<h2 id="CH2"> CHAPTER II </h2>
<div class="chtitle"> UKRIDGE’S ACCIDENT SYNDICATE </div>
<p>“Half a minute, laddie,” said Ukridge. And,
gripping my arm, he brought me to a halt
on the outskirts of the little crowd which
had collected about the church door.</p>
<p>It was a crowd such as may be seen any morning during
the London mating-season outside any of the churches
which nestle in the quiet squares between Hyde Park and
the King’s Road, Chelsea.</p>
<p>It consisted of five women of cooklike aspect, four nurse-maids,
half a dozen men of the non-producing class who
had torn themselves away for the moment from their normal
task of propping up the wall of the Bunch of Grapes public-house
on the corner, a costermonger with a barrow of
vegetables, divers small boys, eleven dogs, and two or three
purposeful-looking young fellows with cameras slung over
their shoulders. It was plain that a wedding was in progress—and,
arguing from the presence of the camera-men
and the line of smart motor-cars along the kerb, a fairly
fashionable wedding. What was not plain—to me—was
why Ukridge, sternest of bachelors, had desired to add
himself to the spectators.</p>
<p>“What,” I enquired, “is the thought behind this? Why
are we interrupting our walk to attend the obsequies of
some perfect stranger?”</p>
<p>Ukridge did not reply for a moment. He seemed plunged
in thought. Then he uttered a hollow, mirthless laugh—a
dreadful sound like the last gargle of a dying moose.</p>
<p>“Perfect stranger, my number eleven foot!” he responded,
in his coarse way. “Do you know who it is
who’s getting hitched up in there?”</p>
<p>“Who?”</p>
<p>“Teddy Weeks.”</p>
<p>“Teddy Weeks? Teddy Weeks? Good Lord!” I
exclaimed. “Not really?”</p>
<p>And five years rolled away.</p>
<p>It was at Barolini’s Italian restaurant in Beak Street
that Ukridge evolved his great scheme. Barolini’s was
a favourite resort of our little group of earnest strugglers
in the days when the philanthropic restaurateurs of Soho
used to supply four courses and coffee for a shilling and
sixpence; and there were present that night, besides
Ukridge and myself, the following men-about-town:
Teddy Weeks, the actor, fresh from a six-weeks’ tour with
the Number Three “Only a Shop-Girl” Company; Victor
Beamish, the artist, the man who drew that picture of the
O-So-Eesi Piano-Player in the advertisement pages of the
<i>Piccadilly Magazine</i>; Bertram Fox, author of <i>Ashes of
Remorse</i>, and other unproduced motion-picture scenarios;
and Robert Dunhill, who, being employed at a salary of
eighty pounds per annum by the New Asiatic Bank, represented
the sober, hard-headed commercial element. As
usual, Teddy Weeks had collared the conversation, and
was telling us once again how good he was and how hardly
treated by a malignant fate.</p>
<p>There is no need to describe Teddy Weeks. Under
another and a more euphonious name he has long since
made his personal appearance dreadfully familiar to all
who read the illustrated weekly papers. He was then, as
now, a sickeningly handsome young man, possessing precisely
the same melting eyes, mobile mouth, and corrugated
hair so esteemed by the theatre-going public to-day. And
yet, at this period of his career he was wasting himself on
minor touring companies of the kind which open at Barrow-in-Furness
and jump to Bootle for the second half of the
week. He attributed this, as Ukridge was so apt to attribute
his own difficulties, to lack of capital.</p>
<p>“I have everything,” he said, querulously, emphasising
his remarks with a coffee-spoon. “Looks, talent, personality,
a beautiful speaking-voice—everything. All I need
is a chance. And I can’t get that because I have no clothes
fit to wear. These managers are all the same, they never
look below the surface, they never bother to find out if a
man has genius. All they go by are his clothes. If I could
afford to buy a couple of suits from a Cork Street tailor, if
I could have my boots made to order by Moykoff instead of
getting them ready-made and second-hand at Moses
Brothers’, if I could once contrive to own a decent hat, a
really good pair of spats, and a gold cigarette-case, all at the
same time, I could walk into any manager’s office in London
and sign up for a West-end production to-morrow.”</p>
<p>It was at this point that Freddie Lunt came in. Freddie,
like Robert Dunhill, was a financial magnate in the making
and an assiduous frequenter of Barolini’s; and it suddenly
occurred to us that a considerable time had passed since
we had last seen him in the place. We enquired the reason
for this aloofness.</p>
<p>“I’ve been in bed,” said Freddie, “for over a fortnight.”</p>
<p>The statement incurred Ukridge’s stern disapproval.
