The Golf Omnibus

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The Golf Omnibus Page 26

by P. G. Wodehouse


  Bradbury Fisher gazed upon the caddie, whom until now he had not had any occasion to observe with any closeness.

  The caddie was not a boy. He was a man, apparently in the middle forties, with bushy eyebrows and a walrus moustache; and there was something about his appearance which suggested to Bradbury that here was a kindred spirit. He reminded Bradbury a little of Spike Huggins, the safe-blower, who had been a fresher with him at Sing-Sing. It seemed to him that this caddie could be trusted in a delicate matter involving secrecy and silence. Had he been some babbling urchin, the risk might have been too great.

  “Caddie,” said Bradbury.

  “Sir?” said the caddie.

  “Yours is an ill-paid job,” said Bradbury.

  “It is, indeed, sir,” said the caddie.

  “Would you like to earn fifty dollars?”

  “I would prefer to earn a hundred.”

  “I meant a hundred,” said Bradbury.

  He produced a roll of bills from his pocket, and peeled off one of that value. Then, stooping, he picked up his ball and placed it on the little oasis of turf. The caddie bowed intelligently.

  “You mean to say,” cried Gladstone Bott, a few moments later, “that you were out with your second? With your second!”

  “I had a stroke of luck.”

  “You’re sure it wasn’t about six strokes of luck?”

  “My ball was right out in the open in an excellent lie.”

  “Oh!” said Gladstone Bott, shortly.

  “I have four for it, I think.”

  “One down,” said Gladstone Bott.

  “And two to play,” trilled Bradbury.

  It was with a light heart that Bradbury Fisher teed up on the seventeenth. The match, he felt, was as good as over. The whole essence of golf is to discover a way of getting out of the rough without losing strokes; and with this sensible, broad-minded man of the world caddying for him he seemed to have discovered the ideal way. It cost him scarcely a pang when he saw his drive slice away into a tangle of long grass, but for the sake of appearances he affected a little chagrin.

  “Tut, tut!” he said.

  “I shouldn’t worry,” said Gladstone Bott. “You will probably find it sitting upon an india-rubber tee which someone has dropped there.”

  He spoke sardonically, and Bradbury did not like his manner. But then he never had liked Gladstone Bott’s manner, so what of that? He made his way to where the ball had fallen. It was lying under a bush.

  “Caddie,” said Bradbury.

  “Sir?” said the caddie.

  “A hundred?”

  “And fifty.”

  “And fifty,” said Bradbury Fisher.

  Gladstone Bott was still toiling along the fairway when Bradbury reached the green.

  “How many?” he asked, eventually winning to the goal.

  “On in two,” said Bradbury. “And you?”

  “Playing seven.”

  “Then let me see. If you take two putts, which is most unlikely, I shall have six for the hole and match.”

  A minute later Bradbury had picked up his ball out of the cup. He stood there, basking in the sunshine, his heart glowing with quiet happiness. It seemed to him that he had never seen the countryside looking so beautiful. The birds appeared to be singing as they had never sung before. The trees and the rolling turf had taken on a charm beyond anything he had ever encountered. Even Gladstone Bott looked almost bearable.

  “A very pleasant match,” he said, cordially, “conducted throughout in the most sporting spirit. At one time I thought you were going to pull it off, old man, but there—class will tell.”

  “I will now make my report,” said the caddie with the walrus moustache.

  “Do so,” said Gladstone Bott, briefly.

  Bradbury Fisher stared at the man with blanched cheeks. The sun had ceased to shine, the birds had stopped singing. The trees and the rolling turf looked pretty rotten, and Gladstone Bott perfectly foul. His heart was leaden with a hideous dread.

  “Your report? Your—your report? What do you mean?”

  “You don’t suppose,” said Gladstone Bott, “that I would play you an important match unless I had detectives watching you, do you? This gentleman is from the Quick Results Agency. What have you to report?” he said, turning to the caddie.

  The caddie removed his bushy eyebrows, and with a quick gesture swept off his moustache.

