<h2 id="CH9"> CHAPTER IX </h2>
<div class="chtitle"> THE EXIT OF BATTLING BILLSON </div>
<p>The Theatre Royal, Llunindnno, is in the middle
of the principal thoroughfare of that repellent
town, and immediately opposite its grubby
main entrance there is a lamp-post. Under
this lamp-post, as I approached, a man was standing. He
was a large man, and his air was that of one who has recently
passed through some trying experience. There was dust
on his person, and he had lost his hat. At the sound of my
footsteps he turned, and the rays of the lamp revealed the
familiar features of my old friend Stanley Featherstonehaugh
Ukridge.</p>
<p>“Great Scot!” I ejaculated. “What are you doing
here?”</p>
<p>There was no possibility of hallucination. It was the
man himself in the flesh. And what Ukridge, a free agent,
could be doing in Llunindnno was more than I could
imagine. Situated, as its name implies, in Wales, it is a dark,
dingy, dishevelled spot, inhabited by tough and sinister
men with suspicious eyes and three-day beards; and to me,
after a mere forty minutes’ sojourn in the place, it was incredible
that anyone should be there except on compulsion.</p>
<p>Ukridge gaped at me incredulously.</p>
<p>“Corky, old horse!” he said, “this is, upon my Sam,
without exception the most amazing event in the world’s
history. The last bloke I expected to see.”</p>
<p>“Same here. Is anything the matter?” I asked, eyeing
his bedraggled appearance.</p>
<p>“Matter? I should say something was the matter!”
snorted Ukridge, astonishment giving way to righteous
indignation. “They chucked me out!”</p>
<p>“Chucked you out? Who? Where from?”</p>
<p>“This infernal theatre, laddie. After taking my good
money, dash it! At least, I got it on my face, but that has
nothing to do with the principle of the thing. Corky, my
boy, don’t you ever go about this world seeking for justice,
because there’s no such thing under the broad vault of
heaven. I had just gone out for a breather after the first
act, and when I came back I found some fiend in human
shape had pinched my seat. And just because I tried to
lift the fellow out by the ears, a dozen hired assassins
swooped down and shot me out. Me, I’ll trouble you!
The injured party! Upon my Sam,” he said, heatedly,
with a longing look at the closed door, “I’ve a dashed good
mind to——”</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t,” I said, soothingly. “After all, what
does it matter? It’s just one of those things that are
bound to happen from time to time. The man of affairs
passes them off with a light laugh.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but——”</p>
<p>“Come and have a drink.”</p>
<p>The suggestion made him waver. The light of battle
died down in his eyes. He stood for a moment in thought.</p>
<p>“You wouldn’t bung a brick through the window?”
he queried, doubtfully.</p>
<p>“No, no!”</p>
<p>“Perhaps you’re right.”</p>
<p>He linked his arm in mine and we crossed the road to
where the lights of a public-house shone like heartening
beacons. The crisis was over.</p>
<p>“Corky,” said Ukridge, warily laying down his mug of
beer on the counter a few moments later, lest emotion
should cause him to spill any of its precious contents, “I
can’t get over, I simply cannot get over the astounding
fact of your being in this blighted town.”</p>
<p>I explained my position. My presence in Llunindnno
was due to the fact that the paper which occasionally made
use of my services as a special writer had sent me to compose
a fuller and more scholarly report than its local correspondent
seemed capable of concocting of the activities of
one Evan Jones, the latest of those revivalists who periodically
convulse the emotions of the Welsh mining population.
His last and biggest meeting was to take place next morning
at eleven o’clock.</p>
<p>“But what are you doing here?” I asked.</p>
<p>“What am <i>I </i> doing here?” said Ukridge. “Who, me?
Why, where else would you expect me to be? Haven’t
you heard?”</p>
<p>“Heard what?”</p>
<p>“Haven’t you seen the posters?”</p>
<p>“What posters? I only arrived an hour ago.”</p>
<p>“My dear old horse! Then naturally you aren’t abreast
of local affairs.” He drained his mug, breathed contentedly,
and led me out into the street. “Look!”</p>
<p>He was pointing at a poster, boldly lettered in red and
black, which decorated the side-wall of the Bon Ton
Millinery Emporium. The street-lighting system of Llunindnno
is defective, but I was able to read what it said:—</p>
<div class="poster"> ODDFELLOWS’ HALL </div>
<div class="poster2"> Special Ten-Round Contest. </div>
<div class="poster"> LLOYD THOMAS </div>
<div class="poster2"> (Llunindnno) </div>
<div class="poster2"> <i>vs. </i> </div>
<div class="poster"> BATTLING BILLSON </div>
<div class="poster2"> (Bermondsey). </div>
<p>“Comes off to-morrow night,” said Ukridge. “And I
don’t mind telling you, laddie, that I expect to make a
colossal fortune.”</p>
<p>“Are you still managing the Battler?” I said, surprised
at this dogged perseverance. “I should have thought
that after your last two experiences you would have had
about enough of it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, he means business this time! I’ve been talking to
him like a father.”</p>
<p>“How much does he get?”</p>
<p>“Twenty quid.”</p>
<p>“Twenty quid? Well, where does the colossal fortune
come in? Your share will only be a tenner.”</p>
<p>“No, my boy. You haven’t got on to my devilish
shrewdness. I’m not in on the purse at all this time. I’m
the management.”</p>
<p>“The management?”</p>
<p>“Well, part of it. You remember Isaac O’Brien, the
bookie I was partner with till that chump Looney Coote
smashed the business? Izzy Previn is his real name.
