<h2 id="CH6"> CHAPTER VI </h2>
<div class="chtitle"> UKRIDGE SEES HER THROUGH </div>
<p>The girl from the typewriting and stenographic
bureau had a quiet but speaking eye. At
first it had registered nothing but enthusiasm
and the desire to please. But now, rising from
that formidable notebook, it met mine with a look of
exasperated bewilderment. There was an expression of
strained sweetness on her face, as of a good woman unjustly
put upon. I could read what was in her mind as clearly as
if she had been impolite enough to shout it. She thought
me a fool. And as this made the thing unanimous, for I
had been feeling exactly the same myself for the last quarter
of an hour, I decided that the painful exhibition must now
terminate.</p>
<p>It was Ukridge who had let me in for the thing. He had
fired my imagination with tales of authors who were able
to turn out five thousand words a day by dictating their
stuff to a stenographer instead of writing it; and though
I felt at the time that he was merely trying to drum up
trade for the typewriting bureau in which his young friend
Dora Mason was now a partner, the lure of the idea had
gripped me. Like all writers, I had a sturdy distaste for
solid work, and this seemed to offer a pleasant way out,
turning literary composition into a jolly <i>tête-à-tête</i> chat.
It was only when those gleaming eyes looked eagerly into
mine and that twitching pencil poised itself to record the
lightest of my golden thoughts that I discovered what I
was up against. For fifteen minutes I had been experiencing
all the complex emotions of a nervous man who,
suddenly called upon to make a public speech, realises too
late that his brain has been withdrawn and replaced by a
cheap cauliflower substitute: and I was through.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry,” I said, “but I’m afraid it’s not much use
going on. I don’t seem able to manage it.”</p>
<p>Now that I had come frankly out into the open and
admitted my idiocy, the girl’s expression softened. She
closed her notebook forgivingly.</p>
<p>“Lots of people can’t,” she said. “It’s just a knack.”</p>
<p>“Everything seems to go out of my head.”</p>
<p>“I’ve often thought it must be very difficult to dictate.”</p>
<p>Two minds with but a single thought, in fact. Her
sweet reasonableness, combined with the relief that the
thing was over, induced in me a desire to babble. One has
the same feeling when the dentist lets one out of his chair.</p>
<p>“You’re from the Norfolk Street Agency, aren’t you?”
I said. A silly question, seeing that I had expressly rung
them up on the telephone and asked them to send somebody
round; but I was still feeling the effects of the ether.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“That’s in Norfolk Street, isn’t it? I mean,” I went on
hurriedly, “I wonder if you know a Miss Mason there?
Miss Dora Mason.”</p>
<p>She seemed surprised.</p>
<p>“My name is Dora Mason,” she said.</p>
<p>I was surprised, too. I had not supposed that partners
in typewriting businesses stooped to going out on these
errands. And I was conscious of a return of my former
embarrassment, feeling—quite unreasonably, for I had
only seen her once in my life, and then from a distance—that
I ought to have remembered her.</p>
<p>“We were short-handed at the office,” she explained,
“so I came along. But how do you know my name?”</p>
<p>“I am a great friend of Ukridge’s.”</p>
<p>“Why, of course! I was wondering why your name
was so familiar. I’ve heard him talk so much about you.”</p>
<p>And after that we really did settle down to the cosy
<i>tête-à-tête </i> of which I had had visions. She was a nice girl,
the only noticeable flaw in her character being an absurd
respect for Ukridge’s intelligence and abilities. I, who
had known that foe of the human race from boyhood up
and was still writhing beneath the memory of the night
when he had sneaked my dress clothes, could have corrected
her estimate of him, but it seemed unkind to shatter her
girlish dreams.</p>
<p>“He was wonderful about this type-writing business,”
she said. “It was such a splendid opportunity, and but
for Mr. Ukridge I should have had to let it slip. You see,
they were asking two hundred pounds for the partnership,
and I only had a hundred. And Mr. Ukridge insisted on
putting up the rest of the money. You see—I don’t know
if he told you—he insisted that he ought to do something
because he says he lost me the position I had with his aunt.
It wasn’t his fault at all, really, but he kept saying that if
I hadn’t gone to that dance with him I shouldn’t have got
back late and been dismissed. So——”</p>
<p>She was a rapid talker, and it was only now that I was
able to comment on the amazing statement which she had
made in the opening portion of her speech. So stunning
had been the effect of those few words on me that I had
hardly heard her subsequent remarks.</p>
<p>“Did you say that Ukridge insisted on finding the rest?”
I gasped.</p>
<p>“Yes. Wasn’t it nice of him?”</p>
<p>“He gave you a hundred pounds? Ukridge!”</p>
<p>“Guaranteed it,” said Miss Mason. “I arranged to pay
a hundred pounds down and the rest in sixty days.”</p>
<p>“But suppose the rest is not paid in sixty days?”</p>
<p>“Well, then I’m afraid I should lose my hundred. But
it will be, of course. Mr. Ukridge told me to have no
anxiety about that at all. Well, good-bye, Mr. Corcoran.
