<h2> 19. The Illness of Edward </h2>
<p>Life in a bank is at its pleasantest in the winter. When all the world
outside is dark and damp and cold, the light and warmth of the place are
comforting. There is a pleasant air of solidity about the interior of a
bank. The green shaded lamps look cosy. And, the outside world offering so
few attractions, the worker, perched on his stool, feels that he is not so
badly off after all. It is when the days are long and the sun beats hot on
the pavement, and everything shouts to him how splendid it is out in the
country, that he begins to grow restless.</p>
<p>Mike, except for a fortnight at the beginning of his career in the New
Asiatic Bank, had not had to stand the test of sunshine. At present, the
weather being cold and dismal, he was almost entirely contented. Now that
he had got into the swing of his work, the days passed very quickly; and
with his life after office-hours he had no fault to find at all.</p>
<p>His life was very regular. He would arrive in the morning just in time to
sign his name in the attendance-book before it was removed to the
accountant's room. That was at ten o'clock. From ten to eleven he would
potter. There was nothing going on at that time in his department, and Mr
Waller seemed to take it for granted that he should stroll off to the
Postage Department and talk to Psmith, who had generally some fresh
grievance against the ring-wearing Bristow to air. From eleven to half
past twelve he would put in a little gentle work. Lunch, unless there was
a rush of business or Mr Waller happened to suffer from a spasm of
conscientiousness, could be spun out from half past twelve to two. More
work from two till half past three. From half past three till half past
four tea in the tearoom, with a novel. And from half past four till five
either a little more work or more pottering, according to whether there
was any work to do or not. It was by no means an unpleasant mode of
spending a late January day.</p>
<p>Then there was no doubt that it was an interesting little community, that
of the New Asiatic Bank. The curiously amateurish nature of the
institution lent a certain air of light-heartedness to the place. It was
not like one of those banks whose London office is their main office,
where stern business is everything and a man becomes a mere machine for
getting through a certain amount of routine work. The employees of the New
Asiatic Bank, having plenty of time on their hands, were able to retain
their individuality. They had leisure to think of other things besides
their work. Indeed, they had so much leisure that it is a wonder they
thought of their work at all.</p>
<p>The place was full of quaint characters. There was West, who had been
requested to leave Haileybury owing to his habit of borrowing horses and
attending meets in the neighbourhood, the same being always out of bounds
and necessitating a complete disregard of the rules respecting evening
chapel and lock-up. He was a small, dried-up youth, with black hair
plastered down on his head. He went about his duties in a costume which
suggested the sportsman of the comic papers.</p>
<p>There was also Hignett, who added to the meagre salary allowed him by the
bank by singing comic songs at the minor music halls. He confided to Mike
his intention of leaving the bank as soon as he had made a name, and
taking seriously to the business. He told him that he had knocked them at
the Bedford the week before, and in support of the statement showed him a
cutting from the Era, in which the writer said that 'Other acceptable
turns were the Bounding Zouaves, Steingruber's Dogs, and Arthur Hignett.'
Mike wished him luck.</p>
<p>And there was Raymond who dabbled in journalism and was the author of
'Straight Talks to Housewives' in <i>Trifles</i>, under the pseudonym of
'Lady Gussie'; Wragge, who believed that the earth was flat, and addressed
meetings on the subject in Hyde Park on Sundays; and many others, all
interesting to talk to of a morning when work was slack and time had to be
filled in.</p>
<p>Mike found himself, by degrees, growing quite attached to the New Asiatic
Bank.</p>
<p>One morning, early in February, he noticed a curious change in Mr Waller.
The head of the Cash Department was, as a rule, mildly cheerful on
arrival, and apt (excessively, Mike thought, though he always listened
with polite interest) to relate the most recent sayings and doings of his
snub-nosed son, Edward. No action of this young prodigy was withheld from
Mike. He had heard, on different occasions, how he had won a prize at his
school for General Information (which Mike could well believe); how he had
trapped young Mr Richards, now happily reconciled to Ada, with an
ingenious verbal catch; and how he had made a sequence of diverting puns
on the name of the new curate, during the course of that cleric's first
Sunday afternoon visit.</p>
<p>On this particular day, however, the cashier was silent and absent-minded.