We’ve gone shares in this thing. Izzy came down a week
ago, hired the hall, and looked after the advertising and
so on; and I arrived with good old Billson this afternoon.
We’re giving him twenty quid, and the other fellow’s getting
another twenty; and all the rest of the cash Izzy and I
split on a fifty-fifty basis. Affluence, laddie! That’s what
it means. Affluence beyond the dreams of a Monte Cristo.
Owing to this Jones fellow the place is crowded, and every
sportsman for miles around will be there to-morrow at
five bob a head, cheaper seats two-and-six, and standing-room
one shilling. Add lemonade and fried fish privileges,
and you have a proposition almost without parallel in the
annals of commerce. I couldn’t be more on velvet if they
gave me a sack and a shovel and let me loose in the Mint.”</p>
<p>I congratulated him in suitable terms.</p>
<p>“How is the Battler?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Trained to an ounce. Come and see him to-morrow
morning.”</p>
<p>“I can’t come in the morning. I’ve got to go to this
Jones meeting.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes. Well, make it early in the afternoon, then.
Don’t come later than three, because he will be resting.
We’re at Number Seven, Caerleon Street. Ask for the Cap
and Feathers public-house, and turn sharp to the left.”</p>
<p>I was in a curiously uplifted mood on the following afternoon
as I set out to pay my respects to Mr. Billson. This
was the first time I had had occasion to attend one of these
revival meetings, and the effect it had had on me was to
make me feel as if I had been imbibing large quantities of
champagne to the accompaniment of a very loud orchestra.
Even before the revivalist rose to speak, the proceedings
had had an effervescent quality singularly unsettling to the
sober mind, for the vast gathering had begun to sing hymns
directly they took their seats; and while the opinion I
had formed of the inhabitants of Llunindnno was not high,
there was no denying their vocal powers. There is something
about a Welsh voice when raised in song that no
other voice seems to possess—a creepy, heart-searching
quality that gets right into a man’s inner consciousness and
stirs it up with a pole. And on top of this had come Evan
Jones’s address.</p>
<p>It did not take me long to understand why this man had
gone through the country-side like a flame. He had
magnetism, intense earnestness, and the voice of a prophet
crying in the wilderness. His fiery eyes seemed to single
out each individual in the hall, and every time he paused
sighings and wailings went up like the smoke of a furnace.
And then, after speaking for what I discovered with amazement
on consulting my watch was considerably over an
hour, he stopped. And I blinked like an aroused somnambulist,
shook myself to make sure I was still there, and
came away. And now, as I walked in search of the Cap
and Feathers, I was, as I say, oddly exhilarated: and I
was strolling along in a sort of trance when a sudden uproar
jerked me from my thoughts. I looked about me, and saw
the sign of the Cap and Feathers suspended over a building
across the street.</p>
<p>It was a dubious-looking hostelry in a dubious neighbourhood:
and the sounds proceeding from its interior
were not reassuring to a peace-loving pedestrian. There
was a good deal of shouting going on and much smashing
of glass; and, as I stood there, the door flew open and a
familiar figure emerged rather hastily. A moment later
there appeared in the doorway a woman.</p>
<p>She was a small woman, but she carried the largest and
most intimidating mop I had ever seen. It dripped dirty
water as she brandished it; and the man, glancing apprehensively
over his shoulder, proceeded rapidly on his way.</p>
<p>“Hallo, Mr. Billson!” I said, as he shot by me.</p>
<p>It was not, perhaps, the best-chosen moment for endeavouring
to engage him in light conversation. He showed no
disposition whatever to linger. He vanished round the
corner, and the woman, with a few winged words, gave
her mop a victorious flourish and re-entered the public-house.
I walked on, and a little later a huge figure stepped
cautiously out of an alleyway and fell into step at my side.</p>
<p>“Didn’t recognise you, mister,” said Mr. Billson, apologetically.</p>
<p>“You seemed in rather a hurry,” I agreed.</p>
<p>“’R!” said Mr. Billson, and a thoughtful silence descended
upon him for a space.</p>
<p>“Who,” I asked, tactlessly, perhaps, “was your lady
friend?”</p>
<p>Mr. Billson looked a trifle sheepish. Unnecessarily, in
my opinion. Even heroes may legitimately quail before a
mop wielded by an angry woman.</p>
<p>“She come out of a back room,” he said, with embarrassment.
