A. A. Milne

The Red House Mystery and Other Novels


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      "Are you sure you brought it with you?" he asked.

      The programme girls seemed to think that it would solve the whole mystery if I hadn't brought it with me.

      "Are you sure you are the fireman?" I said coldly.

      He thought for a moment, and then unburdened himself of another idea.

      "Perhaps it's just been kicked under the seat," he said.

      I left him under the seat and went downstairs with a heavy heart. At the door I said to the hall porter, "Have you seen anybody going out with two hats by mistake?"

      "What's the matter?" he said. "Lost your hat?"

      "It has been stolen."

      "Have you looked under the seats? It may have been kicked along a bit."

      "Perhaps I'd better see the manager," I said. "Is it any good looking under the seats for _him_?"

      "I expect it's just been kicked along a bit," the hall porter repeated confidently. "I'll come up with you and look for it."

      "If there's any more talk about being kicked along a bit," I said bitterly, "somebody _will_ be. I want the manager."

      I was led to the manager's room, and there I explained the matter to him. He was very pleasant about it.

      "I expect you haven't looked for it properly," he said, with a charming smile. "Just take this gentleman up," he added to the hall porter, "and find his hat for him. It has probably been kicked under one of the other seats."

      We were smiled irresistibly out, and I was dragged up to the grand circle again. The seats by this time were laid out in white draperies; the house looked very desolate; I knew that my poor hat was dead.

      With an air of cheery confidence the hall porter turned into the first row of seats....

      "It may have been kicked on to the stage," I said, as he began to slow down. "It may have jumped into one of the boxes. It may have turned into a rabbit. You know, I expect you aren't looking for it properly."

      The manager was extremely sympathetic when we came back to him. He said, "Oh, I'm sorry." Just like that--"Oh, I'm sorry."

      "My hat," I said firmly, "has been stolen."

      "I'm sorry," he repeated with a bored smile, and turned to look at himself in the glass.

      Then I became angry with him and his attendants and his whole blessed theatre.

      "My hat," I said bitingly, "has been stolen from me--while I slept."

      * * * * *

      You must have seen me wearing it in the dear old days. Greeny brown it was in colour; but it wasn't the colour that drew your eyes to it--no, nor yet the shape, nor the angle at which it sat. It was just the essential rightness of it. If you have ever seen a hat which you felt instinctively was a clever hat, an alive hat, a profound hat, then that was my hat--and that was myself underneath it.

      XI. THE LUCKY MONTH

      "Know thyself," said the old Greek motto. (In Greek--but this is an English book.) So I bought a little red volume called, tersely enough, _Were you born in January?_ I was; and, reassured on this point, the author told me all about myself.

      For the most part he told me nothing new. "You are," he said in effect, "good-tempered, courageous, ambitious, loyal, quick to resent wrong, an excellent _raconteur_, and a leader of men." True. "Generous to a fault"--(Yes, I was overdoing that rather)--"you have a ready sympathy with the distressed. People born in this month will always keep their promises." And so on. There was no doubt that the author had the idea all right. Even when he went on to warn me of my weaknesses he maintained the correct note. "People born in January," he said, "must be on their guard against working too strenuously. Their extraordinarily active brains----" Well, you see what he means. It _is_ a fault perhaps, and I shall be more careful in future. Mind, I do not take offence with him for calling my attention to it. In fact, my only objection to the book is its surface application to _all_ the people who were born in January. There should have been more distinction made between me and the rabble.

      I have said that he told me little that was new. In one matter, however, he did open my eyes. He introduced me to an aspect of myself entirely unsuspected.

      "They," he said--meaning me, "have unusual business capacity, and are destined to be leaders in great commercial enterprises."

      One gets at times these flashes of self-revelation. In an instant I realised how wasted my life had been; in an instant I resolved that here and now I would put my great gifts to their proper uses. I would be a leader in an immense commercial enterprise.

      One cannot start commercial enterprises without capital. The first thing was to determine the exact nature of my balance at the bank. This was a matter for the bank to arrange, and I drove there rapidly.

      "Good morning," I said to the cashier, "I am in rather a hurry. May I have my pass-book?"

      He assented and retired. After an interminable wait, during which many psychological moments for commercial enterprise must have lapsed, he returned.

      "I think _you_ have it," he said shortly.

      "Thank you," I replied, and drove rapidly home again.

      A lengthy search followed; but after an hour of it one of those white-hot flashes of thought, such as only occur to the natural business genius, seared my mind and sent me post-haste to the bank again.

      "After all," I said to the cashier, "I only want to know my balance. What is it?"

      He withdrew and gave himself up to calculation. I paced the floor impatiently. Opportunities were slipping by. At last he pushed a slip of paper across at me. My balance!

      It was in four figures. Unfortunately two of them were shillings and pence. Still, there was a matter of fifty pounds odd as well, and fortunes have been built up on less.

      Out in the street I had a moment's pause. Hitherto I had regarded my commercial enterprise in the bulk, as a finished monument of industry; the little niggling preliminary details had not come up for consideration. Just for a second I wondered how to begin.

      Only for a second. An unsuspected talent which has long lain dormant needs, when waked, a second or so to turn round in. At the end of that time I had made up my mind. I knew exactly what I would do. I would ring up my solicitor.

      "Hallo, is that you? Yes, this is me. What? Yes, awfully, thanks. How are you? Good. Look here, come and lunch with me. What? No, at once. Good-bye."

      Business, particularly that sort of commercial enterprise to which I had now decided to lend my genius, can only be discussed properly over a cigar. During the meal itself my solicitor and I indulged in the ordinary small-talk of the pleasure-loving world.

      "You're looking very fit," said my solicitor. "No, not fat, _fit_."

      "You don't think I'm looking thin?" I asked anxiously. "People are warning me that I may be overdoing it rather. They tell me that I must be seriously on my guard against brain strain."

      "I suppose they think you oughtn't to strain it too suddenly," said my solicitor. Though he is now a solicitor he was once just an ordinary boy like the rest of us, and it was in those days that he acquired the habit of being rude to me, a habit he has never quite forgotten.

      "What