<h2 id="CH3"> CHAPTER III </h2>
<div class="chtitle"> THE DÉBUT OF BATTLING BILLSON </div>
<p>It becomes increasingly difficult, I have found, as
time goes by, to recall the exact circumstances in
which one first became acquainted with this man
or that; for as a general thing I lay no claim to
the possession of one of those hair-trigger memories which
come from subscribing to the correspondence courses
advertised in the magazines. And yet I can state without
doubt or hesitation that the individual afterwards known
as Battling Billson entered my life at half-past four on
the afternoon of Saturday, September the tenth, two
days after my twenty-seventh birthday. For there was
that about my first sight of him which has caused the
event to remain photographically lined on the tablets of
my mind when a yesterday has faded from its page. Not
only was our meeting dramatic and even startling, but
it had in it something of the quality of the last straw, the
final sling or arrow of outrageous Fortune. It seemed to
put the lid on the sadness of life.</p>
<p>Everything had been going steadily wrong with me
for more than a week. I had been away, paying a duty
visit to uncongenial relatives in the country, and it had
rained and rained and rained. There had been family
prayers before breakfast and bezique after dinner. On the
journey back to London my carriage had been full of
babies, the train had stopped everywhere, and I had had
nothing to eat but a bag of buns. And when finally I let
myself into my lodgings in Ebury Street and sought the
soothing haven of my sitting-room, the first thing I saw
on opening the door was this enormous red-headed man
lying on the sofa.</p>
<p>He made no move as I came in, for he was asleep; and
I can best convey the instantaneous impression I got of
his formidable physique by saying that I had no desire to
wake him. The sofa was a small one, and he overflowed
it in every direction. He had a broken nose, and his jaw
was the jaw of a Wild West motion-picture star registering
Determination. One hand was under his head; the
other, hanging down to the floor, looked like a strayed
ham congealed into stone. What he was doing in my
sitting-room I did not know; but, passionately as I wished
to know, I preferred not to seek first-hand information.
There was something about him that seemed to suggest
that he might be one of those men who are rather cross
when they first wake up. I crept out and stole softly
downstairs to make enquiries of Bowles, my landlord.</p>
<p>“Sir?” said Bowles, in his fruity ex-butler way,
popping up from the depths accompanied by a rich smell
of finnan haddie.</p>
<p>“There’s someone in my room,” I whispered.</p>
<p>“That would be Mr. Ukridge, sir.”</p>
<p>“It wouldn’t be anything of the kind,” I replied, with
asperity. I seldom had the courage to contradict Bowles,
but this statement was so wildly inaccurate that I could
not let it pass. “It’s a huge red-headed man.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Ukridge’s friend, sir. He joined Mr. Ukridge
here yesterday.”</p>
<p>“How do you mean, joined Mr. Ukridge here yesterday?”</p>
<p>“Mr. Ukridge came to occupy your rooms in your
absence, sir, on the night after your departure. I assumed
that he had your approval. He said, if I remember
correctly, that ‘it would be all right.’”</p>
<p>For some reason or other which I had never been able to
explain, Bowles’s attitude towards Ukridge from their
first meeting had been that of an indulgent father towards
a favourite son. He gave the impression now of congratulating
me on having such a friend to rally round
and sneak into my rooms when I went away.</p>
<p>“Would there be anything further, sir?” enquired
Bowles, with a wistful half-glance over his shoulder. He
seemed reluctant to tear himself away for long from the
finnan haddie.</p>
<p>“No,” I said. “Er—no. When do you expect Mr.
Ukridge back?”</p>
<p>“Mr. Ukridge informed me that he would return for
dinner, sir. Unless he has altered his plans, he is now at
a <i>matinée</i> performance at the Gaiety Theatre.”</p>
<p>The audience was just beginning to leave when I reached
the Gaiety. I waited in the Strand, and presently was
rewarded by the sight of a yellow mackintosh working its
way through the crowd.</p>
<p>“Hallo, laddie!” said Stanley Featherstonehaugh
Ukridge, genially. “When did you get back? I say, I
want you to remember this tune, so that you can remind
me of it to-morrow, when I’ll be sure to have forgotten it.
This is how it goes.” He poised himself flat-footedly in
the surging tide of pedestrians and, shutting his eyes and
raising his chin, began to yodel in a loud and dismal
tenor. “Tumty-tumty-tumty-tum, tum tum tum,” he
concluded. “And now, old horse, you may lead me across
the street to the Coal Hole for a short snifter. What
sort of a time have you had?”</p>
<p>“Never mind what sort of a time I’ve had. Who’s
the fellow you’ve dumped down in my rooms?</p>
<p>“Red-haired man?”</p>
<p>“Good Lord! Surely even you wouldn’t inflict more
than one on me?”</p>
<p>Ukridge looked at me a little pained.</p>
<p>“I don’t like this tone,” he said, leading me down the
steps of the Coal Hole. “Upon my Sam, your manner
wounds me, old horse. I little thought that you would
object to your best friend laying his head on your pillow.”</p>
<p>“I don’t mind your head. At least I do, but I suppose
I’ve got to put up with it. But when it comes to your
taking in lodgers——”</p>
<p>“Order two tawny ports, laddie,” said Ukridge, “and
I’ll explain all about that. I had an idea all along that
you would want to know. It’s like this,” he proceeded,
when the tawny ports had arrived. “That bloke’s going
to make my everlasting fortune.”</p>
<p>“Well, can’t he do it somewhere else except in my
sitting-room?”</p>
<p>“You know me, old horse,” said Ukridge, sipping
luxuriously. “Keen, alert, far-sighted. Brain never
still. Always getting ideas—<i>bing</i>—like a flash. The
other day I was in a pub down Chelsea way having a bit
of bread and cheese, and a fellow came in smothered with
jewels. Smothered, I give you my word. Rings on his
fingers and a tie-pin you could have lit your cigar at. I
made enquiries and found that he was Tod Bingham’s
manager.”</p>
<p>“Who’s Tod Bingham?”</p>
<p>“My dear old son, you must have heard of Tod Bingham.