That great man made a practice of never rising before
noon, and on one occasion, when a carelessly-thrown match
had burned a hole in his only pair of trousers, had gone so
far as to remain between the sheets for forty-eight hours;
but sloth on so majestic a scale as this shocked him.</p>
<p>“Lazy young devil,” he commented severely. “Letting
the golden hours of youth slip by like that when you ought
to have been bustling about and making a name for yourself.”</p>
<p>Freddie protested himself wronged by the imputation.</p>
<p>“I had an accident,” he explained. “Fell off my
bicycle and sprained an ankle.”</p>
<p>“Tough luck,” was our verdict.</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” said Freddie. “It wasn’t bad fun
getting a rest. And of course there was the fiver.”</p>
<p>“What fiver?”</p>
<p>“I got a fiver from the <i>Weekly Cyclist</i> for getting my
ankle sprained.”</p>
<p>“You—<i>what?</i>” cried Ukridge, profoundly stirred—as
ever—by a tale of easy money. “Do you mean to sit there
and tell me that some dashed paper paid you five quid
simply because you sprained your ankle? Pull yourself
together, old horse. Things like that don’t happen.”</p>
<p>“It’s quite true.”</p>
<p>“Can you show me the fiver?”</p>
<p>“No; because if I did you would try to borrow it.”</p>
<p>Ukridge ignored this slur in dignified silence.</p>
<p>“Would they pay a fiver to <i>anyone</i> who sprained his
ankle?” he asked, sticking to the main point.</p>
<p>“Yes. If he was a subscriber.”</p>
<p>“I knew there was a catch in it,” said Ukridge, moodily.</p>
<p>“Lots of weekly papers are starting this wheeze,” proceeded
Freddie. “You pay a year’s subscription and that
entitles you to accident insurance.”</p>
<p>We were interested. This was in the days before every
daily paper in London was competing madly against its
rivals in the matter of insurance and offering princely
bribes to the citizens to make a fortune by breaking their
necks. Nowadays papers are paying as high as two thousand
pounds for a genuine corpse and five pounds a week
for a mere dislocated spine; but at that time the idea was
new and it had an attractive appeal.</p>
<p>“How many of these rags are doing this?” asked Ukridge.
You could tell from the gleam in his eyes that that great
brain was whirring like a dynamo. “As many as ten?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I should think so. Quite ten.”</p>
<p>“Then a fellow who subscribed to them all and then
sprained his ankle would get fifty quid?” said Ukridge,
reasoning acutely.</p>
<p>“More if the injury was more serious,” said Freddie, the
expert. “They have a regular tariff. So much for a
broken arm, so much for a broken leg, and so forth.”</p>
<p>Ukridge’s collar leaped off its stud and his pince-nez
wobbled drunkenly as he turned to us.</p>
<p>“How much money can you blokes raise?” he demanded.</p>
<p>“What do you want it for?” asked Robert Dunhill,
with a banker’s caution.</p>
<p>“My dear old horse, can’t you see? Why, my gosh,
I’ve got the idea of the century. Upon my Sam, this is the
giltest-edged scheme that was ever hatched. We’ll get
together enough money and take out a year’s subscription
for every one of these dashed papers.”</p>
<p>“What’s the good of that?” said Dunhill, coldly unenthusiastic.</p>
<p>They train bank clerks to stifle emotion, so that they will
be able to refuse overdrafts when they become managers.
“The odds are we should none of us have an accident of
any kind, and then the money would be chucked away.”</p>
<p>“Good heavens, ass,” snorted Ukridge, “you don’t suppose
I’m suggesting that we should leave it to chance, do
you? Listen! Here’s the scheme. We take out subscriptions
for all these papers, then we draw lots, and the
fellow who gets the fatal card or whatever it is goes out and
breaks his leg and draws the loot, and we split it up between
us and live on it in luxury. It ought to run into hundreds
of pounds.”</p>
<p>A long silence followed. Then Dunhill spoke again. His
was a solid rather than a nimble mind.</p>
<p>“Suppose he couldn’t break his leg?”</p>
<p>“My gosh!” cried Ukridge, exasperated. “Here we
are in the twentieth century, with every resource of modern
civilisation at our disposal, with opportunities for getting
our legs broken opening about us on every side—and you
ask a silly question like that! Of course he could break
his leg. Any ass can break a leg. It’s a little hard! We’re
all infernally broke—personally, unless Freddie can lend
me a bit of that fiver till Saturday, I’m going to have a
difficult job pulling through. We all need money like the
dickens, and yet, when I point out this marvellous scheme
for collecting a bit, instead of fawning on me for my ready
intelligence you sit and make objections. It isn’t the right
spirit. It isn’t the spirit that wins.”</p>
<p>“If you’re as hard up as that,” objected Dunhill, “how
are you going to put in your share of the pool?”</p>
<p>A pained, almost a stunned, look came into Ukridge’s
eyes. He gazed at Dunhill through his lop-sided pince-nez
as one who speculates as to whether his hearing has deceived
him.</p>
<p>“Me?” he cried. “Me? I like that! Upon my Sam,
that’s rich! Why, damme, if there’s any justice in the
world, if there’s a spark of decency and good feeling in your
bally bosoms, I should think you would let me in free for
suggesting the idea. It’s a little hard! I supply the
brains and you want me to cough up cash as well. My
gosh, I didn’t expect this. This hurts me, by George!