He answered Mike's good-morning mechanically, and sitting down at his
desk, stared blankly across the building. There was a curiously grey,
tired look on his face.</p>
<p>Mike could not make it out. He did not like to ask if there was anything
the matter. Mr Waller's face had the unreasonable effect on him of making
him feel shy and awkward. Anything in the nature of sorrow always dried
Mike up and robbed him of the power of speech. Being naturally
sympathetic, he had raged inwardly in many a crisis at this devil of dumb
awkwardness which possessed him and prevented him from putting his
sympathy into words. He had always envied the cooing readiness of the hero
on the stage when anyone was in trouble. He wondered whether he would ever
acquire that knack of pouring out a limpid stream of soothing words on
such occasions. At present he could get no farther than a scowl and an
almost offensive gruffness.</p>
<p>The happy thought struck him of consulting Psmith. It was his hour for
pottering, so he pottered round to the Postage Department, where he found
the old Etonian eyeing with disfavour a new satin tie which Bristow was
wearing that morning for the first time.</p>
<p>'I say, Smith,' he said, 'I want to speak to you for a second.'</p>
<p>Psmith rose. Mike led the way to a quiet corner of the Telegrams
Department.</p>
<p>'I tell you, Comrade Jackson,' said Psmith, 'I am hard pressed. The fight
is beginning to be too much for me. After a grim struggle, after days of
unremitting toil, I succeeded yesterday in inducing the man Bristow to
abandon that rainbow waistcoat of his. Today I enter the building, blythe
and buoyant, worn, of course, from the long struggle, but seeing with
aching eyes the dawn of another, better era, and there is Comrade Bristow
in a satin tie. It's hard, Comrade Jackson, it's hard, I tell you.'</p>
<p>'Look here, Smith,' said Mike, 'I wish you'd go round to the Cash and find
out what's up with old Waller. He's got the hump about something. He's
sitting there looking absolutely fed up with things. I hope there's
nothing up. He's not a bad sort. It would be rot if anything rotten's
happened.'</p>
<p>Psmith began to display a gentle interest.</p>
<p>'So other people have troubles as well as myself,' he murmured musingly.
'I had almost forgotten that. Comrade Waller's misfortunes cannot but be
trivial compared with mine, but possibly it will be as well to ascertain
their nature. I will reel round and make inquiries.'</p>
<p>'Good man,' said Mike. 'I'll wait here.'</p>
<p>Psmith departed, and returned, ten minutes later, looking more serious
than when he had left.</p>
<p>'His kid's ill, poor chap,' he said briefly. 'Pretty badly too, from what
I can gather. Pneumonia. Waller was up all night. He oughtn't to be here
at all today. He doesn't know what he's doing half the time. He's
absolutely fagged out. Look here, you'd better nip back and do as much of
the work as you can. I shouldn't talk to him much if I were you. Buck
along.'</p>
<p>Mike went. Mr Waller was still sitting staring out across the aisle. There
was something more than a little gruesome in the sight of him. He wore a
crushed, beaten look, as if all the life and fight had gone out of him. A
customer came to the desk to cash a cheque. The cashier shovelled the
money to him under the bars with the air of one whose mind is elsewhere.
Mike could guess what he was feeling, and what he was thinking about. The
fact that the snub-nosed Edward was, without exception, the most repulsive
small boy he had ever met in this world, where repulsive small boys crowd
and jostle one another, did not interfere with his appreciation of the
cashier's state of mind. Mike's was essentially a sympathetic character.
He had the gift of intuitive understanding, where people of whom he was
fond were concerned. It was this which drew to him those who had
intelligence enough to see beyond his sometimes rather forbidding manner,
and to realize that his blunt speech was largely due to shyness. In spite
of his prejudice against Edward, he could put himself into Mr Waller's
place, and see the thing from his point of view.</p>
<p>Psmith's injunction to him not to talk much was unnecessary. Mike, as
always, was rendered utterly dumb by the sight of suffering. He sat at his
desk, occupying himself as best he could with the driblets of work which
came to him.</p>
<p>Mr Waller's silence and absentness continued unchanged. The habit of years
had made his work mechanical. Probably few of the customers who came to
cash cheques suspected that there was anything the matter with the man who
paid them their money. After all, most people look on the cashier of a
bank as a sort of human slot-machine. You put in your cheque, and out
comes money. It is no affair of yours whether life is treating the machine
well or ill that day.</p>
<p>The hours dragged slowly by till five o'clock struck, and the cashier,
putting on his coat and hat, passed silently out through the swing doors.
He walked listlessly. He was evidently tired out.</p>
<p>Mike shut his ledger with a vicious bang, and went across to find Psmith.