The new middle-weight champion. Beat Alf
Palmer for the belt a couple of weeks ago. And this
bloke, as opulent-looking a bloke as ever I saw, was his
manager. I suppose he gets about fifty per cent. of
everything Tod makes, and you know the sort of purses
they give for big fights nowadays. And then there’s
music-hall tours and the movies and all that. Well, I
see no reason why, putting the thing at the lowest figures,
I shouldn’t scoop in thousands. I got the idea two seconds
after they told me who this fellow was. And what made
the thing seem almost as if it was meant to be was the
coincidence that I should have heard only that morning
that the <i>Hyacinth</i> was in.”</p>
<p>The man seemed to me to be rambling. In my reduced
and afflicted state his cryptic method of narrative irritated
me.</p>
<p>“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” I said.
“What’s the <i>Hyacinth</i>? In where?”</p>
<p>“Pull yourself together, old horse,” said Ukridge, with
the air of one endeavouring to be patient with a half-witted
child. “You remember the <i>Hyacinth</i>, the tramp steamer
I took that trip on a couple of years ago. Many’s the
time I’ve told you all about the <i>Hyacinth.</i> She docked in
the Port of London the night before I met this opulent
bloke, and I had been meaning to go down next day and
have a chat with the lads. The fellow you found in your
rooms is one of the trimmers. As decent a bird as ever
you met. Not much conversation, but a heart of gold.
And it came across me like a thunderbolt the moment
they told me who the jewelled cove was that, if I could
only induce this man Billson to take up scrapping seriously,
with me as his manager, my fortune was made. Billson
is the man who invented fighting.”</p>
<p>“He looks it.”</p>
<p>“Splendid chap—you’ll like him.”</p>
<p>“I bet I shall. I made up my mind to like him the
moment I saw him.”</p>
<p>“Never picks a quarrel, you understand—in fact, used
to need the deuce of a lot of provocation before he would
give of his best; but once he started—golly! I’ve seen
that man clean out a bar at Marseilles in a way that
fascinated you. A bar filled to overflowing with A.B.’s
and firemen, mind you, and all capable of felling oxen
with a blow. Six of them there were, and they kept
swatting Billson with all the vim and heartiness at their
disposal, but he just let them bounce off, and went on
with the business in hand. The man’s a champion,
laddie, nothing less. You couldn’t hurt him with a
hatchet, and every time he hits anyone all the undertakers
in the place jump up and make bids for the body. And
the amazing bit of luck is that he was looking for a job
ashore. It appears he’s fallen in love with one of the
barmaids at the Crown in Kennington. Not,” said
Ukridge, so that all misapprehension should be avoided,
“the one with the squint. The other one. Flossie.
The girl with yellow hair.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know the barmaids at the Crown in Kennington,”
I said.</p>
<p>“Nice girls,” said Ukridge, paternally. “So it was all
right, you see. Our interests were identical. Good old
Billson isn’t what you’d call a very intelligent chap, but
I managed to make him understand after an hour or so,
and we drew up the contract. I’m to get fifty per cent.
of everything in consideration of managing him, fixing
up fights, and looking after him generally.”</p>
<p>“And looking after him includes tucking him up on
my sofa and singing him to sleep?”</p>
<p>Again that pained look came into Ukridge’s face. He
gazed at me as if I had disappointed him.</p>
<p>“You keep harping on that, laddie, and it isn’t the
right spirit. Anyone would think that we had polluted
your damned room.”</p>
<p>“Well, you must admit that having this coming champion
of yours in the home is going to make things a bit
crowded.”</p>
<p>“Don’t worry about that, my dear old man,” said
Ukridge, reassuringly. “We move to the White Hart
at Barnes to-morrow, to start training. I’ve got Billson
an engagement in one of the preliminaries down at
Wonderland two weeks from to-night.”</p>
<p>“No; really?” I said, impressed by this enterprise.
“How did you manage it?”</p>
<p>“I just took him along and showed him to the management.
They jumped at him. You see, the old boy’s
appearance rather speaks for itself. Thank goodness, all
this happened just when I had a few quid tucked away.
By the greatest good luck I ran into George Tupper at
the very moment when he had had word that they were
going to make him an under-secretary or something—I
can’t remember the details, but it’s something they give
these Foreign Office blokes when they show a bit of class—and
Tuppy parted with a tenner without a murmur.
Seemed sort of dazed. I believe now I could have had
twenty if I’d had the presence of mind to ask for it.
Still,” said Ukridge, with a manly resignation which did
him credit, “it can’t be helped now, and ten will see me
through. The only thing that’s worrying me at the
moment is what to call Billson.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I should be careful what I called a man like
that.”</p>
<p>“I mean, what name is he to fight under?”</p>
<p>“Why not his own?”</p>
<p>“His parents, confound them,” said Ukridge, moodily,
“christened him Wilberforce. I ask you, can you see the
crowd at Wonderland having Wilberforce Billson introduced
to them?”</p>
<p>“Willie Billson,” I suggested. “Rather snappy.”</p>
<p>Ukridge considered the proposal seriously, with knit
brows, as becomes a manager.</p>
<p>“Too frivolous,” he decided at length. “Might be
all right for a bantam, but—no, I don’t like it. I was
thinking of something like Hurricane Hicks or Rock-Crusher
Riggs.”</p>
<p>“Don’t do it,” I urged, “or you’ll kill his career right
from the start. You never find a real champion with one
of these fancy names. Bob Fitzsimmons, Jack Johnson,
James J. Corbett, James J. Jeffries——”</p>
<p>“James J. Billson?”</p>
<p>“Rotten.”</p>
<p>“You don’t think,” said Ukridge, almost with timidity,
“that Wildcat Wix might do?”</p>
<p>“No fighter with an adjective in front of his name ever
boxed in anything except a three-round preliminary.”</p>
<p>“How about Battling Billson?”</p>
<p>I patted him on the shoulder.</p>
<p>“Go no farther,” I said. “The thing is settled.
