Edward Waller reminding him that mustard was first introduced into Peru
  • by Cortez.
  • His host was all courtesy and consideration. He passed the matter off
  • genially. But life can never be quite the same after you have upset a
  • water-jug into an open jam-tart at the table of a comparative stranger.
  • Mike's nerve had gone. He ate on, but he was a broken man.
  • At the other end of the table it became gradually apparent that things
  • were not going on altogether as they should have done. There was a sort
  • of bleakness in the atmosphere. Young Mr Richards was looking like a
  • stuffed fish, and the face of Mr Waller's niece was cold and set.
  • 'Why, come, come, Ada,' said Mr Waller, breezily, 'what's the matter?
  • You're eating nothing. What's George been saying to you?' he added
  • jocularly.
  • 'Thank you, uncle Robert,' replied Ada precisely, 'there's nothing the
  • matter. Nothing that Mr Richards can say to me can upset me.'
  • 'Mr Richards!' echoed Mr Waller in astonishment. How was he to know
  • that, during the walk back from church, the world had been transformed,
  • George had become Mr Richards, and all was over?
  • 'I assure you, Ada--' began that unfortunate young man. Ada turned a
  • frigid shoulder towards him.
  • 'Come, come,' said Mr Waller disturbed. 'What's all this? What's all
  • this?'
  • His niece burst into tears and left the room.
  • If there is anything more embarrassing to a guest than a family row, we
  • have yet to hear of it. Mike, scarlet to the extreme edges of his ears,
  • concentrated himself on his plate. Comrade Prebble made a great many
  • remarks, which were probably illuminating, if they could have been
  • understood. Mr Waller looked, astonished, at Mr Richards. Mr Richards,
  • pink but dogged, loosened his collar, but said nothing. Psmith, leaning
  • forward, asked Master Edward Waller his opinion on the Licensing Bill.
  • 'We happened to have a word or two,' said Mr Richards at length, 'on
  • the way home from church on the subject of Women's Suffrage.'
  • 'That fatal topic!' murmured Psmith.
  • 'In Australia--' began Master Edward Waller.
  • 'I was rayther--well, rayther facetious about it,' continued Mr
  • Richards.
  • Psmith clicked his tongue sympathetically.
  • 'In Australia--' said Edward.
  • 'I went talking on, laughing and joking, when all of a sudden she flew
  • out at me. How was I to know she was 'eart and soul in the movement?
  • You never told me,' he added accusingly to his host.
  • 'In Australia--' said Edward.
  • 'I'll go and try and get her round. How was I to know?'
  • Mr Richards thrust back his chair and bounded from the room.
  • 'Now, iawinyaw, iear oiler--' said Comrade Prebble judicially, but was
  • interrupted.
  • 'How very disturbing!' said Mr Waller. 'I am so sorry that this should
  • have happened. Ada is such a touchy, sensitive girl. She--'
  • 'In Australia,' said Edward in even tones, 'they've _got_ Women's
  • Suffrage already. Did _you_ know that?' he said to Mike.
  • Mike made no answer. His eyes were fixed on his plate. A bead of
  • perspiration began to roll down his forehead. If his feelings could
  • have been ascertained at that moment, they would have been summed up in
  • the words, 'Death, where is thy sting?'
  • 18. Psmith Makes a Discovery
  • 'Women,' said Psmith, helping himself to trifle, and speaking with the
  • air of one launched upon his special subject, 'are, one must recollect,
  • like--like--er, well, in fact, just so. Passing on lightly from that
  • conclusion, let us turn for a moment to the Rights of Property, in
  • connection with which Comrade Prebble and yourself had so much that was
  • interesting to say this afternoon. Perhaps you'--he bowed in Comrade
  • Prebble's direction--'would resume, for the benefit of Comrade Jackson--a
  • novice in the Cause, but earnest--your very lucid--'
  • Comrade Prebble beamed, and took the floor. Mike began to realize that,
  • till now, he had never known what boredom meant. There had been moments
  • in his life which had been less interesting than other moments, but
  • nothing to touch this for agony. Comrade Prebble's address streamed on
  • like water rushing over a weir. Every now and then there was a word or
  • two which was recognizable, but this happened so rarely that it
  • amounted to little. Sometimes Mr Waller would interject a remark, but
  • not often. He seemed to be of the opinion that Comrade Prebble's was
  • the master mind and that to add anything to his views would be in the
  • nature of painting the lily and gilding the refined gold. Mike himself
  • said nothing. Psmith and Edward were equally silent. The former sat
  • like one in a trance, thinking his own thoughts, while Edward, who,
  • prospecting on the sideboard, had located a rich biscuit-mine, was too
  • occupied for speech.
  • After about twenty minutes, during which Mike's discomfort changed to a
  • dull resignation, Mr Waller suggested a move to the drawing-room, where
  • Ada, he said, would play some hymns.
  • The prospect did not dazzle Mike, but any change, he thought, must be
  • for the better. He had sat staring at the ruin of the blancmange so
  • long that it had begun to hypnotize him. Also, the move had the
  • excellent result of eliminating the snub-nosed Edward, who was sent to
  • bed. His last words were in the form of a question, addressed to Mike,
  • on the subject of the hypotenuse and the square upon the same.
  • 'A remarkably intelligent boy,' said Psmith. 'You must let him come to
  • tea at our flat one day. I may not be in myself--I have many duties
  • which keep me away--but Comrade Jackson is sure to be there, and will
  • be delighted to chat with him.'
  • On the way upstairs Mike tried to get Psmith to himself for a moment to
  • suggest the advisability of an early departure; but Psmith was in close
  • conversation with his host. Mike was left to Comrade Prebble, who,
  • apparently, had only touched the fringe of his subject in his lecture
  • in the dining-room.
  • When Mr Waller had predicted hymns in the drawing-room, he had been too
  • sanguine (or too pessimistic). Of Ada, when they arrived, there were no
  • signs. It seemed that she had gone straight to bed. Young Mr Richards
  • was sitting on the sofa, moodily turning the leaves of a photograph
  • album, which contained portraits of Master Edward Waller in
  • geometrically progressing degrees of repulsiveness--here, in frocks,
  • looking like a gargoyle; there, in sailor suit, looking like nothing on
  • earth. The inspection of these was obviously deepening Mr Richards'
  • gloom, but he proceeded doggedly with it.
  • Comrade Prebble backed the reluctant Mike into a corner, and, like the
  • Ancient Mariner, held him with a glittering eye. Psmith and Mr Waller,
  • in the opposite corner, were looking at something with their heads
  • close together. Mike definitely abandoned all hope of a rescue from
  • Psmith, and tried to buoy himself up with the reflection that this
  • could not last for ever.
  • Hours seemed to pass, and then at last he heard Psmith's voice saying
  • good-bye to his host.
  • He sprang to his feet. Comrade Prebble was in the middle of a sentence,
  • but this was no time for polished courtesy. He felt that he must get
  • away, and at once. 'I fear,' Psmith was saying, 'that we must tear
  • ourselves away. We have greatly enjoyed our evening. You must look us
  • up at our flat one day, and bring Comrade Prebble. If I am not in,
  • Comrade Jackson is certain to be, and he will be more than delighted to
  • hear Comrade Prebble speak further on the subject of which he is such a
  • master.' Comrade Prebble was understood to say that he would certainly
  • come. Mr Waller beamed. Mr Richards, still steeped in gloom, shook
  • hands in silence.
  • Out in the road, with the front door shut behind them, Mike spoke his
  • mind.
  • 'Look here, Smith,' he said definitely, 'if being your confidential
  • secretary and adviser is going to let me in for any more of that sort
  • of thing, you can jolly well accept my resignation.'
  • 'The orgy was not to your taste?' said Psmith sympathetically.
  • Mike laughed. One of those short, hollow, bitter laughs.
  • 'I am at a loss, Comrade Jackson,' said Psmith, 'to understand your
  • attitude. You fed sumptuously. You had fun with the crockery--that
  • knockabout act of yours with the water-jug was alone worth the
  • money--and you had the advantage of listening to the views of a
  • master of his subject. What more do you want?'
  • 'What on earth did you land me with that man Prebble for?'
  • 'Land you! Why, you courted his society. I had practically to drag you
  • away from him. When I got up to say good-bye, you were listening to him
  • with bulging eyes. I never saw such a picture of rapt attention. Do you
  • mean to tell me, Comrade Jackson, that your appearance belied you, that
  • you were not interested? Well, well. How we misread our fellow
  • creatures.'
  • 'I think you might have come and lent a hand with Prebble. It was a bit
  • thick.'
  • 'I was too absorbed with Comrade Waller. We were talking of things of
  • vital moment. However, the night is yet young. We will take this cab,
  • wend our way to the West, seek a cafe, and cheer ourselves with light
  • refreshments.'
  • Arrived at a cafe whose window appeared to be a sort of museum of every
  • kind of German sausage, they took possession of a vacant table and
  • ordered coffee. Mike soon found himself soothed by his bright
  • surroundings, and gradually his impressions of blancmange, Edward, and
  • Comrade Prebble faded from his mind. Psmith, meanwhile, was preserving
  • an unusual silence, being deep in a large square book of the sort in
  • which Press cuttings are pasted. As Psmith scanned its contents a
  • curious smile lit up his face. His reflections seemed to be of an
  • agreeable nature.
  • 'Hullo,' said Mike, 'what have you got hold of there? Where did you get
  • that?'
  • 'Comrade Waller very kindly lent it to me. He showed it to me after
  • supper, knowing how enthusiastically I was attached to the Cause. Had
  • you been less tensely wrapped up in Comrade Prebble's conversation, I
  • would have desired you to step across and join us. However, you now
  • have your opportunity.'
  • 'But what is it?' asked Mike.
  • 'It is the record of the meetings of the Tulse Hill Parliament,' said
  • Psmith impressively. 'A faithful record of all they said, all the votes
  • of confidence they passed in the Government, and also all the nasty
  • knocks they gave it from time to time.'
  • 'What on earth's the Tulse Hill Parliament?'
  • 'It is, alas,' said Psmith in a grave, sad voice, 'no more. In life it
  • was beautiful, but now it has done the Tom Bowling act. It has gone
  • aloft. We are dealing, Comrade Jackson, not with the live, vivid
  • present, but with the far-off, rusty past. And yet, in a way, there is
  • a touch of the live, vivid present mixed up in it.'
  • 'I don't know what the dickens you're talking about,' said Mike. 'Let's
  • have a look, anyway.'
  • Psmith handed him the volume, and, leaning back, sipped his coffee, and
  • watched him. At first Mike's face was bored and blank, but suddenly an
  • interested look came into it.
  • 'Aha!' said Psmith.
  • 'Who's Bickersdyke? Anything to do with our Bickersdyke?'
  • 'No other than our genial friend himself.'
  • Mike turned the pages, reading a line or two on each.
  • 'Hullo!' he said, chuckling. 'He lets himself go a bit, doesn't he!'
  • 'He does,' acknowledged Psmith. 'A fiery, passionate nature, that of
  • Comrade Bickersdyke.'
  • 'He's simply cursing the Government here. Giving them frightful beans.'
  • Psmith nodded.
  • 'I noticed the fact myself.'
  • 'But what's it all about?'
  • 'As far as I can glean from Comrade Waller,' said Psmith, 'about twenty
  • years ago, when he and Comrade Bickersdyke worked hand-in-hand as
  • fellow clerks at the New Asiatic, they were both members of the Tulse
  • Hill Parliament, that powerful institution. At that time Comrade
  • Bickersdyke was as fruity a Socialist as Comrade Waller is now. Only,
  • apparently, as he began to get on a bit in the world, he altered his
  • views to some extent as regards the iniquity of freezing on to a decent
  • share of the doubloons. And that, you see, is where the dim and rusty
  • past begins to get mixed up with the live, vivid present. If any
  • tactless person were to publish those very able speeches made by
  • Comrade Bickersdyke when a bulwark of the Tulse Hill Parliament, our
  • revered chief would be more or less caught bending, if I may employ the
  • expression, as regards his chances of getting in as Unionist candidate
  • at Kenningford. You follow me, Watson? I rather fancy the light-hearted
  • electors of Kenningford, from what I have seen of their rather acute
  • sense of humour, would be, as it were, all over it. It would be very,
  • very trying for Comrade Bickersdyke if these speeches of his were to
  • get about.'
  • 'You aren't going to--!'
  • 'I shall do nothing rashly. I shall merely place this handsome volume
  • among my treasured books. I shall add it to my "Books that have helped
  • me" series. Because I fancy that, in an emergency, it may not be at all
  • a bad thing to have about me. And now,' he concluded, 'as the hour is
  • getting late, perhaps we had better be shoving off for home.'
  • 19. The Illness of Edward
  • Life in a bank is at its pleasantest in the winter. When all the world
  • outside is dark and damp and cold, the light and warmth of the place
  • are comforting. There is a pleasant air of solidity about the interior
  • of a bank. The green shaded lamps look cosy. And, the outside world
  • offering so few attractions, the worker, perched on his stool, feels
  • that he is not so badly off after all. It is when the days are long and
  • the sun beats hot on the pavement, and everything shouts to him how
  • splendid it is out in the country, that he begins to grow restless.
  • Mike, except for a fortnight at the beginning of his career in the New
  • Asiatic Bank, had not had to stand the test of sunshine. At present,
  • the weather being cold and dismal, he was almost entirely contented.
  • Now that he had got into the swing of his work, the days passed very
  • quickly; and with his life after office-hours he had no fault to find
  • at all.
  • His life was very regular. He would arrive in the morning just in time
  • to sign his name in the attendance-book before it was removed to the
  • accountant's room. That was at ten o'clock. From ten to eleven he would
  • potter. There was nothing going on at that time in his department, and
  • Mr Waller seemed to take it for granted that he should stroll off to
  • the Postage Department and talk to Psmith, who had generally some fresh
  • grievance against the ring-wearing Bristow to air. From eleven to half
  • past twelve he would put in a little gentle work. Lunch, unless there
  • was a rush of business or Mr Waller happened to suffer from a spasm of
  • conscientiousness, could be spun out from half past twelve to two. More
  • work from two till half past three. From half past three till half past
  • four tea in the tearoom, with a novel. And from half past four till
  • five either a little more work or more pottering, according to whether
  • there was any work to do or not. It was by no means an unpleasant mode
  • of spending a late January day.
  • Then there was no doubt that it was an interesting little community,
  • that of the New Asiatic Bank. The curiously amateurish nature of the
  • institution lent a certain air of light-heartedness to the place. It
  • was not like one of those banks whose London office is their main
  • office, where stern business is everything and a man becomes a mere
  • machine for getting through a certain amount of routine work. The
  • employees of the New Asiatic Bank, having plenty of time on their
  • hands, were able to retain their individuality. They had leisure to
  • think of other things besides their work. Indeed, they had so much
  • leisure that it is a wonder they thought of their work at all.