“Started makin’ a fuss when she saw what I’d
done. So I come away. You can’t dot a woman,” argued
Mr. Billson, chivalrously.</p>
<p>“Certainly not,” I agreed. “But what was the
trouble?”</p>
<p>“I been doin’ good,” said Mr. Billson, virtuously.</p>
<p>“Doing good?”</p>
<p>“Spillin’ their beers.”</p>
<p>“Whose beers?”</p>
<p>“All of their beers. I went in and there was a lot of
sinful fellers drinkin’ beers. So I spilled ’em. All of ’em.
Walked round and spilled all of them beers, one after the
other. Not ’arf surprised them pore sinners wasn’t,” said
Mr. Billson, with what sounded to me not unlike a worldly
chuckle.</p>
<p>“I can readily imagine it.”</p>
<p>“Huh?”</p>
<p>“I say I bet they were.”</p>
<p>“’R!” said Mr. Billson. He frowned. “Beer,” he
proceeded, with cold austerity, “ain’t right. Sinful, that’s
what beer is. It stingeth like a serpent and biteth like a
ruddy adder.”</p>
<p>My mouth watered a little. Beer like that was what I
had been scouring the country for for years. I thought it
imprudent, however, to say so. For some reason which I
could not fathom, my companion, once as fond of his half-pint
as the next man, seemed to have conceived a puritanical
hostility to the beverage. I decided to change the
subject.</p>
<p>“I’m looking forward to seeing you fight to-night,” I
said.</p>
<p>He eyed me woodenly.</p>
<p>“Me?”</p>
<p>“Yes. At the Oddfellows’ Hall, you know.”</p>
<p>He shook his head.</p>
<p>“I ain’t fighting at no Oddfellows’ Hall,” he replied.
“Not at no Oddfellows’ Hall nor nowhere else I’m not
fighting, not to-night nor no night.” He pondered stolidly,
and then, as if coming to the conclusion that his last
sentence could be improved by the addition of a negative,
added “No!”</p>
<p>And having said this, he suddenly stopped and stiffened
like a pointing dog; and, looking up to see what interesting
object by the wayside had attracted his notice, I perceived
that we were standing beneath another public-house sign,
that of the Blue Boar. Its windows were hospitably open,
and through them came a musical clinking of glasses.
Mr. Billson licked his lips with a quiet relish.</p>
<p>“’Scuse me, mister,” he said, and left me abruptly.</p>
<p>My one thought now was to reach Ukridge as quickly as
possible, in order to acquaint him with these sinister
developments. For I was startled. More, I was alarmed
and uneasy. In one of the star performers at a special
ten-round contest, scheduled to take place that evening,
Mr. Billson’s attitude seemed to me peculiar, not to say
disquieting. So, even though a sudden crash and uproar
from the interior of the Blue Boar called invitingly to me
to linger, I hurried on, and neither stopped, looked, nor
listened until I stood on the steps of Number Seven Caerleon
Street. And eventually, after my prolonged ringing and
knocking had finally induced a female of advanced years
to come up and open the door, I found Ukridge lying on a
horse-hair sofa in the far corner of the sitting-room.</p>
<p>I unloaded my grave news. It was wasting time to try
to break it gently.</p>
<p>“I’ve just seen Billson,” I said, “and he seems to be
in rather a strange mood. In fact, I’m sorry to say, old
man, he rather gave me the impression——”</p>
<p>“That he wasn’t going to fight to-night?” said Ukridge,
with a strange calm. “Quite correct. He isn’t. He’s
just been in here to tell me so. What I like about the man
is his consideration for all concerned. <i>He </i> doesn’t want to
upset anybody’s arrangements.”</p>
<p>“But what’s the trouble? Is he kicking about only
getting twenty pounds?”</p>
<p>“No. He thinks fighting’s sinful!”</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“Nothing more nor less, Corky, my boy. Like chumps,
we took our eyes off him for half a second this morning, and
he sneaked off to that revival meeting. Went out shortly
after a light and wholesome breakfast for what he called
a bit of a mooch round, and came in half an hour ago a
changed man. Full of loving-kindness, curse him. Nasty
shifty gleam in his eye. Told us he thought fighting
sinful and it was all off, and then buzzed out to spread the
Word.”</p>
<p>I was shaken to the core. Wilberforce Billson, the
peerless but temperamental Battler, had never been an
ideal pugilist to manage, but hitherto he had drawn the
line at anything like this. Other little problems which he
might have brought up for his manager to solve might have
been overcome by patience and tact; but not this one.
The psychology of Mr. Billson was as an open book to me.
He possessed one of those single-track minds, capable of
accommodating but one idea at a time, and he had the
tenacity of the simple soul. Argument would leave him
unshaken. On that bone-like head Reason would beat in
vain. And, these things being so, I was at a loss to account
for Ukridge’s extraordinary calm. His fortitude in the
hour of ruin amazed me.</p>
<p>His next remark, however, offered an explanation.</p>
<p>“We’re putting on a substitute,” he said.</p>
<p>I was relieved.</p>
<p>“Oh, you’ve got a substitute? That’s a bit of luck.