Battling Billson is the name.”</p>
<p>“Laddie,” said Ukridge in a hushed voice, reaching
across the table and grasping my hand, “this is genius.
Sheer genius. Order another couple of tawny ports, old
man.”</p>
<p>I did so, and we drank deep to the Battler’s success.</p>
<p>My formal introduction to my godchild took place on
our return to Ebury Street, and—great as had been my
respect for the man before—it left me with a heightened
appreciation of the potentialities for triumph awaiting
him in his selected profession. He was awake by this
time and moving ponderously about the sitting-room, and
he looked even more impressive standing than he had
appeared when lying down. At our first meeting, moreover,
his eyes had been closed in sleep; they were now
open, green in colour, and of a peculiarly metallic glint
which caused them, as we shook hands, to seem to be
exploring my person for good spots to hit. What was
probably intended to be the smile that wins appeared to
me a grim and sardonic twist of the lip. Take him for
all in all, I had never met a man so calculated to convert
the most truculent swashbuckler to pacifism at a glance;
and when I recalled Ukridge’s story of the little unpleasantness
at Marseilles and realised that a mere handful
of half a dozen able-bodied seamen had had the temerity
to engage this fellow in personal conflict, it gave me a
thrill of patriotic pride. There must be good stuff in the
British Merchant Marine, I felt. Hearts of oak.</p>
<p>Dinner, which followed the introduction, revealed the
Battler rather as a capable trencherman than as a sparkling
conversationalist. His long reach enabled him to
grab salt, potatoes, pepper, and other necessaries without
the necessity of asking for them; and on other topics he
seemed to possess no views which he deemed worthy of
exploitation. A strong, silent man.</p>
<p>That there was a softer side to his character was, however,
made clear to me when, after smoking one of my
cigars and talking for awhile of this and that, Ukridge
went out on one of those mysterious errands of his which
were always summoning him at all hours and left my guest
and myself alone together. After a bare half-hour’s
silence, broken only by the soothing gurgle of his pipe,
the coming champion cocked an intimidating eye at me
and spoke.</p>
<p>“You ever been in love, mister?”</p>
<p>I was thrilled and flattered. Something in my appearance,
I told myself, some nebulous something that showed
me a man of sentiment and sympathy, had appealed to
this man, and he was about to pour out his heart in
intimate confession. I said yes, I had been in love many
times. I went on to speak of love as a noble emotion of
which no man need be ashamed. I spoke at length and
with fervour.</p>
<p>“R!” said Battling Billson.</p>
<p>Then, as if aware that he had been chattering in an
undignified manner to a comparative stranger, he withdrew
into the silence again and did not emerge till it was
time to go to bed, when he said “Good night, mister,”
and disappeared. It was disappointing. Significant,
perhaps, the conversation had been, but I had been rather
hoping for something which could have been built up into
a human document, entitled “The Soul of the Abysmal
Brute,” and sold to some editor for that real money which
was always so badly needed in the home.</p>
<p>Ukridge and his <i>protégé</i> left next morning for Barnes,
and, as that riverside resort was somewhat off my beat,
I saw no more of the Battler until the fateful night at
Wonderland. From time to time Ukridge would drop in
at my rooms to purloin cigars and socks, and on these
occasions he always spoke with the greatest confidence of
his man’s prospects. At first, it seemed, there had been
a little difficulty owing to the other’s rooted idea that
plug tobacco was an indispensable adjunct to training:
but towards the end of the first week the arguments of
wisdom had prevailed and he had consented to abandon
smoking until after his début. By this concession the
issue seemed to Ukridge to have been sealed as a certainty,
and he was in sunny mood as he borrowed the money from
me to pay our fares to the Underground station at which
the pilgrim alights who wishes to visit that Mecca of East-end
boxing, Wonderland.</p>
<p>The Battler had preceded us, and when we arrived was
in the dressing-room, stripped to a breath-taking semi-nudity.
I had not supposed that it was possible for a
man to be larger than was Mr. Billson when arrayed for
the street, but in trunks and boxing shoes he looked like
his big brother. Muscles resembling the hawsers of an
Atlantic liner coiled down his arms and rippled along his
massive shoulders. He seemed to dwarf altogether the
by no means flimsy athlete who passed out of the room
as we came in.</p>
<p>“That’s the bloke,” announced Mr. Billson, jerking his
red head after this person.</p>
<p>We understood him to imply that the other was his
opponent, and the spirit of confidence which had animated
us waxed considerably. Where six of the pick of the
Merchant Marine had failed, this stripling could scarcely
hope to succeed.</p>
<p>“I been talkin’ to ’im,” said Battling Billson.</p>
<p>I took this unwonted garrulity to be due to a slight
nervousness natural at such a moment.</p>
<p>“’E’s ’ad a lot of trouble, that bloke,” said the Battler.</p>
<p>The obvious reply was that he was now going to have
a lot more, but before either of us could make it a hoarse
voice announced that Squiffy and the Toff had completed
their three-round bout and that the stage now waited for
our nominee. We hurried to our seats. The necessity of
taking a look at our man in his dressing-room had deprived
us of the pleasure of witnessing the passage of arms
between Squiffy and the Toff, but I gathered that it must
have been lively and full of entertainment, for the audience
seemed in excellent humour. All those who were not too
busy eating jellied eels were babbling happily or whistling
between their fingers to friends in distant parts of
the hall. As Mr. Billson climbed into the ring in all the
glory of his red hair and jumping muscles, the babble
rose to a roar. It was plain that Wonderland had stamped
our Battler with its approval on sight.</p>
<p>The audiences which support Wonderland are not
disdainful of science. Neat footwork wins their commendation,
and a skilful ducking of the head is greeted
with knowing applause. But what they esteem most
highly is the punch. And one sight of Battling Billson
seemed to tell them that here was the Punch personified.