If anybody had told me that an old pal would——”</p>
<p>“Oh, all right,” said Robert Dunhill. “All right, all
right, all right. But I’ll tell you one thing. If you draw
the lot it’ll be the happiest day of my life.”</p>
<p>“I sha’n’t,” said Ukridge. “Something tells me that I
shan’t.”</p>
<p>Nor did he. When, in a solemn silence broken only by
the sound of a distant waiter quarrelling with the cook
down a speaking-tube, we had completed the drawing, the
man of destiny was Teddy Weeks.</p>
<p>I suppose that even in the springtime of Youth, when
broken limbs seems a lighter matter than they become
later in life, it can never be an unmixedly agreeable thing
to have to go out into the public highways and try to
make an accident happen to one. In such circumstances
the reflection that you are thereby benefiting your
friends brings but slight balm. To Teddy Weeks it
appeared to bring no balm at all. That he was experiencing
a certain disinclination to sacrifice himself for the
public good became more and more evident as the days
went by and found him still intact. Ukridge, when he called
upon me to discuss the matter, was visibly perturbed. He
sank into a chair beside the table at which I was beginning
my modest morning meal, and, having drunk half my coffee,
sighed deeply.</p>
<p>“Upon my Sam,” he moaned, “it’s a little disheartening.
I strain my brain to think up schemes for getting us all a
bit of money just at the moment when we are all needing it
most, and when I hit on what is probably the simplest and
yet ripest notion of our time, this blighter Weeks goes and
lets me down by shirking his plain duty. It’s just my
luck that a fellow like that should have drawn the lot. And
the worst of it is, laddie, that, now we’ve started with him,
we’ve got to keep on. We can’t possibly raise enough
money to pay yearly subscriptions for anybody else. It’s
Weeks or nobody.”</p>
<p>“I suppose we must give him time.”</p>
<p>“That’s what he says,” grunted Ukridge, morosely,
helping himself to toast. “He says he doesn’t know how
to start about it. To listen to him, you’d think that going
and having a trifling accident was the sort of delicate and
intricate job that required years of study and special preparation.
Why, a child of six could do it on his head at
five minutes’ notice. The man’s so infernally particular.
You make helpful suggestions, and instead of accepting
them in a broad, reasonable spirit of co-operation he comes
back at you every time with some frivolous objection. He’s
so dashed fastidious. When we were out last night, we
came on a couple of navvies scrapping. Good hefty fellows,
either of them capable of putting him in hospital for a
month. I told him to jump in and start separating them,
and he said no; it was a private dispute which was none
of his business, and he didn’t feel justified in interfering.
Finicky, I call it. I tell you, laddie, this blighter is a broken
reed. He has got cold feet. We did wrong to let him into
the drawing at all. We might have known that a fellow like
that would never give results. No conscience. No sense
of esprit de corps. No notion of putting himself out to the
most trifling extent for the benefit of the community.
Haven’t you any more marmalade, laddie?”</p>
<p>“I have not.”</p>
<p>“Then I’ll be going,” said Ukridge, moodily. “I suppose,”
he added, pausing at the door, “you couldn’t lend
me five bob?”</p>
<p>“How did you guess?”</p>
<p>“Then I’ll tell you what,” said Ukridge, ever fair and
reasonable; “you can stand me dinner to-night.” He
seemed cheered up for the moment by this happy compromise,
but gloom descended on him again. His face
clouded. “When I think,” he said, “of all the money
that’s locked up in that poor faint-hearted fish, just waiting
to be released, I could sob. Sob, laddie, like a little child.