Where did you find him?”</p>
<p>“As a matter of fact, laddie, I’ve decided to go on
myself.”</p>
<p>“What! You!”</p>
<p>“Only way out, my boy. No other solution.”</p>
<p>I stared at the man. Years of the closest acquaintance
with S. F. Ukridge had rendered me almost surprise-proof
at anything he might do, but this was too much.</p>
<p>“Do you mean to tell me that you seriously intend to
go out there to-night and appear in the ring?” I cried.</p>
<p>“Perfectly straightforward business-like proposition,
old man,” said Ukridge, stoutly. “I’m in excellent shape.
I sparred with Billson every day while he was training.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but——”</p>
<p>“The fact is, laddie, you don’t realise my potentialities.
Recently, it’s true, I’ve allowed myself to become slack and
what you might call enervated, but, damme, when I was on
that trip in that tramp-steamer, scarcely a week used to go
by without my having a good earnest scrap with somebody.
Nothing barred,” said Ukridge, musing lovingly on the care-free
past, “except biting and bottles.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but, hang it—a professional pugilist!”</p>
<p>“Well, to be absolutely accurate, laddie,” said Ukridge,
suddenly dropping the heroic manner and becoming confidential,
“the thing’s going to be fixed. Izzy Previn has
seen the bloke Thomas’s manager, and has arranged a
gentleman’s agreement. The manager, a Class A blood-sucker,
insists on us giving his man another twenty pounds
after the fight, but that can’t be helped. In return, the
Thomas bloke consents to play light for three rounds, at
the end of which period, laddie, he will tap me on the side
of the head and I shall go down and out, a popular loser.
What’s more, I’m allowed to hit him hard—once—just so
long as it isn’t on the nose. So you see, a little tact, a little
diplomacy, and the whole thing fixed up as satisfactorily as
anyone could wish.”</p>
<p>“But suppose the audience demands its money back
when they find they’re going to see a substitute?”</p>
<p>“My dear old horse,” protested Ukridge, “surely you
don’t imagine that a man with a business head like mine
overlooked that? Naturally, I’m going to fight as Battling
Billson. Nobody knows him in this town. I’m a good big
chap, just as much a heavy-weight as he is. No, laddie,
pick how you will you can’t pick a flaw in this.”</p>
<p>“Why mayn’t you hit him on the nose?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know. People have these strange whims. And
now, Corky, my boy, I think you had better leave me. I
ought to relax.”</p>
<p>The Oddfellows’ Hall was certainly filling up nicely when
I arrived that night. Indeed, it seemed as though Llunindnno’s
devotees of sport would cram it to the roof. I
took my place in the line before the pay-window, and,
having completed the business end of the transaction,
went in and enquired my way to the dressing-rooms. And
presently, after wandering through divers passages, I came
upon Ukridge, clad for the ring and swathed in his familiar
yellow mackintosh.</p>
<p>“You’re going to have a wonderful house,” I said.
“The populace is rolling up in shoals.”</p>
<p>He received the information with a strange lack of
enthusiasm. I looked at him in concern, and was disquieted
by his forlorn appearance. That face, which had
beamed so triumphantly at our last meeting, was pale and
set. Those eyes, which normally shone with the flame of an
unquenchable optimism, seemed dull and careworn. And
even as I looked at him he seemed to rouse himself from a
stupor and, reaching out for his shirt, which hung on a
near-by peg, proceeded to pull it over his head.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter?” I asked.</p>
<p>His head popped out of the shirt, and he eyed me wanly.</p>
<p>“I’m off,” he announced, briefly.</p>
<p>“Off? How do you mean, off?” I tried to soothe
what I took to be an eleventh-hour attack of stage-fright.
“You’ll be all right.”</p>
<p>Ukridge laughed hollowly.</p>
<p>“Once the gong goes, you’ll forget the crowd.”</p>
<p>“It isn’t the crowd,” said Ukridge, in a pale voice,
climbing into his trousers. “Corky, old man,” he went
on, earnestly, “if ever you feel your angry passions rising
to the point where you want to swat a stranger in a public
place, restrain yourself. There’s nothing in it. This bloke
Thomas was in here a moment ago with his manager to settle
the final details. He’s the fellow I had the trouble with at
the theatre last night!”</p>
<p>“The man you pulled out of the seat by his ears?” I
gasped.</p>
<p>Ukridge nodded.</p>
<p>“Recognised me at once, confound him, and it was all
his manager, a thoroughly decent cove whom I liked, could
do to prevent him getting at me there and then.”</p>
<p>“Good Lord!” I said, aghast at this grim development,
yet thinking how thoroughly characteristic it was of
Ukridge, when he had a whole townful of people to quarrel
with, to pick the one professional pugilist.</p>
<p>At this moment, when Ukridge was lacing his left shoe,
the door opened and a man came in.</p>
<p>The new-comer was stout, dark, and beady-eyed, and
from his manner of easy comradeship and the fact that
when he spoke he supplemented words with the language
of the waving palm, I deduced that this must be Mr. Izzy
Previn, recently trading as Isaac O’Brien. He was
cheeriness itself.</p>
<p>“Vell,” he said, with ill-timed exuberance, “how’th
the boy?”</p>
<p>The boy cast a sour look at him.</p>
<p>“The house,” proceeded Mr. Previn, with an almost
lyrical enthusiasm, “is abtholutely full. Crammed,
jammed, and packed. They’re hanging from the roof by
their eyelids. It’th goin’ to be a knock-out.”</p>
<p>The expression, considering the circumstances, could
hardly have been less happily chosen. Ukridge winced
painfully, then spoke in no uncertain voice.</p>
<p>“I’m not going to fight!”</p>
<p>Mr. Previn’s exuberance fell from him like a garment.