I must be going now. I’m sorry we didn’t get better
results with the dictating. I should think it must be very
difficult to do till you get used to it.”</p>
<p>Her cheerful smile as she went out struck me as one of
the most pathetic sights I had ever seen. Poor child,
bustling off so brightly when her whole future rested on
Ukridge’s ability to raise a hundred pounds! I presumed
that he was relying on one of those Utopian schemes of his
which were to bring him in thousands—“at a conservative
estimate, laddie!”—and not for the first time in a friendship
of years the reflection came to me that Ukridge ought to
be in some sort of a home. A capital fellow in many
respects, but not a man lightly to be allowed at large.</p>
<p>I was pursuing this train of thought when the banging
of the front door, followed by a pounding of footsteps on
the stairs and a confused noise without, announced his
arrival.</p>
<p>“I say, laddie,” said Ukridge, entering the room, as was
his habit, like a north-easterly gale, “was that Dora Mason
I saw going down the street? It looked like her back.
Has she been here?”</p>
<p>“Yes. I asked her agency to send someone to take
dictation, and she came.”</p>
<p>Ukridge reached out for the tobacco jar, filled his pipe,
replenished his pouch, sank comfortably on to the sofa,
adjusted the cushions, and bestowed an approving glance
upon me.</p>
<p>“Corky, my boy,” said Ukridge, “what I like about
you and the reason why I always maintain that you will be
a great man one of these days is that you have Vision.
You have the big, broad, flexible outlook. You’re not too
proud to take advice. I say to you, ‘Dictate your stuff,
it’ll pay you,’ and, damme, you go straight off and do it.
No arguing or shilly-shallying. You just go and do it.
It’s the spirit that wins to success. I like to see it. Dictating
will add thousands a year to your income. I say it
advisedly, laddie—thousands. And if you continue leading
a steady and sober life and save your pennies, you’ll be
amazed at the way your capital will pile up. Money at
five per cent. compound interest doubles itself every fourteen
years. By the time you’re forty——”</p>
<p>It seemed churlish to strike a jarring note after all these
compliments, but it had to be done.</p>
<p>“Never mind about what’s going to happen to me when
I’m forty,” I said. “What I want to know is what is all
this I hear about you guaranteeing Miss Mason a hundred
quid?”</p>
<p>“Ah, she told you? Yes,” said Ukridge, airily, “I
guaranteed it. Matter of conscience, old son. Man of
honour, no alternative. You see, there’s no getting away
from it, it was my fault that she was sacked by my aunt.
Got to see her through, laddie, got to see her through.”</p>
<p>I goggled at the man.</p>
<p>“Look here,” I said, “let’s get this thing straight. A
couple of days ago you touched me for five shillings and
said it would save your life.”</p>
<p>“It did, old man, it did.”</p>
<p>“And now you’re talking of scattering hundred quids
about the place as if you were Rothschild. Do you smoke
it or inject it with a hypodermic needle?”</p>
<p>There was pain in Ukridge’s eyes as he sat up and gazed
at me through the smoke.</p>
<p>“I don’t like this tone, laddie,” he said, reproachfully.
“Upon my Sam, it wounds me. It sounds as if you had
lost faith in me, in my vision.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I know you’ve got vision. And the big, broad,
flexible outlook. Also snap, ginger, enterprise, and ears
that stick out at right angles like the sails of a windmill.
But that doesn’t help me to understand where on earth
you expect to get a hundred quid.”</p>
<p>Ukridge smiled tolerantly.</p>
<p>“You don’t suppose I would have guaranteed the money
for poor little Dora unless I knew where to lay my hands
on it, do you? If you ask me, Have I got the stuff at
this precise moment? I candidly reply, No, I haven’t.
But it’s fluttering on the horizon, laddie, fluttering on the
horizon. I can hear the beating of its wings.”</p>
<p>“Is Battling Billson going to fight someone and make
your fortune again?”</p>
<p>Ukridge winced, and the look of pain flitted across his
face once more.</p>
<p>“Don’t mention that man’s name to me, old horse,” he
begged. “Every time I think of him everything seems to
go all black. No, the thing I have on hand now is a real
solid business proposition. Gilt-edged, you might call it.
I ran into a bloke the other day whom I used to know out
in Canada.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t know you had ever been in Canada,” I interrupted.</p>
<p>“Of course I’ve been in Canada. Go over there and ask
the first fellow you meet if I was ever in Canada. Canada!
I should say I had been in Canada. Why, when I left
Canada, I was seen off on the steamer by a couple of policemen.
Well, I ran into this bloke in Piccadilly. He was
wandering up and down and looking rather lost. Couldn’t
make out what the deuce he was doing over here, because,
when I knew him, he hadn’t a cent. Well, it seems that he
got fed up with Canada and went over to America to try
and make his fortune. And, by Jove, he did, first crack
out of the box. Bought a bit of land about the size of a
pocket-handkerchief in Texas or Oklahoma or somewhere,
and one morning, when he was hoeing the soil or planting
turnips or something, out buzzed a whacking great oil-well.