I never liked that man—he has a bad eye and waves his
hair. Never trust a man who waves his hair, old horse.”</p>
<p>Ukridge’s pessimism was not confined to himself. By
the end of a fortnight, nothing having happened to Teddy
Weeks worse than a slight cold which he shook off in a
couple of days, the general consensus of opinion among
his apprehensive colleagues in the Syndicate was that the
situation had become desperate. There were no signs
whatever of any return on the vast capital which we had laid
out, and meanwhile meals had to be bought, landladies paid,
and a reasonable supply of tobacco acquired. It was a
melancholy task in these circumstances to read one’s paper
of a morning.</p>
<p>All over the inhabited globe, so the well-informed sheet
gave one to understand, every kind of accident was happening
every day to practically everybody in existence except
Teddy Weeks. Farmers in Minnesota were getting mixed
up with reaping-machines, peasants in India were being
bisected by crocodiles; iron girders from skyscrapers were
falling hourly on the heads of citizens in every town from
Philadelphia to San Francisco; and the only people who
were not down with ptomaine poisoning were those who
had walked over cliffs, driven motors into walls, tripped
over manholes, or assumed on too slight evidence that the
gun was not loaded. In a crippled world, it seemed, Teddy
Weeks walked alone, whole and glowing with health. It
was one of those grim, ironical, hopeless, grey, despairful
situations which the Russian novelists love to write about,
and I could not find it in me to blame Ukridge for taking
direct action in this crisis. My only regret was that bad
luck caused so excellent a plan to miscarry.</p>
<p>My first intimation that he had been trying to hurry
matters on came when he and I were walking along the
King’s Road one evening, and he drew me into Markham
Square, a dismal backwater where he had once had rooms.</p>
<p>“What’s the idea?” I asked, for I disliked the place.</p>
<p>“Teddy Weeks lives here,” said Ukridge. “In my old
rooms.” I could not see that this lent any fascination to
the place. Every day and in every way I was feeling
sorrier and sorrier that I had been foolish enough to put
money which I could ill spare into a venture which had all
the earmarks of a wash-out, and my sentiments towards
Teddy Weeks were cold and hostile.</p>
<p>“I want to enquire after him.”</p>
<p>“Enquire after him? Why?”</p>
<p>“Well, the fact is, laddie, I have an idea that he has
been bitten by a dog.”</p>
<p>“What makes you think that?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” said Ukridge, dreamily. “I’ve
just got the idea. You know how one gets ideas.”</p>
<p>The mere contemplation of this beautiful event was so
inspiring that for awhile it held me silent. In each of the
ten journals in which we had invested dog-bites were specifically
recommended as things which every subscriber ought
to have. They came about half-way up the list of lucrative
accidents, inferior to a broken rib or a fractured fibula, but
better value than an ingrowing toe-nail. I was gloating
happily over the picture conjured up by Ukridge’s words
when an exclamation brought me back with a start to the
realities of life. A revolting sight met my eyes. Down the
street came ambling the familiar figure of Teddy Weeks, and
one glance at his elegant person was enough to tell us that
our hopes had been built on sand. Not even a toy Pomeranian
had chewed this man.</p>
<p>“Hallo, you fellows!” said Teddy Weeks.</p>
<p>“Hallo!” we responded, dully.</p>
<p>“Can’t stop,” said Teddy Weeks. “I’ve got to fetch a
doctor.”</p>
<p>“A doctor?”</p>
<p>“Yes. Poor Victor Beamish. He’s been bitten by a
dog.”</p>
<p>Ukridge and I exchanged weary glances. It seemed as
if Fate was going out of its way to have sport with us.
What was the good of a dog biting Victor Beamish?
What was the good of a hundred dogs biting Victor Beamish?
A dog-bitten Victor Beamish had no market value whatever.</p>
<p>“You know that fierce brute that belongs to my landlady,”
said Teddy Weeks. “The one that always dashes
out into the area and barks at people who come to the front
door.” I remembered. A large mongrel with wild eyes and
flashing fangs, badly in need of a haircut. I had encountered
it once in the street, when visiting Ukridge, and only
the presence of the latter, who knew it well and to whom all
dogs were as brothers, had saved me from the doom of
Victor Beamish. “Somehow or other he got into my bedroom
this evening. He was waiting there when I came
home. I had brought Beamish back with me, and the
animal pinned him by the leg the moment I opened the
door.”</p>
<p>“Why didn’t he pin you?” asked Ukridge, aggrieved.</p>
<p>“What I can’t make out,” said Teddy Weeks, “is how
on earth the brute came to be in my room. Somebody
must have put him there. The whole thing is very
mysterious.”</p>
<p>“Why didn’t he pin you?” demanded Ukridge again.</p>
<p>“Oh, I managed to climb on to the top of the wardrobe
while he was biting Beamish,” said Teddy Weeks. “And
then the landlady came and took him away. But I can’t
stop here talking. I must go and get that doctor.”</p>
<p>We gazed after him in silence as he tripped down the
street. We noted the careful manner in which he paused
at the corner to eye the traffic before crossing the road, the
wary way in which he drew back to allow a truck to rattle
past.</p>
<p>“You heard that?” said Ukridge, tensely. “He
climbed on to the top of the wardrobe!”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“And you saw the way he dodged that excellent truck?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Something’s got to be done,” said Ukridge, firmly.