  • The place was full of quaint characters. There was West, who had been
  • requested to leave Haileybury owing to his habit of borrowing horses
  • and attending meets in the neighbourhood, the same being always out of
  • bounds and necessitating a complete disregard of the rules respecting
  • evening chapel and lock-up. He was a small, dried-up youth, with black
  • hair plastered down on his head. He went about his duties in a costume
  • which suggested the sportsman of the comic papers.
  • There was also Hignett, who added to the meagre salary allowed him by
  • the bank by singing comic songs at the minor music halls. He confided
  • to Mike his intention of leaving the bank as soon as he had made a
  • name, and taking seriously to the business. He told him that he had
  • knocked them at the Bedford the week before, and in support of the
  • statement showed him a cutting from the Era, in which the writer said
  • that 'Other acceptable turns were the Bounding Zouaves, Steingruber's
  • Dogs, and Arthur Hignett.' Mike wished him luck.
  • And there was Raymond who dabbled in journalism and was the author of
  • 'Straight Talks to Housewives' in _Trifles_, under the pseudonym
  • of 'Lady Gussie'; Wragge, who believed that the earth was flat, and
  • addressed meetings on the subject in Hyde Park on Sundays; and many
  • others, all interesting to talk to of a morning when work was slack and
  • time had to be filled in.
  • Mike found himself, by degrees, growing quite attached to the New
  • Asiatic Bank.
  • One morning, early in February, he noticed a curious change in Mr
  • Waller. The head of the Cash Department was, as a rule, mildly cheerful
  • on arrival, and apt (excessively, Mike thought, though he always
  • listened with polite interest) to relate the most recent sayings and
  • doings of his snub-nosed son, Edward. No action of this young prodigy
  • was withheld from Mike. He had heard, on different occasions, how he
  • had won a prize at his school for General Information (which Mike could
  • well believe); how he had trapped young Mr Richards, now happily
  • reconciled to Ada, with an ingenious verbal catch; and how he had made
  • a sequence of diverting puns on the name of the new curate, during the
  • course of that cleric's first Sunday afternoon visit.
  • On this particular day, however, the cashier was silent and
  • absent-minded. He answered Mike's good-morning mechanically, and
  • sitting down at his desk, stared blankly across the building. There
  • was a curiously grey, tired look on his face.
  • Mike could not make it out. He did not like to ask if there was
  • anything the matter. Mr Waller's face had the unreasonable effect on
  • him of making him feel shy and awkward. Anything in the nature of
  • sorrow always dried Mike up and robbed him of the power of speech.
  • Being naturally sympathetic, he had raged inwardly in many a crisis at
  • this devil of dumb awkwardness which possessed him and prevented him
  • from putting his sympathy into words. He had always envied the cooing
  • readiness of the hero on the stage when anyone was in trouble. He
  • wondered whether he would ever acquire that knack of pouring out a
  • limpid stream of soothing words on such occasions. At present he could
  • get no farther than a scowl and an almost offensive gruffness.
  • The happy thought struck him of consulting Psmith. It was his hour for
  • pottering, so he pottered round to the Postage Department, where he
  • found the old Etonian eyeing with disfavour a new satin tie which
  • Bristow was wearing that morning for the first time.
  • 'I say, Smith,' he said, 'I want to speak to you for a second.'
  • Psmith rose. Mike led the way to a quiet corner of the Telegrams
  • Department.
  • 'I tell you, Comrade Jackson,' said Psmith, 'I am hard pressed. The
  • fight is beginning to be too much for me. After a grim struggle, after
  • days of unremitting toil, I succeeded yesterday in inducing the man
  • Bristow to abandon that rainbow waistcoat of his. Today I enter the
  • building, blythe and buoyant, worn, of course, from the long struggle,
  • but seeing with aching eyes the dawn of another, better era, and there
  • is Comrade Bristow in a satin tie. It's hard, Comrade Jackson, it's
  • hard, I tell you.'
  • 'Look here, Smith,' said Mike, 'I wish you'd go round to the Cash and
  • find out what's up with old Waller. He's got the hump about something.
  • He's sitting there looking absolutely fed up with things. I hope
  • there's nothing up. He's not a bad sort. It would be rot if anything
  • rotten's happened.'
  • Psmith began to display a gentle interest.
  • 'So other people have troubles as well as myself,' he murmured
  • musingly. 'I had almost forgotten that. Comrade Waller's misfortunes
  • cannot but be trivial compared with mine, but possibly it will be as
  • well to ascertain their nature. I will reel round and make inquiries.'
  • 'Good man,' said Mike. 'I'll wait here.'
  • Psmith departed, and returned, ten minutes later, looking more serious
  • than when he had left.
  • 'His kid's ill, poor chap,' he said briefly. 'Pretty badly too, from
  • what I can gather. Pneumonia. Waller was up all night. He oughtn't to
  • be here at all today. He doesn't know what he's doing half the time.
  • He's absolutely fagged out. Look here, you'd better nip back and do as
  • much of the work as you can. I shouldn't talk to him much if I were
  • you. Buck along.'
  • Mike went. Mr Waller was still sitting staring out across the aisle.
  • There was something more than a little gruesome in the sight of him. He
  • wore a crushed, beaten look, as if all the life and fight had gone out
  • of him. A customer came to the desk to cash a cheque. The cashier
  • shovelled the money to him under the bars with the air of one whose
  • mind is elsewhere. Mike could guess what he was feeling, and what he
  • was thinking about. The fact that the snub-nosed Edward was, without
  • exception, the most repulsive small boy he had ever met in this world,
  • where repulsive small boys crowd and jostle one another, did not
  • interfere with his appreciation of the cashier's state of mind. Mike's
  • was essentially a sympathetic character. He had the gift of intuitive
  • understanding, where people of whom he was fond were concerned. It was
  • this which drew to him those who had intelligence enough to see beyond
  • his sometimes rather forbidding manner, and to realize that his blunt
  • speech was largely due to shyness. In spite of his prejudice against
  • Edward, he could put himself into Mr Waller's place, and see the thing
  • from his point of view.
  • Psmith's injunction to him not to talk much was unnecessary. Mike, as
  • always, was rendered utterly dumb by the sight of suffering. He sat at
  • his desk, occupying himself as best he could with the driblets of work
  • which came to him.
  • Mr Waller's silence and absentness continued unchanged. The habit of
  • years had made his work mechanical. Probably few of the customers who
  • came to cash cheques suspected that there was anything the matter with
  • the man who paid them their money. After all, most people look on the
  • cashier of a bank as a sort of human slot-machine. You put in your
  • cheque, and out comes money. It is no affair of yours whether life is
  • treating the machine well or ill that day.
  • The hours dragged slowly by till five o'clock struck, and the cashier,
  • putting on his coat and hat, passed silently out through the swing
  • doors. He walked listlessly. He was evidently tired out.
  • Mike shut his ledger with a vicious bang, and went across to find
  • Psmith. He was glad the day was over.
  • 20. Concerning a Cheque
  • Things never happen quite as one expects them to. Mike came to the
  • office next morning prepared for a repetition of the previous day. He
  • was amazed to find the cashier not merely cheerful, but even
  • exuberantly cheerful. Edward, it appeared, had rallied in the
  • afternoon, and, when his father had got home, had been out of danger.
  • He was now going along excellently, and had stumped Ada, who was
  • nursing him, with a question about the Thirty Years' War, only a few
  • minutes before his father had left to catch his train. The cashier was
  • overflowing with happiness and goodwill towards his species. He greeted
  • customers with bright remarks on the weather, and snappy views on the
  • leading events of the day: the former tinged with optimism, the latter
  • full of a gentle spirit of toleration. His attitude towards the latest
  • actions of His Majesty's Government was that of one who felt that,
  • after all, there was probably some good even in the vilest of his
  • fellow creatures, if one could only find it.
  • Altogether, the cloud had lifted from the Cash Department. All was joy,
  • jollity, and song.
  • 'The attitude of Comrade Waller,' said Psmith, on being informed of the
  • change, 'is reassuring. I may now think of my own troubles. Comrade
  • Bristow has blown into the office today in patent leather boots with
  • white kid uppers, as I believe the technical term is. Add to that the
  • fact that he is still wearing the satin tie, the waistcoat, and the
  • ring, and you will understand why I have definitely decided this
  • morning to abandon all hope of his reform. Henceforth my services, for
  • what they are worth, are at the disposal of Comrade Bickersdyke. My
  • time from now onward is his. He shall have the full educative value of
  • my exclusive attention. I give Comrade Bristow up. Made straight for
  • the corner flag, you understand,' he added, as Mr Rossiter emerged from
  • his lair, 'and centred, and Sandy Turnbull headed a beautiful goal. I
  • was just telling Jackson about the match against Blackburn Rovers,' he
  • said to Mr Rossiter.
  • 'Just so, just so. But get on with your work, Smith. We are a little
  • behind-hand. I think perhaps it would be as well not to leave it just
  • yet.'
  • 'I will leap at it at once,' said Psmith cordially.
  • Mike went back to his department.
  • The day passed quickly. Mr Waller, in the intervals of work, talked a
  • good deal, mostly of Edward, his doings, his sayings, and his
  • prospects. The only thing that seemed to worry Mr Waller was the
  • problem of how to employ his son's almost superhuman talents to the
  • best advantage. Most of the goals towards which the average man strives
  • struck him as too unambitious for the prodigy.
  • By the end of the day Mike had had enough of Edward. He never wished to
  • hear the name again.
  • We do not claim originality for the statement that things never happen
  • quite as one expects them to. We repeat it now because of its profound
  • truth. The Edward's pneumonia episode having ended satisfactorily (or,
  • rather, being apparently certain to end satisfactorily, for the
  • invalid, though out of danger, was still in bed), Mike looked forward
  • to a series of days unbroken by any but the minor troubles of life. For
  • these he was prepared. What he did not expect was any big calamity.
  • At the beginning of the day there were no signs of it. The sky was blue
  • and free from all suggestions of approaching thunderbolts. Mr Waller,
  • still chirpy, had nothing but good news of Edward. Mike went for his
  • morning stroll round the office feeling that things had settled down
  • and had made up their mind to run smoothly.
  • When he got back, barely half an hour later, the storm had burst.
  • There was no one in the department at the moment of his arrival; but a
  • few minutes later he saw Mr Waller come out of the manager's room, and
  • make his way down the aisle.
  • It was his walk which first gave any hint that something was wrong. It
  • was the same limp, crushed walk which Mike had seen when Edward's
  • safety still hung in the balance.
  • As Mr Waller came nearer, Mike saw that the cashier's face was deadly
  • pale.
  • Mr Waller caught sight of him and quickened his pace.
  • 'Jackson,' he said.
  • Mike came forward.
  • 'Do you--remember--' he spoke slowly, and with an effort, 'do you
  • remember a cheque coming through the day before yesterday for a hundred
  • pounds, with Sir John Morrison's signature?'
  • 'Yes. It came in the morning, rather late.'
  • Mike remembered the cheque perfectly well, owing to the amount. It was
  • the only three-figure cheque which had come across the counter during
  • the day. It had been presented just before the cashier had gone out to
  • lunch. He recollected the man who had presented it, a tallish man with
  • a beard. He had noticed him particularly because of the contrast
  • between his manner and that of the cashier. The former had been so very
  • cheery and breezy, the latter so dazed and silent.
  • 'Why,' he said.
  • 'It was a forgery,' muttered Mr Waller, sitting down heavily.
  • Mike could not take it in all at once. He was stunned. All he could
  • understand was that a far worse thing had happened than anything he
  • could have imagined.
  • 'A forgery?' he said.
  • 'A forgery. And a clumsy one. Oh it's hard. I should have seen it on
  • any other day but that. I could not have missed it. They showed me the
  • cheque in there just now. I could not believe that I had passed it. I
  • don't remember doing it. My mind was far away. I don't remember the
  • cheque or anything about it. Yet there it is.'
  • Once more Mike was tongue-tied. For the life of him he could not think
  • of anything to say. Surely, he thought, he could find _something_
  • in the shape of words to show his sympathy. But he could find nothing
  • that would not sound horribly stilted and cold. He sat silent.
  • 'Sir John is in there,' went on the cashier. 'He is furious. Mr
  • Bickersdyke, too. They are both furious. I shall be dismissed. I shall
  • lose my place. I shall be dismissed.' He was talking more to himself
  • than to Mike. It was dreadful to see him sitting there, all limp and
  • broken.
  • 'I shall lose my place. Mr Bickersdyke has wanted to get rid of me for
  • a long time. He never liked me. I shall be dismissed. What can I do?
  • I'm an old man. I can't make another start. I am good for nothing.
  • Nobody will take an old man like me.'
  • His voice died away. There was a silence. Mike sat staring miserably in
  • front of him.
  • Then, quite suddenly, an idea came to him. The whole pressure of the
  • atmosphere seemed to lift. He saw a way out. It was a curious crooked
  • way, but at that moment it stretched clear and broad before him. He
  • felt lighthearted and excited, as if he were watching the development
  • of some interesting play at the theatre.
  • He got up, smiling.
  • The cashier did not notice the movement. Somebody had come in to cash a
  • cheque, and he was working mechanically.
  • Mike walked up the aisle to Mr Bickersdyke's room, and went in.
  • The manager was in his chair at the big table. Opposite him, facing
  • slightly sideways, was a small, round, very red-faced man. Mr
  • Bickersdyke was speaking as Mike entered.
  • 'I can assure you, Sir John--' he was saying.
  • He looked up as the door opened.
  • 'Well, Mr Jackson?'
  • Mike almost laughed. The situation was tickling him.
  • 'Mr Waller has told me--' he began.
  • 'I have already seen Mr Waller.'
  • 'I know. He told me about the cheque. I came to explain.'
  • 'Explain?'
  • 'Yes. He didn't cash it at all.'
  • 'I don't understand you, Mr Jackson.'
  • 'I was at the counter when it was brought in,' said Mike. 'I cashed it.'
  • 21. Psmith Makes Inquiries
  • Psmith, as was his habit of a morning when the fierce rush of his
  • commercial duties had abated somewhat, was leaning gracefully against
  • his desk, musing on many things, when he was aware that Bristow was
  • standing before him.
  • Focusing his attention with some reluctance upon this blot on the
  • horizon, he discovered that the exploiter of rainbow waistcoats and
  • satin ties was addressing him.
  • 'I say, Smithy,' said Bristow. He spoke in rather an awed voice.
  • 'Say on, Comrade Bristow,' said Psmith graciously. 'You have our ear.