Apparently that sort of thing’s happening every
day out there. If I could get a bit of capital together,
I’m dashed if I wouldn’t go to Texas myself. Great open
spaces where men are men, laddie—suit me down to the
ground. Well, we got talking, and he said that he intended
to settle in England. Came from London as a kid, but
couldn’t stick it at any price now because they had altered
it so much. I told him the thing for him to do was to buy
a house in the country with a decent bit of shooting, and he
said, ‘Well, how do you buy a house in the country with a
decent bit of shooting?’ and I said, ‘Leave it entirely in
my hands, old horse. I’ll see you’re treated right.’ So
he told me to go ahead, and I went to Farmingdons, the
house-agent blokes in Cavendish Square. Had a chat
with the manager. Very decent old bird with moth-eaten
whiskers. I said I’d got a millionaire looking for a house
in the country. ‘Find him one, laddie,’ I said, ‘and we
split the commish.’ He said ‘Right-o,’ and any day now
I expect to hear that he’s dug up something suitable.
Well, you can see for yourself what that’s going to mean.
These house-agent fellows take it as a personal affront if a
client gets away from them with anything except a collar-stud
and the clothes he stands up in, and I’m in halves.
Reason it out, my boy, reason it out.”</p>
<p>“You’re sure this man really has money?”</p>
<p>“Crawling with it, laddie. Hasn’t found out yet there’s
anything smaller than a five-pound note in circulation.
He took me to lunch, and when he tipped the waiter the
man burst into tears and kissed him on both cheeks.”</p>
<p>I am bound to admit that I felt easier in my mind, for
it really did seem as though the fortunes of Miss Mason
rested on firm ground. I had never supposed that Ukridge
could be associated with so sound a scheme, and I said so.
In fact, I rather overdid my approval, for it encouraged
him to borrow another five shillings; and before he left
we were in treaty over a further deal which was to entail
my advancing him half a sovereign in one solid payment.
Business breeds business.</p>
<p>For the next ten days I saw nothing of Ukridge. As he
was in the habit of making these periodical disappearances,
I did not worry unduly as to the whereabouts of my wandering
boy, but I was conscious from time to time of a mild
wonder as to what had become of him. The mystery was
solved one night when I was walking through Pall Mall on
my way home after a late session with an actor acquaintance
who was going into vaudeville, and to whom I hoped,—mistakenly,
as it turned out—to sell a one-act play.</p>
<p>I say night, but it was nearly two in the morning. The
streets were black and deserted, silence was everywhere, and
all London slept except Ukridge and a friend of his whom
I came upon standing outside Hardy’s fishing tackle shop.
That is to say, Ukridge was standing outside the shop.
His friend was sitting on the pavement with his back
against a lamp-post.</p>
<p>As far as I could see in the uncertain light, he was a
man of middle age, rugged of aspect and grizzled about the
temples. I was able to inspect his temples because—doubtless
from the best motives—he was wearing his hat on
his left foot. He was correctly clad in dress clothes, but
his appearance was a little marred by a splash of mud
across his shirt-front and the fact that at some point earlier
in the evening he had either thrown away or been deprived
of his tie. He gazed fixedly at the hat with a poached-egg-like
stare. He was the only man I had ever seen who
was smoking two cigars at the same time.</p>
<p>Ukridge greeted me with the warmth of a beleaguered
garrison welcoming the relieving army.</p>
<p>“My dear old horse! Just the man I wanted!” he
cried, as if he had picked me out of a number of competing
applicants. “You can give me a hand with Hank, laddie.”</p>
<p>“Is this Hank!” I enquired, glancing at the recumbent
sportsman, who had now closed his eyes as if the spectacle
of the hat had begun to pall.</p>
<p>“Yes. Hank Philbrick. This is the bloke I was telling
you about, the fellow who wants the house.”</p>
<p>“He doesn’t seem to want any house. He looks quite
satisfied with the great open spaces.”</p>
<p>“Poor old Hank’s a bit under the weather,” explained
Ukridge, regarding his stricken friend with tolerant
sympathy. “It takes him this way. The fact is, old man,
it’s a mistake for these blokes to come into money. They
overdo things. The only thing Hank ever got to drink for
the first fifty years of his life was water, with buttermilk
as a treat on his birthday, and he’s trying to make up for
lost time. He’s only just discovered that there are such
things as liqueurs in the world, and he’s making them
rather a hobby. Says they’re such a pretty colour. It
wouldn’t be so bad if he stuck to one at a time, but he likes
making experiments. Mixes them, laddie. Orders the
whole lot and blends them in a tankard. Well, I mean to
say,” said Ukridge reasonably, “you can’t take more than
five or six tankards of mixed benedictine, chartreuse,
kummel, crème de menthe, and old brandy without feeling
the strain a bit. Especially if you stoke up on champagne
and burgundy.”</p>
<p>A strong shudder ran through me at the thought. I
gazed at the human cellar on the pavement with a feeling
bordering on awe.</p>
<p>“Does he really?”</p>
<p>“Every night for the last two weeks. I’ve been with
him most of the time. I’m the only pal he’s got in London,
and he likes to have me round.”</p>
<p>“What plans have you for his future? His immediate
future, I mean. Do we remove him somewhere or is he
going to spend the night out here under the quiet
stars?”</p>
<p>“I thought, if you would lend a hand, old man, we could
get him to the Carlton. He’s staying there.”</p>
<p>“He won’t be long, if he comes in in this state.”</p>
<p>“Bless you, my dear old man, they don’t mind. He
tipped the night-porter twenty quid yesterday and asked
me if I thought it was enough. Lend a hand, laddie. Let’s
go.”</p>
<p>I lent a hand, and we went.</p>
<p>The effect which that nocturnal encounter had upon me
was to cement the impression that in acting as agent for
Mr. Philbrick in the purchase of a house Ukridge was on to
a good thing. What little I had seen of Hank had convinced
me that he was not the man to be finicky about price. He
would pay whatever they asked him without hesitation.