  “On the twelfth inst.,” he began in a monotonous, sing-song voice, “acting upon instructions received, I made my way to the Goldenville Golf Links in order to observe the movements of the man Fisher. I had adopted for the occasion the Number Three disguise and⎯”

  “All right, all right,” said Gladstone Bott, impatiently. “You can skip all that. Come down to what happened at the sixteenth.”

  The caddie looked wounded, but bowed deferentially.

  “At the sixteenth hole the man Fisher moved his ball into what—from his actions and furtive manner—I deduced to be a more favourable position.”

  “Ah!” said Gladstone Bott.

  “On the seventeenth the man Fisher picked up his ball and threw it with a movement of the wrist on to the green.”

  “It’s a lie. A foul and contemptible lie, shouted Bradbury Fisher.

  “Realizing that the man Fisher might adopt this attitude, sir,” said the caddie, “I took the precaution of snapshotting him in the act with my miniature wrist-watch camera, the detective’s best friend.”

  Bradbury Fisher covered his face with his hands and uttered a hollow groan.

  “My match,” said Gladstone Bott, with vindictive triumph. “I’ll trouble you to deliver that butler to me f.o.b. at my residence not later than noon tomorrow. Oh yes, and I was forgetting. You owe me three railroads.”

  Blizzard, dignified but kindly, met Bradbury in the Byzantine hall on his return home.

  “I trust your golf-match terminated satisfactorily, sir?” said the butler.

  A pang, almost too poignant to be borne, shot through Bradbury.

  “No, Blizzard,” he said. “No. Thank you for your kind inquiry, but I was not in luck.”

  “Too bad, sir,” said Blizzard, sympathetically. “I trust the prize at stake was not excessive?”

  “Well—er—well, it was rather big. I should like to speak to you about that a little later, Blizzard.”

  “At any time that is suitable to you, sir. If you will ring for one of the assistant-under-footmen when you desire to see me, sir, he will find me in my pantry. Meanwhile, sir, this cable arrived for you a short while back.”

  Bradbury took the envelope listlessly. He had been expecting a communication from his London agents announcing that they had bought Kent and Sussex, for which he had instructed them to make a firm offer just before he left England. No doubt this was their cable.

  He opened the envelope, and started as if it had contained a scorpion. It was from his wife.

  “Returning immediately ‘Aquitania’,” (it ran). “Docking Friday night. Meet without fail.”

  Bradbury stared at the words, frozen to the marrow. Although he had been in a sort of trance ever since that dreadful moment on the seventeenth green, his great brain had not altogether ceased to function; and, while driving home in the car, he had sketched out roughly a plan of action which, he felt, might meet the crisis. Assuming that Mrs. Fisher was to remain abroad for another month, he had practically decided to buy a daily paper, insert in it a front-page story announcing the death of Blizzard, forward the clipping to his wife, and then sell his house, and move to another neighbourhood. In this way it might be that she would never learn of what had occurred.

  But if she was due back next Friday, the scheme fell through and exposure was inevitable.

  He wondered dully what had caused her change of plans, and came to the conclusion that some feminine sixth sense must have warned her of peril threatening Blizzard. With a good deal of peevishness he wished that Providence had never endowed women with this sixth
sense. A woman with merely five took quite enough handling.

  “Sweet suffering soup-spoons!” groaned Bradbury.

  “Sir?” said Blizzard.

  “Nothing,” said Bradbury.

  “Very good, sir,” said Blizzard.

  For a man with anything on his mind, any little trouble calculated to affect the joie de vivre, there are few spots less cheering that the Customs sheds of New York. Draughts whistle dismally there—now to, now fro. Strange noises are heard. Customs officials chew gum and lurk grimly in the shadows, like tigers awaiting the luncheon-gong. It is not surprising that Bradbury’s spirits, low when he reached the place, should have sunk to zero long before the gangplank was lowered and the passengers began to stream down it.

  His wife was among the first to land. How beautiful she looked, thought Bradbury, as he watched her. And, alas, how intimidating. His tastes had always lain in the direction of spirited women. His first wife had been spirited. So had his second, third, and fourth. And the one at the moment of holding office was perhaps the most spirited of the whole platoon. For one long instant, as he went to meet her, Bradbury Fisher was conscious of a regret that he had not married one of those meek, mild girls who suffer uncomplainingly at their husband’s hands in the more hectic type of feminine novel. What he felt he could have done with at the moment was the sort of wife who thinks herself dashed lucky if the other half of the sketch does not drag her round the billiard-room by her hair, kicking her the while with spiked shoes.