“The man has got to be awakened to a sense of his responsibilities.”</p>
<p>Next day a deputation waited on Teddy Weeks.</p>
<p>Ukridge was our spokesman, and he came to the point
with admirable directness.</p>
<p>“How about it?” asked Ukridge.</p>
<p>“How about what?” replied Teddy Weeks, nervously,
avoiding his accusing eye.</p>
<p>“When do we get action?”</p>
<p>“Oh, you mean that accident business?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“I’ve been thinking about that,” said Teddy Weeks.</p>
<p>Ukridge drew the mackintosh which he wore indoors and
out of doors and in all weathers more closely around him.
There was in the action something suggestive of a member of
the Roman Senate about to denounce an enemy of the State.
In just such a manner must Cicero have swished his toga
as he took a deep breath preparatory to assailing Clodius.
He toyed for a moment with the ginger-beer wire which
held his pince-nez in place, and endeavoured without success
to button his collar at the back. In moments of emotion
Ukridge’s collar always took on a sort of temperamental
jumpiness which no stud could restrain.</p>
<p>“And about time you <i>were</i> thinking about it,” he boomed,
sternly.</p>
<p>We shifted appreciatively in our seats, all except Victor
Beamish, who had declined a chair and was standing by
the mantelpiece. “Upon my Sam, it’s about time you
were thinking about it. Do you realise that we’ve invested
an enormous sum of money in you on the distinct understanding
that we could rely on you to do your duty and get
immediate results? Are we to be forced to the conclusion
that you are so yellow and few in the pod as to want to
evade your honourable obligations? We thought better
of you, Weeks. Upon my Sam, we thought better of you.
We took you for a two-fisted, enterprising, big-souled, one
hundred-per-cent. he-man who would stand by his friends
to the finish.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but——”</p>
<p>“Any bloke with a sense of loyalty and an appreciation
of what it meant to the rest of us would have rushed out
and found some means of fulfilling his duty long ago. You
don’t even grasp at the opportunities that come your way.
Only yesterday I saw you draw back when a single step
into the road would have had a truck bumping into you.”</p>
<p>“Well, it’s not so easy to let a truck bump into you.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense. It only requires a little ordinary resolution.
Use your imagination, man. Try to think that a child
has fallen down in the street—a little golden-haired child,”
said Ukridge, deeply affected. “And a dashed great cab
or something comes rolling up. The kid’s mother is standing
on the pavement, helpless, her hands clasped in agony.
‘Dammit,’ she cries, ‘will no one save my darling?’
‘Yes, by George,’ you shout, ‘<i>I</i> will.’ And out you jump
and the thing’s over in half a second. I don’t know what
you’re making such a fuss about.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but——” said Teddy Weeks.</p>
<p>“I’m told, what’s more, it isn’t a bit painful. A sort
of dull shock, that’s all.”</p>
<p>“Who told you that?”</p>
<p>“I forget. Someone.”</p>
<p>“Well, you can tell him from me that he’s an ass,” said
Teddy Weeks, with asperity.</p>
<p>“All right. If you object to being run over by a truck
there are lots of other ways. But, upon my Sam, it’s pretty
hopeless suggesting them. You seem to have no enterprise
at all. Yesterday, after I went to all the trouble to put a
dog in your room, a dog which would have done all the
work for you—all that you had to do was stand still and
let him use his own judgment—what happened? You
climbed on to——”</p>
<p>Victor Beamish interrupted, speaking in a voice husky
with emotion.</p>
<p>“Was it you who put that damned dog in the room?”</p>
<p>“Eh?” said Ukridge. “Why, yes. But we can have
a good talk about all that later on,” he proceeded, hastily.
“The point at the moment is how the dickens we’re going
to persuade this poor worm to collect our insurance money
for us. Why, damme, I should have thought you would
have——”</p>
<p>“All I can say——” began Victor Beamish, heatedly.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes,” said Ukridge; “some other time. Must
stick to business now, laddie. I was saying,” he resumed,
“that I should have thought you would have been as keen
as mustard to put the job through for your own sake.