His cigar dropped from his mouth, and his beady eyes glittered
with sudden consternation.</p>
<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“Rather an unfortunate thing has happened,” I explained.
“It seems that this man Thomas is a fellow
Ukridge had trouble with at the theatre last night.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean, Ukridge?” broke in Mr. Previn.
“This is Battling Billson.”</p>
<p>“I’ve told Corky all about it,” said Ukridge over his
shoulder as he laced his right shoe. “Old pal of mine.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” said Mr. Previn, relieved. “Of course, if Mr.
Corky is a friend of yours and quite understands that all
this is quite private among ourselves and don’t want talking
about outside, all right. But what were you thayin’? I
can’t make head or tail of it. How do you mean, you’re
not goin’ to fight? Of course you’re goin’ to fight.”</p>
<p>“Thomas was in here just now,” I said. “Ukridge
and he had a row at the theatre last night, and naturally
Ukridge is afraid he will go back on the agreement.”</p>
<p>“Nonthense,” said Mr. Previn, and his manner was that
of one soothing a refractory child. “<i>He </i> won’t go back on
the agreement. He promised he’d play light and he will
play light. Gave me his word as a gentleman.”</p>
<p>“He isn’t a gentleman,” Ukridge pointed out, moodily.</p>
<p>“But lithen!”</p>
<p>“I’m going to get out of here as quick as I dashed well
can!”</p>
<p>“Conthider!” pleaded Mr. Previn, clawing great chunks
out of the air.</p>
<p>Ukridge began to button his collar.</p>
<p>“Reflect!” moaned Mr. Previn. “There’s that lovely
audience all sitting out there, jammed like thardines, waiting
for the thing to start. Do you expect me to go and
tell ’em there ain’t goin’ to be no fight? I’m thurprised
at you,” said Mr. Previn, trying an appeal to his pride.
“Where’s your manly spirit? A big, husky feller like you,
that’s done all sorts of scrappin’ in your time——”</p>
<p>“Not,” Ukridge pointed out coldly, “with any damned
professional pugilists who’ve got a grievance against me.”</p>
<p>“<i>He </i> won’t hurt you.”</p>
<p>“He won’t get the chance.”</p>
<p>“You’ll be as safe and cosy in that ring with him as if
you was playing ball with your little thister.”</p>
<p>Ukridge said he hadn’t got a little sister.</p>
<p>“But think!” implored Mr. Previn, flapping like a seal.
“Think of the money! Do you realise we’ll have to return
it all, every penny of it?”</p>
<p>A spasm of pain passed over Ukridge’s face, but he continued
buttoning his collar.</p>
<p>“And not only that,” said Mr. Previn, “but, if you ask
me, they’ll be so mad when they hear there ain’t goin’ to
be no fight, they’ll lynch me.”</p>
<p>Ukridge seemed to regard this possibility with calm.</p>
<p>“And you, too,” added Mr. Previn.</p>
<p>Ukridge started. It was a plausible theory, and one that
had not occurred to him before. He paused irresolutely.
And at this moment a man came hurrying in.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter?” he demanded, fussily. “Thomas
has been in the ring for five minutes. Isn’t your man
ready?”</p>
<p>“In one half tick,” said Mr. Previn. He turned meaningly
to Ukridge. “That’s right, ain’t it? You’ll be
ready in half a tick?”</p>
<p>Ukridge nodded wanly. In silence he shed shirt,
trousers, shoes, and collar, parting from them as if they
were old friends whom he never expected to see again.
