“Dear boy!” she said. “He does enjoy it so. I think he gets so much more out of life than he used to, don’t you?”
“Sure thing. May I wish you happiness? Why didn’t you let me know and collect the silver fish-slice?”
“Thank you so much, Mr. Pepper. I did write to you, but I suppose you never got the letter.”
“Mr. Craye didn’t make any objections, then?”
“On the contrary. He was more in favor of the marriage than anyone.”
“And I’ll tell you why,” I said. “I’m rather a chump, you know, but I observe things. I bet he was most frightfully grateful to you for taking Edwin in hand and making him human.”
“Why, you’re wonderful, Mr. Pepper. That is exactly what he said himself. It was that that first made us friends.”
“And—er—Florence?”
She sighed.
“I’m afraid Florence has taken the thing a little badly. But I hope to win her over in time. I want all my children to love me.”
“All your what?”
“I think of them as my children, you see, Mr. Pepper. I adopted them as my own when I married their father. Did you think I had married Edwin? What a funny mistake. I am very fond of Edwin, but not in that way. No, I married Mr. Craye. We left him at our villa tonight, as he had some letters to get off. You must come and see us, Mr. Pepper. I always feel that it was you who brought us together, you know. I wonder if you will be seeing Florence when you get back? Will you give her my very best love?”
End of Project Gutenberg’s A Wodehouse Miscellany, by P. G. Wodehouse
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