  Three conversational openings presented themselves to him as he approached her.

  “Darling, there is something I want to tell you⎯”

  “Dearest, I have a small confession to make⎯”

  “Sweetheart, I don’t know if by any chance you remember Blizzard, our butler. Well, it’s like this⎯”

  But, in the event, it was she who spoke first.

  “Oh, Bradbury,” she cried, rushing into his arms, “I’ve done the most awful thing, and you must try to forgive me!”

  Bradbury blinked. He had never seen her in this strange mood before. As she clung to him, she seemed timid, fluttering, and—although a woman who weighed a full hundred and fifty-seven pounds—almost fragile.

  “What is it?” he inquired, tenderly. “Has somebody stolen your jewels?”

  “No, no.”

  “Have you been losing money at bridge?”

  “No, no. Worse than that.”

  Bradbury started.

  “You didn’t sing ‘My Little Grey Home in the West’ at the ship’s concert?” he demanded, eyeing her closely.

  “No, no! Ah, how can I tell you? Bradbury, look! You see that man over there?”

  Bradbury followed her pointing finger. Standing in an attitude of negligent dignity beside a pile of trunks under the letter V was a tall, stout, ambassadorial man, at the very sight of whom, even at this distance, Bradbury Fisher felt an odd sense of inferiority. His pendulous cheeks, his curving waistcoat, his protruding eyes, and the sequence of rolling chins combined to produce in Bradbury that instinctive feeling of being in the presence of a superior which we experience when meeting scratch golfers, head-waiters of fashionable restaurants, and traffic-policemen. A sudden pang of suspicion pierced him.

  “Well?” he said, hoarsely. “What of him?”

  “Bradbury, you must not judge me too harshly. We were thrown together and I was tempted⎯”

  “Woman,” thundered Bradbury Fisher, “who is this man?”

  “His name is Vosper.”

  “And what is there between you and him, and when did it start, and why and how and where?”

  Mrs. Fisher dabbed at her eyes with her handkerchief.

  “It was at the Duke of Bootle’s, Bradbury. I was invited there for the week-end.”

  “And this man was there?”

  “Yes.”

  “Ha! Proceed!”

  “The moment I set eyes on him, something seemed to go all over me.”

  “Indeed!”

  “At first it was his mere appearance. I felt that I had dreamed of such a man all my life, and that for all these wasted years I had been putting up with the second-best.”

  “Oh, you did, eh? Really? Is that so? You did, did you?” snorted Bradbury Fisher.

  “I couldn’t help it, Bradbury. I know I have always seemed so devoted to Blizzard, and so I was. But, honestly, there is no comparison between them—really there isn’t. You should see the way Vosper stood behind the Duke’s chair. Like a high priest presiding over some mystic religious ceremony. And his voice when he asks you if you will have sherry or hock! Like the music of some wonderful organ. I couldn’t resist him. I approached him delicately, and found that he was willing to come to America. He had been eighteen years with the Duke, and he told me he couldn’t stand the sight of the back of his head any longer. So⎯”

  Bradbury Fisher reeled.

  “This man—this Vosper. Who is he?”

  “Why, I’m telling you, honey. He was the Duke’s butler, and now he’s ours. Oh, you know how impulsive I am. Honestly, it wasn’t till we were half-way across the Atlantic that I suddenly said to myself, ‘What about Blizzard?’ What am I to do, Bradbury? I simply haven’t the nerve to fire Blizzard. And yet what will happen when he walks into his pantry and finds Vosper there? Oh, think, Bradbury, think!”

  Bradbury Fisher was thinking—and for the first time in a week without agony.

  “Evangeline,” he said, gravely, “this is awkward.”

  “I know.”

  ‘Extremely awkward.”

  “I know, I know. But surely you can think of some way out of the muddle?”

  “I may, I cannot promise, but I may.” He pondered deeply. “Ha! I have it! It is just possible I may be able to induce Gladstone Bott to take on Blizzard.”