One wistful glance he cast at his mackintosh, lying forlornly
across a chair; and then, with more than a suggestion
of a funeral procession, we started down the corridor that
led to the main hall. The hum of many voices came to
us; there was a sudden blaze of light, and we were there.</p>
<p>I must say for the sport-loving citizens of Llunindnno
that they appeared to be fair-minded men. Stranger in
their midst though he was, they gave Ukridge an excellent
reception as he climbed into the ring; and for a moment,
such is the tonic effect of applause on a large scale, his
depression seemed to lift. A faint, gratified smile played
about his drawn mouth, and I think it would have developed
into a bashful grin, had he not at this instant caught sight
of the redoubtable Mr. Thomas towering massively across
the way. I saw him blink, as one who, thinking absently
of this and that, walks suddenly into a lamp-post; and his
look of unhappiness returned.</p>
<p>My heart bled for him. If the offer of my little savings
in the bank could have transported him there and then
to the safety of his London lodgings, I would have made it
unreservedly. Mr. Previn had disappeared, leaving me
standing at the ring-side, and as nobody seemed to object
I remained there, thus getting an excellent view of the mass
of bone and sinew that made up Lloyd Thomas. And
there was certainly plenty of him to see.</p>
<p>Mr. Thomas was, I should imagine, one of those men who
do not look their most formidable in mufti—for otherwise
I could not conceive how even the fact that he had stolen
his seat could have led Ukridge to lay the hand of violence
upon him. In the exiguous costume of the ring he looked a
person from whom the sensible man would suffer almost
any affront with meekness. He was about six feet in
height, and wherever a man could bulge with muscle he
bulged. For a moment my anxiety for Ukridge was tinged
with a wistful regret that I should never see this sinewy
citizen in action with Mr. Billson. It would, I mused,
have been a battle worth coming even to Llunindnno to
see.</p>
<p>The referee, meanwhile, had been introducing the principals
in the curt, impressive fashion of referees. He now
retired, and with a strange foreboding note a gong sounded
on the farther side of the ring. The seconds scuttled under
the ropes. The man Thomas, struggling—it seemed to
me—with powerful emotions, came ponderously out of his
corner.</p>
<p>In these reminiscences of a vivid and varied career, it is
as a profound thinker that I have for the most part had
occasion to portray Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge.
I was now to be reminded that he also had it in him to be a
doer. Even as Mr. Thomas shuffled towards him, his left
fist shot out and thudded against the other’s ribs. In
short, in a delicate and difficult situation, Ukridge was
comporting himself with an adequacy that surprised me.
However great might have been his reluctance to embark
on this contest, once in he was doing well.</p>
<p>And then, half-way through the first round, the truth
dawned upon me. Injured though Mr. Thomas had been,
the gentleman’s agreement still held. The word of a
Thomas was as good as his bond. Poignant though his
dislike of Ukridge might be, nevertheless, having pledged
himself to mildness and self-restraint for the first three
rounds, he intended to abide by the contract. Probably,
in the interval between his visit to Ukridge’s dressing-room
and his appearance in the ring, his manager had been talking
earnestly to him. At any rate, whether it was managerial
authority or his own sheer nobility of character that
influenced him, the fact remains that he treated Ukridge
with a quite remarkable forbearance, and the latter reached
his corner at the end of round one practically intact.</p>
<p>And it was this that undid him. No sooner had the
gong sounded for round two than out he pranced from his
corner, thoroughly above himself. He bounded at Mr.
Thomas like a Dervish.</p>
<p>I could read his thoughts as if he had spoken them.
Nothing could be clearer than that he had altogether failed
to grasp the true position of affairs. Instead of recognising
his adversary’s forbearance for what it was and
being decently grateful for it, he was filled with a sinful
pride. Here, he told himself, was a man who had a solid
grievance against him—and, dash it, the fellow couldn’t
hurt him a bit. What the whole thing boiled down to, he
felt, was that he, Ukridge, was better than he had suspected,
a man to be reckoned with, and one who could show a
distinguished gathering of patrons of sport something worth
looking at. The consequence was that, where any sensible
person would have grasped the situation at once and
endeavoured to show his appreciation by toying with Mr.
Thomas in gingerly fashion, whispering soothing compliments
into his ear during the clinches, and generally
trying to lay the foundations of a beautiful friendship
against the moment when the gentleman’s agreement
should lapse, Ukridge committed the one unforgivable act.
There was a brief moment of fiddling and feinting in the
centre of the ring, then a sharp smacking sound, a startled
yelp, and Mr. Thomas, with gradually reddening eye,
leaning against the ropes and muttering to himself in
Welsh.</p>
<p>Ukridge had hit him on the nose.</p>
<p>Once more I must pay a tribute to the fair-mindedness of
the sportsmen of Llunindnno. The stricken man was one
of them—possibly Llunindnno’s favourite son—yet nothing
could have exceeded the heartiness with which they greeted
the visitor’s achievement. A shout went up as if Ukridge
had done each individual present a personal favour. It
continued as he advanced buoyantly upon his antagonist,
and—to show how entirely Llunindnno audiences render
themselves impartial and free from any personal bias—it
became redoubled as Mr. Thomas, swinging a fist like a
ham, knocked Ukridge flat on his back. Whatever happened,
so long as it was sufficiently violent, seemed to be
all right with that broad-minded audience.</p>
<p>Ukridge heaved himself laboriously to one knee. His
sensibilities had been ruffled by this unexpected blow,
about fifteen times as hard as the others he had received
since the beginning of the affray, but he was a man of mettle
and determination. However humbly he might quail
before a threatening landlady, or however nimbly he might
glide down a side-street at the sight of an approaching
creditor, there was nothing wrong with his fighting heart
when it came to a straight issue between man and man,
untinged by the financial element. He struggled painfully
to his feet, while Mr. Thomas, now definitely abandoning
the gentleman’s agreement, hovered about him with ready
fists, only restrained by the fact that one of Ukridge’s
gloves still touched the floor.</p>
<p>It was at this tensest of moments that a voice spoke in
my ear. “’Alf a mo’, mister!”</p>
<p>A hand pushed me gently aside. Something large
obscured the lights. And Wilberforce Billson, squeezing
under the ropes, clambered into the ring.</p>
<p>For the purposes of the historian it was a good thing
that for the first few moments after this astounding occurrence
a dazed silence held the audience in its grip. Otherwise,
it might have been difficult to probe motives and
explain underlying causes. I think the spectators were
either too surprised to shout, or else they entertained for a
few brief seconds the idea that Mr. Billson was the forerunner
of a posse of plain-clothes police about to raid the
place. At any rate, for a space they were silent, and he
was enabled to say his say.</p>
<p>“Fightin’,” bellowed Mr. Billson, “ain’t right!”</p>
<p>There was an uneasy rustle in the audience. The voice
of the referee came thinly, saying, “Here! Hi!”</p>
<p>“Sinful,” explained Mr. Billson, in a voice like a foghorn.</p>
<p>His oration was interrupted by Mr. Thomas, who was
endeavouring to get round him and attack Ukridge. The
Battler pushed him gently back.</p>
<p>“Gents,” he roared, “I, too, have been a man of voylence!