He was glad the day was over.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> 20. Concerning a Cheque </h2>
<p>Things never happen quite as one expects them to. Mike came to the office
next morning prepared for a repetition of the previous day. He was amazed
to find the cashier not merely cheerful, but even exuberantly cheerful.
Edward, it appeared, had rallied in the afternoon, and, when his father
had got home, had been out of danger. He was now going along excellently,
and had stumped Ada, who was nursing him, with a question about the Thirty
Years' War, only a few minutes before his father had left to catch his
train. The cashier was overflowing with happiness and goodwill towards his
species. He greeted customers with bright remarks on the weather, and
snappy views on the leading events of the day: the former tinged with
optimism, the latter full of a gentle spirit of toleration. His attitude
towards the latest actions of His Majesty's Government was that of one who
felt that, after all, there was probably some good even in the vilest of
his fellow creatures, if one could only find it.</p>
<p>Altogether, the cloud had lifted from the Cash Department. All was joy,
jollity, and song.</p>
<p>'The attitude of Comrade Waller,' said Psmith, on being informed of the
change, 'is reassuring. I may now think of my own troubles. Comrade
Bristow has blown into the office today in patent leather boots with white
kid uppers, as I believe the technical term is. Add to that the fact that
he is still wearing the satin tie, the waistcoat, and the ring, and you
will understand why I have definitely decided this morning to abandon all
hope of his reform. Henceforth my services, for what they are worth, are
at the disposal of Comrade Bickersdyke. My time from now onward is his. He
shall have the full educative value of my exclusive attention. I give
Comrade Bristow up. Made straight for the corner flag, you understand,' he
added, as Mr Rossiter emerged from his lair, 'and centred, and Sandy
Turnbull headed a beautiful goal. I was just telling Jackson about the
match against Blackburn Rovers,' he said to Mr Rossiter.</p>
<p>'Just so, just so. But get on with your work, Smith. We are a little
behind-hand. I think perhaps it would be as well not to leave it just
yet.'</p>
<p>'I will leap at it at once,' said Psmith cordially.</p>
<p>Mike went back to his department.</p>
<p>The day passed quickly. Mr Waller, in the intervals of work, talked a good
deal, mostly of Edward, his doings, his sayings, and his prospects. The
only thing that seemed to worry Mr Waller was the problem of how to employ
his son's almost superhuman talents to the best advantage. Most of the
goals towards which the average man strives struck him as too unambitious
for the prodigy.</p>
<p>By the end of the day Mike had had enough of Edward. He never wished to
hear the name again.</p>
<p>We do not claim originality for the statement that things never happen
quite as one expects them to. We repeat it now because of its profound
truth. The Edward's pneumonia episode having ended satisfactorily (or,
rather, being apparently certain to end satisfactorily, for the invalid,
though out of danger, was still in bed), Mike looked forward to a series
of days unbroken by any but the minor troubles of life. For these he was
prepared. What he did not expect was any big calamity.</p>
<p>At the beginning of the day there were no signs of it. The sky was blue
and free from all suggestions of approaching thunderbolts. Mr Waller,
still chirpy, had nothing but good news of Edward. Mike went for his
morning stroll round the office feeling that things had settled down and
had made up their mind to run smoothly.</p>
<p>When he got back, barely half an hour later, the storm had burst.</p>
<p>There was no one in the department at the moment of his arrival; but a few
minutes later he saw Mr Waller come out of the manager's room, and make
his way down the aisle.</p>
<p>It was his walk which first gave any hint that something was wrong. It was
the same limp, crushed walk which Mike had seen when Edward's safety still
hung in the balance.</p>
<p>As Mr Waller came nearer, Mike saw that the cashier's face was deadly
pale.</p>
<p>Mr Waller caught sight of him and quickened his pace.</p>
<p>'Jackson,' he said.</p>
<p>Mike came forward.</p>
<p>'Do you—remember—' he spoke slowly, and with an effort, 'do
you remember a cheque coming through the day before yesterday for a
hundred pounds, with Sir John Morrison's signature?'</p>
<p>'Yes. It came in the morning, rather late.'</p>
<p>Mike remembered the cheque perfectly well, owing to the amount. It was the
only three-figure cheque which had come across the counter during the day.