You’re always beefing that you haven’t any clothes to
impress managers with. Think of all you can buy with your
share of the swag once you have summoned up a little
ordinary determination and seen the thing through. Think
of the suits, the boots, the hats, the spats. You’re always
talking about your dashed career, and how all you need to
land you in a West-end production is good clothes. Well,
here’s your chance to get them.”</p>
<p>His eloquence was not wasted. A wistful look came into
Teddy Weeks’s eye, such a look as must have come into the
eye of Moses on the summit of Pisgah. He breathed
heavily. You could see that the man was mentally walking
along Cork Street, weighing the merits of one famous tailor
against another.</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you what I’ll do,” he said, suddenly. “It’s no
use asking me to put this thing through in cold blood. I
simply can’t do it. I haven’t the nerve. But if you fellows
will give me a dinner to-night with lots of champagne I
think it will key me up to it.”</p>
<p>A heavy silence fell upon the room. Champagne! The
word was like a knell.</p>
<p>“How on earth are we going to afford champagne?”
said Victor Beamish.</p>
<p>“Well, there it is,” said Teddy Weeks. “Take it or
leave it.”</p>
<p>“Gentlemen,” said Ukridge, “it would seem that the
company requires more capital. How about it, old horses?
Let’s get together in a frank, business-like cards-on-the-table
spirit, and see what can be done. I can raise ten
bob.”</p>
<p>“What!” cried the entire assembled company, amazed.
“How?”</p>
<p>“I’ll pawn a banjo.”</p>
<p>“You haven’t got a banjo.”</p>
<p>“No, but George Tupper has, and I know where he
keeps it.”</p>
<p>Started in this spirited way, the subscriptions came
pouring in. I contributed a cigarette-case, Bertram Fox
thought his landlady would let him owe for another week,
Robert Dunhill had an uncle in Kensington who, he fancied,
if tactfully approached, would be good for a quid, and
Victor Beamish said that if the advertisement-manager of
the O-So-Eesi Piano-Player was churlish enough to refuse
an advance of five shillings against future work he misjudged
him sadly. Within a few minutes, in short, the
Lightning Drive had produced the impressive total of two
pounds six shillings, and we asked Teddy Weeks if he
thought that he could get adequately keyed up within the
limits of that sum.</p>
<p>“I’ll try,” said Teddy Weeks.</p>
<p>So, not unmindful of the fact that that excellent
hostelry supplied champagne at eight shillings the
quart bottle, we fixed the meeting for seven o’clock at
Barolini’s.</p>
<p>Considered as a social affair, Teddy Weeks’s keying-up
dinner was not a success. Almost from the start I think
we all found it trying. It was not so much the fact that
he was drinking deeply of Barolini’s eight-shilling champagne
while we, from lack of funds, were compelled to confine
ourselves to meaner beverages; what really marred
the pleasantness of the function was the extraordinary
effect the stuff had on Teddy. What was actually in the
champagne supplied to Barolini and purveyed by him to
the public, such as were reckless enough to drink it, at
eight shillings the bottle remains a secret between its maker
and his Maker; but three glasses of it were enough to
convert Teddy Weeks from a mild and rather oily young
man into a truculent swashbuckler.</p>
<p>He quarrelled with us all. With the soup he was tilting
at Victor Beamish’s theories of Art; the fish found him
ridiculing Bertram Fox’s views on the future of the motion-picture;
and by the time the leg of chicken with dandelion
salad arrived—or, as some held, string salad—opinions
varied on this point—the hell-brew had so wrought on him
that he had begun to lecture Ukridge on his mis-spent life
and was urging him in accents audible across the street to
go out and get a job and thus acquire sufficient self-respect
to enable him to look himself in the face in a mirror without
wincing. Not, added Teddy Weeks with what we all
thought uncalled-for offensiveness, that any amount of self-respect
was likely to do that. Having said which, he called
imperiously for another eight bobs’-worth.</p>
<p>We gazed at one another wanly. However excellent the
end towards which all this was tending, there was no denying
that it was hard to bear. But policy kept us silent.