I ’ave struck men in anger. R, yes! But I ’ave
seen the light. Oh, my brothers——”</p>
<p>The rest of his remarks were lost. With a startling
suddenness the frozen silence melted. In every part of
the hall indignant seatholders were rising to state their
views.</p>
<p>But it is doubtful whether, even if he had been granted
a continuance of their attention, Mr. Billson would have
spoken to much greater length; for at this moment Lloyd
Thomas, who had been gnawing at the strings of his gloves
with the air of a man who is able to stand just so much
and whose limit has been exceeded, now suddenly shed
these obstacles to the freer expression of self, and advancing
bare-handed, smote Mr. Billson violently on the jaw.</p>
<p>Mr. Billson turned. He was pained, one could see that,
but more spiritually than physically. For a moment he
seemed uncertain how to proceed. Then he turned the
other cheek.</p>
<p>The fermenting Mr. Thomas smote that, too.</p>
<p>There was no vacillation or uncertainty now about
Wilberforce Billson. He plainly considered that he had
done all that could reasonably be expected of any pacifist.
A man has only two cheeks. He flung up a mast-like arm,
to block a third blow, countered with an accuracy and
spirit which sent his aggressor reeling to the ropes; and
then, swiftly removing his coat, went into action with the
unregenerate zeal that had made him the petted hero of a
hundred water-fronts. And I, tenderly scooping Ukridge
up as he dropped from the ring, hurried him away along
the corridor to his dressing-room. I would have given
much to remain and witness a mix-up which, if the police
did not interfere, promised to be the battle of the ages,
but the claims of friendship are paramount.</p>
<p>Ten minutes later, however, when Ukridge, washed,
clothed, and restored as near to the normal as a man may
be who has received the full weight of a Lloyd Thomas on
a vital spot, was reaching for his mackintosh, there filtered
through the intervening doors and passageways a sudden
roar so compelling that my sporting spirit declined to
ignore it.</p>
<p>“Back in a minute, old man,” I said.</p>
<p>And, urged by that ever-swelling roar, I cantered back
to the hall.</p>
<p>In the interval during which I had been ministering to
my stricken friend a certain decorum seemed to have been
restored to the proceedings. The conflict had lost its first
riotous abandon. Upholders of the decencies of debate
had induced Mr. Thomas to resume his gloves, and a pair
had also been thrust upon the Battler. Moreover, it was
apparent that the etiquette of the tourney now governed
the conflict, for rounds had been introduced, and one had
just finished as I came in view of the ring. Mr. Billson
was leaning back in a chair in one corner undergoing treatment
by his seconds, and in the opposite corner loomed Mr.
Thomas; and one sight of the two men was enough to tell
me what had caused that sudden tremendous outburst of
enthusiasm among the patriots of Llunindnno. In the
last stages of the round which had just concluded the native
son must have forged ahead in no uncertain manner.
Perhaps some chance blow had found its way through the
Battler’s guard, laying him open and defenceless to the
final attack. For his attitude, as he sagged in his corner,
was that of one whose moments are numbered. His eyes
were closed, his mouth hung open, and exhaustion was writ
large upon him. Mr. Thomas, on the contrary, leaned
forward with hands on knees, wearing an impatient look,
as if this formality of a rest between rounds irked his
imperious spirit.</p>
<p>The gong sounded and he sprang from his seat.</p>
<p>“Laddie!” breathed an anguished voice, and a hand
clutched my arm.</p>
<p>I was dimly aware of Ukridge standing beside me. I
shook him off. This was no moment for conversation.
My whole attention was concentrated on what was happening
in the ring.</p>
<p>“I say, laddie!”</p>
<p>Matters in there had reached that tense stage when
audiences lose their self-control—when strong men stand
on seats and weak men cry “Siddown!” The air was
full of that electrical thrill that precedes the knock-out.</p>
<p>And the next moment it came. But it was not Lloyd
Thomas who delivered it. From some mysterious reservoir
of vitality Wilberforce Billson, the pride of Bermondsey,
who an instant before had been reeling under his antagonist’s
blows like a stricken hulk before a hurricane, produced
that one last punch that wins battles. Up it came, whizzing
straight to its mark, a stupendous, miraculous upper-cut
which caught Mr. Thomas on the angle of the jaw just
as he lurched forward to complete his task. It was the
last word. Anything milder Llunindnno’s favourite son
might have borne with fortitude, for his was a teak-like
frame impervious to most things short of dynamite; but
this was final. It left no avenue for argument or evasion.