They sent the fighters off to a howl of ecstasy, and settled
back in their seats to enjoy the pure pleasure of seeing two
of their fellow-men hitting each other very hard and often.</p>
<p>The howl died away.</p>
<p>I looked at Ukridge with concern. Was this the hero
of Marseilles, the man who cleaned out bar-rooms and on
whom undertakers fawned? Diffident was the only
word to describe our Battler’s behaviour in that opening
round. He pawed lightly at his antagonist. He embraced
him like a brother. He shuffled about the ring, innocuous.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter with him?” I asked.</p>
<p>“He always starts slow,” said Ukridge, but his concern
was manifest. He fumbled nervously at the buttons of
his mackintosh. The referee was warning Battling Billson,
He was speaking to him like a disappointed father. In
the cheaper and baser parts of the house enraged citizens
were whistling “Comrades.” Everywhere a chill had
fallen on the house. That first fine fresh enthusiasm had
died away, and the sounding of the gong for the end of
the round was greeted with censorious cat-calls. As
Mr. Billson lurched back to his corner, frank unfriendliness
was displayed on all sides.</p>
<p>With the opening of the second round considerably
more spirit was introduced into the affair. The same
strange torpidity still held our Battler in its grip, but his
opponent was another man. During round one he had
seemed a little nervous and apprehensive. He had
behaved as if he considered it prudent not to stir Mr.
Billson. But now this distaste for direct action had
left him. There was jauntiness in his demeanour as he
moved to the centre of the ring; and, having reached it,
he uncoiled a long left and smote Mr. Billson forcefully
on the nose. Twice he smote him, and twice Mr. Billson
blinked like one who has had bad news from home. The
man who had had a lot of trouble leaned sideways and
brought his right fist squarely against the Battler’s ear.</p>
<p>All was forgotten and forgiven. A moment before the
audience had been solidly anti-Billson. Now they were
as unanimously pro. For these blows, while they
appeared to have affected him not at all physically,
seemed to have awakened Mr. Billson’s better feelings
as if somebody had turned on a tap. They had aroused
in Mr. Billson’s soul that zest for combat which had been
so sadly to seek in round one. For an instant after the
receipt of that buffet on the ear the Battler stood motionless
on his flat feet, apparently in deep thought. Then,
with the air of one who has suddenly remembered an
important appointment, he plunged forward. Like an
animated windmill he cast himself upon the bloke of
troubles. He knocked him here, he bounced him there.
He committed mayhem upon his person. He did everything
to him that a man can do who is hampered with
boxing-gloves, until presently the troubled one was
leaning heavily against the ropes, his head hanging
dazedly, his whole attitude that of a man who would just
as soon let the matter drop. It only remained for the
Battler to drive home the final punch, and a hundred
enthusiasts, rising to their feet, were pointing out to him
desirable locations for it.</p>
<p>But once more that strange diffidence had descended
upon our representative. While every other man in the
building seemed to know the correct procedure and was
sketching it out in nervous English, Mr. Billson appeared
the victim of doubt. He looked uncertainly at his opponent
and enquiringly at the referee.</p>
<p>The referee, obviously a man of blunted sensibilities,
was unresponsive. Do It Now was plainly his slogan.
He was a business man, and he wanted his patrons to get
good value for their money. He was urging Mr. Billson
to make a thorough job of it. And finally Mr. Billson
approached his man and drew back his right arm. Having
done this, he looked over his shoulder once more at the
referee.</p>
<p>It was a fatal blunder. The man who had had a lot
of trouble may have been in poor shape, but, like most of
his profession, he retained, despite his recent misadventures,
a reserve store of energy. Even as Mr. Billson turned his
head, he reached down to the floor with his gloved right
hand, then, with a final effort, brought it up in a majestic
sweep against the angle of the other’s jaw. And then,
as the fickle audience, with swift change of sympathy,
cheered him on, he buried his left in Mr. Billson’s stomach
on the exact spot where the well-dressed man wears the
third button of his waistcoat.</p>
<p>Of all human experiences this of being smitten in this
precise locality is the least agreeable. Battling Billson
drooped like a stricken flower, settled slowly down, and
spread himself out. He lay peacefully on his back with
outstretched arms like a man floating in smooth water.
His day’s work was done.</p>
<p>A wailing cry rose above the din of excited patrons of
sport endeavouring to explain to their neighbours how
it had all happened. It was the voice of Ukridge mourning
over his dead.</p>
<p>At half-past eleven that night, as I was preparing for
bed, a drooping figure entered my room. I mixed a
silent, sympathetic Scotch and soda, and for awhile no
word was spoken.</p>
<p>“How is the poor fellow?” I asked at length.</p>
<p>“He’s all right,” said Ukridge, listlessly. “I left him
eating fish and chips at a coffee-stall.”</p>
<p>“Bad luck his getting pipped on the post like that.”</p>
<p>“Bad luck!” boomed Ukridge, throwing off his
lethargy with a vigour that spoke of mental anguish.
“What do you mean, bad luck? It was just dam’ bone-headedness.
