Something
New
P.G.
Wodehouse
CHAPTER
I
The sunshine of a fair Spring morning fell graciously on London town. Out in
Piccadilly its heartening warmth seemed to infuse into traffic and pedestrians
alike a novel jauntiness, so that bus drivers jested and even the lips of
chauffeurs uncurled into not unkindly smiles. Policemen whistled at their
posts--clerks, on their way to work; beggars approached the task of trying to
persuade perfect strangers to bear the burden of their maintenance with that
optimistic vim which makes all the difference. It was one of those happy
mornings.
At nine o'clock precisely the door of Number Seven Arundel Street, Leicester
Square, opened and a young man stepped out.
Of all the spots in London which may fairly be described as backwaters there
is none that answers so completely to the description as Arundel Street,
Leicester Square. Passing along the north sidewalk of the square, just where it
joins Piccadilly, you hardly notice the bottleneck opening of the tiny
cul-de-sac. Day and night the human flood roars past, ignoring it. Arundel
Street is less than forty yards in length; and, though there are two hotels in
it, they are not fashionable hotels. It is just a backwater.
In shape Arundel Street is exactly like one of those flat stone jars in
which Italian wine of the cheaper sort is stored. The narrow neck that leads
off Leicester Square opens abruptly into a small court. Hotels occupy two sides
of this; the third is at present given up to rooming houses for the
impecunious. These are always just going to be pulled down in the name of
progress to make room for another hotel, but they never do meet with that fate;
and as they stand now so will they in all probability stand for generations to
come.
They provide single rooms of moderate size, the bed modestly hidden during
the day behind a battered screen. The rooms contain a table, an easy-chair, a
hard chair, a bureau, and a round tin bath, which, like the bed, goes into
hiding after its useful work is performed. And you may rent one of these rooms,
with breakfast thrown in, for five dollars a week.
Ashe Marson had done so. He had rented the second-floor front of Number
Seven.
Twenty-six years before this story opens there had been born to Joseph
Marson, minister, and Sarah his wife, of Hayling, Massachusetts, in the United
States of America, a son. This son, christened Ashe after a wealthy uncle who
subsequently double-crossed them by leaving his money to charities, in due
course proceeded to Harvard to study for the ministry. So far as can be
ascertained from contemporary records, he did not study a great deal for the
ministry; but he did succeed in running the mile in four minutes and a half and
the half mile at a correspondingly rapid speed, and his researches in the art
of long jumping won him the respect of all.
That he should be awarded, at the conclusion of his Harvard career, one of
those scholarships at Oxford University instituted by the late Cecil Rhodes for
the encouragement of the liberal arts, was a natural sequence of events.
That was how Ashe came to be in England.
The rest of Ashe's history follows almost automatically. He won his blue for
athletics at Oxford, and gladdened thousands by winning the mile and the half
mile two years in succession against Cambridge at Queen's Club. But owing to
the pressure of other engagements he unfortunately omitted to do any studying,
and when the hour of parting arrived he was peculiarly unfitted for any of the
learned professions. Having, however, managed to obtain a sort of degree,
enough to enable him to call himself a Bachelor of Arts, and realizing that you
can fool some of the people some of the time, he applied for and secured a
series of private tutorships.
A private tutor is a sort of blend of poor relation and nursemaid, and few
of the stately homes of England are without one. He is supposed to instill
learning and deportment into the small son of the house; but what he is really
there for is to prevent the latter from being a nuisance to his parents when he
is home from school on his vacation.
Having saved a little money at this dreadful trade, Ashe came to London and
tried newspaper work. After two years of moderate success he got in touch with
the Mammoth Publishing Company.
The Mammoth Publishing Company, which controls several important newspapers,
a few weekly journals, and a number of other things, does not disdain the
pennies of the office boy and the junior clerk. One of its many profitable
ventures is a series of paper-covered tales of crime and adventure. It was here
that Ashe found his niche. Those adventures of Gridley Quayle, Investigator,
which are so popular with a certain section of the reading public, were his
work.
Until the advent of Ashe and Mr. Quayle, the British Pluck Library had been
written by many hands and had included the adventures of many heroes: but in
Gridley Quayle the proprietors held that the ideal had been reached, and Ashe
received a commission to conduct the entire British Pluck
Library--monthly--himself. On the meager salary paid him for these labors he
had been supporting himself ever since.
That was how Ashe came to be in Arundel Street, Leicester Square, on this
May morning.
