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Damsel in Distress, A
CHAPTER 5
P G Wodehouse
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       CHAPTER 5
       George awoke next morning with a misty sense that somehow the world
       had changed. As the last remnants of sleep left him, he was aware
       of a vague excitement. Then he sat up in bed with a jerk. He had
       remembered that he was in love.
       There was no doubt about it. A curious happiness pervaded his
       entire being. He felt young and active. Everything was emphatically
       for the best in this best of all possible worlds. The sun was
       shining. Even the sound of someone in the street below whistling
       one of his old compositions, of which he had heartily sickened
       twelve months before, was pleasant to his ears, and this in spite
       of the fact that the unseen whistler only touched the key in odd
       spots and had a poor memory for tunes. George sprang lightly out of
       bed, and turned on the cold tap in the bath-room. While he lathered
       his face for its morning shave he beamed at himself in the mirror.
       It had come at last. The Real Thing.
       George had never been in love before. Not really in love. True,
       from the age of fifteen, he had been in varying degrees of
       intensity attracted sentimentally by the opposite sex. Indeed, at
       that period of life of which Mr. Booth Tarkington has written so
       searchingly--the age of seventeen--he had been in love with
       practically every female he met and with dozens whom he had only
       seen in the distance; but ripening years had mellowed his taste and
       robbed him of that fine romantic catholicity. During the last five
       years women had found him more or less cold. It was the nature of
       his profession that had largely brought about this cooling of the
       emotions. To a man who, like George, has worked year in and year
       out at the composition of musical comedies, woman comes to lose
       many of those attractive qualities which ensnare the ordinary male.
       To George, of late years, it had begun to seem that the salient
       feature of woman as a sex was her disposition to kick. For five
       years he had been wandering in a world of women, many of them
       beautiful, all of them superficially attractive, who had left no
       other impress on his memory except the vigour and frequency with
       which they had kicked. Some had kicked about their musical
       numbers, some about their love-scenes; some had grumbled about
       their exit lines, others about the lines of their second-act
       frocks. They had kicked in a myriad differing ways--wrathfully,
       sweetly, noisily, softly, smilingly, tearfully, pathetically and
       patronizingly; but they had all kicked; with the result that woman
       had now become to George not so much a flaming inspiration or a
       tender goddess as something to be dodged--tactfully, if possible;
       but, if not possible, by open flight. For years he had dreaded to
       be left alone with a woman, and had developed a habit of gliding
       swiftly away when he saw one bearing down on him.
       The psychological effect of such a state of things is not difficult
       to realize. Take a man of naturally quixotic temperament, a man of
       chivalrous instincts and a feeling for romance, and cut him off for
       five years from the exercise of those qualities, and you get an
       accumulated store of foolishness only comparable to an escape of
       gas in a sealed room or a cellarful of dynamite. A flicker of a
       match, and there is an explosion.
       This girl's tempestuous irruption into his life had supplied flame
       for George. Her bright eyes, looking into his, had touched off the
       spiritual trinitrotoluol which he had been storing up for so long.
       Up in the air in a million pieces had gone the prudence and
       self-restraint of a lifetime. And here he was, as desperately in
       love as any troubadour of the Middle Ages.
       It was not till he had finished shaving and was testing the
       temperature of his bath with a shrinking toe that the realization
       came over him in a wave that, though he might be in love, the
       fairway of love was dotted with more bunkers than any golf course
       he had ever played on in his life. In the first place, he did not
       know the girl's name. In the second place, it seemed practically
       impossible that he would ever see her again. Even in the midst of
       his optimism George could not deny that these facts might
       reasonably be considered in the nature of obstacles. He went back
       into his bedroom, and sat on the bed. This thing wanted thinking
       over.
       He was not depressed--only a little thoughtful. His faith in his
       luck sustained him. He was, he realized, in the position of a man
       who has made a supreme drive from the tee, and finds his ball near
       the green but in a cuppy lie. He had gained much; it now remained
       for him to push his success to the happy conclusion. The driver of
       Luck must be replaced by the spoon--or, possibly, the niblick--of
       Ingenuity. To fail now, to allow this girl to pass out of his life
       merely because he did not know who she was or where she was, would
       stamp him a feeble adventurer. A fellow could not expect Luck to
       do everything for him. He must supplement its assistance with his
       own efforts.
       What had he to go on? Well, nothing much, if it came to that,
       except the knowledge that she lived some two hours by train out of
       London, and that her journey started from Waterloo Station. What
       would Sherlock Holmes have done? Concentrated thought supplied no
       answer to the question; and it was at this point that the cheery
       optimism with which he had begun the day left George and gave place
       to a grey gloom. A dreadful phrase, haunting in its pathos, crept
       into his mind. "Ships that pass in the night!" It might easily turn
       out that way. Indeed, thinking over the affair in all its aspects
       as he dried himself after his tub, George could not see how it
       could possibly turn out any other way.
       He dressed moodily, and left the room to go down to breakfast.