Upon my Sam, it’s a little hard. I invest
vast sums in this man, I support him in luxury for two
weeks, asking nothing of him in return except to sail in
and knock somebody’s head off, which he could have done
in two minutes if he had liked, and he lets me down purely
and simply because the other fellow told him that he had
been up all night looking after his wife who had burned
her hand at the jam factory. Inferanal sentimentalism!”</p>
<p>“Does him credit,” I argued.</p>
<p>“Bah!”</p>
<p>“Kind hearts,” I urged, “are more than coronets.”</p>
<p>“Who the devil wants a pugilist to have a kind heart?
What’s the use of this man Billson being able to knock
out an elephant if he’s afflicted with this damned maudlin
mushiness? Who ever heard of a mushy pugilist? It’s
the wrong spirit. It doesn’t make for success.”</p>
<p>“It’s a handicap, of course,” I admitted.</p>
<p>“What guarantee have I,” demanded Ukridge, “that
if I go to enormous trouble and expense getting him
another match, he won’t turn aside and brush away a
silent tear in the first round because he’s heard that the
blighter’s wife has got an ingrowing toenail?”</p>
<p>“You could match him only against bachelors.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and the first bachelor he met would draw him
into a corner and tell him his aunt was down with
whooping-cough, and the chump would heave a sigh
and stick his chin out to be walloped. A fellow’s got no
business to have red hair if he isn’t going to live up to it.
And yet,” said Ukridge, wistfully, “I’ve seen that man—it
was in a dance-hall at Naples—I’ve seen him take on
at least eleven Italians simultaneously. But then, one
of them had stuck a knife about three inches into his
leg. He seems to need something like that to give him
ambition.”</p>
<p>“I don’t see how you are going to arrange to have him
knifed just before each fight.”</p>
<p>“No,” said Ukridge, mournfully.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do about his future? Have
you any plans?”</p>
<p>“Nothing definite. My aunt was looking for a companion
to attend to her correspondence and take care of
the canary last time I saw her. I might try to get the
job for him.”</p>
<p>And with a horrid, mirthless laugh Stanley Featherstonehaugh
Ukridge borrowed five shillings and passed
out into the night.</p>
<p>I did not see Ukridge for the next few days, but I had
news of him from our mutual friend George Tupper, whom
I met prancing in uplifted mood down Whitehall.</p>
<p>“I say,” said George Tupper without preamble, and
with a sort of dazed fervour, “they’ve given me an under-secretaryship.”</p>
<p>I pressed his hand. I would have slapped him on the
back, but one does not slap the backs of eminent Foreign
Office officials in Whitehall in broad daylight, even if one
has been at school with them.</p>
<p>“Congratulations,” I said. “There is no one whom I
would more gladly see under-secretarying. I heard
rumours of this from Ukridge.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, I remember I told him it might be coming
off. Good old Ukridge! I met him just now and told
him the news, and he was delighted.”</p>
<p>“How much did he touch you for?”</p>
<p>“Eh? Oh, only five pounds. Till Saturday. He
expects to have a lot of money by then.”</p>
<p>“Did you ever know the time when Ukridge didn’t
expect to have a lot of money?”</p>
<p>“I want you and Ukridge to come and have a bit of
dinner with me to celebrate. How would Wednesday
suit you?”</p>
<p>“Splendidly.”</p>
<p>“Seven-thirty at the Regent Grill, then. Will you tell
Ukridge?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know where he’s got to. I haven’t seen him
for nearly a week. Did he tell you where he was?”</p>
<p>“Out at some place at Barnes. What was the name
of it?”</p>
<p>“The White Hart?”</p>
<p>“That’s it.”</p>
<p>“Tell me,” I said, “how did he seem? Cheerful?”</p>
<p>“Very. Why?”</p>
<p>“The last time I saw him he was thinking of giving
up the struggle. He had had reverses.”</p>
<p>I proceeded to the White Hart immediately after lunch.
The fact that Ukridge was still at that hostelry and had
regained his usual sunny outlook on life seemed to point
to the fact that the clouds enveloping the future of Mr.
Billson had cleared away, and that the latter’s hat was
still in the ring. That this was so was made clear to me
directly I arrived. Enquiring for my old friend, I was
directed to an upper room, from which, as I approached,
there came a peculiar thudding noise. It was caused, as
I perceived on opening the door, by Mr. Billson. Clad in
flannel trousers and a sweater, he was earnestly pounding
a large leather object suspended from a wooden platform.
His manager, seated on a soap-box in a corner, regarded
him the while with affectionate proprietorship.</p>
<p>“Hallo, old horse!” said Ukridge, rising as I entered.
“Glad to see you.”</p>
<p>The din of Mr. Billson’s bag-punching, from which my
arrival had not caused him to desist, was such as to render
conversation difficult. We moved to the quieter retreat
of the bar downstairs, where I informed Ukridge of the
under-secretary’s invitation.</p>
<p>“I’ll be there,” said Ukridge. “There’s one thing
about good old Billson, you can trust him not to break
training if you take your eye off him. And, of course, he
realises that this is a big thing. It’ll be the making of
him.”</p>
<p>“Your aunt is considering engaging him, then?”</p>
<p>“My aunt? What on earth are you talking about?
Collect yourself, laddie.”</p>
<p>“When you left me you were going to try to get him
the job of looking after your aunt’s canary.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I was feeling rather sore then. That’s all over.
I had an earnest talk with the poor zimp, and he means
business from now on. And so he ought to, dash it, with
a magnificent opportunity like this.”</p>
<p>“Like what?”</p>
<p>“We’re on to a big thing now, laddie, the dickens of a
big thing.”</p>
<p>“I hope you’ve made sure the other man’s a bachelor.