Ukridge would undoubtedly make enough out of his share
of the commission to pay off Dora Mason’s hundred without
feeling it. Indeed, for the first time in his life he would
probably be in possession of that bit of capital of which he
was accustomed to speak so wistfully. I ceased, therefore,
to worry about Miss Mason’s future and concentrated
myself on my own troubles.</p>
<p>They would probably have seemed to anyone else minor
troubles, but nevertheless they were big enough to depress
me. Two days after my meeting with Ukridge and Mr.
Philbrick in Pall Mall I had received rather a disturbing
letter.</p>
<p>There was a Society paper for which at that time I did
occasional work and wished to do more; and the editor
of this paper had sent me a ticket for the forthcoming
dance of the Pen and Ink Club, with instructions to let him
have a column and a half of bright descriptive matter. It
was only after I had digested the pleasant reflection that
here was a bit of badly needed cash dropping on me out of
a clear sky that I realised why the words Pen and Ink
Club seemed to have a familiar ring. It was the club of
which Ukridge’s aunt Julia was the popular and energetic
president, and the thought of a second meeting with that
uncomfortable woman filled me with a deep gloom. I
had not forgotten—and probably would never forget—my
encounter with her in her drawing-room at Wimbledon.</p>
<p>I was not in a financial position, however, to refuse
editors their whims, so the thing had to be gone through;
but the prospect damped me, and I was still brooding on
it when a violent ring at the front-door bell broke in on
my meditations. It was followed by the booming of
Ukridge’s voice enquiring if I were in. A moment later he
had burst into the room. His eyes were wild, his pince-nez
at an angle of forty-five, and his collar separated from its
stud by a gap of several inches. His whole appearance
clearly indicated some blow of fate, and I was not surprised
when his first words revealed an aching heart.</p>
<p>“Hank Philbrick,” said Ukridge without preamble, “is a
son of Belial, a leper, and a worm.”</p>
<p>“What’s happened now?”</p>
<p>“He’s let me down, the weak-minded Tishbite! Doesn’t
want that house in the country after all. My gosh, if
Hank Philbrick is the sort of man Canada is producing
nowadays, Heaven help the British Empire.”</p>
<p>I shelved my petty troubles. They seemed insignificant
beside this majestic tragedy.</p>
<p>“What made him change his mind?” I asked.</p>
<p>“The wobbling, vacillating hell-hound! I always had
a feeling that there was something wrong with that man.
He had a nasty, shifty eye. You’ll bear me out, laddie,
in that? Haven’t I spoken to you a hundred times about
his shifty eye?”</p>
<p>“Certainly. Why did he change his mind?”</p>
<p>“Didn’t I always say he wasn’t to be trusted?”</p>
<p>“Repeatedly. What made him change his mind?”</p>
<p>Ukridge laughed with a sharp bitterness that nearly
cracked the window-pane. His collar leaped like a live
thing. Ukridge’s collar was always a sort of thermometer
that registered the warmth of his feelings. Sometimes,
when his temperature was normal, it would remain attached
to its stud for minutes at a time; but the slightest touch
of fever sent it jumping up, and the more he was moved
the higher it jumped.</p>
<p>“When I knew Hank out in Canada,” he said, “he had
the constitution of an ox. Ostriches took his correspondence
course in digestion. But directly he comes into a
bit of money——Laddie,” said Ukridge earnestly, “when
I’m a rich man, I want you to stand at my elbow and
watch me very carefully. The moment you see signs of
degeneration speak a warning word. Don’t let me coddle
myself. Don’t let me get fussy about my health. Where
was I? Oh yes. Directly this man comes into a bit of money
he gets the idea that he’s a sort of fragile, delicate flower.”</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t have thought so from what you were
telling me the other night.”</p>
<p>“What happened the other night was the cause of all
the trouble. Naturally he woke up with a bit of a head.”</p>
<p>“I can quite believe it.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but my gosh, what’s a head! In the old days
he would have gone and worked it off by taking a dose of
pain-killer and chopping down half-a-dozen trees. But
now what happens? Having all this money, he wouldn’t
take a simple remedy like that. No, sir! He went to
one of those Harley Street sharks who charge a couple of
guineas for saying ‘Well, how are we this morning?’ A
fatal move, laddie. Naturally, the shark was all over him.