Lloyd Thomas spun round once in a complete circle, dropped
his hands, and sank slowly to the ground.</p>
<p>There was one wild shout from the audience, and then
a solemn hush fell. And in this hush Ukridge’s voice
spoke once more in my ear.</p>
<p>“I say, laddie, that blighter Previn has bolted with
every penny of the receipts!”</p>
<p>The little sitting-room of Number Seven Caerleon Street
was very quiet and gave the impression of being dark.
This was because there is so much of Ukridge and he takes
Fate’s blows so hardly that when anything goes wrong his
gloom seems to fill a room like a fog. For some minutes
after our return from the Oddfellows’ Hall a gruesome
silence had prevailed. Ukridge had exhausted his vocabulary
on the subject of Mr. Previn; and as for me, the
disaster seemed so tremendous as to render words of sympathy
a mere mockery.</p>
<p>“And there’s another thing I’ve just remembered,” said
Ukridge, hollowly, stirring on his sofa.</p>
<p>“What’s that?” I enquired, in a bedside voice.</p>
<p>“The bloke Thomas. He was to have got another
twenty pounds.”</p>
<p>“He’ll hardly claim it, surely?”</p>
<p>“He’ll claim it all right,” said Ukridge, moodily.
“Except, by Jove,” he went on, a sudden note of optimism
in his voice, “that he doesn’t know where I am. I was
forgetting that. Lucky we legged it away from the hall
before he could grab me.”</p>
<p>“You don’t think that Previn, when he was making
the arrangements with Thomas’s manager, may have mentioned
where you were staying?”</p>
<p>“Not likely. Why should he? What reason would he
have?”</p>
<p>“Gentleman to see you, sir,” crooned the aged female
at the door.</p>
<p>The gentleman walked in. It was the man who had
come to the dressing-room to announce that Thomas was
in the ring; and though on that occasion we had not been
formally introduced I did not need Ukridge’s faint groan
to tell me who he was.</p>
<p>“Mr. Previn?” he said. He was a brisk man, direct
in manner and speech.</p>
<p>“He’s not here,” said Ukridge.</p>
<p>“You’ll do. You’re his partner. I’ve come for that
twenty pounds.”</p>
<p>There was a painful silence.</p>
<p>“It’s gone,” said Ukridge.</p>
<p>“What’s gone?”</p>
<p>“The money, dash it. And Previn, too. He’s bolted.”
A hard look came into the other’s eyes. Dim as the light
was, it was strong enough to show his expression, and that
expression was not an agreeable one.</p>
<p>“That won’t do,” he said, in a metallic voice.</p>
<p>“Now, my dear old horse——”</p>
<p>“It’s no good trying anything like that on me. I want
my money, or I’m going to call a policeman. Now, then!”</p>
<p>“But, laddie, be reasonable.”</p>
<p>“Made a mistake in not getting it in advance. But
now’ll do. Out with it!”</p>
<p>“But I keep telling you Previn’s bolted!”</p>
<p>“He’s certainly bolted,” I put in, trying to be helpful.</p>
<p>“That’s right, mister,” said a voice at the door. “I
met ’im sneakin’ away.”</p>
<p>It was Wilberforce Billson. He stood in the doorway
diffidently, as one not sure of his welcome. His whole
bearing was apologetic. He had a nasty bruise on his left
cheek and one of his eyes was closed, but he bore no other
signs of his recent conflict.</p>
<p>Ukridge was gazing upon him with bulging eyes.</p>
<p>“You <i>met </i> him!” he moaned. “You actually met
him?”</p>
<p>“R,” said Mr. Billson. “When I was comin’ to the ’all.
I seen ’im puttin’ all that money into a liddle bag, and then
’e ’urried off.”</p>
<p>“Good lord!” I cried. “Didn’t you suspect what he
was up to?”</p>
<p>“R,” agreed Mr. Billson. “I always knew ’e was a
wrong ’un.”</p>
<p>“Then why, you poor woollen-headed fish,” bellowed
Ukridge, exploding, “why on earth didn’t you stop him?”</p>
<p>“I never thought of that,” admitted Mr. Billson, apologetically.</p>
<p>Ukridge laughed a hideous laugh.</p>
<p>“I just pushed ’im in the face,” proceeded Mr. Billson,
“and took the liddle bag away from ’im.”</p>
<p>He placed on the table a small weather-worn suitcase
that jingled musically as he moved it; then, with the air
of one who dismisses some triviality from his mind, moved
to the door.</p>
<p>“’Scuse me, gents,” said Battling Billson, deprecatingly.
“Can’t stop. I’ve got to go and spread the light.”</p>
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