  • You would seem to have something on your chest in addition to that
  • Neapolitan ice garment which, I regret to see, you still flaunt. If it
  • is one tithe as painful as that, you have my sympathy. Jerk it out,
  • Comrade Bristow.'
  • 'Jackson isn't half copping it from old Bick.'
  • 'Isn't--? What exactly did you say?'
  • 'He's getting it hot on the carpet.'
  • 'You wish to indicate,' said Psmith, 'that there is some slight
  • disturbance, some passing breeze between Comrades Jackson and
  • Bickersdyke?'
  • Bristow chuckled.
  • 'Breeze! Blooming hurricane, more like it. I was in Bick's room just
  • now with a letter to sign, and I tell you, the fur was flying all over
  • the bally shop. There was old Bick cursing for all he was worth, and a
  • little red-faced buffer puffing out his cheeks in an armchair.'
  • 'We all have our hobbies,' said Psmith.
  • 'Jackson wasn't saying much. He jolly well hadn't a chance. Old Bick
  • was shooting it out fourteen to the dozen.'
  • 'I have been privileged,' said Psmith, 'to hear Comrade Bickersdyke
  • speak both in his sanctum and in public. He has, as you suggest, a
  • ready flow of speech. What, exactly was the cause of the turmoil?'
  • 'I couldn't wait to hear. I was too jolly glad to get away. Old Bick
  • looked at me as if he could eat me, snatched the letter out of my hand,
  • signed it, and waved his hand at the door as a hint to hop it. Which I
  • jolly well did. He had started jawing Jackson again before I was out of
  • the room.'
  • 'While applauding his hustle,' said Psmith, 'I fear that I must take
  • official notice of this. Comrade Jackson is essentially a Sensitive
  • Plant, highly strung, neurotic. I cannot have his nervous system jolted
  • and disorganized in this manner, and his value as a confidential
  • secretary and adviser impaired, even though it be only temporarily. I
  • must look into this. I will go and see if the orgy is concluded. I will
  • hear what Comrade Jackson has to say on the matter. I shall not act
  • rashly, Comrade Bristow. If the man Bickersdyke is proved to have had
  • good grounds for his outbreak, he shall escape uncensured. I may even
  • look in on him and throw him a word of praise. But if I find, as I
  • suspect, that he has wronged Comrade Jackson, I shall be forced to
  • speak sharply to him.'
  • * * * * *
  • Mike had left the scene of battle by the time Psmith reached the Cash
  • Department, and was sitting at his desk in a somewhat dazed condition,
  • trying to clear his mind sufficiently to enable him to see exactly how
  • matters stood as concerned himself. He felt confused and rattled. He
  • had known, when he went to the manager's room to make his statement,
  • that there would be trouble. But, then, trouble is such an elastic
  • word. It embraces a hundred degrees of meaning. Mike had expected
  • sentence of dismissal, and he had got it. So far he had nothing to
  • complain of. But he had not expected it to come to him riding high on
  • the crest of a great, frothing wave of verbal denunciation. Mr
  • Bickersdyke, through constantly speaking in public, had developed the
  • habit of fluent denunciation to a remarkable extent. He had thundered
  • at Mike as if Mike had been his Majesty's Government or the Encroaching
  • Alien, or something of that sort. And that kind of thing is a little
  • overwhelming at short range. Mike's head was still spinning.
  • It continued to spin; but he never lost sight of the fact round which
  • it revolved, namely, that he had been dismissed from the service of the
  • bank. And for the first time he began to wonder what they would say
  • about this at home.
  • Up till now the matter had seemed entirely a personal one. He had
  • charged in to rescue the harassed cashier in precisely the same way as
  • that in which he had dashed in to save him from Bill, the Stone-Flinging
  • Scourge of Clapham Common. Mike's was one of those direct, honest minds
  • which are apt to concentrate themselves on the crisis of the moment,
  • and to leave the consequences out of the question entirely.
  • What would they say at home? That was the point.
  • Again, what could he do by way of earning a living? He did not know
  • much about the City and its ways, but he knew enough to understand that
  • summary dismissal from a bank is not the best recommendation one can
  • put forward in applying for another job. And if he did not get another
  • job in the City, what could he do? If it were only summer, he might get
  • taken on somewhere as a cricket professional. Cricket was his line. He
  • could earn his pay at that. But it was very far from being summer.
  • He had turned the problem over in his mind till his head ached, and had
  • eaten in the process one-third of a wooden penholder, when Psmith
  • arrived.
  • 'It has reached me,' said Psmith, 'that you and Comrade Bickersdyke
  • have been seen doing the Hackenschmidt-Gotch act on the floor. When my
  • informant left, he tells me, Comrade B. had got a half-Nelson on you,
  • and was biting pieces out of your ear. Is this so?'
  • Mike got up. Psmith was the man, he felt, to advise him in this crisis.
  • Psmith's was the mind to grapple with his Hard Case.
  • 'Look here, Smith,' he said, 'I want to speak to you. I'm in a bit of a
  • hole, and perhaps you can tell me what to do. Let's go out and have a
  • cup of coffee, shall we? I can't tell you about it here.'
  • 'An admirable suggestion,' said Psmith. 'Things in the Postage
  • Department are tolerably quiescent at present. Naturally I shall be
  • missed, if I go out. But my absence will not spell irretrievable ruin,
  • as it would at a period of greater commercial activity. Comrades
  • Rossiter and Bristow have studied my methods. They know how I like
  • things to be done. They are fully competent to conduct the business of
  • the department in my absence. Let us, as you say, scud forth. We will
  • go to a Mecca. Why so-called I do not know, nor, indeed, do I ever hope
  • to know. There we may obtain, at a price, a passable cup of coffee, and
  • you shall tell me your painful story.'
  • The Mecca, except for the curious aroma which pervades all Meccas, was
  • deserted. Psmith, moving a box of dominoes on to the next table, sat
  • down.
  • 'Dominoes,' he said, 'is one of the few manly sports which have never
  • had great attractions for me. A cousin of mine, who secured his chess
  • blue at Oxford, would, they tell me, have represented his University in
  • the dominoes match also, had he not unfortunately dislocated the radius
  • bone of his bazooka while training for it. Except for him, there has
  • been little dominoes talent in the Psmith family. Let us merely talk.
  • What of this slight brass-rag-parting to which I alluded just now? Tell
  • me all.'
  • He listened gravely while Mike related the incidents which had led up
  • to his confession and the results of the same. At the conclusion of the
  • narrative he sipped his coffee in silence for a moment.
  • 'This habit of taking on to your shoulders the harvest of other
  • people's bloomers,' he said meditatively, 'is growing upon you, Comrade
  • Jackson. You must check it. It is like dram-drinking. You begin in a
  • small way by breaking school rules to extract Comrade Jellicoe (perhaps
  • the supremest of all the blitherers I have ever met) from a hole. If
  • you had stopped there, all might have been well. But the thing, once
  • started, fascinated you. Now you have landed yourself with a splash in
  • the very centre of the Oxo in order to do a good turn to Comrade
  • Waller. You must drop it, Comrade Jackson. When you were free and
  • without ties, it did not so much matter. But now that you are
  • confidential secretary and adviser to a Shropshire Psmith, the thing
  • must stop. Your secretarial duties must be paramount. Nothing must be
  • allowed to interfere with them. Yes. The thing must stop before it goes
  • too far.'
  • 'It seems to me,' said Mike, 'that it has gone too far. I've got the
  • sack. I don't know how much farther you want it to go.'
  • Psmith stirred his coffee before replying.
  • 'True,' he said, 'things look perhaps a shade rocky just now, but all
  • is not yet lost. You must recollect that Comrade Bickersdyke spoke in
  • the heat of the moment. That generous temperament was stirred to its
  • depths. He did not pick his words. But calm will succeed storm, and we
  • may be able to do something yet. I have some little influence with
  • Comrade Bickersdyke. Wrongly, perhaps,' added Psmith modestly, 'he
  • thinks somewhat highly of my judgement. If he sees that I am opposed to
  • this step, he may possibly reconsider it. What Psmith thinks today, is
  • his motto, I shall think tomorrow. However, we shall see.'
  • 'I bet we shall!' said Mike ruefully.
  • 'There is, moreover,' continued Psmith, 'another aspect to the affair.
  • When you were being put through it, in Comrade Bickersdyke's inimitably
  • breezy manner, Sir John What's-his-name was, I am given to understand,
  • present. Naturally, to pacify the aggrieved bart., Comrade B. had to
  • lay it on regardless of expense. In America, as possibly you are aware,
  • there is a regular post of mistake-clerk, whose duty it is to receive
  • in the neck anything that happens to be coming along when customers
  • make complaints. He is hauled into the presence of the foaming
  • customer, cursed, and sacked. The customer goes away appeased. The
  • mistake-clerk, if the harangue has been unusually energetic, applies
  • for a rise of salary. Now, possibly, in your case--'
  • 'In my case,' interrupted Mike, 'there was none of that rot.
  • Bickersdyke wasn't putting it on. He meant every word. Why, dash it
  • all, you know yourself he'd be only too glad to sack me, just to get
  • some of his own back with me.'
  • Psmith's eyes opened in pained surprise.
  • 'Get some of his own back!' he repeated.
  • 'Are you insinuating, Comrade Jackson, that my relations with Comrade
  • Bickersdyke are not of the most pleasant and agreeable nature possible?
  • How do these ideas get about? I yield to nobody in my respect for our
  • manager. I may have had occasion from time to time to correct him in
  • some trifling matter, but surely he is not the man to let such a thing
  • rankle? No! I prefer to think that Comrade Bickersdyke regards me as
  • his friend and well-wisher, and will lend a courteous ear to any
  • proposal I see fit to make. I hope shortly to be able to prove this to
  • you. I will discuss this little affair of the cheque with him at our
  • ease at the club, and I shall be surprised if we do not come to some
  • arrangement.'
  • 'Look here, Smith,' said Mike earnestly, 'for goodness' sake don't go
  • playing the goat. There's no earthly need for you to get lugged into
  • this business. Don't you worry about me. I shall be all right.'
  • 'I think,' said Psmith, 'that you will--when I have chatted with
  • Comrade Bickersdyke.'
  • 22. And Take Steps
  • On returning to the bank, Mike found Mr Waller in the grip of a
  • peculiarly varied set of mixed feelings. Shortly after Mike's departure
  • for the Mecca, the cashier had been summoned once more into the
  • Presence, and had there been informed that, as apparently he had not
  • been directly responsible for the gross piece of carelessness by which
  • the bank had suffered so considerable a loss (here Sir John puffed out
  • his cheeks like a meditative toad), the matter, as far as he was
  • concerned, was at an end. On the other hand--! Here Mr Waller was
  • hauled over the coals for Incredible Rashness in allowing a mere junior
  • subordinate to handle important tasks like the paying out of money, and
  • so on, till he felt raw all over. However, it was not dismissal. That
  • was the great thing. And his principal sensation was one of relief.
  • Mingled with the relief were sympathy for Mike, gratitude to him for
  • having given himself up so promptly, and a curiously dazed sensation,
  • as if somebody had been hitting him on the head with a bolster.
  • All of which emotions, taken simultaneously, had the effect of
  • rendering him completely dumb when he saw Mike. He felt that he did not
  • know what to say to him. And as Mike, for his part, simply wanted to be
  • let alone, and not compelled to talk, conversation was at something of
  • a standstill in the Cash Department.
  • After five minutes, it occurred to Mr Waller that perhaps the best plan
  • would be to interview Psmith. Psmith would know exactly how matters
  • stood. He could not ask Mike point-blank whether he had been dismissed.
  • But there was the probability that Psmith had been informed and would
  • pass on the information.
  • Psmith received the cashier with a dignified kindliness.
  • 'Oh, er, Smith,' said Mr Waller, 'I wanted just to ask you about
  • Jackson.'
  • Psmith bowed his head gravely.
  • 'Exactly,' he said. 'Comrade Jackson. I think I may say that you have
  • come to the right man. Comrade Jackson has placed himself in my hands,
  • and I am dealing with his case. A somewhat tricky business, but I shall
  • see him through.'
  • 'Has he--?' Mr Waller hesitated.
  • 'You were saying?' said Psmith.
  • 'Does Mr Bickersdyke intend to dismiss him?'
  • 'At present,' admitted Psmith, 'there is some idea of that description
  • floating--nebulously, as it were--in Comrade Bickersdyke's mind.
  • Indeed, from what I gather from my client, the push was actually
  • administered, in so many words. But tush! And possibly bah! we know
  • what happens on these occasions, do we not? You and I are students of
  • human nature, and we know that a man of Comrade Bickersdyke's
  • warm-hearted type is apt to say in the heat of the moment a great deal
  • more than he really means. Men of his impulsive character cannot help
  • expressing themselves in times of stress with a certain generous
  • strength which those who do not understand them are inclined to take a
  • little too seriously. I shall have a chat with Comrade Bickersdyke at
  • the conclusion of the day's work, and I have no doubt that we shall
  • both laugh heartily over this little episode.'
  • Mr Waller pulled at his beard, with an expression on his face that
  • seemed to suggest that he was not quite so confident on this point. He
  • was about to put his doubts into words when Mr Rossiter appeared, and
  • Psmith, murmuring something about duty, turned again to his ledger. The
  • cashier drifted back to his own department.
  • It was one of Psmith's theories of Life, which he was accustomed to
  • propound to Mike in the small hours of the morning with his feet on the
  • mantelpiece, that the secret of success lay in taking advantage of
  • one's occasional slices of luck, in seizing, as it were, the happy
  • moment. When Mike, who had had the passage to write out ten times at
  • Wrykyn on one occasion as an imposition, reminded him that Shakespeare
  • had once said something about there being a tide in the affairs of men,
  • which, taken at the flood, &c., Psmith had acknowledged with an easy
  • grace that possibly Shakespeare _had_ got on to it first, and that
  • it was but one more proof of how often great minds thought alike.
  • Though waiving his claim to the copyright of the maxim, he nevertheless
  • had a high opinion of it, and frequently acted upon it in the conduct
  • of his own life.
  • Thus, when approaching the Senior Conservative Club at five o'clock
  • with the idea of finding Mr Bickersdyke there, he observed his quarry
  • entering the Turkish Baths which stand some twenty yards from the
  • club's front door, he acted on his maxim, and decided, instead of
  • waiting for the manager to finish his bath before approaching him on
  • the subject of Mike, to corner him in the Baths themselves.
  • He gave Mr Bickersdyke five minutes' start. Then, reckoning that by
  • that time he would probably have settled down, he pushed open the door
  • and went in himself. And, having paid his money, and left his boots
  • with the boy at the threshold, he was rewarded by the sight of the
  • manager emerging from a box at the far end of the room, clad in the
  • mottled towels which the bather, irrespective of his personal taste in
  • dress, is obliged to wear in a Turkish bath.