Tapped him here and prodded him there, said he was
run down, and finally told him he ought to spend six
months in a dry, sunny climate. Recommended Egypt.
Egypt, I’ll trouble you, for a bloke who lived fifty years
thinking that it was a town in Illinois. Well, the long
and the short of it is that he’s gone off for six months,
doesn’t want a place in England, and I hope he gets bitten
by a crocodile. And the lease all drawn out and ready
to sign. Upon my Sam, it’s a little hard. Sometimes I
wonder whether it’s worth while going on struggling.”</p>
<p>A sombre silence fell upon us. Ukridge, sunk in gloomy
reverie, fumbled absently at his collar stud. I smoked
with a heavy heart.</p>
<p>“What will your friend Dora do now?” I said at length.</p>
<p>“That’s what’s worrying me,” said Ukridge, lugubriously.
“I’ve been trying to think of some other way of raising
that hundred, but at the moment I don’t mind confessing
I am baffled. I can see no daylight.”</p>
<p>Nor could I. His chance of raising a hundred pounds
by any means short of breaking into the Mint seemed slight
indeed.</p>
<p>“Odd the way things happen,” I said. I gave him the
editor’s letter. “Look at that.”</p>
<p>“What’s this?”</p>
<p>“He’s sending me to do an article on the Pen and Ink
Club dance. If only I had never been to see your aunt——”</p>
<p>“And made such a mess of it.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t make a mess of it. It just happened that——”</p>
<p>“All right, laddie, all right,” said Ukridge, tonelessly.
“Don’t let’s split straws. The fact remains, whether it’s
your fault or not, the thing was a complete frost. What
were you saying?”</p>
<p>“I was saying that, if only I had never been to your
aunt, I could have met her in a perfectly natural way at
this dance.”</p>
<p>“Done Young Disciple stuff,” said Ukridge, seizing on
the idea. “Rubbed in the fact that you could do her a
bit of good by boosting her in the paper.”</p>
<p>“And asked her to re-engage Miss Mason as her secretary.”</p>
<p>Ukridge fiddled with the letter.</p>
<p>“You don’t think even now——”</p>
<p>I was sorry for him and sorrier for Dora Mason, but on
this point I was firm.</p>
<p>“No, I don’t.”</p>
<p>“But consider, laddie,” urged Ukridge. “At this dance
she may well be in malleable mood. The lights, the music,
the laughter, the jollity.”</p>
<p>“No,” I said. “It can’t be done. I can’t back out of
going to the affair, because if I did I’d never get any more
work to do for this paper. But I’ll tell you one thing. I
mean to keep quite clear of your aunt. That’s final. I
dream of her in the night sometimes and wake up screaming.
And in any case it wouldn’t be any use my tackling her.
She wouldn’t listen to me. It’s too late. You weren’t
there that afternoon at Wimbledon, but you can take it
from me that I’m not one of her circle of friends.”</p>
<p>“That’s the way it always happens,” sighed Ukridge.
“Everything comes too late. Well, I’ll be popping off.
Lot of heavy thinking to do, laddie. Lot of heavy thinking.”</p>
<p>And he left without borrowing even a cigar, a sure sign
that his resilient spirit was crushed beyond recuperation.</p>
<p>The dance of the Pen and Ink Club was held, like so many
functions of its kind, at the Lotus Rooms, Knightsbridge,
that barrack-like building which seems to exist only for
these sad affairs. The Pen and Ink evidently went in for
quality in its membership rather than quantity; and the
band, when I arrived, was giving out the peculiarly tinny
sound which bands always produce in very large rooms
that are only one-sixth part full. The air was chilly and
desolate and a general melancholy seemed to prevail. The
few couples dancing on the broad acres of floor appeared
sombre and introspective, as if they were meditating on
the body upstairs and realizing that all flesh is as grass.
Around the room on those gilt chairs which are only seen
in subscription-dance halls weird beings were talking in
undertones, probably about the trend of Scandinavian
literature. In fact, the only bright spot on the whole
gloomy business was that it occurred before the era of
tortoiseshell-rimmed spectacles.</p>
<p>That curious grey hopelessness which always afflicts me
when I am confronted with literary people in the bulk was
not lightened by the reflection that at any moment I might
encounter Miss Julia Ukridge. I moved warily about the
room, keenly alert, like a cat that has wandered into a
strange alley and sees in every shadow the potential hurler
of a half-brick. I could envisage nothing but awkwardness
and embarrassment springing from such a meeting. The
lesson which I had drawn from my previous encounter
with her was that happiness for me lay in keeping as far
away from Miss Julia Ukridge as possible.</p>
<p>“Excuse me!”</p>
<p>My precautions had been in vain. She had sneaked up
on me from behind.</p>
<p>“Good evening,” I said.</p>
<p>It is never any good rehearsing these scenes in advance.