Who is he?”</p>
<p>“Tod Bingham.”</p>
<p>“Tod Bingham?” I groped in my memory. “You
don’t mean the middle-weight champion?”</p>
<p>“That’s the fellow.”</p>
<p>“You don’t expect me to believe that you’ve got a
match on with a champion already?”</p>
<p>“It isn’t exactly a match. It’s like this. Tod Bingham
is going round the East-end halls offering two hundred
quid to anyone who’ll stay four rounds with him. Advertisement
stuff. Good old Billson is going to unleash
himself at the Shoreditch Empire next Saturday.”</p>
<p>“Do you think he’ll be able to stay four rounds?”</p>
<p>“Stay four rounds!” cried Ukridge. “Why, he could
stay four rounds with a fellow armed with a Gatling-gun
and a couple of pickaxes. That money’s as good as in
our pockets, laddie. And once we’re through with this
job, there isn’t a boxing-place in England that won’t
jump at us. I don’t mind telling you in confidence, old
horse, that in a year from now I expect to be pulling in
hundreds a week. Clean up a bit here first, you know, and
then pop over to America and make an enormous fortune.
Damme, I shan’t know how to spend the money!”</p>
<p>“Why not buy some socks? I’m running a bit short
of them.”</p>
<p>“Now, laddie, laddie,” said Ukridge, reprovingly,
“need we strike a jarring note? Is this the moment to
fling your beastly socks in an old friend’s face? A
broader-minded spirit is what I would like to see.”</p>
<p>I was ten minutes late in arriving at the Regent Grill
on the Wednesday of George Tupper’s invitation, and the
spectacle of George in person standing bare-headed at
the Piccadilly entrance filled me with guilty remorse.
George was the best fellow in the world, but the atmosphere
of the Foreign Office had increased the tendency
he had always had from boyhood to a sort of precise
fussiness, and it upset him if his affairs did not run exactly
on schedule. The thought that my unpunctuality should
have marred this great evening sent me hurrying towards
him full of apologies.</p>
<p>“Oh, there you are,” said George Tupper. “I say,
it’s too bad——”</p>
<p>“I’m awfully sorry. My watch——”</p>
<p>“Ukridge!” cried George Tupper, and I perceived that
it was not I who had caused his concern.</p>
<p>“Isn’t he coming?” I asked, amazed. The idea of
Ukridge evading a free meal was one of those that seem to
make the solid foundations of the world rock.</p>
<p>“He’s come. And he’s brought a girl with him!”</p>
<p>“A <i>girl!</i>”</p>
<p>“In pink, with yellow hair,” wailed George Tupper.
“What am I to do?”</p>
<p>I pondered the point.</p>
<p>“It’s a weird thing for even Ukridge to have done,”
I said, “but I suppose you’ll have to give her dinner.”</p>
<p>“But the place is full of people I know, and this girl’s
so—so spectacular.”</p>
<p>I felt for him deeply, but I could see no way out of it.</p>
<p>“You don’t think I could say I had been taken ill?”</p>
<p>“It would hurt Ukridge’s feelings.”</p>
<p>“I should enjoy hurting Ukridge’s feelings, curse him!”
said George Tupper, fervently.</p>
<p>“And it would be an awful slam for the girl, whoever
she is.”</p>
<p>George Tupper sighed. His was a chivalrous nature. He
drew himself up as if bracing himself for a dreadful ordeal.</p>
<p>“Oh, well, I suppose there’s nothing to do,” he said.
“Come along. I left them drinking cocktails in the
lounge.”</p>
<p>George had not erred in describing Ukridge’s addition
to the festivities as spectacular. Flamboyant would have
been a suitable word. As she preceded us down the long
dining-room, her arm linked in George Tupper’s—she
seemed to have taken a liking to George—I had ample
opportunity for studying her, from her patent-leather
shoes to the mass of golden hair beneath her picture-hat.
She had a loud, clear voice, and she was telling George
Tupper the rather intimate details of an internal complaint
which had recently troubled an aunt of hers. If
George had been the family physician, she could not have
been franker; and I could see a dull glow spreading over
his shapely ears.</p>
<p>Perhaps Ukridge saw it, too, for he seemed to experience
a slight twinge of conscience.</p>
<p>“I have an idea, laddie,” he whispered, “that old
Tuppy is a trifle peeved at my bringing Flossie along.
If you get a chance, you might just murmur to him that
it was military necessity.”</p>
<p>“Who is she?” I asked.</p>
<p>“I told you about her. Flossie, the barmaid at the
Crown in Kennington. Billson’s <i>fiancée.</i>”</p>
<p>I looked at him in amazement.</p>
<p>“Do you mean to tell me that you’re courting death
by flirting with Battling Billson’s girl?”</p>
<p>“My dear old man, nothing like that,” said Ukridge,
shocked. “The whole thing is, I’ve got a particular
favour to ask of her—rather a rummy request—and it
was no good springing it on her in cold blood. There
had to be a certain amount of champagne in advance,
and my funds won’t run to champagne. I’m taking her
on to the Alhambra after dinner. I’ll look you up to-night
and tell you all about it.”</p>
<p>We then proceeded to dine. It was not one of the
pleasantest meals of my experience. The future Mrs.
Billson prattled agreeably throughout, and Ukridge
assisted her in keeping the conversation alive; but the
shattered demeanour of George Tupper would have taken
the sparkle out of any banquet. From time to time he
pulled himself together and endeavoured to play the host,
but for the most part he maintained a pale and brooding
silence; and it was a relief when Ukridge and his companion
rose to leave.</p>
<p>“Well!——” began George Tupper in a strangled
voice, as they moved away down the aisle.</p>
<p>I lit a cigar and sat back dutifully to listen.</p>
<p>Ukridge arrived in my rooms at midnight, his eyes
gleaming through their pince-nez with a strange light.