  • Psmith made for the same box. Mr Bickersdyke's clothes lay at the head
  • of one of the sofas, but nobody else had staked out a claim. Psmith
  • took possession of the sofa next to the manager's. Then, humming
  • lightly, he undressed, and made his way downstairs to the Hot Rooms. He
  • rather fancied himself in towels. There was something about them which
  • seemed to suit his figure. They gave him, he though, rather a
  • _debonnaire_ look. He paused for a moment before the looking-glass
  • to examine himself, with approval, then pushed open the door of the Hot
  • Rooms and went in.
  • 23. Mr Bickersdyke Makes a Concession
  • Mr Bickersdyke was reclining in an easy-chair in the first room,
  • staring before him in the boiled-fish manner customary in a Turkish
  • Bath. Psmith dropped into the next seat with a cheery 'Good evening.'
  • The manager started as if some firm hand had driven a bradawl into him.
  • He looked at Psmith with what was intended to be a dignified stare. But
  • dignity is hard to achieve in a couple of parti-coloured towels. The
  • stare did not differ to any great extent from the conventional
  • boiled-fish look, alluded to above.
  • Psmith settled himself comfortably in his chair. 'Fancy finding you
  • here,' he said pleasantly. 'We seem always to be meeting. To me,' he
  • added, with a reassuring smile, 'it is a great pleasure. A very great
  • pleasure indeed. We see too little of each other during office hours.
  • Not that one must grumble at that. Work before everything. You have
  • your duties, I mine. It is merely unfortunate that those duties are not
  • such as to enable us to toil side by side, encouraging each other with
  • word and gesture. However, it is idle to repine. We must make the most
  • of these chance meetings when the work of the day is over.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke heaved himself up from his chair and took another at the
  • opposite end of the room. Psmith joined him.
  • 'There's something pleasantly mysterious, to my mind,' said he
  • chattily, 'in a Turkish Bath. It seems to take one out of the hurry and
  • bustle of the everyday world. It is a quiet backwater in the rushing
  • river of Life. I like to sit and think in a Turkish Bath. Except, of
  • course, when I have a congenial companion to talk to. As now. To me--'
  • Mr Bickersdyke rose, and went into the next room.
  • 'To me,' continued Psmith, again following, and seating himself beside
  • the manager, 'there is, too, something eerie in these places. There is
  • a certain sinister air about the attendants. They glide rather than
  • walk. They say little. Who knows what they may be planning and
  • plotting? That drip-drip again. It may be merely water, but how are we
  • to know that it is not blood? It would be so easy to do away with a man
  • in a Turkish Bath. Nobody has seen him come in. Nobody can trace him if
  • he disappears. These are uncomfortable thoughts, Mr Bickersdyke.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke seemed to think them so. He rose again, and returned to
  • the first room.
  • 'I have made you restless,' said Psmith, in a voice of self-reproach,
  • when he had settled himself once more by the manager's side. 'I am
  • sorry. I will not pursue the subject. Indeed, I believe that my fears
  • are unnecessary. Statistics show, I understand, that large numbers of
  • men emerge in safety every year from Turkish Baths. There was another
  • matter of which I wished to speak to you. It is a somewhat delicate
  • matter, and I am only encouraged to mention it to you by the fact that
  • you are so close a friend of my father's.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke had picked up an early edition of an evening paper, left
  • on the table at his side by a previous bather, and was to all
  • appearances engrossed in it. Psmith, however, not discouraged,
  • proceeded to touch upon the matter of Mike.
  • 'There was,' he said, 'some little friction, I hear, in the office
  • today in connection with a cheque.' The evening paper hid the manager's
  • expressive face, but from the fact that the hands holding it tightened
  • their grip Psmith deduced that Mr Bickersdyke's attention was not
  • wholly concentrated on the City news. Moreover, his toes wriggled. And
  • when a man's toes wriggle, he is interested in what you are saying.
  • 'All these petty breezes,' continued Psmith sympathetically, 'must be
  • very trying to a man in your position, a man who wishes to be left
  • alone in order to devote his entire thought to the niceties of the
  • higher Finance. It is as if Napoleon, while planning out some intricate
  • scheme of campaign, were to be called upon in the midst of his
  • meditations to bully a private for not cleaning his buttons. Naturally,
  • you were annoyed. Your giant brain, wrenched temporarily from its
  • proper groove, expended its force in one tremendous reprimand of
  • Comrade Jackson. It was as if one had diverted some terrific electric
  • current which should have been controlling a vast system of machinery,
  • and turned it on to annihilate a black-beetle. In the present case, of
  • course, the result is as might have been expected. Comrade Jackson, not
  • realizing the position of affairs, went away with the absurd idea that
  • all was over, that you meant all you said--briefly, that his number was
  • up. I assured him that he was mistaken, but no! He persisted in
  • declaring that all was over, that you had dismissed him from the bank.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke lowered the paper and glared bulbously at the old
  • Etonian.
  • 'Mr Jackson is perfectly right,' he snapped. 'Of course I dismissed
  • him.'
  • 'Yes, yes,' said Psmith, 'I have no doubt that at the moment you did
  • work the rapid push. What I am endeavouring to point out is that
  • Comrade Jackson is under the impression that the edict is permanent,
  • that he can hope for no reprieve.'
  • 'Nor can he.'
  • 'You don't mean--'
  • 'I mean what I say.'
  • 'Ah, I quite understand,' said Psmith, as one who sees that he must
  • make allowances. 'The incident is too recent. The storm has not yet had
  • time to expend itself. You have not had leisure to think the matter
  • over coolly. It is hard, of course, to be cool in a Turkish Bath. Your
  • ganglions are still vibrating. Later, perhaps--'
  • 'Once and for all,' growled Mr Bickersdyke, 'the thing is ended. Mr
  • Jackson will leave the bank at the end of the month. We have no room
  • for fools in the office.'
  • 'You surprise me,' said Psmith. 'I should not have thought that the
  • standard of intelligence in the bank was extremely high. With the
  • exception of our two selves, I think that there are hardly any men of
  • real intelligence on the staff. And comrade Jackson is improving every
  • day. Being, as he is, under my constant supervision he is rapidly
  • developing a stranglehold on his duties, which--'
  • 'I have no wish to discuss the matter any further.'
  • 'No, no. Quite so, quite so. Not another word. I am dumb.'
  • 'There are limits you see, to the uses of impertinence, Mr Smith.'
  • Psmith started.
  • 'You are not suggesting--! You do not mean that I--!'
  • 'I have no more to say. I shall be glad if you will allow me to read my
  • paper.'
  • Psmith waved a damp hand.
  • 'I should be the last man,' he said stiffly, 'to force my conversation
  • on another. I was under the impression that you enjoyed these little
  • chats as keenly as I did. If I was wrong--'
  • He relapsed into a wounded silence. Mr Bickersdyke resumed his perusal
  • of the evening paper, and presently, laying it down, rose and made his
  • way to the room where muscular attendants were in waiting to perform
  • that blend of Jiu-Jitsu and Catch-as-catch-can which is the most
  • valuable and at the same time most painful part of a Turkish Bath.
  • It was not till he was resting on his sofa, swathed from head to foot
  • in a sheet and smoking a cigarette, that he realized that Psmith was
  • sharing his compartment.
  • He made the unpleasant discovery just as he had finished his first
  • cigarette and lighted his second. He was blowing out the match when
  • Psmith, accompanied by an attendant, appeared in the doorway, and
  • proceeded to occupy the next sofa to himself. All that feeling of
  • dreamy peace, which is the reward one receives for allowing oneself to
  • be melted like wax and kneaded like bread, left him instantly. He felt
  • hot and annoyed. To escape was out of the question. Once one has been
  • scientifically wrapped up by the attendant and placed on one's sofa,
  • one is a fixture. He lay scowling at the ceiling, resolved to combat
  • all attempt at conversation with a stony silence.
  • Psmith, however, did not seem to desire conversation. He lay on his
  • sofa motionless for a quarter of an hour, then reached out for a large
  • book which lay on the table, and began to read.
  • When he did speak, he seemed to be speaking to himself. Every now and
  • then he would murmur a few words, sometimes a single name. In spite of
  • himself, Mr Bickersdyke found himself listening.
  • At first the murmurs conveyed nothing to him. Then suddenly a name
  • caught his ear. Strowther was the name, and somehow it suggested
  • something to him. He could not say precisely what. It seemed to touch
  • some chord of memory. He knew no one of the name of Strowther. He was
  • sure of that. And yet it was curiously familiar. An unusual name, too.
  • He could not help feeling that at one time he must have known it quite
  • well.
  • 'Mr Strowther,' murmured Psmith, 'said that the hon. gentleman's
  • remarks would have been nothing short of treason, if they had not been
  • so obviously the mere babblings of an irresponsible lunatic. Cries of
  • "Order, order," and a voice, "Sit down, fat-head!"'
  • For just one moment Mr Bickersdyke's memory poised motionless, like a
  • hawk about to swoop. Then it darted at the mark. Everything came to him
  • in a flash. The hands of the clock whizzed back. He was no longer Mr
  • John Bickersdyke, manager of the London branch of the New Asiatic Bank,
  • lying on a sofa in the Cumberland Street Turkish Baths. He was Jack
  • Bickersdyke, clerk in the employ of Messrs Norton and Biggleswade,
  • standing on a chair and shouting 'Order! order!' in the Masonic Room of
  • the 'Red Lion' at Tulse Hill, while the members of the Tulse Hill
  • Parliament, divided into two camps, yelled at one another, and young
  • Tom Barlow, in his official capacity as Mister Speaker, waved his arms
  • dumbly, and banged the table with his mallet in his efforts to restore
  • calm.
  • He remembered the whole affair as if it had happened yesterday. It had
  • been a speech of his own which had called forth the above expression of
  • opinion from Strowther. He remembered Strowther now, a pale, spectacled
  • clerk in Baxter and Abrahams, an inveterate upholder of the throne, the
  • House of Lords and all constituted authority. Strowther had objected to
  • the socialistic sentiments of his speech in connection with the Budget,
  • and there had been a disturbance unparalleled even in the Tulse Hill
  • Parliament, where disturbances were frequent and loud....
  • Psmith looked across at him with a bright smile. 'They report you
  • verbatim,' he said. 'And rightly. A more able speech I have seldom
  • read. I like the bit where you call the Royal Family "blood-suckers".
  • Even then, it seems you knew how to express yourself fluently and
  • well.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke sat up. The hands of the clock had moved again, and he
  • was back in what Psmith had called the live, vivid present.
  • 'What have you got there?' he demanded.
  • 'It is a record,' said Psmith, 'of the meeting of an institution called
  • the Tulse Hill Parliament. A bright, chatty little institution, too, if
  • one may judge by these reports. You in particular, if I may say so,
  • appear to have let yourself go with refreshing vim. Your political
  • views have changed a great deal since those days, have they not? It is
  • extremely interesting. A most fascinating study for political students.
  • When I send these speeches of yours to the _Clarion_--'
  • Mr Bickersdyke bounded on his sofa.
  • 'What!' he cried.
  • 'I was saying,' said Psmith, 'that the _Clarion_ will probably
  • make a most interesting comparison between these speeches and those you
  • have been making at Kenningford.'
  • 'I--I--I forbid you to make any mention of these speeches.'
  • Psmith hesitated.
  • 'It would be great fun seeing what the papers said,' he protested.
  • 'Great fun!'
  • 'It is true,' mused Psmith, 'that in a measure, it would dish you at
  • the election. From what I saw of those light-hearted lads at
  • Kenningford the other night, I should say they would be so amused that
  • they would only just have enough strength left to stagger to the poll
  • and vote for your opponent.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke broke out into a cold perspiration.
  • 'I forbid you to send those speeches to the papers,' he cried.
  • Psmith reflected.
  • 'You see,' he said at last, 'it is like this. The departure of Comrade
  • Jackson, my confidential secretary and adviser, is certain to plunge me
  • into a state of the deepest gloom. The only way I can see at present by
  • which I can ensure even a momentary lightening of the inky cloud is the
  • sending of these speeches to some bright paper like the _Clarion._
  • I feel certain that their comments would wring, at any rate, a sad,
  • sweet smile from me. Possibly even a hearty laugh. I must, therefore,
  • look on these very able speeches of yours in something of the light of
  • an antidote. They will stand between me and black depression. Without
  • them I am in the cart. With them I may possibly buoy myself up.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke shifted uneasily on his sofa. He glared at the floor.
  • Then he eyed the ceiling as if it were a personal enemy of his. Finally
  • he looked at Psmith. Psmith's eyes were closed in peaceful meditation.
  • 'Very well,' said he at last. 'Jackson shall stop.'
  • Psmith came out of his thoughts with a start. 'You were observing--?'
  • he said.
  • 'I shall not dismiss Jackson,' said Mr Bickersdyke.
  • Psmith smiled winningly.
  • 'Just as I had hoped,' he said. 'Your very justifiable anger melts
  • before reflection. The storm subsides, and you are at leisure to
  • examine the matter dispassionately. Doubts begin to creep in. Possibly,
  • you say to yourself, I have been too hasty, too harsh. Justice must be
  • tempered with mercy. I have caught Comrade Jackson bending, you add
  • (still to yourself), but shall I press home my advantage too
  • ruthlessly? No, you cry, I will abstain. And I applaud your action. I
  • like to see this spirit of gentle toleration. It is bracing and
  • comforting. As for these excellent speeches,' he added, 'I shall, of
  • course, no longer have any need of their consolation. I can lay them
  • aside. The sunlight can now enter and illumine my life through more
  • ordinary channels. The cry goes round, "Psmith is himself again."'
  • Mr Bickersdyke said nothing. Unless a snort of fury may be counted as
  • anything.
  • 24. The Spirit of Unrest
  • During the following fortnight, two things happened which materially
  • altered Mike's position in the bank.
  • The first was that Mr Bickersdyke was elected a member of Parliament.
  • He got in by a small majority amidst scenes of disorder of a nature
  • unusual even in Kenningford. Psmith, who went down on the polling-day
  • to inspect the revels and came back with his hat smashed in, reported
  • that, as far as he could see, the electors of Kenningford seemed to be
  • in just that state of happy intoxication which might make them vote for
  • Mr Bickersdyke by mistake. Also it had been discovered, on the eve of
  • the poll, that the bank manager's opponent, in his youth, had been
  • educated at a school in Germany, and had subsequently spent two years
  • at Heidelberg University. These damaging revelations were having a
  • marked effect on the warm-hearted patriots of Kenningford, who were now
  • referring to the candidate in thick but earnest tones as 'the German
  • Spy'.
  • 'So that taking everything into consideration,' said Psmith, summing
  • up, 'I fancy that Comrade Bickersdyke is home.'
  • And the papers next day proved that he was right.
