P. G. Wodehouse

Love Among the Chickens


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popular concerts."

      "Yes, sir."

      "And, Mrs. Medley, if a man named——"

      Mrs. Medley had drifted silently away. During his last speech a thunderous knocking had begun on the front door.

      Jerry Garnet stood and listened, transfixed. Something seemed to tell him who was at the business end of that knocker.

      He heard Mrs. Medley's footsteps pass along the hall and pause at the door. Then there was the click of the latch. Then a volume of sound rushed up to him where he stood over his empty portmanteau.

      "Is Mr. Garnet in?"

      Mrs. Medley's reply was inaudible, but apparently in the affirmative.

      "Where is he?" boomed the voice. "Show me the old horse. First floor. Thank you. Where is the man of wrath?"

      There followed a crashing on the stairs such as even the young gentleman of the top floor had been unable to produce in his nocturnal rovings. The house shook.

      And with the tramping came the thunderous voice, as the visitor once more gave tongue.

      "Garnet! Garnet!! GARNET!!!"

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      r. Stanley Featherstonhaugh Ukridge dashed into the room, uttering a roar of welcome as he caught sight of Garnet, still standing petrified athwart his portmanteau.

      "My dear old man," he shouted, springing at him and seizing his hand in a clutch that effectually woke Garnet from his stupor. "How are you, old chap? This is good. By Jove, this is good! This is fine, what?"

      He dashed back to the door and looked out.

      "Come on, Millie," he shouted.

      Garnet was wondering who in the name of fortune Millie could possibly be, when there appeared on the further side of Mr. Ukridge the figure of a young woman. She paused in the doorway, and smiled pleasantly.

      "Garnet, old horse," said Ukridge with some pride, "let me introduce you to my wife. Millie, this is old Garnet. You've heard me talk about him."

      "Oh, yes," said Mrs. Ukridge.

      Garnet bowed awkwardly. The idea of Ukridge married was something too overpowering to be assimilated on the instant. If ever there was a man designed by nature to be a bachelor, Stanley Ukridge was that man. Garnet could feel that he himself was not looking his best. He knew in a vague, impersonal way that his eyebrows were still somewhere in the middle of his forehead, whither they had sprung in the first moment of surprise, and that his jaw, which had dropped, had not yet resumed its normal posture. Before committing himself to speech he made a determined effort to revise his facial expression.

      "Buck up, old horse," said Ukridge. He had a painful habit of addressing all and sundry by that title. In his school-master days he had made use of it while interviewing the parents of new pupils, and the latter had gone away, as a rule, with a feeling that this must be either the easy manner of genius or spirits, and hoping for the best. Later, he had used it to perfect strangers in the streets. On one occasion he had been heard to address a bishop by that title.

      "Surprised to find me married, what? Garny, old boy"—sinking his voice to what was intended to be a whisper—"take my tip. You go and do the same. You feel another man. Give up this bachelor business. It's a mug's game. Go and get married, my boy, go and get married. By gad, I've forgotten to pay the cabby. Half a moment."

      He was out of the door and on his way downstairs before the echoes of his last remark had ceased to shake the window of the sitting room. Garnet was left to entertain Mrs. Ukridge.

      So far her share in the conversation had been small. Nobody talked very much when Ukridge was on the scene. She sat on the edge of Garnet's big basket chair, looking very small and quiet. She smiled pleasantly, as she had done during the whole of the preceding dialogue. It was apparently her chief form of expression.

      Jerry Garnet felt very friendly toward her. He could not help pitying her. Ukridge, he thought, was a very good person to know casually, but a little of him, as his former headmaster had once said in a moody, reflective voice, went a very long way. To be bound to him for life was not the ideal state for a girl. If he had been a girl, he felt, he would as soon have married a volcano.

      "And she's so young," he thought, as he looked across at the basket chair. "Quite a kid."

      "You and Stanley have known each other a long time, haven't you?" said the object of his pity, breaking the silence.

      "Yes. Oh, yes," said Garnet. "Several years. We were masters at the same school together."

      Mrs. Ukridge leaned forward with round, shining eyes.

      "Isn't he a wonderful man, Mr. Garnet!" she said ecstatically.

      Not yet, to judge from her expression and the tone of her voice, had she had experience of the disadvantages attached to the position of Mrs. Stanley Ukridge.

      Garnet could agree with her there.

      "Yes, he is certainly wonderful," he said.

      "I believe he could do anything."

      "Yes," said Garnet. He believed that Ukridge was at least capable of anything.

      "He has done so many things. Have you ever kept fowls?" she broke off with apparent irrelevance.

      "No," said Garnet. "You see, I spend so much of my time in town. I should find it difficult."

      Mrs. Ukridge looked disappointed.

      "I was hoping you might have had some experience. Stanley, of course, can turn his hand to anything, but I think experience is such a good thing, don't you?"

      "It is," said Garnet, mystified. "But—"

      "I have bought a shilling book called 'Fowls and All About Them,' but it is very hard to understand. You see, we—but here is Stanley. He will explain it all."

      "Well, Garnet, old horse," said Ukridge, reëntering the room after another energetic passage of the stairs, "settle down and let's talk business. Found cabby gibbering on doorstep. Wouldn't believe I didn't want to bilk him. Had to give him an extra shilling. But now, about business. Lucky to find you in, because I've got a scheme for you, Garny, old boy. Yes, sir, the idea of a thousand years. Now listen to me for a moment."

      He sat down on the table and dragged a chair up as a leg rest. Then he took off his pince-nez, wiped them, readjusted the wire behind his ears, and, having hit a brown patch on the knee of his gray flannel trousers several times in the apparent hope of removing it, began to speak.

      "About fowls," he said.

      "What about them?" asked Garnet. The subject was beginning to interest him. It showed a curious tendency to creep into the conversation.

      "I want you to give me your undivided attention for a moment," said Ukridge. "I was saying to my wife only the other day: 'Garnet's the man. Clever man, Garnet. Full of ideas.' Didn't I, Millie?"

      "Yes, dear," said Mrs. Ukridge, smiling.

      "Well?" said Garnet.

      "The fact is," said Ukridge, with a Micawber-like burst of candor, "we are going to keep fowls."

      He stopped and looked at Garnet in order to see the effect of the information. Garnet bore it with fortitude.

      "Yes?" he said.

      Ukridge shifted himself farther on to the table and upset the inkpot.