They always turn out so differently. I had been assuming,
when I slunk into this hall, that if I met this woman I
should feel the same shrinking sense of guilt and inferiority
which had proved so disintegrating at Wimbledon. I had
omitted to make allowances for the fact that that painful
episode had taken place on her own ground, and that
right from the start my conscience had been far from clear.
To-night the conditions were different.</p>
<p>“Are you a member of the Pen and Ink Club?” said
Ukridge’s aunt, frostily.</p>
<p>Her stony blue eyes were fixed on me with an expression
that was not exactly loathing, but rather a cold and critical
contempt. So might a fastidious cook look at a black-beetle
in her kitchen.</p>
<p>“No,” I replied, “I am not.”</p>
<p>I felt bold and hostile. This woman gave me a pain in the
neck, and I endeavoured to express as much in the language
of the eyes.</p>
<p>“Then will you please tell me what you are doing here?
This is a private dance.”</p>
<p>One has one’s moments. I felt much as I presume
Battling Billson must have felt in his recent fight with Alf
Todd, when he perceived his antagonist advancing upon
him wide-open, inviting the knock-out punch.</p>
<p>“The editor of <i>Society </i> sent me a ticket. He wanted an
article written about it.”</p>
<p>If I was feeling like Mr. Billson, Ukridge’s aunt must have
felt very like Mr. Todd. I could see that she was shaken.
In a flash I had changed from a black-beetle to a god-like
creature, able, if conciliated, to do a bit of that log-rolling
which is so dear to the heart of the female novelist. And
she had not conciliated me. Of all sad words of tongue
or pen, the saddest are these: It might have been. It is
too much to say that her jaw fell, but certainly the agony
of this black moment caused her lips to part in a sort of
twisted despair. But there was good stuff in this woman.
She rallied gamely.</p>
<p>“A Press ticket,” she murmured.</p>
<p>“A Press ticket,” I echoed.</p>
<p>“May I see it?”</p>
<p>“Certainly.”</p>
<p>“Thank you.”</p>
<p>“Not at all.”</p>
<p>She passed on.</p>
<p>I resumed my inspection of the dancers with a lighter
heart. In my present uplifted mood they did not appear
so bad as they had a few minutes back. Some of them,
quite a few of them, looked almost human. The floor was
fuller now, and whether owing to my imagination or not,
the atmosphere seemed to have taken on a certain cheeriness.
The old suggestion of a funeral still lingered, but now
it was possible to think of it as a less formal, rather jollier
funeral. I began to be glad that I had come.</p>
<p>“Excuse me!”</p>
<p>I had thought that I was finished with this sort of thing
for the evening, and I turned with a little impatience. It
was a refined tenor voice that had addressed me, and it was
a refined tenor-looking man whom I saw. He was young
and fattish, with a Jovian coiffure and pince-nez attached
to a black cord.</p>
<p>“Pardon me,” said this young man, “but are you a
member of the Pen and Ink Club?”</p>
<p>My momentary annoyance vanished, for it suddenly
occurred to me that, looked at in the proper light, it was
really extremely flattering, this staunch refusal on the part
of these people to entertain the belief that I could be one
of them. No doubt, I felt, they were taking up the position
of the proprietor of a certain night-club, who, when sued
for defamation of character by a young lady to whom he
had refused admittance on the ground that she was not a
fit person to associate with his members, explained to
the court that he had meant it as a compliment.</p>
<p>“No, thank Heaven!” I replied.</p>
<p>“Then what——”</p>
<p>“Press ticket,” I explained.</p>
<p>“Press ticket? What paper?”</p>
<p>“<i>Society .</i>”</p>
<p>There was nothing of the Julia Ukridge spirit in this
young man, no ingrained pride which kept him aloof and
outwardly indifferent. He beamed like the rising sun.
He grasped my arm and kneaded it. He gambolled about
me like a young lamb in the springtime.</p>
<p>“My dear fellow!” he exclaimed, exuberantly, and
clutched my arm more firmly, lest even now I might elude
him. “My dear fellow, I really must apologise. I would
not have questioned you, but there are some persons present
who were not invited. I met a man only a moment ago
who said that he had bought a ticket. Some absurd mistake.