It had been presented just before the cashier had gone out to lunch. He
recollected the man who had presented it, a tallish man with a beard. He
had noticed him particularly because of the contrast between his manner
and that of the cashier. The former had been so very cheery and breezy,
the latter so dazed and silent.</p>
<p>'Why,' he said.</p>
<p>'It was a forgery,' muttered Mr Waller, sitting down heavily.</p>
<p>Mike could not take it in all at once. He was stunned. All he could
understand was that a far worse thing had happened than anything he could
have imagined.</p>
<p>'A forgery?' he said.</p>
<p>'A forgery. And a clumsy one. Oh it's hard. I should have seen it on any
other day but that. I could not have missed it. They showed me the cheque
in there just now. I could not believe that I had passed it. I don't
remember doing it. My mind was far away. I don't remember the cheque or
anything about it. Yet there it is.'</p>
<p>Once more Mike was tongue-tied. For the life of him he could not think of
anything to say. Surely, he thought, he could find <i>something</i> in the
shape of words to show his sympathy. But he could find nothing that would
not sound horribly stilted and cold. He sat silent.</p>
<p>'Sir John is in there,' went on the cashier. 'He is furious. Mr
Bickersdyke, too. They are both furious. I shall be dismissed. I shall
lose my place. I shall be dismissed.' He was talking more to himself than
to Mike. It was dreadful to see him sitting there, all limp and broken.</p>
<p>'I shall lose my place. Mr Bickersdyke has wanted to get rid of me for a
long time. He never liked me. I shall be dismissed. What can I do? I'm an
old man. I can't make another start. I am good for nothing. Nobody will
take an old man like me.'</p>
<p>His voice died away. There was a silence. Mike sat staring miserably in
front of him.</p>
<p>Then, quite suddenly, an idea came to him. The whole pressure of the
atmosphere seemed to lift. He saw a way out. It was a curious crooked way,
but at that moment it stretched clear and broad before him. He felt
lighthearted and excited, as if he were watching the development of some
interesting play at the theatre.</p>
<p>He got up, smiling.</p>
<p>The cashier did not notice the movement. Somebody had come in to cash a
cheque, and he was working mechanically.</p>
<p>Mike walked up the aisle to Mr Bickersdyke's room, and went in.</p>
<p>The manager was in his chair at the big table. Opposite him, facing
slightly sideways, was a small, round, very red-faced man. Mr Bickersdyke
was speaking as Mike entered.</p>
<p>'I can assure you, Sir John—' he was saying.</p>
<p>He looked up as the door opened.</p>
<p>'Well, Mr Jackson?'</p>
<p>Mike almost laughed. The situation was tickling him.</p>
<p>'Mr Waller has told me—' he began.</p>
<p>'I have already seen Mr Waller.'</p>
<p>'I know. He told me about the cheque. I came to explain.'</p>
<p>'Explain?'</p>
<p>'Yes. He didn't cash it at all.'</p>
<p>'I don't understand you, Mr Jackson.'</p>
<p>'I was at the counter when it was brought in,' said Mike. 'I cashed it.'</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> 21. Psmith Makes Inquiries </h2>
<p>Psmith, as was his habit of a morning when the fierce rush of his
commercial duties had abated somewhat, was leaning gracefully against his
desk, musing on many things, when he was aware that Bristow was standing
before him.</p>
<p>Focusing his attention with some reluctance upon this blot on the horizon,
he discovered that the exploiter of rainbow waistcoats and satin ties was
addressing him.</p>
<p>'I say, Smithy,' said Bristow. He spoke in rather an awed voice.</p>
<p>'Say on, Comrade Bristow,' said Psmith graciously. 'You have our ear. You
would seem to have something on your chest in addition to that Neapolitan
ice garment which, I regret to see, you still flaunt. If it is one tithe
as painful as that, you have my sympathy. Jerk it out, Comrade Bristow.'</p>
<p>'Jackson isn't half copping it from old Bick.'</p>
<p>'Isn't—? What exactly did you say?'</p>
<p>'He's getting it hot on the carpet.'</p>
<p>'You wish to indicate,' said Psmith, 'that there is some slight
disturbance, some passing breeze between Comrades Jackson and
Bickersdyke?'</p>
<p>Bristow chuckled.</p>
<p>'Breeze! Blooming hurricane, more like it. I was in Bick's room just now
with a letter to sign, and I tell you, the fur was flying all over the
bally shop. There was old Bick cursing for all he was worth, and a little
red-faced buffer puffing out his cheeks in an armchair.'</p>
<p>'We all have our hobbies,' said Psmith.</p>
<p>'Jackson wasn't saying much. He jolly well hadn't a chance. Old Bick was
shooting it out fourteen to the dozen.'</p>
<p>'I have been privileged,' said Psmith, 'to hear Comrade Bickersdyke speak
both in his sanctum and in public. He has, as you suggest, a ready flow of
speech. What, exactly was the cause of the turmoil?'</p>
<p>'I couldn't wait to hear. I was too jolly glad to get away. Old Bick
looked at me as if he could eat me, snatched the letter out of my hand,
signed it, and waved his hand at the door as a hint to hop it. Which I
jolly well did. He had started jawing Jackson again before I was out of
the room.'</p>
<p>'While applauding his hustle,' said Psmith, 'I fear that I must take
official notice of this. Comrade Jackson is essentially a Sensitive Plant,
highly strung, neurotic. I cannot have his nervous system jolted and
disorganized in this manner, and his value as a confidential secretary and
adviser impaired, even though it be only temporarily. I must look into
this. I will go and see if the orgy is concluded. I will hear what Comrade
Jackson has to say on the matter. I shall not act rashly, Comrade Bristow.