His manner was exuberant.</p>
<p>“It’s all right,” he said.</p>
<p>“I’m glad you think so.”</p>
<p>“Did you explain to Tuppy?”</p>
<p>“I didn’t get a chance. He was talking too hard.”</p>
<p>“About me?”</p>
<p>“Yes. He said everything I’ve always felt about you,
only far, far better than I could ever have put it.”</p>
<p>Ukridge’s face clouded for a moment, but cheerfulness
returned.</p>
<p>“Oh, well, it can’t be helped. He’ll simmer down in a
day or two. It had to be done, laddie. Life and death
matter. And it’s all right. Read this.”</p>
<p>I took the letter he handed me. It was written in a
scrawly hand.</p>
<p>“What’s this?”</p>
<p>“Read it, laddie. I think it will meet the case.”
I read.</p>
<p>“‘<i>Wilberforce.</i>’”</p>
<p>“Who on earth’s Wilberforce?”</p>
<p>“I told you that was Billson’s name.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes.”</p>
<p>I returned to the letter.</p>
<div class="opening">“Wilberforce,—</div>
<p class="p1">“I take my pen in hand to tell you that I can
never be yours. You will no doubt be surprised to hear
that I love another and a better man, so that it can never
be. He loves me, and he is a better man than you.</p>
<p>“Hoping this finds you in the pink as it leaves me at
present,</p>
<div class="closure"> “Yours faithfully, </div>
<div class="signature"> “Florence Burns.” </div>
<p>“I told her to keep it snappy,” said Ukridge.</p>
<p>“Well, she’s certainly done it,” I replied, handing back
the letter. “I’m sorry. From the little I saw of her,
I thought her a nice girl—for Billson. Do you happen
to know the other man’s address? Because it would be a
kindly act to send him a post card advising him to leave
England for a year or two.”</p>
<p>“The Shoreditch Empire will find him this week.”</p>
<p>“What!”</p>
<p>“The other man is Tod Bingham.”</p>
<p>“Tod Bingham!” The drama of the situation moved
me. “Do you mean to say that Tod Bingham is in love
with Battling Billson’s girl?”</p>
<p>“No. He’s never seen her!”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>Ukridge sat down creakingly on the sofa. He slapped
my knee with sudden and uncomfortable violence.</p>
<p>“Laddie,” said Ukridge, “I will tell you all. Yesterday
afternoon I found old Billson reading a copy of the
<i>Daily Sportsman.</i> He isn’t much of a reader as a rule,
so I was rather interested to know what had gripped him.
And do you know what it was, old horse?”</p>
<p>“I do not.”</p>
<p>“It was an article about Tod Bingham. One of those
damned sentimental blurbs they print about pugilists
nowadays, saying what a good chap he was in private life
and how he always sent a telegram to his old mother after
each fight and gave her half the purse. Damme, there
ought to be a censorship of the Press. These blighters
don’t mind <i>what</i> they print. I don’t suppose Tod Bingham
has <i>got</i> an old mother, and if he has I’ll bet he doesn’t
give her a bob. There were tears in that chump Billson’s
eyes as he showed me the article. Salt tears, laddie!
‘Must be a nice feller!’ he said. Well, I ask you! I
mean to say, it’s a bit thick when the man you’ve been
pouring out money for and watching over like a baby sister
starts getting sorry for a champion three days before he’s
due to fight him. A champion, mark you! It was bad
enough his getting mushy about that fellow at Wonderland,
but when it came to being soft-hearted over Tod Bingham
something had to be done. Well, you know me. Brain
like a buzz-saw. I saw the only way of counteracting
this pernicious stuff was to get him so mad with Tod
Bingham that he would forget all about his old mother,
so I suddenly thought: Why not get Flossie to pretend
that Bingham had cut him out with her? Well, it’s not
the sort of thing you can ask a girl to do without preparing
the ground a bit, so I brought her along to Tuppy’s
dinner. It was a master-stroke, laddie. There’s nothing
softens the delicately-nurtured like a good dinner, and
there’s no denying that old Tuppy did us well. She
agreed the moment I put the thing to her, and sat down
and wrote that letter without a blink. I think she thinks
it’s all a jolly practical joke. She’s a light-hearted girl.”</p>
<p>“Must be.”</p>
<p>“It’ll give poor old Billson a bit of a jar for the time
being, I suppose, but it’ll make him spread himself on
Saturday night, and he’ll be perfectly happy on Sunday
morning when she tells him she didn’t mean it and he
realises that he’s got a hundred quid of Tod Bingham’s
in his trousers pocket.”</p>
<p>“I thought you said it was two hundred quid that
Bingham was offering.”</p>
<p>“I get a hundred,” said Ukridge, dreamily.</p>
<p>“The only flaw is, the letter doesn’t give the other man’s
name. How is Billson to know it’s Tod Bingham?”</p>
<p>“Why, damme, laddie, do use your intelligence.