We recognised that this was Teddy Weeks’s evening and that
he must be humoured. Victor Beamish said meekly that
Teddy had cleared up a lot of points which had been troubling
him for a long time. Bertram Fox agreed that there
was much in what Teddy had said about the future of the
close-up. And even Ukridge, though his haughty soul was
seared to its foundations by the latter’s personal remarks,
promised to take his homily to heart and act upon it at the
earliest possible moment.</p>
<p>“You’d better!” said Teddy Weeks, belligerently, biting
off the end of one of Barolini’s best cigars. “And there’s
another thing—don’t let me hear of your coming and sneaking
people’s socks again.”</p>
<p>“Very well, laddie,” said Ukridge, humbly.</p>
<p>“If there is one person in the world that I despise,” said
Teddy, bending a red-eyed gaze on the offender, “it’s a
snock-seeker—a seek-snocker—a—well, you know what I
mean.”</p>
<p>We hastened to assure him that we knew what he meant
and he relapsed into a lengthy stupor, from which he
emerged three-quarters of an hour later to announce that
he didn’t know what we intended to do, but that he was
going. We said that we were going too, and we paid the
bill and did so.</p>
<p>Teddy Weeks’s indignation on discovering us gathered
about him upon the pavement outside the restaurant was
intense, and he expressed it freely. Among other things,
he said—which was not true—that he had a reputation to
keep up in Soho.</p>
<p>“It’s all right, Teddy, old horse,” said Ukridge, soothingly.
“We just thought you would like to have all your
old pals round you when you did it.”</p>
<p>“Did it? Did what?”</p>
<p>“Why, had the accident.”</p>
<p>Teddy Weeks glared at him truculently. Then his mood
seemed to change abruptly, and he burst into a loud and
hearty laugh.</p>
<p>“Well, of all the silly ideas!” he cried, amusedly. “I’m
not going to have an accident. You don’t suppose I ever
seriously intended to have an accident, do you? It was
just my fun.” Then, with another sudden change of mood,
he seemed to become a victim to an acute unhappiness. He
stroked Ukridge’s arm affectionately, and a tear rolled
down his cheek. “Just my fun,” he repeated. “You
don’t mind my fun, do you?” he asked, pleadingly. “You
like my fun, don’t you? All my fun. Never meant to
have an accident at all. Just wanted dinner.” The gay
humour of it all overcame his sorrow once more. “Funniest
thing ever heard,” he said cordially. “Didn’t want accident,
wanted dinner. Dinner daxident, danner dixident,”
he added, driving home his point. “Well, good night
all,” he said, cheerily. And, stepping off the kerb on
to a banana-skin, was instantly knocked ten feet by a
passing lorry.</p>
<p>“Two ribs and an arm,” said the doctor five minutes
later, superintending the removal proceedings. “Gently
with that stretcher.”</p>
<p>It was two weeks before we were informed by the authorities
of Charing Cross Hospital that the patient was in a
condition to receive visitors. A whip-round secured the
price of a basket of fruit, and Ukridge and I were deputed
by the shareholders to deliver it with their compliments
and kind enquiries.</p>
<p>“Hallo!” we said in a hushed, bedside manner when
finally admitted to his presence.</p>
<p>“Sit down, gentlemen,” replied the invalid.</p>
<p>I must confess even in that first moment to having
experienced a slight feeling of surprise. It was not like
Teddy Weeks to call us gentlemen. Ukridge, however,
seemed to notice nothing amiss.</p>
<p>“Well, well, well,” he said, buoyantly. “And how are
you, laddie? We’ve brought you a few fragments of
fruit.”</p>
<p>“I am getting along capitally,” replied Teddy Weeks,
still in that odd precise way which had made his opening
words strike me as curious. “And I should like to say
that in my opinion England has reason to be proud of the
alertness and enterprise of her great journals. The excellence
of their reading-matter, the ingenuity of their various
competitions, and, above all, the go-ahead spirit which has
resulted in this accident insurance scheme are beyond praise.
Have you got that down?” he enquired.</p>
<p>Ukridge and I looked at each other. We had been told
that Teddy was practically normal again, but this sounded
like delirium.</p>
<p>“Have we got that down, old horse?” asked Ukridge,
gently.</p>
<p>Teddy Weeks seemed surprised.</p>
<p>“Aren’t you reporters?”</p>
<p>“How do you mean, reporters?”</p>
<p>“I thought you had come from one of these weekly
papers that have been paying me insurance money, to
interview me,” said Teddy Weeks.</p>
<p>Ukridge and I exchanged another glance. An uneasy
glance this time. I think that already a grim foreboding
had begun to cast its shadow over us.</p>
<p>“Surely you remember me, Teddy, old horse?” said
Ukridge, anxiously.</p>
<p>Teddy Weeks knit his brow, concentrating painfully.</p>
<p>“Why, of course,” he said at last. “You’re Ukridge,
aren’t you?”</p>
<p>“That’s right. Ukridge.”</p>
<p>“Of course. Ukridge.”</p>
<p>“Yes. Ukridge. Funny your forgetting me!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Teddy Weeks. “It’s the effect of the shock
I got when that thing bowled me over. I must have been
struck on the head, I suppose. It has had the effect of
rendering my memory rather uncertain. The doctors here
are very interested. They say it is a most unusual case.