  • 'A hundred and fifty-seven,' said Psmith, as he read his paper at
  • breakfast. 'Not what one would call a slashing victory. It is fortunate
  • for Comrade Bickersdyke, I think, that I did not send those very able
  • speeches of his to the _Clarion'_.
  • Till now Mike had been completely at a loss to understand why the
  • manager had sent for him on the morning following the scene about the
  • cheque, and informed him that he had reconsidered his decision to
  • dismiss him. Mike could not help feeling that there was more in the
  • matter than met the eye. Mr Bickersdyke had not spoken as if it gave
  • him any pleasure to reprieve him. On the contrary, his manner was
  • distinctly brusque. Mike was thoroughly puzzled. To Psmith's statement,
  • that he had talked the matter over quietly with the manager and brought
  • things to a satisfactory conclusion, he had paid little attention. But
  • now he began to see light.
  • 'Great Scott, Smith,' he said, 'did you tell him you'd send those
  • speeches to the papers if he sacked me?'
  • Psmith looked at him through his eye-glass, and helped himself to
  • another piece of toast.
  • 'I am unable,' he said, 'to recall at this moment the exact terms of
  • the very pleasant conversation I had with Comrade Bickersdyke on the
  • occasion of our chance meeting in the Turkish Bath that afternoon; but,
  • thinking things over quietly now that I have more leisure, I cannot
  • help feeling that he may possibly have read some such intention into my
  • words. You know how it is in these little chats, Comrade Jackson. One
  • leaps to conclusions. Some casual word I happened to drop may have
  • given him the idea you mention. At this distance of time it is
  • impossible to say with any certainty. Suffice it that all has ended
  • well. He _did_ reconsider his resolve. I shall be only too happy
  • if it turns out that the seed of the alteration in his views was sown
  • by some careless word of mine. Perhaps we shall never know.'
  • Mike was beginning to mumble some awkward words of thanks, when Psmith
  • resumed his discourse.
  • 'Be that as it may, however,' he said, 'we cannot but perceive that
  • Comrade Bickersdyke's election has altered our position to some extent.
  • As you have pointed out, he may have been influenced in this recent
  • affair by some chance remark of mine about those speeches. Now,
  • however, they will cease to be of any value. Now that he is elected he
  • has nothing to lose by their publication. I mention this by way of
  • indicating that it is possible that, if another painful episode occurs,
  • he may be more ruthless.'
  • 'I see what you mean,' said Mike. 'If he catches me on the hop again,
  • he'll simply go ahead and sack me.'
  • 'That,' said Psmith, 'is more or less the position of affairs.'
  • The other event which altered Mike's life in the bank was his removal
  • from Mr Waller's department to the Fixed Deposits. The work in the
  • Fixed Deposits was less pleasant, and Mr Gregory, the head of the
  • department was not of Mr Waller's type. Mr Gregory, before joining the
  • home-staff of the New Asiatic Bank, had spent a number of years with a
  • firm in the Far East, where he had acquired a liver and a habit of
  • addressing those under him in a way that suggested the mate of a tramp
  • steamer. Even on the days when his liver was not troubling him, he was
  • truculent. And when, as usually happened, it did trouble him, he was a
  • perfect fountain of abuse. Mike and he hated each other from the first.
  • The work in the Fixed Deposits was not really difficult, when you got
  • the hang of it, but there was a certain amount of confusion in it to a
  • beginner; and Mike, in commercial matters, was as raw a beginner as
  • ever began. In the two other departments through which he had passed,
  • he had done tolerably well. As regarded his work in the Postage
  • Department, stamping letters and taking them down to the post office
  • was just about his form. It was the sort of work on which he could
  • really get a grip. And in the Cash Department, Mr Waller's mild
  • patience had helped him through. But with Mr Gregory it was different.
  • Mike hated being shouted at. It confused him. And Mr Gregory invariably
  • shouted. He always spoke as if he were competing against a high wind.
  • With Mike he shouted more than usual. On his side, it must be admitted
  • that Mike was something out of the common run of bank clerks. The whole
  • system of banking was a horrid mystery to him. He did not understand
  • why things were done, or how the various departments depended on and
  • dove-tailed into one another. Each department seemed to him something
  • separate and distinct. Why they were all in the same building at all he
  • never really gathered. He knew that it could not be purely from motives
  • of sociability, in order that the clerks might have each other's
  • company during slack spells. That much he suspected, but beyond that he
  • was vague.
  • It naturally followed that, after having grown, little by little, under
  • Mr Waller's easy-going rule, to enjoy life in the bank, he now suffered
  • a reaction. Within a day of his arrival in the Fixed Deposits he was
  • loathing the place as earnestly as he had loathed it on the first
  • morning.
  • Psmith, who had taken his place in the Cash Department, reported that
  • Mr Waller was inconsolable at his loss.
  • 'I do my best to cheer him up,' he said, 'and he smiles bravely every
  • now and then. But when he thinks I am not looking, his head droops and
  • that wistful expression comes into his face. The sunshine has gone out
  • of his life.'
  • It had just come into Mike's, and, more than anything else, was making
  • him restless and discontented. That is to say, it was now late spring:
  • the sun shone cheerfully on the City; and cricket was in the air. And
  • that was the trouble.
  • In the dark days, when everything was fog and slush, Mike had been
  • contented enough to spend his mornings and afternoons in the bank, and
  • go about with Psmith at night. Under such conditions, London is the
  • best place in which to be, and the warmth and light of the bank were
  • pleasant.
  • But now things had changed. The place had become a prison. With all the
  • energy of one who had been born and bred in the country, Mike hated
  • having to stay indoors on days when all the air was full of approaching
  • summer. There were mornings when it was almost more than he could do to
  • push open the swing doors, and go out of the fresh air into the stuffy
  • atmosphere of the bank.
  • The days passed slowly, and the cricket season began. Instead of being
  • a relief, this made matters worse. The little cricket he could get only
  • made him want more. It was as if a starving man had been given a
  • handful of wafer biscuits.
  • If the summer had been wet, he might have been less restless. But, as
  • it happened, it was unusually fine. After a week of cold weather at the
  • beginning of May, a hot spell set in. May passed in a blaze of
  • sunshine. Large scores were made all over the country.
  • Mike's name had been down for the M.C.C. for some years, and he had
  • become a member during his last season at Wrykyn. Once or twice a week
  • he managed to get up to Lord's for half an hour's practice at the nets;
  • and on Saturdays the bank had matches, in which he generally managed to
  • knock the cover off rather ordinary club bowling. But it was not enough
  • for him.
  • June came, and with it more sunshine. The atmosphere of the bank seemed
  • more oppressive than ever.
  • 25. At the Telephone
  • If one looks closely into those actions which are apparently due to
  • sudden impulse, one generally finds that the sudden impulse was merely
  • the last of a long series of events which led up to the action. Alone,
  • it would not have been powerful enough to effect anything. But, coming
  • after the way has been paved for it, it is irresistible. The hooligan
  • who bonnets a policeman is apparently the victim of a sudden impulse.
  • In reality, however, the bonneting is due to weeks of daily encounters
  • with the constable, at each of which meetings the dislike for his
  • helmet and the idea of smashing it in grow a little larger, till
  • finally they blossom into the deed itself.
  • This was what happened in Mike's case. Day by day, through the summer,
  • as the City grew hotter and stuffier, his hatred of the bank became
  • more and more the thought that occupied his mind. It only needed a
  • moderately strong temptation to make him break out and take the
  • consequences.
  • Psmith noticed his restlessness and endeavoured to soothe it.
  • 'All is not well,' he said, 'with Comrade Jackson, the Sunshine of the
  • Home. I note a certain wanness of the cheek. The peach-bloom of your
  • complexion is no longer up to sample. Your eye is wild; your merry
  • laugh no longer rings through the bank, causing nervous customers to
  • leap into the air with startled exclamations. You have the manner of
  • one whose only friend on earth is a yellow dog, and who has lost the
  • dog. Why is this, Comrade Jackson?'
  • They were talking in the flat at Clement's Inn. The night was hot.
  • Through the open windows the roar of the Strand sounded faintly. Mike
  • walked to the window and looked out.
  • 'I'm sick of all this rot,' he said shortly.
  • Psmith shot an inquiring glance at him, but said nothing. This
  • restlessness of Mike's was causing him a good deal of inconvenience,
  • which he bore in patient silence, hoping for better times. With Mike
  • obviously discontented and out of tune with all the world, there was
  • but little amusement to be extracted from the evenings now. Mike did
  • his best to be cheerful, but he could not shake off the caged feeling
  • which made him restless.
  • 'What rot it all is!' went on Mike, sitting down again. 'What's the
  • good of it all? You go and sweat all day at a desk, day after day, for
  • about twopence a year. And when you're about eighty-five, you retire.
  • It isn't living at all. It's simply being a bally vegetable.'
  • 'You aren't hankering, by any chance, to be a pirate of the Spanish
  • main, or anything like that, are you?' inquired Psmith.
  • 'And all this rot about going out East,' continued Mike. 'What's the
  • good of going out East?'
  • 'I gather from casual chit-chat in the office that one becomes
  • something of a blood when one goes out East,' said Psmith. 'Have
  • a dozen native clerks under you, all looking up to you as the Last
  • Word in magnificence, and end by marrying the Governor's daughter.'
  • 'End by getting some foul sort of fever, more likely, and being booted
  • out as no further use to the bank.'
  • 'You look on the gloomy side, Comrade Jackson. I seem to see you
  • sitting in an armchair, fanned by devoted coolies, telling some Eastern
  • potentate that you can give him five minutes. I understand that being
  • in a bank in the Far East is one of the world's softest jobs. Millions
  • of natives hang on your lightest word. Enthusiastic rajahs draw you
  • aside and press jewels into your hand as a token of respect and esteem.
  • When on an elephant's back you pass, somebody beats on a booming brass
  • gong! The Banker of Bhong! Isn't your generous young heart stirred to
  • any extent by the prospect? I am given to understand--'
  • 'I've a jolly good mind to chuck up the whole thing and become a pro.
  • I've got a birth qualification for Surrey. It's about the only thing I
  • could do any good at.'
  • Psmith's manner became fatherly.
  • '_You're_ all right,' he said. 'The hot weather has given you that
  • tired feeling. What you want is a change of air. We will pop down
  • together hand in hand this week-end to some seaside resort. You shall
  • build sand castles, while I lie on the beach and read the paper. In the
  • evening we will listen to the band, or stroll on the esplanade, not so
  • much because we want to, as to give the natives a treat. Possibly, if
  • the weather continues warm, we may even paddle. A vastly exhilarating
  • pastime, I am led to believe, and so strengthening for the ankles. And
  • on Monday morning we will return, bronzed and bursting with health, to
  • our toil once more.'
  • 'I'm going to bed,' said Mike, rising.
  • Psmith watched him lounge from the room, and shook his head sadly. All
  • was not well with his confidential secretary and adviser.
  • The next day, which was a Thursday, found Mike no more reconciled to
  • the prospect of spending from ten till five in the company of Mr
  • Gregory and the ledgers. He was silent at breakfast, and Psmith, seeing
  • that things were still wrong, abstained from conversation. Mike propped
  • the _Sportsman_ up against the hot-water jug, and read the cricket
  • news. His county, captained by brother Joe, had, as he had learned
  • already from yesterday's evening paper, beaten Sussex by five wickets
  • at Brighton. Today they were due to play Middlesex at Lord's. Mike
  • thought that he would try to get off early, and go and see some of the
  • first day's play.
  • As events turned out, he got off a good deal earlier, and saw a good
  • deal more of the first day's play than he had anticipated.
  • He had just finished the preliminary stages of the morning's work,
  • which consisted mostly of washing his hands, changing his coat, and
  • eating a section of a pen-holder, when William, the messenger,
  • approached.
  • 'You're wanted on the 'phone, Mr Jackson.'
  • The New Asiatic Bank, unlike the majority of London banks, was on the
  • telephone, a fact which Psmith found a great convenience when securing
  • seats at the theatre. Mike went to the box and took up the receiver.
  • 'Hullo!' he said.
  • 'Who's that?' said an agitated voice. 'Is that you, Mike? I'm Joe.'
  • 'Hullo, Joe,' said Mike. 'What's up? I'm coming to see you this
  • evening. I'm going to try and get off early.'
  • 'Look here, Mike, are you busy at the bank just now?'
  • 'Not at the moment. There's never anything much going on before
  • eleven.'
  • 'I mean, are you busy today? Could you possibly manage to get off and
  • play for us against Middlesex?'
  • Mike nearly dropped the receiver.
  • 'What?' he cried.
  • 'There's been the dickens of a mix-up. We're one short, and you're our
  • only hope. We can't possibly get another man in the time. We start in
  • half an hour. Can you play?'
  • For the space of, perhaps, one minute, Mike thought.
  • 'Well?' said Joe's voice.
  • The sudden vision of Lord's ground, all green and cool in the morning
  • sunlight, was too much for Mike's resolution, sapped as it was by days
  • of restlessness. The feeling surged over him that whatever happened
  • afterwards, the joy of the match in perfect weather on a perfect wicket
  • would make it worth while. What did it matter what happened afterwards?
  • 'All right, Joe,' he said. 'I'll hop into a cab now, and go and get my
  • things.'
  • 'Good man,' said Joe, hugely relieved.
  • 26. Breaking The News
  • Dashing away from the call-box, Mike nearly cannoned into Psmith, who
  • was making his way pensively to the telephone with the object of
  • ringing up the box office of the Haymarket Theatre.
  • 'Sorry,' said Mike. 'Hullo, Smith.'
  • 'Hullo indeed,' said Psmith, courteously. 'I rejoice, Comrade Jackson,
  • to find you going about your commercial duties like a young bomb. How
  • is it, people repeatedly ask me, that Comrade Jackson contrives to
  • catch his employer's eye and win the friendly smile from the head of
  • his department? My reply is that where others walk, Comrade Jackson
  • runs. Where others stroll, Comrade Jackson legs it like a highly-trained
  • mustang of the prairie. He does not loiter. He gets back to his department
  • bathed in perspiration, in level time. He--'
  • 'I say, Smith,' said Mike, 'you might do me a favour.'
  • 'A thousand. Say on.'
  • 'Just look in at the Fixed Deposits and tell old Gregory that I shan't
  • be with him today, will you? I haven't time myself. I must rush!'
  • Psmith screwed his eyeglass into his eye, and examined Mike carefully.
  • 'What exactly--?' be began.
  • 'Tell the old ass I've popped off.'
  • 'Just so, just so,' murmured Psmith, as one who assents to a thoroughly
  • reasonable proposition. 'Tell him you have popped off. It shall be
  • done. But it is within the bounds of possibility that Comrade Gregory
  • may inquire further. Could you give me some inkling as to why you are
  • popping?'