If the man Bickersdyke is proved to have had good grounds for his
outbreak, he shall escape uncensured. I may even look in on him and throw
him a word of praise. But if I find, as I suspect, that he has wronged
Comrade Jackson, I shall be forced to speak sharply to him.'</p>
<hr />
<p>Mike had left the scene of battle by the time Psmith reached the Cash
Department, and was sitting at his desk in a somewhat dazed condition,
trying to clear his mind sufficiently to enable him to see exactly how
matters stood as concerned himself. He felt confused and rattled. He had
known, when he went to the manager's room to make his statement, that
there would be trouble. But, then, trouble is such an elastic word. It
embraces a hundred degrees of meaning. Mike had expected sentence of
dismissal, and he had got it. So far he had nothing to complain of. But he
had not expected it to come to him riding high on the crest of a great,
frothing wave of verbal denunciation. Mr Bickersdyke, through constantly
speaking in public, had developed the habit of fluent denunciation to a
remarkable extent. He had thundered at Mike as if Mike had been his
Majesty's Government or the Encroaching Alien, or something of that sort.
And that kind of thing is a little overwhelming at short range. Mike's
head was still spinning.</p>
<p>It continued to spin; but he never lost sight of the fact round which it
revolved, namely, that he had been dismissed from the service of the bank.
And for the first time he began to wonder what they would say about this
at home.</p>
<p>Up till now the matter had seemed entirely a personal one. He had charged
in to rescue the harassed cashier in precisely the same way as that in
which he had dashed in to save him from Bill, the Stone-Flinging Scourge
of Clapham Common. Mike's was one of those direct, honest minds which are
apt to concentrate themselves on the crisis of the moment, and to leave
the consequences out of the question entirely.</p>
<p>What would they say at home? That was the point.</p>
<p>Again, what could he do by way of earning a living? He did not know much
about the City and its ways, but he knew enough to understand that summary
dismissal from a bank is not the best recommendation one can put forward
in applying for another job. And if he did not get another job in the
City, what could he do? If it were only summer, he might get taken on
somewhere as a cricket professional. Cricket was his line. He could earn
his pay at that. But it was very far from being summer.</p>
<p>He had turned the problem over in his mind till his head ached, and had
eaten in the process one-third of a wooden penholder, when Psmith arrived.</p>
<p>'It has reached me,' said Psmith, 'that you and Comrade Bickersdyke have
been seen doing the Hackenschmidt-Gotch act on the floor. When my
informant left, he tells me, Comrade B. had got a half-Nelson on you, and
was biting pieces out of your ear. Is this so?'</p>
<p>Mike got up. Psmith was the man, he felt, to advise him in this crisis.