I can remember some things perfectly, but in some ways my
memory is a complete blank.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but I say, old horse,” quavered Ukridge. “I suppose
you haven’t forgotten about that insurance, have you?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, I remember that.”</p>
<p>Ukridge breathed a relieved sigh.</p>
<p>“I was a subscriber to a number of weekly papers,” went
on Teddy Weeks. “They are paying me insurance money
now.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes, old horse,” cried Ukridge. “But what I
mean is you remember the Syndicate, don’t you?”</p>
<p>Teddy Weeks raised his eyebrows.</p>
<p>“Syndicate? What Syndicate?”</p>
<p>“Why, when we all got together and put up the money
to pay for the subscriptions to these papers and drew lots,
to choose which of us should go out and have an accident
and collect the money. And you drew it, don’t you
remember?”</p>
<p>Utter astonishment, and a shocked astonishment at that,
spread itself over Teddy Weeks’s countenance. The man
seemed outraged.</p>
<p>“I certainly remember nothing of the kind,” he said,
severely. “I cannot imagine myself for a moment consenting
to become a party to what from your own account
would appear to have been a criminal conspiracy to obtain
money under false pretences from a number of weekly
papers.”</p>
<p>“But, laddie——”</p>
<p>“However,” said Teddy Weeks, “if there is any truth in
this story, no doubt you have documentary evidence to
support it.”</p>
<p>Ukridge looked at me. I looked at Ukridge. There
was a long silence.</p>
<p>“Shift-ho, old horse?” said Ukridge, sadly. “No use
staying on here.”</p>
<p>“No,” I replied, with equal gloom. “May as well go.”</p>
<p>“Glad to have seen you,” said Teddy Weeks, “and
thanks for the fruit.”</p>
<p>The next time I saw the man he was coming out of a
manager’s office in the Haymarket. He had on a new
Homburg hat of a delicate pearl grey, spats to match, and
a new blue flannel suit, beautifully cut, with an invisible red
twill. He was looking jubilant, and; as I passed him, he
drew from his pocket a gold cigarette-case.</p>
<p>It was shortly after that, if you remember, that he
made a big hit as the juvenile lead in that piece at the
Apollo and started on his sensational career as a <i>matinee</i>
idol.</p>
<p>Inside the church the organ had swelled into the familiar
music of the Wedding March. A verger came out and
opened the doors. The five cooks ceased their reminiscences
of other and smarter weddings at which they had participated.
The camera-men unshipped their cameras. The
costermonger moved his barrow of vegetables a pace forward.
A dishevelled and unshaven man at my side uttered
a disapproving growl.</p>
<p>“Idle rich!” said the dishevelled man.</p>
<p>Out of the church came a beauteous being, leading
attached to his arm another being, somewhat less beauteous.</p>
<p>There was no denying the spectacular effect of Teddy
Weeks. He was handsomer than ever. His sleek hair, gorgeously
waved, shone in the sun, his eyes were large and
bright; his lissome frame, garbed in faultless morning-coat
and trousers, was that of an Apollo. But his bride gave
the impression that Teddy had married money. They
paused in the doorway, and the camera-men became active
and fussy.</p>
<p>“Have you got a shilling, laddie?” said Ukridge in a
low, level voice.</p>
<p>“Why do you want a shilling?”</p>
<p>“Old horse,” said Ukridge, tensely, “it is of the
utmost vital importance that I have a shilling here and
now.”</p>
<p>I passed it over. Ukridge turned to the dishevelled man,
and I perceived that he held in his hand a large rich tomato
of juicy and over-ripe appearance.</p>
<p>“Would you like to earn a bob?” Ukridge said.</p>
<p>“Would I!” replied the dishevelled man.</p>
<p>Ukridge sank his voice to a hoarse whisper.</p>
<p>The camera-men had finished their preparations. Teddy
Weeks, his head thrown back in that gallant way which has
endeared him to so many female hearts, was exhibiting
his celebrated teeth. The cooks, in undertones, were making
adverse comments on the appearance of the bride.</p>
<p>“Now, please,” said one of the camera-men.</p>
<p>Over the heads of the crowd, well and truly aimed,
whizzed a large juicy tomato. It burst like a shell full
between Teddy Weeks’s expressive eyes, obliterating them
in scarlet ruin. It spattered Teddy Weeks’s collar, it
dripped on Teddy Weeks’s morning-coat. And the dishevelled
man turned abruptly and raced off down the
street.</p>
<p>Ukridge grasped my arm. There was a look of deep
content in his eyes.</p>
<p>“Shift-ho?” said Ukridge.</p>
<p>Arm-in-arm, we strolled off in the pleasant June sunshine.</p>
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