He was a tall, well-built, fit-looking young man, with a clear eye and a
strong chin; and he was dressed, as he closed the front door behind him, in a
sweater, flannel trousers, and rubber-soled gymnasium shoes. In one hand he
bore a pair of Indian clubs, in the other a skipping rope.
Having drawn in and expelled the morning air in a measured and solemn
fashion, which the initiated observer would have recognized as that scientific
deep breathing so popular nowadays, he laid down his clubs, adjusted his rope
and began to skip.
When he had taken the second-floor front of Number Seven, three months
before, Ashe Marson had realized that he must forego those morning exercises
which had become a second nature to him, or else defy London's unwritten law
and brave London's mockery. He had not hesitated long. Physical fitness was his
gospel. On the subject of exercise he was confessedly a crank. He decided to
defy London.
The first time he appeared in Arundel Street in his sweater and flannels he
had barely whirled his Indian clubs once around his head before he had
attracted the following audience:
a) Two cabmen--one intoxicated; b) Four waiters from the Hotel Mathis; c)
Six waiters from the Hotel Previtali; d) Six chambermaids from the Hotel
Mathis; e) Five chambermaids from the Hotel Previtali; f) The proprietor of the
Hotel Mathis; g) The proprietor of the Hotel Previtali; h) A street cleaner; i)
Eleven nondescript loafers; j) Twenty-seven children; k) A cat.
They all laughed--even the cat--and kept on laughing. The intoxicated cabman
called Ashe "Sunny Jim." And Ashe kept on swinging his clubs.
A month later, such is the magic of perseverance, his audience had narrowed
down to the twenty-seven children. They still laughed, but without that ringing
conviction which the sympathetic support of their elders had lent them.
And now, after three months, the neighborhood, having accepted Ashe and his
morning exercises as a natural phenomenon, paid him no further attention.
On this particular morning Ashe Marson skipped with even more than his usual
vigor. This was because he wished to expel by means of physical fatigue a small
devil of discontent, of whose presence within him he had been aware ever since
getting out of bed. It is in the Spring that the ache for the larger life comes
on us, and this was a particularly mellow Spring morning. It was the sort of
morning when the air gives us a feeling of anticipation--a feeling that, on a
day like this, things surely cannot go jogging along in the same dull old
groove; a premonition that something romantic and exciting is about to happen
to us.
But the southwest wind of Spring brings also remorse. We catch the vague
spirit of unrest in the air and we regret our misspent youth.
Ashe was doing this. Even as he skipped, he was conscious of a wish that he
had studied harder at college and was now in a position to be doing something
better than hack work for a soulless publishing company. Never before had he
been so completely certain that he was sick to death of the rut into which he
had fallen.
Skipping brought no balm. He threw down his rope and took up the Indian
clubs. Indian clubs left him still unsatisfied. The thought came to him that it
was a long time since he had done his Larsen Exercises. Perhaps they would heal
him.
The Larsen Exercises, invented by a certain Lieutenant Larsen, of the Swedish
Army, have almost every sort of merit. They make a man strong, supple, and
slender. But they are not dignified. Indeed, to one seeing them suddenly and
without warning for the first time, they are markedly humorous. The only reason
why King Henry, of England, whose son sank with the White Ship, never smiled
again, was because Lieutenant Larsen had not then invented his admirable
exercises.
So complacent, so insolently unselfconscious had Ashe become in the course
of three months, owing to his success in inducing the populace to look on
anything he did with the indulgent eye of understanding, that it simply did not
occur to him, when he abruptly twisted his body into the shape of a corkscrew,
in accordance with the directions in the lieutenant's book for the consummation
of Exercise One, that he was doing anything funny.
And the behavior of those present seemed to justify his confidence. The
proprietor of the Hotel Mathis regarded him without a smile. The proprietor of
the Hotel Previtali might have been in a trance, for all the interest he
displayed. The hotel employees continued their tasks impassively. The children
were blind and dumb. The cat across the way stropped its backbone against the
railings unheeding.
But, even as he unscrambled himself and resumed a normal posture, from his
immediate rear there rent the quiet morning air a clear and musical laugh. It
floated out on the breeze and hit him like a bullet.
Three months ago Ashe would have accepted the laugh as inevitable, and would
have refused to allow it to embarrass him; but long immunity from ridicule had
sapped his resolution. He spun round with a jump, flushed and self-conscious.
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