  • 'My brother Joe has just rung me up from Lords. The county are playing
  • Middlesex and they're one short. He wants me to roll up.'
  • Psmith shook his head sadly.
  • 'I don't wish to interfere in any way,' he said, 'but I suppose you
  • realize that, by acting thus, you are to some extent knocking the
  • stuffing out of your chances of becoming manager of this bank? If you
  • dash off now, I shouldn't count too much on that marrying the
  • Governor's daughter scheme I sketched out for you last night. I doubt
  • whether this is going to help you to hold the gorgeous East in fee, and
  • all that sort of thing.'
  • 'Oh, dash the gorgeous East.'
  • 'By all means,' said Psmith obligingly. 'I just thought I'd mention it.
  • I'll look in at Lord's this afternoon. I shall send my card up to you,
  • and trust to your sympathetic cooperation to enable me to effect an
  • entry into the pavilion on my face. My father is coming up to London
  • today. I'll bring him along, too.'
  • 'Right ho. Dash it, it's twenty to. So long. See you at Lord's.'
  • Psmith looked after his retreating form till it had vanished through
  • the swing-door, and shrugged his shoulders resignedly, as if
  • disclaiming all responsibility.
  • 'He has gone without his hat,' he murmured. 'It seems to me that this
  • is practically a case of running amok. And now to break the news to
  • bereaved Comrade Gregory.'
  • He abandoned his intention of ringing up the Haymarket Theatre, and
  • turning away from the call-box, walked meditatively down the aisle till
  • he came to the Fixed Deposits Department, where the top of Mr Gregory's
  • head was to be seen over the glass barrier, as he applied himself to
  • his work.
  • Psmith, resting his elbows on the top of the barrier and holding his
  • head between his hands, eyed the absorbed toiler for a moment in
  • silence, then emitted a hollow groan.
  • Mr Gregory, who was ruling a line in a ledger--most of the work in the
  • Fixed Deposits Department consisted of ruling lines in ledgers,
  • sometimes in black ink, sometimes in red--started as if he had been
  • stung, and made a complete mess of the ruled line. He lifted a fiery,
  • bearded face, and met Psmith's eye, which shone with kindly sympathy.
  • He found words.
  • 'What the dickens are you standing there for, mooing like a blanked
  • cow?' he inquired.
  • 'I was groaning,' explained Psmith with quiet dignity. 'And why was I
  • groaning?' he continued. 'Because a shadow has fallen on the Fixed
  • Deposits Department. Comrade Jackson, the Pride of the Office, has
  • gone.'
  • Mr Gregory rose from his seat.
  • 'I don't know who the dickens you are--' he began.
  • 'I am Psmith,' said the old Etonian,
  • 'Oh, you're Smith, are you?'
  • 'With a preliminary P. Which, however, is not sounded.'
  • 'And what's all this dashed nonsense about Jackson?'
  • 'He is gone. Gone like the dew from the petal of a rose.'
  • 'Gone! Where's he gone to?'
  • 'Lord's.'
  • 'What lord's?'
  • Psmith waved his hand gently.
  • 'You misunderstand me. Comrade Jackson has not gone to mix with any
  • member of our gay and thoughtless aristocracy. He has gone to Lord's
  • cricket ground.'
  • Mr Gregory's beard bristled even more than was its wont.
  • 'What!' he roared. 'Gone to watch a cricket match! Gone--!'
  • 'Not to watch. To play. An urgent summons I need not say. Nothing but
  • an urgent summons could have wrenched him from your very delightful
  • society, I am sure.'
  • Mr Gregory glared.
  • 'I don't want any of your impudence,' he said.
  • Psmith nodded gravely.
  • 'We all have these curious likes and dislikes,' he said tolerantly.
  • 'You do not like my impudence. Well, well, some people don't. And now,
  • having broken the sad news, I will return to my own department.'
  • 'Half a minute. You come with me and tell this yarn of yours to Mr
  • Bickersdyke.'
  • 'You think it would interest, amuse him? Perhaps you are right. Let us
  • buttonhole Comrade Bickersdyke.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke was disengaged. The head of the Fixed Deposits
  • Department stumped into the room. Psmith followed at a more leisurely
  • pace.
  • 'Allow me,' he said with a winning smile, as Mr Gregory opened his
  • mouth to speak, 'to take this opportunity of congratulating you on your
  • success at the election. A narrow but well-deserved victory.'
  • There was nothing cordial in the manager's manner.
  • 'What do you want?' he said.
  • 'Myself, nothing,' said Psmith. 'But I understand that Mr Gregory has
  • some communication to make.'
  • 'Tell Mr Bickersdyke that story of yours,' said Mr Gregory.
  • 'Surely,' said Psmith reprovingly, 'this is no time for anecdotes. Mr
  • Bickersdyke is busy. He--'
  • 'Tell him what you told me about Jackson.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke looked up inquiringly.
  • 'Jackson,' said Psmith, 'has been obliged to absent himself from work
  • today owing to an urgent summons from his brother, who, I understand,
  • has suffered a bereavement.'
  • 'It's a lie,' roared Mr Gregory. 'You told me yourself he'd gone to
  • play in a cricket match.'
  • 'True. As I said, he received an urgent summons from his brother.'
  • 'What about the bereavement, then?'
  • 'The team was one short. His brother was very distressed about it. What
  • could Comrade Jackson do? Could he refuse to help his brother when it
  • was in his power? His generous nature is a byword. He did the only
  • possible thing. He consented to play.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke spoke.
  • 'Am I to understand,' he asked, with sinister calm, 'that Mr Jackson
  • has left his work and gone off to play in a cricket match?'
  • 'Something of that sort has, I believe, happened,' said Psmith. 'He
  • knew, of course,' he added, bowing gracefully in Mr Gregory's
  • direction, 'that he was leaving his work in thoroughly competent
  • hands.'
  • 'Thank you,' said Mr Bickersdyke. 'That will do. You will help Mr
  • Gregory in his department for the time being, Mr Smith. I will arrange
  • for somebody to take your place in your own department.'
  • 'It will be a pleasure,' murmured Psmith.
  • 'Show Mr Smith what he has to do, Mr Gregory,' said the manager.
  • They left the room.
  • 'How curious, Comrade Gregory,' mused Psmith, as they went, 'are the
  • workings of Fate! A moment back, and your life was a blank. Comrade
  • Jackson, that prince of Fixed Depositors, had gone. How, you said to
  • yourself despairingly, can his place be filled? Then the cloud broke,
  • and the sun shone out again. _I_ came to help you. What you lose
  • on the swings, you make up on the roundabouts. Now show me what I have
  • to do, and then let us make this department sizzle. You have drawn a
  • good ticket, Comrade Gregory.'
  • 27. At Lord's
  • Mike got to Lord's just as the umpires moved out into the field. He
  • raced round to the pavilion. Joe met him on the stairs.
  • 'It's all right,' he said. 'No hurry. We've won the toss. I've put you
  • in fourth wicket.'
  • 'Right ho,' said Mike. 'Glad we haven't to field just yet.'
  • 'We oughtn't to have to field today if we don't chuck our wickets
  • away.'
  • 'Good wicket?'
  • 'Like a billiard-table. I'm glad you were able to come. Have any
  • difficulty in getting away?'
  • Joe Jackson's knowledge of the workings of a bank was of the slightest.
  • He himself had never, since he left Oxford, been in a position where
  • there were obstacles to getting off to play in first-class cricket. By
  • profession he was agent to a sporting baronet whose hobby was the
  • cricket of the county, and so, far from finding any difficulty in
  • playing for the county, he was given to understand by his employer that
  • that was his chief duty. It never occurred to him that Mike might find
  • his bank less amenable in the matter of giving leave. His only fear,
  • when he rang Mike up that morning, had been that this might be a
  • particularly busy day at the New Asiatic Bank. If there was no special
  • rush of work, he took it for granted that Mike would simply go to the
  • manager, ask for leave to play in the match, and be given it with a
  • beaming smile.
  • Mike did not answer the question, but asked one on his own account.
  • 'How did you happen to be short?' he said.
  • 'It was rotten luck. It was like this. We were altering our team after
  • the Sussex match, to bring in Ballard, Keene, and Willis. They couldn't
  • get down to Brighton, as the 'Varsity had a match, but there was
  • nothing on for them in the last half of the week, so they'd promised to
  • roll up.'
  • Ballard, Keene, and Willis were members of the Cambridge team, all very
  • capable performers and much in demand by the county, when they could
  • get away to play for it.
  • 'Well?' said Mike.
  • 'Well, we all came up by train from Brighton last night. But these
  • three asses had arranged to motor down from Cambridge early today, and
  • get here in time for the start. What happens? Why, Willis, who fancies
  • himself as a chauffeur, undertakes to do the driving; and naturally,
  • being an absolute rotter, goes and smashes up the whole concern just
  • outside St Albans. The first thing I knew of it was when I got to
  • Lord's at half past ten, and found a wire waiting for me to say that
  • they were all three of them crocked, and couldn't possibly play. I tell
  • you, it was a bit of a jar to get half an hour before the match
  • started. Willis has sprained his ankle, apparently; Keene's damaged his
  • wrist; and Ballard has smashed his collar-bone. I don't suppose they'll
  • be able to play in the 'Varsity match. Rotten luck for Cambridge. Well,
  • fortunately we'd had two reserve pros, with us at Brighton, who had
  • come up to London with the team in case they might be wanted, so, with
  • them, we were only one short. Then I thought of you. That's how it
  • was.'
  • 'I see,' said Mike. 'Who are the pros?'
  • 'Davis and Brockley. Both bowlers. It weakens our batting a lot.
  • Ballard or Willis might have got a stack of runs on this wicket. Still,
  • we've got a certain amount of batting as it is. We oughtn't to do
  • badly, if we're careful. You've been getting some practice, I suppose,
  • this season?'
  • 'In a sort of a way. Nets and so on. No matches of any importance.'
  • 'Dash it, I wish you'd had a game or two in decent class cricket.
  • Still, nets are better than nothing, I hope you'll be in form. We may
  • want a pretty long knock from you, if things go wrong. These men seem
  • to be settling down all right, thank goodness,' he added, looking out
  • of the window at the county's first pair, Warrington and Mills, two
  • professionals, who, as the result of ten minutes' play, had put up
  • twenty.
  • 'I'd better go and change,' said Mike, picking up his bag. 'You're in
  • first wicket, I suppose?'
  • 'Yes. And Reggie, second wicket.'
  • Reggie was another of Mike's brothers, not nearly so fine a player as
  • Joe, but a sound bat, who generally made runs if allowed to stay in.
  • Mike changed, and went out into the little balcony at the top of the
  • pavilion. He had it to himself. There were not many spectators in the
  • pavilion at this early stage of the game.
  • There are few more restful places, if one wishes to think, than the
  • upper balconies of Lord's pavilion. Mike, watching the game making its
  • leisurely progress on the turf below, set himself seriously to review
  • the situation in all its aspects. The exhilaration of bursting the
  • bonds had begun to fade, and he found himself able to look into the
  • matter of his desertion and weigh up the consequences. There was no
  • doubt that he had cut the painter once and for all. Even a
  • friendly-disposed management could hardly overlook what he had done.
  • And the management of the New Asiatic Bank was the very reverse of
  • friendly. Mr Bickersdyke, he knew, would jump at this chance of getting
  • rid of him. He realized that he must look on his career in the bank as
  • a closed book. It was definitely over, and he must now think about the
  • future.
  • It was not a time for half-measures. He could not go home. He must
  • carry the thing through, now that he had begun, and find something
  • definite to do, to support himself.
  • There seemed only one opening for him. What could he do, he asked
  • himself. Just one thing. He could play cricket. It was by his cricket
  • that he must live. He would have to become a professional. Could he get
  • taken on? That was the question. It was impossible that he should play
  • for his own county on his residential qualification. He could not
  • appear as a professional in the same team in which his brothers were
  • playing as amateurs. He must stake all on his birth qualification for
  • Surrey.
  • On the other hand, had he the credentials which Surrey would want? He
  • had a school reputation. But was that enough? He could not help feeling
  • that it might not be.
  • Thinking it over more tensely than he had ever thought over anything in
  • his whole life, he saw clearly that everything depended on what sort of
  • show he made in this match which was now in progress. It was his big
  • chance. If he succeeded, all would be well. He did not care to think
  • what his position would be if he did not succeed.
  • A distant appeal and a sound of clapping from the crowd broke in on his
  • thoughts. Mills was out, caught at the wicket. The telegraph-board gave
  • the total as forty-eight. Not sensational. The success of the team
  • depended largely on what sort of a start the two professionals made.
  • The clapping broke out again as Joe made his way down the steps. Joe,
  • as an All England player, was a favourite with the crowd.
  • Mike watched him play an over in his strong, graceful style: then it
  • suddenly occurred to him that he would like to know how matters had
  • gone at the bank in his absence.
  • He went down to the telephone, rang up the bank, and asked for Psmith.
  • Presently the familiar voice made itself heard.
  • 'Hullo, Smith.'
  • 'Hullo. Is that Comrade Jackson? How are things progressing?'
  • 'Fairly well. We're in first. We've lost one wicket, and the fifty's
  • just up. I say, what's happened at the bank?'
  • 'I broke the news to Comrade Gregory. A charming personality. I feel
  • that we shall be friends.'
  • 'Was he sick?'
  • 'In a measure, yes. Indeed, I may say he practically foamed at the
  • mouth. I explained the situation, but he was not to be appeased. He
  • jerked me into the presence of Comrade Bickersdyke, with whom I had a
  • brief but entertaining chat. He had not a great deal to say, but he
  • listened attentively to my narrative, and eventually told me off to
  • take your place in the Fixed Deposits. That melancholy task I am now
  • performing to the best of my ability. I find the work a little trying.
  • There is too much ledger-lugging to be done for my simple tastes. I
  • have been hauling ledgers from the safe all the morning. The cry is
  • beginning to go round, "Psmith is willing, but can his physique stand
  • the strain?" In the excitement of the moment just now I dropped a
  • somewhat massive tome on to Comrade Gregory's foot, unfortunately, I
  • understand, the foot in which he has of late been suffering twinges of
  • gout. I passed the thing off with ready tact, but I cannot deny that
  • there was a certain temporary coolness, which, indeed, is not yet past.
  • These things, Comrade Jackson, are the whirlpools in the quiet stream
  • of commercial life.'
  • 'Have I got the sack?'
  • 'No official pronouncement has been made to me as yet on the subject,
  • but I think I should advise you, if you are offered another job in the
  • course of the day, to accept it. I cannot say that you are precisely
  • the pet of the management just at present. However, I have ideas for
  • your future, which I will divulge when we meet. I propose to slide
  • coyly from the office at about four o'clock. I am meeting my father at
  • that hour. We shall come straight on to Lord's.'