       Breakfast would at least alleviate this sinking feeling which was
       unmanning him. And he could think more briskly after a cup or two
       of coffee.
       He opened the door. On a mat outside lay a letter.
       The handwriting was feminine. It was also in pencil, and strange to
       him. He opened the envelope.
       "Dear Mr. Bevan" (it began).
       With a sudden leap of the heart he looked at the signature.
       The letter was signed "The Girl in the Cab."
       "DEAR MR. BEVAN,
       "I hope you won't think me very rude, running off
       without waiting to say good-bye. I had to. I saw Percy
       driving up in a cab, and knew that he must have followed us.
       He did not see me, so I got away all right. I managed
       splendidly about the money, for I remembered that I was
       wearing a nice brooch, and stopped on the way to the
       station to pawn it.
       "Thank you ever so much again for all your wonderful
       kindness.
       Yours,
       THE GIRL IN THE CAB."
       George read the note twice on the way down to the breakfast room,
       and three times more during the meal; then, having committed its
       contents to memory down to the last comma, he gave himself up to
       glowing thoughts.
       What a girl! He had never in his life before met a woman who could
       write a letter without a postscript, and this was but the smallest
       of her unusual gifts. The resource of her, to think of pawning that
       brooch! The sweetness of her to bother to send him a note! More
       than ever before was he convinced that he had met his ideal, and
       more than ever before was he determined that a triviality like
       being unaware of her name and address should not keep him from her.
       It was not as if he had no clue to go upon. He knew that she lived
       two hours from London and started home from Waterloo. It narrowed
       the thing down absurdly. There were only about three counties in
       which she could possibly live; and a man must be a poor fellow who
       is incapable of searching through a few small counties for the girl
       he loves. Especially a man with luck like his.
       Luck is a goddess not to be coerced and forcibly wooed by those who
       seek her favours. From such masterful spirits she turns away. But
       it happens sometimes that, if we put our hand in hers with the
       humble trust of a little child, she will have pity on us, and not
       fail us in our hour of need. On George, hopefully watching for
       something to turn up, she smiled almost immediately.
       It was George's practice, when he lunched alone, to relieve the
       tedium of the meal with the assistance of reading matter in the
       shape of one or more of the evening papers. Today, sitting down to
       a solitary repast at the Piccadilly grill-room, he had brought with
       him an early edition of the Evening News. And one of the first
       items which met his eye was the following, embodied in a column
       on one of the inner pages devoted to humorous comments in prose and
       verse on the happenings of the day. This particular happening the
       writer had apparently considered worthy of being dignified by
       rhyme. It was headed:
       "THE PEER AND THE POLICEMAN."
       "Outside the 'Carlton,' 'tis averred, these stirring
       happenings occurred. The hour, 'tis said (and no one
       doubts) was half-past two, or thereabouts. The day was
       fair, the sky was blue, and everything was peaceful too,
       when suddenly a well-dressed gent engaged in heated
       argument and roundly to abuse began another well-dressed
       gentleman. His suede-gloved fist he raised on high to dot
       the other in the eye. Who knows what horrors might have
       been, had there not come upon the scene old London city's
       favourite son, Policeman C. 231. 'What means this conduct?
       Prithee stop!' exclaimed that admirable slop. With which he
       placed a warning hand upon the brawler's collarband. We
       simply hate to tell the rest. No subject here for flippant
       jest. The mere remembrance of the tale has made our ink
       turn deadly pale. Let us be brief. Some demon sent stark
       madness on the well-dressed gent. He gave the constable a
       punch just where the latter kept his lunch. The constable
       said 'Well! Well! Well!' and marched him to a dungeon cell.
       At Vine Street Station out it came--Lord Belpher was the
       culprit's name. But British Justice is severe alike on
       pauper and on peer; with even hand she holds the scale; a
       thumping fine, in lieu of gaol, induced Lord B. to feel
       remorse and learn he mustn't punch the Force."
       George's mutton chop congealed on the plate, untouched. The French
       fried potatoes cooled off, unnoticed. This was no time for food.
       Rightly indeed had he relied upon his luck. It had stood by him
       nobly. With this clue, all was over except getting to the nearest
       Free Library and consulting Burke's Peerage. He paid his bill and
       left the restaurant.
       Ten minutes later he was drinking in the pregnant information that
       Belpher was the family name of the Earl of Marshmoreton, and that
       the present earl had one son, Percy Wilbraham Marsh, educ. Eton and
       Christ Church, Oxford, and what the book with its customary
       curtness called "one d."--Patricia Maud. The family seat, said
       Burke, was Belpher Castle, Belpher, Hants.
       Some hours later, seated in a first-class compartment of a train
       that moved slowly out of Waterloo Station, George watched London
       vanish behind him. In the pocket closest to his throbbing heart
       was a single ticket to Belpher.
       Content of CHAPTER 5 [P G Wodehouse's novel: A Damsel in Distress]
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