Psmith's was the mind to grapple with his Hard Case.</p>
<p>'Look here, Smith,' he said, 'I want to speak to you. I'm in a bit of a
hole, and perhaps you can tell me what to do. Let's go out and have a cup
of coffee, shall we? I can't tell you about it here.'</p>
<p>'An admirable suggestion,' said Psmith. 'Things in the Postage Department
are tolerably quiescent at present. Naturally I shall be missed, if I go
out. But my absence will not spell irretrievable ruin, as it would at a
period of greater commercial activity. Comrades Rossiter and Bristow have
studied my methods. They know how I like things to be done. They are fully
competent to conduct the business of the department in my absence. Let us,
as you say, scud forth. We will go to a Mecca. Why so-called I do not
know, nor, indeed, do I ever hope to know. There we may obtain, at a
price, a passable cup of coffee, and you shall tell me your painful
story.'</p>
<p>The Mecca, except for the curious aroma which pervades all Meccas, was
deserted. Psmith, moving a box of dominoes on to the next table, sat down.</p>
<p>'Dominoes,' he said, 'is one of the few manly sports which have never had
great attractions for me. A cousin of mine, who secured his chess blue at
Oxford, would, they tell me, have represented his University in the
dominoes match also, had he not unfortunately dislocated the radius bone
of his bazooka while training for it. Except for him, there has been
little dominoes talent in the Psmith family. Let us merely talk. What of
this slight brass-rag-parting to which I alluded just now? Tell me all.'</p>
<p>He listened gravely while Mike related the incidents which had led up to
his confession and the results of the same. At the conclusion of the
narrative he sipped his coffee in silence for a moment.</p>
<p>'This habit of taking on to your shoulders the harvest of other people's
bloomers,' he said meditatively, 'is growing upon you, Comrade Jackson.
You must check it. It is like dram-drinking. You begin in a small way by
breaking school rules to extract Comrade Jellicoe (perhaps the supremest
of all the blitherers I have ever met) from a hole. If you had stopped
there, all might have been well. But the thing, once started, fascinated
you. Now you have landed yourself with a splash in the very centre of the
Oxo in order to do a good turn to Comrade Waller. You must drop it,
Comrade Jackson. When you were free and without ties, it did not so much
matter. But now that you are confidential secretary and adviser to a
Shropshire Psmith, the thing must stop. Your secretarial duties must be
paramount. Nothing must be allowed to interfere with them. Yes. The thing
must stop before it goes too far.'</p>
<p>'It seems to me,' said Mike, 'that it has gone too far. I've got the sack.
I don't know how much farther you want it to go.'</p>
<p>Psmith stirred his coffee before replying.</p>
<p>'True,' he said, 'things look perhaps a shade rocky just now, but all is
not yet lost. You must recollect that Comrade Bickersdyke spoke in the
heat of the moment. That generous temperament was stirred to its depths.
He did not pick his words. But calm will succeed storm, and we may be able
to do something yet. I have some little influence with Comrade
Bickersdyke. Wrongly, perhaps,' added Psmith modestly, 'he thinks somewhat
highly of my judgement. If he sees that I am opposed to this step, he may
possibly reconsider it. What Psmith thinks today, is his motto, I shall
think tomorrow. However, we shall see.'</p>
<p>'I bet we shall!' said Mike ruefully.</p>
<p>'There is, moreover,' continued Psmith, 'another aspect to the affair.
When you were being put through it, in Comrade Bickersdyke's inimitably
breezy manner, Sir John What's-his-name was, I am given to understand,
present. Naturally, to pacify the aggrieved bart., Comrade B. had to lay
it on regardless of expense. In America, as possibly you are aware, there
is a regular post of mistake-clerk, whose duty it is to receive in the
neck anything that happens to be coming along when customers make
complaints. He is hauled into the presence of the foaming customer,
cursed, and sacked. The customer goes away appeased. The mistake-clerk, if
the harangue has been unusually energetic, applies for a rise of salary.
Now, possibly, in your case—'</p>
<p>'In my case,' interrupted Mike, 'there was none of that rot. Bickersdyke
wasn't putting it on. He meant every word. Why, dash it all, you know
yourself he'd be only too glad to sack me, just to get some of his own
back with me.'</p>
<p>Psmith's eyes opened in pained surprise.</p>
<p>'Get some of his own back!' he repeated.</p>
<p>'Are you insinuating, Comrade Jackson, that my relations with Comrade
Bickersdyke are not of the most pleasant and agreeable nature possible?
How do these ideas get about? I yield to nobody in my respect for our
manager. I may have had occasion from time to time to correct him in some
trifling matter, but surely he is not the man to let such a thing rankle?
No! I prefer to think that Comrade Bickersdyke regards me as his friend
and well-wisher, and will lend a courteous ear to any proposal I see fit
to make. I hope shortly to be able to prove this to you. I will discuss
this little affair of the cheque with him at our ease at the club, and I
shall be surprised if we do not come to some arrangement.'</p>
<p>'Look here, Smith,' said Mike earnestly, 'for goodness' sake don't go
playing the goat. There's no earthly need for you to get lugged into this
business. Don't you worry about me. I shall be all right.'</p>
<p>'I think,' said Psmith, 'that you will—when I have chatted with
Comrade Bickersdyke.'</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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