  • 'Right ho,' said Mike. 'I'll be looking out for you.'
  • 'Is there any little message I can give Comrade Gregory from you?'
  • 'You can give him my love, if you like.'
  • 'It shall be done. Good-bye.'
  • 'Good-bye.'
  • Mike replaced the receiver, and went up to his balcony again.
  • As soon as his eye fell on the telegraph-board he saw with a start that
  • things had been moving rapidly in his brief absence. The numbers of the
  • batsmen on the board were three and five.
  • 'Great Scott!' he cried. 'Why, I'm in next. What on earth's been
  • happening?'
  • He put on his pads hurriedly, expecting every moment that a wicket
  • would fall and find him unprepared. But the batsmen were still together
  • when he rose, ready for the fray, and went downstairs to get news.
  • He found his brother Reggie in the dressing-room.
  • 'What's happened?' he said. 'How were you out?'
  • 'L.b.w.,' said Reggie. 'Goodness knows how it happened. My eyesight
  • must be going. I mistimed the thing altogether.'
  • 'How was Warrington out?'
  • 'Caught in the slips.'
  • 'By Jove!' said Mike. 'This is pretty rocky. Three for sixty-one. We
  • shall get mopped.'
  • 'Unless you and Joe do something. There's no earthly need to get out.
  • The wicket's as good as you want, and the bowling's nothing special.
  • Well played, Joe!'
  • A beautiful glide to leg by the greatest of the Jacksons had rolled up
  • against the pavilion rails. The fieldsmen changed across for the next
  • over.
  • 'If only Peters stops a bit--' began Mike, and broke off. Peters' off
  • stump was lying at an angle of forty-five degrees.
  • 'Well, he hasn't,' said Reggie grimly. 'Silly ass, why did he hit at
  • that one? All he'd got to do was to stay in with Joe. Now it's up to
  • you. Do try and do something, or we'll be out under the hundred.'
  • Mike waited till the outcoming batsman had turned in at the
  • professionals' gate. Then he walked down the steps and out into the
  • open, feeling more nervous than he had felt since that far-off day when
  • he had first gone in to bat for Wrykyn against the M.C.C. He found his
  • thoughts flying back to that occasion. Today, as then, everything
  • seemed very distant and unreal. The spectators were miles away. He had
  • often been to Lord's as a spectator, but the place seemed entirely
  • unfamiliar now. He felt as if he were in a strange land.
  • He was conscious of Joe leaving the crease to meet him on his way. He
  • smiled feebly. 'Buck up,' said Joe in that robust way of his which was
  • so heartening. 'Nothing in the bowling, and the wicket like a shirt-front.
  • Play just as if you were at the nets. And for goodness' sake don't try to
  • score all your runs in the first over. Stick in, and we've got them.'
  • Mike smiled again more feebly than before, and made a weird gurgling
  • noise in his throat.
  • It had been the Middlesex fast bowler who had destroyed Peters. Mike
  • was not sorry. He did not object to fast bowling. He took guard, and
  • looked round him, taking careful note of the positions of the slips.
  • As usual, once he was at the wicket the paralysed feeling left him. He
  • became conscious again of his power. Dash it all, what was there to be
  • afraid of? He was a jolly good bat, and he would jolly well show them
  • that he was, too.
  • The fast bowler, with a preliminary bound, began his run. Mike settled
  • himself into position, his whole soul concentrated on the ball.
  • Everything else was wiped from his mind.
  • 28. Psmith Arranges his Future
  • It was exactly four o'clock when Psmith, sliding unostentatiously from
  • his stool, flicked divers pieces of dust from the leg of his trousers,
  • and sidled towards the basement, where he was wont to keep his hat
  • during business hours. He was aware that it would be a matter of some
  • delicacy to leave the bank at that hour. There was a certain quantity
  • of work still to be done in the Fixed Deposits Department--work in
  • which, by rights, as Mike's understudy, he should have lent a
  • sympathetic and helping hand. 'But what of that?' he mused,
  • thoughtfully smoothing his hat with his knuckles. 'Comrade Gregory is a
  • man who takes such an enthusiastic pleasure in his duties that he will
  • go singing about the office when he discovers that he has got a double
  • lot of work to do.'
  • With this comforting thought, he started on his perilous journey to the
  • open air. As he walked delicately, not courting observation, he
  • reminded himself of the hero of 'Pilgrim's Progress'. On all sides of
  • him lay fearsome beasts, lying in wait to pounce upon him. At any
  • moment Mr Gregory's hoarse roar might shatter the comparative
  • stillness, or the sinister note of Mr Bickersdyke make itself heard.
  • 'However,' said Psmith philosophically, 'these are Life's Trials, and
  • must be borne patiently.'
  • A roundabout route, via the Postage and Inwards Bills Departments, took
  • him to the swing-doors. It was here that the danger became acute. The
  • doors were well within view of the Fixed Deposits Department, and Mr
  • Gregory had an eye compared with which that of an eagle was more or
  • less bleared.
  • Psmith sauntered to the door and pushed it open in a gingerly manner.
  • As he did so a bellow rang through the office, causing a timid customer,
  • who had come in to arrange about an overdraft, to lose his nerve
  • completely and postpone his business till the following afternoon.
  • Psmith looked up. Mr Gregory was leaning over the barrier which divided
  • his lair from the outer world, and gesticulating violently.
  • 'Where are you going,' roared the head of the Fixed Deposits.
  • Psmith did not reply. With a benevolent smile and a gesture intended to
  • signify all would come right in the future, he slid through the
  • swing-doors, and began to move down the street at a somewhat swifter
  • pace than was his habit.
  • Once round the corner he slackened his speed.
  • 'This can't go on,' he said to himself. 'This life of commerce is too
  • great a strain. One is practically a hunted hare. Either the heads of
  • my department must refrain from View Halloos when they observe me going
  • for a stroll, or I abandon Commerce for some less exacting walk in
  • life.'
  • He removed his hat, and allowed the cool breeze to play upon his
  • forehead. The episode had been disturbing.
  • He was to meet his father at the Mansion House. As he reached that
  • land-mark he saw with approval that punctuality was a virtue of which
  • he had not the sole monopoly in the Smith family. His father was
  • waiting for him at the tryst.
  • 'Certainly, my boy,' said Mr Smith senior, all activity in a moment,
  • when Psmith had suggested going to Lord's. 'Excellent. We must be
  • getting on. We must not miss a moment of the match. Bless my soul: I
  • haven't seen a first-class match this season. Where's a cab? Hi, cabby!
  • No, that one's got some one in it. There's another. Hi! Here, lunatic!
  • Are you blind? Good, he's seen us. That's right. Here he comes. Lord's
  • Cricket Ground, cabby, as quick as you can. Jump in, Rupert, my boy,
  • jump in.'
  • Psmith rarely jumped. He entered the cab with something of the
  • stateliness of an old Roman Emperor boarding his chariot, and settled
  • himself comfortably in his seat. Mr Smith dived in like a rabbit.
  • A vendor of newspapers came to the cab thrusting an evening paper into
  • the interior. Psmith bought it.
  • 'Let's see how they're getting on,' he said, opening the paper. 'Where
  • are we? Lunch scores. Lord's. Aha! Comrade Jackson is in form.'
  • 'Jackson?' said Mr Smith, 'is that the same youngster you brought home
  • last summer? The batsman? Is he playing today?'
  • 'He was not out thirty at lunch-time. He would appear to be making
  • something of a stand with his brother Joe, who has made sixty-one up to
  • the moment of going to press. It's possible he may still be in when we
  • get there. In which case we shall not be able to slide into the
  • pavilion.'
  • 'A grand bat, that boy. I said so last summer. Better than any of his
  • brothers. He's in the bank with you, isn't he?'
  • 'He was this morning. I doubt, however, whether he can be said to be
  • still in that position.'
  • 'Eh? what? How's that?'
  • 'There was some slight friction between him and the management. They
  • wished him to be glued to his stool; he preferred to play for the
  • county. I think we may say that Comrade Jackson has secured the Order
  • of the Boot.'
  • 'What? Do you mean to say--?'
  • Psmith related briefly the history of Mike's departure.
  • Mr Smith listened with interest.
  • 'Well,' he said at last, 'hang me if I blame the boy. It's a sin
  • cooping up a fellow who can bat like that in a bank. I should have done
  • the same myself in his place.'
  • Psmith smoothed his waistcoat.
  • 'Do you know, father,' he said, 'this bank business is far from being
  • much of a catch. Indeed, I should describe it definitely as a bit off.
  • I have given it a fair trial, and I now denounce it unhesitatingly as a
  • shade too thick.'
  • 'What? Are you getting tired of it?'
  • 'Not precisely tired. But, after considerable reflection, I have come
  • to the conclusion that my talents lie elsewhere. At lugging ledgers I
  • am among the also-rans--a mere cipher. I have been wanting to speak to
  • you about this for some time. If you have no objection, I should like
  • to go to the Bar.'
  • 'The Bar? Well--'
  • 'I fancy I should make a pretty considerable hit as a barrister.'
  • Mr Smith reflected. The idea had not occurred to him before. Now that
  • it was suggested, his always easily-fired imagination took hold of it
  • readily. There was a good deal to be said for the Bar as a career.
  • Psmith knew his father, and he knew that the thing was practically as
  • good as settled. It was a new idea, and as such was bound to be
  • favourably received.
  • 'What I should do, if I were you,' he went on, as if he were advising a
  • friend on some course of action certain to bring him profit and
  • pleasure, 'is to take me away from the bank at once. Don't wait. There
  • is no time like the present. Let me hand in my resignation tomorrow.
  • The blow to the management, especially to Comrade Bickersdyke, will be
  • a painful one, but it is the truest kindness to administer it swiftly.
  • Let me resign tomorrow, and devote my time to quiet study. Then I can
  • pop up to Cambridge next term, and all will be well.'
  • 'I'll think it over--' began Mr Smith.
  • 'Let us hustle,' urged Psmith. 'Let us Do It Now. It is the only way.
  • Have I your leave to shoot in my resignation to Comrade Bickersdyke
  • tomorrow morning?'
  • Mr Smith hesitated for a moment, then made up his mind.
  • 'Very well,' he said. 'I really think it is a good idea. There are
  • great opportunities open to a barrister. I wish we had thought of it
  • before.'
  • 'I am not altogether sorry that we did not,' said Psmith. 'I have
  • enjoyed the chances my commercial life has given me of associating with
  • such a man as Comrade Bickersdyke. In many ways a master-mind. But
  • perhaps it is as well to close the chapter. How it happened it is hard
  • to say, but somehow I fancy I did not precisely hit it off with Comrade
  • Bickersdyke. With Psmith, the worker, he had no fault to find; but it
  • seemed to me sometimes, during our festive evenings together at the
  • club, that all was not well. From little, almost imperceptible signs I
  • have suspected now and then that he would just as soon have been
  • without my company. One cannot explain these things. It must have been
  • some incompatibility of temperament. Perhaps he will manage to bear up
  • at my departure. But here we are,' he added, as the cab drew up. 'I
  • wonder if Comrade Jackson is still going strong.'
  • They passed through the turnstile, and caught sight of the
  • telegraph-board.
  • 'By Jove!' said Psmith, 'he is. I don't know if he's number three or
  • number six. I expect he's number six. In which case he has got
  • ninety-eight. We're just in time to see his century.'
  • 29. And Mike's
  • For nearly two hours Mike had been experiencing the keenest pleasure
  • that it had ever fallen to his lot to feel. From the moment he took his
  • first ball till the luncheon interval he had suffered the acutest
  • discomfort. His nervousness had left him to a great extent, but he had
  • never really settled down. Sometimes by luck, and sometimes by skill,
  • he had kept the ball out of his wicket; but he was scratching, and he
  • knew it. Not for a single over had he been comfortable. On several
  • occasions he had edged balls to leg and through the slips in quite an
  • inferior manner, and it was seldom that he managed to hit with the
  • centre of the bat.
  • Nobody is more alive to the fact that he is not playing up to his true
  • form than the batsman. Even though his score mounted little by little
  • into the twenties, Mike was miserable. If this was the best he could do
  • on a perfect wicket, he felt there was not much hope for him as a
  • professional.
  • The poorness of his play was accentuated by the brilliance of Joe's.
  • Joe combined science and vigour to a remarkable degree. He laid on the
  • wood with a graceful robustness which drew much cheering from the
  • crowd. Beside him Mike was oppressed by that leaden sense of moral
  • inferiority which weighs on a man who has turned up to dinner in
  • ordinary clothes when everybody else has dressed. He felt awkward and
  • conspicuously out of place.
  • Then came lunch--and after lunch a glorious change.
  • Volumes might be written on the cricket lunch and the influence it has
  • on the run of the game; how it undoes one man, and sends another back
  • to the fray like a giant refreshed; how it turns the brilliant fast
  • bowler into the sluggish medium, and the nervous bat into the masterful
  • smiter.
  • On Mike its effect was magical. He lunched wisely and well, chewing his
  • food with the concentration of a thirty-three-bites a mouthful crank,
  • and drinking dry ginger-ale. As he walked out with Joe after the
  • interval he knew that a change had taken place in him. His nerve had
  • come back, and with it his form.
  • It sometimes happens at cricket that when one feels particularly fit
  • one gets snapped in the slips in the first over, or clean bowled by a
  • full toss; but neither of these things happened to Mike. He stayed in,
  • and began to score. Now there were no edgings through the slips and
  • snicks to leg. He was meeting the ball in the centre of the bat, and
  • meeting it vigorously. Two boundaries in successive balls off the fast
  • bowler, hard, clean drives past extra-cover, put him at peace with all
  • the world. He was on top. He had found himself.
  • Joe, at the other end, resumed his brilliant career. His century and
  • Mike's fifty arrived in the same over. The bowling began to grow loose.
  • Joe, having reached his century, slowed down somewhat, and Mike took up
  • the running. The score rose rapidly.
  • A leg-theory bowler kept down the pace of the run-getting for a time,
  • but the bowlers at the other end continued to give away runs. Mike's
  • score passed from sixty to seventy, from seventy to eighty, from eighty
  • to ninety. When the Smiths, father and son, came on to the ground the
  • total was ninety-eight. Joe had made a hundred and thirty-three.
  • * * * * *
  • Mike reached his century just as Psmith and his father took their
  • seats. A square cut off the slow bowler was just too wide for point to
  • get to. By the time third man had sprinted across and returned the ball
  • the batsmen had run two.
  • Mr Smith was enthusiastic.