Billson isn’t going to sit and yawn when he gets that
letter. He’ll buzz straight down to Kennington and ask
Flossie.”</p>
<p>“And then she will give the whole thing away.”</p>
<p>“No, she won’t. I slipped her a couple of quid to
promise she wouldn’t. And that reminds me, old man,
it has left me a bit short, so if you could possibly
manage——”</p>
<p>“Good night,” I said.</p>
<p>“But, laddie——”</p>
<p>“And God bless you,” I added, firmly.</p>
<p>The Shoreditch Empire is a roomy house, but it was
crowded to the doors when I reached it on the Saturday
night. In normal circumstances I suppose there would
always have been a large audience on a Saturday, and this
evening the lure of Tod Bingham’s personal appearance
had drawn more than capacity. In return for my shilling
I was accorded the privilege of standing against the wall
at the back, a position from which I could not see a great
deal of the performance.</p>
<p>From the occasional flashes which I got of the stage
between the heads of my neighbours, however, and from
the generally restless and impatient attitude of the
audience I gathered that I was not missing much. The
programme of the Shoreditch Empire that week was
essentially a one-man affair. The patrons had the air
of suffering the preliminary acts as unavoidable obstacles
that stand between them and the head-liner. It was Tod
Bingham whom they had come to see, and they were not
cordial to the unfortunate serio-comics, tramp cyclists,
jugglers, acrobats, and ballad singers who intruded themselves
during the earlier part of the evening. The cheer
that arose as the curtain fell on a dramatic sketch came
from the heart, for the next number on the programme
was that of the star.</p>
<p>A stout man in evening dress with a red handkerchief
worn ambassadorially athwart his shirt-front stepped out
from the wings.</p>
<p>“Ladies and gentlemen!”</p>
<p>“’Ush!” cried the audience.</p>
<p>“Ladies and gentlemen!”</p>
<p>A Voice: “Good ole Tod!” (“Cheese it!”)</p>
<p>“Ladies and gentlemen,” said the ambassador for the
third time. He scanned the house apprehensively.
“Deeply regret have unfortunate disappointment to
announce. Tod Bingham unfortunately unable to appear
before you to-night.”</p>
<p>A howl like the howl of wolves balked of their prey or
of an amphitheatre full of Roman citizens on receipt of
the news that the supply of lions had run out greeted these
words. We stared at each other with a wild surmise. Could
this thing be, or was it not too thick for human belief?</p>
<p>“Wot’s the matter with ’im?” demanded the gallery,
hoarsely.</p>
<p>“Yus, wot’s the matter with ’im?” echoed we of the
better element on the lower floor.</p>
<p>The ambassador sidled uneasily towards the prompt
entrance. He seemed aware that he was not a popular
favourite.</p>
<p>“’E ’as ’ad an unfortunate accident,” he declared,
nervousness beginning to sweep away his aitches wholesale.
“On ’is way ’ere to this ’all ’e was unfortunately run into
by a truck, sustaining bruises and contusions which render
’im unfortunately unable to appear before you to-night.
I beg to announce that ’is place will be taken by Professor
Devine, who will render ’is marvellous imitations of
various birds and familiar animals. Ladies and gentlemen,”
concluded the ambassador, stepping nimbly off the
stage, “I thank you one and all.”</p>
<p>The curtain rose and a dapper individual with a waxed
moustache skipped on.</p>
<p>“Ladies and gentlemen, my first imitation will be of
that well-known songster, the common thrust—better
known to some of you per’aps as the throstle. And in
connection with my performance I wish to state that I
’ave nothing whatsoever in my mouth. The effects which
I produce——”</p>
<p>I withdrew, and two-thirds of the audience started to
do the same. From behind us, dying away as the doors
closed, came the plaintive note of the common thrush
feebly competing with that other and sterner bird which
haunts those places of entertainment where audiences are
critical and swift to take offence.</p>
<p>Out in the street a knot of Shoreditch’s younger set
were hanging on the lips of an excited orator in a battered
hat and trousers which had been made for a larger man.
Some stirring tale which he was telling held them spell-bound.
Words came raggedly through the noise of the
traffic.</p>
<p>“——like this. Then ’e ’its ’im another like that.
Then they start—on the side of the jor——”</p>
<p>“Pass along, there,” interrupted an official voice.
“Come on, there, pass along.”</p>
<p>The crowd thinned and resolved itself into its elements.
I found myself moving down the street in company with
the wearer of the battered hat. Though we had not
been formally introduced, he seemed to consider me a
suitable recipient for his tale. He enrolled me at once
as a nucleus for a fresh audience.</p>
<p>“’E comes up, this bloke does, just as Tod is goin’ in
at the stage-door——”</p>
<p>“Tod?” I queried.</p>
<p>“Tod Bingham. ’E comes up just as ’e’s goin’ in at
the stage-door, and ’e says ‘’Ere!’ and Tod says ‘Yus?’
and this bloke ’e says ‘Put ’em up!’ and Tod says ‘Put
wot up?’ and this bloke says ‘Yer ’ands,’ and Tod says
‘Wot, me?’—sort of surprised. An’ the next minute
they’re fightin’ all over the shop.”</p>
<p>“But surely Tod Bingham was run over by a truck?”</p>
<p>The man in the battered hat surveyed me with the
mingled scorn and resentment which the devout bestow
on those of heretical views.</p>
<p>“Truck! ’E wasn’t run over by no truck. Wot mikes
yer fink ’e was run over by a truck? Wot ’ud ’e be doin’
bein’ run over by a truck? ’E ’ad it put across ’im by
this red-’eaded bloke, same as I’m tellin’ yer.”</p>
<p>A great light shone upon me.</p>
<p>“Red-headed?” I cried.</p>
<p>“Yus.”</p>
<p>“A big man?”</p>
<p>“Yus.”</p>
<p>“And he put it across Tod Bingham?”</p>
<p>“Put it across ’im proper. ’Ad to go ’ome in a keb,
Tod did. Funny a bloke that could fight like that bloke
could fight ’adn’t the sense to go and do it on the stige
and get some money for it. That’s wot I think.”</p>
<p>Across the street an arc-lamp shed its cold rays. And
into its glare there strode a man draped in a yellow mackintosh.
The light gleamed on his pince-nez and lent a
gruesome pallor to his set face. It was Ukridge retreating
from Moscow.</p>
<p>“Others,” I said, “are thinking the same.”</p>
<p>And I hurried across the road to administer what feeble
consolation I might. There are moments when a fellow
needs a friend.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />