His voice trembled with self-pity.
"Do you realize a fraction of the awful things you have let me in for?
How on earth am I to remember whether I go in before the chef or after the
third footman? I shan't have a peaceful minute while I'm in this place. I've
got to sit and listen by the hour to a bore of a butler who seems to be a sort
of walking hospital. I've got to steer my way through a complicated system of
etiquette.
"And on top of all that you have the nerve, the insolence, to imagine
that you can use me as a punching bag to work your bad temper off! You have the
immortal rind to suppose that I will stand for being nagged and bullied by you
whenever your suicidal way of living brings on an attack of indigestion! You
have the supreme gall to fancy that you can talk as you please to me!
"Very well! I've had enough of it. I resign! If you want this scarab of
yours recovered let somebody else do it. I've retired from business."
He took another step toward the door. A shaking hand clutched at his sleeve.
"My boy--my dear boy--be reasonable!"
Ashe was intoxicated with his own oratory. The sensation of bullyragging a
genuine millionaire was new and exhilarating. He expanded his chest and spread
his feet like a colossus.
"That's all very well," he said, coldly disentangling himself from
the hand. "You can't get out of it like that. We have got to come to an
understanding. The point is that if I am to be subjected to your--your senile
malevolence every time you have a twinge of indigestion, no amount of money
could pay me to stop on."
"My dear boy, it shall not occur again. I was hasty."
Mr. Peters, with agitated fingers, relit the stump of his cigar.
"Throw away that cigar!"
"My boy!"
"Throw it away! You say you were hasty. Of course you were hasty; and
as long as you abuse your digestion you will go on being hasty. I want
something better than apologies. If I am to stop here we must get to the root
of things. You must put yourself in my hands as though I were your doctor. No
more cigars. Every morning regular exercises."
"No, no!"
"Very well!"
"No; stop! Stop! What sort of exercises?"
"I'll show you to-morrow morning. Brisk walks."
"I hate walking."
"Cold baths."
"No, no!"
"Very well!"
"No; stop! A cold bath would kill me at my age."
"It would put new life into you. Do you consent to the cold baths? No?
Very well!"
"Yes, yes, yes!"
"You promise?"
"Yes, yes!"
"All right, then."
The distant sound of the dinner gong floated in.
"We settled that just in time." said Ashe.
Mr. Peters regarded him fixedly.
"Young man," he said slowly, "if, after all this, you fail to
recover my Cheops for me I'll--I'll--By George, I'll skin you!"
"Don't talk like that," said Ashe. "That's another thing you
have got to remember. If my treatment is to be successful you must not let
yourself think in that way. You must exercise self-control mentally. You must
think beautiful thoughts."
"The idea of skinning you is a beautiful thought!" said Mr. Peters
wistfully.
* * *
In order that their gayety might not be diminished--and the food turned to
ashes in their mouths by the absence from the festive board of Mr. Beach, it
was the custom for the upper servants at Blandings to postpone the start of
their evening meal until dinner was nearly over above-stairs. This enabled the
butler to take his place at the head of the table without fear of interruption,
except for the few moments when coffee was being served.
Every night shortly before half-past eight--at which hour Mr. Beach felt
that he might safely withdraw from the dining-room and leave Lord Emsworth and
his guests to the care of Merridew, the under-butler, and James and Alfred, the
footmen, returning only for a few minutes to lend tone and distinction to the
distribution of cigars and liqueurs--those whose rank entitled them to do so
made their way to the housekeeper's room, to pass in desultory conversation the
interval before Mr. Beach should arrive, and a kitchen maid, with the
appearance of one who has been straining at the leash and has at last managed
to get free, opened the door, with the announcement: "Mr. Beach, if you
please, dinner is served." On which Mr. Beach, extending a crooked elbow
toward the housekeeper, would say, "Mrs. Twemlow!" and lead the way,
high and disposedly, down the passage, followed in order of rank by the rest of
the company, in couples, to the steward's room.
For Blandings was not one of those houses--or shall we say hovels?--where
the upper servants are expected not only to feed but to congregate before
feeding in the steward's room. Under the auspices of Mr. Beach and of Mrs.
Twemlow, who saw eye to eye with him in these matters, things were done
properly at the castle, with the correct solemnity. To Mr. Beach and Mrs.
Twemlow the suggestion that they and their peers should gather together in the
same room in which they were to dine would have been as repellent as an
announcement from Lady Ann Warblington, the chatelaine, that the house party
would eat in the drawing-room.
When Ashe, returning from his interview with Mr. Peters, was intercepted by
a respectful small boy and conducted to the housekeeper's room, he was
conscious of a sensation of shrinking inferiority akin to his emotions on his
first day at school. The room was full and apparently on very cordial terms
with itself. Everybody seemed to know everybody and conversation was proceeding
in a manner reminiscent of an Old Home Week.
As a matter of fact, the house party at Blandings being in the main a
gathering together of the Emsworth clan by way of honor and as a means of
introduction to Mr. Peters and daughter, the bride-of-the-house-to-be, most of
the occupants of the house-keeper's room were old acquaintances and were
renewing interrupted friendships at the top of their voices.
A lull followed Ashe's arrival and all eyes, to his great discomfort, were
turned in his direction. His embarrassment was relieved by Mrs. Twemlow, who
advanced to do the honors. Of Mrs. Twemlow little need be attempted in the way
of pen portraiture beyond the statement that she went as harmoniously with Mr.
Beach as one of a pair of vases or one of a brace of pheasants goes with its
fellow. She had the same appearance of imminent apoplexy, the same air of
belonging to some dignified and haughty branch of the vegetable kingdom.
"Mr. Marson, welcome to Blandings Castle!"
Ashe had been waiting for somebody to say this, and had been a little
surprised that Mr. Beach had not done so. He was also surprised at the
housekeeper's ready recognition of his identity, until he saw Joan in the
throng and deduced that she must have been the source of information.
He envied Joan. In some amazing way she contrived to look not out of place
in this gathering. He himself, he felt, had impostor stamped in large
characters all over him.
Mrs. Twemlow began to make the introductions--a long and tedious process, which
she performed relentlessly, without haste and without scamping her work. With
each member of the aristocracy of his new profession Ashe shook hands, and on
each member he smiled, until his facial and dorsal muscles were like to crack
under the strain. It was amazing that so many high-class domestics could be
collected into one moderate-sized room.
"Miss Simpson you know," said Mrs. Twemlow, and Ashe was about to
deny the charge when he perceived that Joan was the individual referred to.
"Mr. Judson, Mr. Marson. Mr. Judson is the Honorable Frederick's
gentleman."
"You have not the pleasure of our Freddie's acquaintance as yet, I take
it, Mr. Marson?" observed Mr. Judson genially, a smooth-faced,
lazy-looking young man. "Freddie repays inspection."
"Mr. Marson, permit me to introduce you to Mr. Ferris, Lord
Stockheath's gentleman."
Mr. Ferris, a dark, cynical man, with a high forehead, shook Ashe by the
hand.
"Happy to meet you, Mr. Marson."
"Miss Willoughby, this is Mr. Marson, who will take you in to dinner.
Miss Willoughby is Lady Muriel Mant's lady. As of course you are aware, Lady
Mildred, our eldest daughter, married Colonel Horace Mant, of the Scots
Guards."
Ashe was not aware, and he was rather surprised that Mrs. Twemlow should
have a daughter whose name was Lady Mildred; but reason, coming to his rescue,
suggested that by our she meant the offspring of the Earl of Emsworth and his
late countess. Miss Willoughby was a light-hearted damsel, with a smiling face
and chestnut hair, done low over her forehead.
Since etiquette forbade that he should take Joan in to dinner, Ashe was glad
that at least an apparently pleasant substitute had been provided. He had just
been introduced to an appallingly statuesque lady of the name of Chester, Lady
Ann Warblington's own maid, and his somewhat hazy recollections of Joan's
lecture on below-stairs precedence had left him with the impression that this
was his destined partner. He had frankly quailed at the prospect of being
linked to so much aristocratic hauteur.
When the final introduction had been made conversation broke out again. It
dealt almost exclusively, so far as Ashe could follow it, with the
idiosyncrasies of the employers of those present. He took it that this happened
down the entire social scale below stairs. Probably the lower servants in the
servants' hall discussed the upper servants in the room, and the still lower
servants in the housemaids' sitting-room discussed their superiors of the
servants' hall, and the stillroom gossiped about the housemaids' sitting-room.
He wondered which was the bottom circle of all, and came to the conclusion
that it was probably represented by the small respectful boy who had acted as
his guide a short while before. This boy, having nobody to discuss anybody with,
presumably sat in solitary meditation, brooding on the odd-job man.
He thought of mentioning this theory to Miss Willoughby, but decided that it
was too abstruse for her, and contented himself with speaking of some of the
plays he had seen before leaving London. Miss Willoughby was an enthusiast on
the drama; and, Colonel Mant's military duties keeping him much in town, she
had had wide opportunities of indulging her tastes. Miss Willoughby did not
like the country. She thought it dull.
"Don't you think the country dull, Mr. Marson?"
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