  • 'I tell you,' he said to Psmith, who was clapping in a gently
  • encouraging manner, 'the boy's a wonderful bat. I said so when he was
  • down with us. I remember telling him so myself. "I've seen your
  • brothers play," I said, "and you're better than any of them." I
  • remember it distinctly. He'll be playing for England in another year or
  • two. Fancy putting a cricketer like that into the City! It's a crime.'
  • 'I gather,' said Psmith, 'that the family coffers had got a bit low. It
  • was necessary for Comrade Jackson to do something by way of saving the
  • Old Home.'
  • 'He ought to be at the University. Look, he's got that man away to the
  • boundary again. They'll never get him out.'
  • At six o'clock the partnership was broken, Joe running himself out in
  • trying to snatch a single where no single was. He had made a hundred
  • and eighty-nine.
  • Mike flung himself down on the turf with mixed feelings. He was sorry
  • Joe was out, but he was very glad indeed of the chance of a rest. He
  • was utterly fagged. A half-day match once a week is no training for
  • first-class cricket. Joe, who had been playing all the season, was as
  • tough as india-rubber, and trotted into the pavilion as fresh as if he
  • had been having a brief spell at the nets. Mike, on the other hand,
  • felt that he simply wanted to be dropped into a cold bath and left
  • there indefinitely. There was only another half-hour's play, but he
  • doubted if he could get through it.
  • He dragged himself up wearily as Joe's successor arrived at the
  • wickets. He had crossed Joe before the latter's downfall, and it was
  • his turn to take the bowling.
  • Something seemed to have gone out of him. He could not time the ball
  • properly. The last ball of the over looked like a half-volley, and he
  • hit out at it. But it was just short of a half-volley, and his stroke
  • arrived too soon. The bowler, running in the direction of mid-on,
  • brought off an easy c.-and-b.
  • Mike turned away towards the pavilion. He heard the gradually swelling
  • applause in a sort of dream. It seemed to him hours before he reached
  • the dressing-room.
  • He was sitting on a chair, wishing that somebody would come along and
  • take off his pads, when Psmith's card was brought to him. A few moments
  • later the old Etonian appeared in person.
  • 'Hullo, Smith,' said Mike, 'By Jove! I'm done.'
  • '"How Little Willie Saved the Match,"' said Psmith. 'What you want is
  • one of those gin and ginger-beers we hear so much about. Remove those
  • pads, and let us flit downstairs in search of a couple. Well, Comrade
  • Jackson, you have fought the good fight this day. My father sends his
  • compliments. He is dining out, or he would have come up. He is going to
  • look in at the flat latish.'
  • 'How many did I get?' asked Mike. 'I was so jolly done I didn't think
  • of looking.'
  • 'A hundred and forty-eight of the best,' said Psmith. 'What will they
  • say at the old homestead about this? Are you ready? Then let us test
  • this fruity old ginger-beer of theirs.'
  • The two batsmen who had followed the big stand were apparently having a
  • little stand all of their own. No more wickets fell before the drawing
  • of stumps. Psmith waited for Mike while he changed, and carried him off
  • in a cab to Simpson's, a restaurant which, as he justly observed,
  • offered two great advantages, namely, that you need not dress, and,
  • secondly, that you paid your half-crown, and were then at liberty to
  • eat till you were helpless, if you felt so disposed, without extra
  • charge.
  • Mike stopped short of this giddy height of mastication, but consumed
  • enough to make him feel a great deal better. Psmith eyed his inroads on
  • the menu with approval.
  • 'There is nothing,' he said, 'like victualling up before an ordeal.'
  • 'What's the ordeal?' said Mike.
  • 'I propose to take you round to the club anon, where I trust we shall
  • find Comrade Bickersdyke. We have much to say to one another.'
  • 'Look here, I'm hanged--' began Mike.
  • 'Yes, you must be there,' said Psmith. 'Your presence will serve to
  • cheer Comrade B. up. Fate compels me to deal him a nasty blow, and he
  • will want sympathy. I have got to break it to him that I am leaving the
  • bank.'
  • 'What, are you going to chuck it?'
  • Psmith inclined his head.
  • 'The time,' he said, 'has come to part. It has served its turn. The
  • startled whisper runs round the City. "Psmith has had sufficient."'
  • 'What are you going to do?'
  • 'I propose to enter the University of Cambridge, and there to study the
  • intricacies of the Law, with a view to having a subsequent dash at
  • becoming Lord Chancellor.'
  • 'By Jove!' said Mike, 'you're lucky. I wish I were coming too.'
  • Psmith knocked the ash off his cigarette.
  • 'Are you absolutely set on becoming a pro?' he asked.
  • 'It depends on what you call set. It seems to me it's about all I can
  • do.'
  • 'I can offer you a not entirely scaly job,' said Smith, 'if you feel
  • like taking it. In the course of conversation with my father during the
  • match this afternoon, I gleaned the fact that he is anxious to secure
  • your services as a species of agent. The vast Psmith estates, it seems,
  • need a bright boy to keep an eye upon them. Are you prepared to accept
  • the post?'
  • Mike stared.
  • 'Me! Dash it all, how old do you think I am? I'm only nineteen.'
  • 'I had suspected as much from the alabaster clearness of your
  • unwrinkled brow. But my father does not wish you to enter upon your
  • duties immediately. There would be a preliminary interval of three,
  • possibly four, years at Cambridge, during which I presume, you would be
  • learning divers facts concerning spuds, turmuts, and the like. At
  • least,' said Psmith airily, 'I suppose so. Far be it from me to dictate
  • the line of your researches.'
  • 'Then I'm afraid it's off,' said Mike gloomily. 'My pater couldn't
  • afford to send me to Cambridge.'
  • 'That obstacle,' said Psmith, 'can be surmounted. You would, of course,
  • accompany me to Cambridge, in the capacity, which you enjoy at the
  • present moment, of my confidential secretary and adviser. Any expenses
  • that might crop up would be defrayed from the Psmith family chest.'
  • Mike's eyes opened wide again.
  • 'Do you mean,' he asked bluntly, 'that your pater would pay for me at
  • the 'Varsity? No I say--dash it--I mean, I couldn't--'
  • 'Do you suggest,' said Psmith, raising his eyebrows, 'that I should go
  • to the University _without_ a confidential secretary and adviser?'
  • 'No, but I mean--' protested Mike.
  • 'Then that's settled,' said Psmith. 'I knew you would not desert me in
  • my hour of need, Comrade Jackson. "What will you do," asked my father,
  • alarmed for my safety, "among these wild undergraduates? I fear for my
  • Rupert." "Have no fear, father," I replied. "Comrade Jackson will be
  • beside me." His face brightened immediately. "Comrade Jackson," he
  • said, "is a man in whom I have the supremest confidence. If he is with
  • you I shall sleep easy of nights." It was after that that the
  • conversation drifted to the subject of agents.'
  • Psmith called for the bill and paid it in the affable manner of a
  • monarch signing a charter. Mike sat silent, his mind in a whirl. He saw
  • exactly what had happened. He could almost hear Psmith talking his
  • father into agreeing with his scheme. He could think of nothing to say.
  • As usually happened in any emotional crisis in his life, words
  • absolutely deserted him. The thing was too big. Anything he could say
  • would sound too feeble. When a friend has solved all your difficulties
  • and smoothed out all the rough places which were looming in your path,
  • you cannot thank him as if he had asked you to lunch. The occasion
  • demanded some neat, polished speech; and neat, polished speeches were
  • beyond Mike.
  • 'I say, Psmith--' he began.
  • Psmith rose.
  • 'Let us now,' he said, 'collect our hats and meander to the club,
  • where, I have no doubt, we shall find Comrade Bickersdyke, all
  • unconscious of impending misfortune, dreaming pleasantly over coffee
  • and a cigar in the lower smoking-room.'
  • 30. The Last Sad Farewells
  • As it happened, that was precisely what Mr Bickersdyke was doing. He
  • was feeling thoroughly pleased with life. For nearly nine months Psmith
  • had been to him a sort of spectre at the feast inspiring him with an
  • ever-present feeling of discomfort which he had found impossible to
  • shake off. And tonight he saw his way of getting rid of him.
  • At five minutes past four Mr Gregory, crimson and wrathful, had plunged
  • into his room with a long statement of how Psmith, deputed to help in
  • the life and thought of the Fixed Deposits Department, had left the
  • building at four o'clock, when there was still another hour and a
  • half's work to be done.
  • Moreover, Mr Gregory deposed, the errant one, seen sliding out of the
  • swinging door, and summoned in a loud, clear voice to come back, had
  • flatly disobeyed and had gone upon his ways 'Grinning at me,' said the
  • aggrieved Mr Gregory, 'like a dashed ape.' A most unjust description of
  • the sad, sweet smile which Psmith had bestowed upon him from the
  • doorway.
  • Ever since that moment Mr Bickersdyke had felt that there was a silver
  • lining to the cloud. Hitherto Psmith had left nothing to be desired in
  • the manner in which he performed his work. His righteousness in the
  • office had clothed him as in a suit of mail. But now he had slipped. To
  • go off an hour and a half before the proper time, and to refuse to
  • return when summoned by the head of his department--these were offences
  • for which he could be dismissed without fuss. Mr Bickersdyke looked
  • forward to tomorrow's interview with his employee.
  • Meanwhile, having enjoyed an excellent dinner, he was now, as Psmith
  • had predicted, engaged with a cigar and a cup of coffee in the lower
  • smoking-room of the Senior Conservative Club.
  • Psmith and Mike entered the room when he was about half through these
  • luxuries.
  • Psmith's first action was to summon a waiter, and order a glass of neat
  • brandy. 'Not for myself,' he explained to Mike. 'For Comrade
  • Bickersdyke. He is about to sustain a nasty shock, and may need a
  • restorative at a moment's notice. For all we know, his heart may not be
  • strong. In any case, it is safest to have a pick-me-up handy.'
  • He paid the waiter, and advanced across the room, followed by Mike. In
  • his hand, extended at arm's length, he bore the glass of brandy.
  • Mr Bickersdyke caught sight of the procession, and started. Psmith set
  • the brandy down very carefully on the table, beside the manager's
  • coffee cup, and, dropping into a chair, regarded him pityingly through
  • his eyeglass. Mike, who felt embarrassed, took a seat some little way
  • behind his companion. This was Psmith's affair, and he proposed to
  • allow him to do the talking.
  • Mr Bickersdyke, except for a slight deepening of the colour of his
  • complexion, gave no sign of having seen them. He puffed away at his
  • cigar, his eyes fixed on the ceiling.
  • 'An unpleasant task lies before us,' began Psmith in a low, sorrowful
  • voice, 'and it must not be shirked. Have I your ear, Mr Bickersdyke?'
  • Addressed thus directly, the manager allowed his gaze to wander from
  • the ceiling. He eyed Psmith for a moment like an elderly basilisk, then
  • looked back at the ceiling again.
  • 'I shall speak to you tomorrow,' he said.
  • Psmith heaved a heavy sigh.
  • 'You will not see us tomorrow,' he said, pushing the brandy a little
  • nearer.
  • Mr Bickersdyke's eyes left the ceiling once more.
  • 'What do you mean?' he said.
  • 'Drink this,' urged Psmith sympathetically, holding out the glass. 'Be
  • brave,' he went on rapidly. 'Time softens the harshest blows. Shocks
  • stun us for the moment, but we recover. Little by little we come to
  • ourselves again. Life, which we had thought could hold no more pleasure
  • for us, gradually shows itself not wholly grey.'
  • Mr Bickersdyke seemed about to make an observation at this point, but
  • Psmith, with a wave of the hand, hurried on.
  • 'We find that the sun still shines, the birds still sing. Things which
  • used to entertain us resume their attraction. Gradually we emerge from
  • the soup, and begin--'
  • 'If you have anything to say to me,' said the manager, 'I should be
  • glad if you would say it, and go.'
  • 'You prefer me not to break the bad news gently?' said Psmith. 'Perhaps
  • you are wise. In a word, then,'--he picked up the brandy and held it
  • out to him--'Comrade Jackson and myself are leaving the bank.'
  • 'I am aware of that,' said Mr Bickersdyke drily.
  • Psmith put down the glass.
  • 'You have been told already?' he said. 'That accounts for your calm.
  • The shock has expended its force on you, and can do no more. You are
  • stunned. I am sorry, but it had to be. You will say that it is madness
  • for us to offer our resignations, that our grip on the work of the bank
  • made a prosperous career in Commerce certain for us. It may be so. But
  • somehow we feel that our talents lie elsewhere. To Comrade Jackson the
  • management of the Psmith estates seems the job on which he can get the
  • rapid half-Nelson. For my own part, I feel that my long suit is the
  • Bar. I am a poor, unready speaker, but I intend to acquire a knowledge
  • of the Law which shall outweigh this defect. Before leaving you, I
  • should like to say--I may speak for you as well as myself, Comrade
  • Jackson--?'
  • Mike uttered his first contribution to the conversation--a gurgle--and
  • relapsed into silence again.
  • 'I should like to say,' continued Psmith, 'how much Comrade Jackson and
  • I have enjoyed our stay in the bank. The insight it has given us into
  • your masterly handling of the intricate mechanism of the office has
  • been a treat we would not have missed. But our place is elsewhere.'
  • He rose. Mike followed his example with alacrity. It occurred to Mr
  • Bickersdyke, as they turned to go, that he had not yet been able to get
  • in a word about their dismissal. They were drifting away with all the
  • honours of war.
  • 'Come back,' he cried.
  • Psmith paused and shook his head sadly.
  • 'This is unmanly, Comrade Bickersdyke,' he said. 'I had not expected
  • this. That you should be dazed by the shock was natural. But that you
  • should beg us to reconsider our resolve and return to the bank is
  • unworthy of you. Be a man. Bite the bullet. The first keen pang will
  • pass. Time will soften the feeling of bereavement. You must be brave.
  • Come, Comrade Jackson.'
  • Mike responded to the call without hesitation.
  • 'We will now,' said Psmith, leading the way to the door, 'push back to
  • the flat. My father will be round there soon.' He looked over his
  • shoulder. Mr Bickersdyke appeared to be wrapped in thought.
  • 'A painful business,' sighed Psmith. 'The man seems quite broken up. It
  • had to be, however. The bank was no place for us. An excellent career
  • in many respects, but unsuitable for you and me. It is hard on Comrade
  • Bickersdyke, especially as he took such trouble to get me into it, but
  • I think we may say that we are well out of the place.'
  • Mike's mind roamed into the future. Cambridge first, and then an
  • open-air life of the sort he had always dreamed of. The Problem of
  • Life seemed to him to be solved. He looked on down the years, and he
  • could see no troubles there of any kind whatsoever. Reason suggested
  • that there were probably one or two knocking about somewhere, but this
  • was no time to think of them. He examined the future, and found it good.
  • 'I should jolly well think,' he said simply, 'that we might.'
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