  “Do you really think he would?”

  “He may—if I play my cards carefully. At any rate, I will try to persuade him. For the moment you and Vosper had better remain in New York, while I go home and put the negotiations in train. If I am successful, I will let you know.”

  “Do try your very hardest.”

  “I think I shall be able to manage it. Gladstone and I are old friends, and he would stretch a point to oblige me. But let this be a lesson to you, Evangeline.”

  “Oh, I will.”

  “By the way,” said Bradbury Fisher, “I am cabling my London agents today to instruct them to buy J. H. Taylor’s shirt-stud for my collection.”

  “Quite right, Bradbury, darling. And anything else you want in that way you will get, won’t you?”

  “I will,” said Bradbury Fisher.

  14

  KEEPING IN WITH VOSPER

  THE YOUNG MAN in the heather-mixture plus fours, who for some time had been pacing the terrace above the ninth green like an imprisoned jaguar, flung himself into a chair and uttered a snort of anguish.

  “Women,” said the young man, “are the limit.”

  The Oldest Member, ever ready to sympathize with youth in affliction, turned a courteous ear.

  “What,” he inquired, “has the sex been pulling on you now?”

  “My wife is the best little woman in the world.”

  “I can readily believe it.”

  “But,” continued the young man, “I would like to bean her with a brick, and bean her good. I told her, when she wanted to play a round with me this afternoon, that we must start early, as the days are drawing in. What did she do? Having got into her things, she decided that she didn’t like the look of them and made a complete change. She then powdered her nose for ten minutes. And when finally I got her on to the first tee, an hour late, she went back into the clubhouse to phone to her dressmaker. It will be dark before we’ve played six holes. If I had my way, golf-clubs would make a rigid rule that no wife be allowed to play with her husband.”

  The Oldest Member nodded gravely.

  “Until this is done,” he agreed, “the millennium cannot but be set back indefinit
ely. Although we are told nothing about it, there can be little doubt that one of Job’s chief trials was that his wife insisted on playing golf with him. And, as we are on this topic, it may interest you to hear a story.”

  “I have no time to listen to stories now.”

  “If your wife is telephoning to her dressmaker, you have ample time,” replied the Sage. “The story which I am about to relate deals with a man named Bradbury Fisher⎯”

  “You told me that one.”

  “I think not.”

  “Yes, you did. Bradbury Fisher was a Wall Street millionaire who had an English butler named Blizzard, who had been fifteen years with an earl. Another millionaire coveted Blizzard, and they played a match for him, and Fisher lost. But, just as he was wondering how he could square himself with his wife, who valued Blizzard very highly, Mrs. Fisher turned up from England with a still finer butler named Vosper, who had been eighteen years with a duke. So all ended happily.”

  “Yes,” said the Sage. “You appear to have the facts correctly. The tale which I am about to relate is a sequel to that story, and runs as follows:

  You say (began the Oldest Member) that all ended happily. That was Bradbury Fisher’s opinion, too. It seemed to Bradbury in the days that followed Vosper’s taking of office as though Providence, recognizing his sterling merits, had gone out of its way to smooth the path of life for him. The weather was fine; his handicap, after remaining stationary for many years, had begun to decrease; and his old friend Rupert Worple had just come out of Sing-Sing, where he had been taking a postgraduate course, and was paying him a pleasant visit at his house in Goldenville, Long Island.

  The only thing, in fact, that militated against Bradbury’s complete tranquillity was the information he had just received from his wife that her mother, Mrs. Lora Smith Maplebury, was about to infest the home for an indeterminate stay.

  Bradbury had never liked his wives’ mothers. His first wife, he recalled, had had a particularly objectionable mother. So had his second, third, and fourth. And the present holder of the title appeared to him to be scratch. She had a habit of sniffing in a significant way whenever she looked at him, and this can never make for a spirit of easy comradeship between man and woman. Given a free hand, he would have tied a brick to her neck and dropped her in the water-hazard at the second; but, realizing that this was but a Utopian dream, he sensibly decided to make the best of things and to content himself with jumping out of the window whenever she came into a room in which he happened to be sitting.

 

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