There were no tickets for sale. I was about to
question him further, but he disappeared into the crowd
and I have not seen him since. This is a quite private
dance, open only to members of the club. Come with me,
my dear fellow, and I will give you a few particulars which
you may find of use for your article.”</p>
<p>He led me resolutely into a small room off the floor,
closed the door to prevent escape, and, on the principle on
which you rub a cat’s paws with butter to induce it to
settle down in a new home, began to fuss about with whisky
and cigarettes.</p>
<p>“Do, do sit down.”</p>
<p>I sat down.</p>
<p>“First, about this club. The Pen and Ink Club is the
only really exclusive organisation of its kind in London.
We pride ourselves on the fact. We are to the literary
world what Brooks’s and the Carlton are to the social.
Members are elected solely by invitation. Election, in
short, you understand, is in the nature of an accolade. We
have exactly one hundred members, and we include only
those writers who in our opinion possess vision.”</p>
<p>“And the big, broad, flexible outlook?”</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon?”</p>
<p>“Nothing.”</p>
<p>“The names of most of those here to-night must be very
familiar to you.”</p>
<p>“I know Miss Ukridge, the president,” I said.</p>
<p>A faint, almost imperceptible shadow passed over the
stout young man’s face. He removed his pince-nez and
polished them with a touch of disfavour. There was a
rather flat note in his voice.</p>
<p>“Ah, yes,” he said, “Julia Ukridge. A dear soul, but
between ourselves, strictly between ourselves, not a great
deal of help in an executive capacity.”</p>
<p>“No!”</p>
<p>“No. In confidence, I do all the work. I am the
club’s secretary. My name, by the way, is Charlton Prout.
You may know it?”</p>
<p>He eyed me wistfully, and I felt that something ought to
be done about him. He was much too sleek, and he had
no right to do his hair like that.</p>
<p>“Of course,” I said. “I have read all your
books.”</p>
<p>“Really?”</p>
<p>“‘A Shriek in the Night.’ ‘Who Killed Jasper Bossom?’—all
of them.”</p>
<p>He stiffened austerely.</p>
<p>“You must be confusing me with some other—ah—writer,”
he said. “My work is on somewhat different lines.
The reviewers usually describe the sort of thing I do as
Pastels in Prose. My best-liked book, I believe, is <i>Grey
Myrtles.</i> Dunstable’s brought it out last year. It was
exceedingly well received. And I do a good deal of critical
work for the better class of review.” He paused. “If
you think it would interest your readers,” he said, with
a deprecating wave of the hand, “I will send you a
photograph. Possibly your editor would like to use
it.”</p>
<p>“I bet he would.”</p>
<p>“A photograph somehow seems to—as it were—set off
an article of this kind.”</p>
<p>“That,” I replied, cordially, “is what it doesn’t do
nothing else but.”</p>
<p>“And you won’t forget <i>Grey Myrtles.</i> Well, if you have
finished your cigarette, we might be returning to the
ballroom. These people rather rely on me to keep things
going, you know.”</p>
<p>A burst of music greeted us as he opened the door, and
even in that first moment I had an odd feeling that it
sounded different. That tinny sound had gone from it.
And as we debouched from behind a potted palm and came
in sight of the floor, I realised why.</p>
<p>The floor was full. It was crammed, jammed, and overflowing.
Where couples had moved as single spies, they
were now in battalions. The place was alive with noise
and laughter. These people might, as my companion had
said, be relying on him to keep things going, but they
seemed to have been getting along uncommonly well in
his absence. I paused and surveyed the mob in astonishment.
I could not make the man’s figures balance.</p>
<p>“I thought you said the Pen and Ink Club had only a
hundred members.”</p>
<p>The secretary was fumbling for his glasses. He had an
almost Ukridge-like knack of dropping his pince-nez in
moments of emotion.</p>
<p>“It—it has,” he stammered.</p>
<p>“Well, reading from left to right, I make it nearer seven
hundred.”</p>
<p>“I cannot understand it.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps they have been having a new election and
letting in some writers without vision,” I suggested.</p>
<p>I was aware of Miss Ukridge bearing down upon us,
bristling.</p>
<p>“Mr. Prout!”</p>
<p>The talented young author of <i>Grey Myrtles </i> leaped convulsively.</p>
<p>“Yes, Miss Ukridge?”</p>
<p>“Who are all these people?”</p>
<p>“I—I don’t know,” said the talented young man.</p>
<p>“You don’t know! It’s your business to know. You
are the secretary of the club. I suggest that you find out
as quickly as possible who they are and what they imagine
they are doing here.”</p>
<p>The goaded secretary had something of the air of a man
leading a forlorn hope, and his ears had turned bright pink,
but he went at it bravely. A serene-looking man with a
light moustache and a made-up tie was passing, and he
sprang upon him like a stoutish leopard.</p>
<p>“Excuse me, sir.”</p>
<p>“Eh?”</p>
<p>“Will you kindly—would you mind—pardon me if I
ask——”</p>
<p>“What are you doing here?” demanded Miss Ukridge,
curtly, cutting in on his flounderings with a masterful
impatience. “How do you come to be at this dance?”</p>
<p>The man seemed surprised.</p>
<p>“Who, me?” he said. “I came with the rest of ’em.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean, the rest of them?”</p>
<p>“The members of the Warner’s Stores Social and Outing
Club.”</p>
<p>“But this is the dance of the Pen and Ink Club,” bleated
Mr. Prout.</p>
<p>“Some mistake,” said the other, confidently. “It’s a
bloomer of some kind. Here,” he added, beckoning to a
portly gentleman of middle age who was bustling by, “you’d
better have a talk with our hon. sec. He’ll know. Mr.
Biggs, this gentleman seems to think there’s been some
mistake about this dance.”</p>
<p>Mr. Biggs stopped, looked, and listened. Seen at close
range, he had a forceful, determined air. I liked his looks.</p>
<p>“May I introduce Mr. Charlton Prout?” I said.
“Author of <i>Grey Myrtles.</i> Mr. Prout,” I went on, as this
seemed to make little or no sensation, “is the secretary of
the Pen and Ink Club.”</p>
<p>“I’m the secretary of the Warner’s Stores Social and
Outing Club,” said Mr. Biggs.</p>
<p>The two secretaries eyed each other warily, like two dogs.</p>
<p>“But what are you doing here?” moaned Mr. Prout,
in a voice like the wind in the tree-tops. “This is a private
dance.”</p>
<p>“Nothing of the kind,” said Mr. Biggs, resolutely. “I
personally bought tickets for all my members.”</p>
<p>“But there were no tickets for sale. The dance was for
the exclusive——”</p>
<p>“It’s perfectly evident that you have come to the wrong
hall or chosen the wrong evening,” snapped Miss Ukridge,
abruptly superseding Mr. Prout in the supreme command.
I did not blame her for feeling a little impatient. The
secretary was handling the campaign very feebly.</p>
<p>The man behind the Warner’s Stores Social and Outing
Club cocked a polite but belligerent eye at this new enemy.
I liked his looks more than ever. This was a man who
would fight it out on these lines if it took all the summer.</p>
<p>“I have not the honour of this lady’s acquaintance,”
he said, smoothly, but with a gradually reddening eye.
The Biggses, that eye seemed to say, were loath to war upon
women, but if the women asked for it they could be men
of iron, ruthless. “Might I ask who this lady is?”</p>
<p>“This is our president.”</p>
<p>“Happy to meet you, ma’am.”</p>
<p>“Miss Ukridge,” added Mr. Prout, completing the
introduction.</p>
<p>The name appeared to strike a chord in Mr. Biggs. He
bent forward and a gleam of triumph came into his eyes.</p>
<p>“Ukridge, did you say?”</p>
<p>“Miss Julia Ukridge.”</p>
<p>“Then it’s all right,” said Mr. Biggs, briskly. “There’s
been no mistake. I bought our tickets from a gentleman
named Ukridge. I got seven hundred at five bob apiece,
reduction for taking a quantity and ten per cent. discount
for cash. If Mr. Ukridge acted contrary to instructions,
it’s too late to remedy the matter now. You should have
made it clear to him what you wanted him to do before he
went and did it.”</p>
<p>And with this extremely sound sentiment the honorary
secretary of the Warner’s Stores Social and Outing Club
turned on the heel of his shining dancing-pump and was
gone. And I, too, sauntered away. There seemed nothing
to keep me. As I went, I looked over my shoulder. The
author of <i>Grey Myrtles </i> appeared to be entering upon the
opening stages of what promised to be a painful <i>tête-à-tête.</i>
My heart bled for him. If ever a man was blameless Mr.
Prout was, but the president of the Pen and Ink Club
was not the woman to allow a trifle like that to stand in her
way.</p>
<p>“Oh, it just came to me, laddie,” said Stanley Featherstonehaugh
Ukridge modestly, interviewed later by our
representative. “You know me. One moment mind a
blank, then—<i>bing!</i>—some dashed colossal idea. It was
your showing me that ticket for the dance that set me
thinking. And I happened to meet a bloke in a pub who
worked in Warner’s Stores. Nice fellow, with a fair amount
of pimples. Told me their Social and Outing Club was
working up for its semi-annual beano. One thing led to
another, I got him to introduce me to the hon. sec., and we
came to terms. I liked the man, laddie. Great treat to
meet a bloke with a good, level business head. We settled
the details in no time. Well, I don’t mind telling you,
Corky my boy, that at last for the first time in many years
I begin to see my way clear. I’ve got a bit of capital now.
After sending poor little Dora her hundred, I shall have at
least fifty quid left over. Fifty quid! My dear old son,
you may take it from me that there’s no limit—absolutely
no limit—to what I can accomplish with fifty o’goblins in
my kick. From now on I see my way clear. My feet are
on solid ground. The world, laddie, is my oyster. Nothing
can stop me from making a colossal fortune. I’m not
exaggerating, old horse—a colossal fortune. Why, by a
year from now I calculate, at a conservative estimate——”</p>
<p>Our representative then withdrew.</p>
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