"Good Lord, Bill, don't tell me you go around in a coat like that? It must make you look like an absconding bookie. And the tie! The cravat! Ye gods! You'd better drop in at Harrige's and see the chap in our haberdashery department. We've got a sale on."
Captain Biggar strode forward. There was a tense, hard expression on his rugged face.
"Let me look at that." He took the coat, felt in the pocket and produced a black patch. "Ha!" he said, and there was a wealth of meaning in his voice.
Rory was listening at the library door.
"Hullo," he said. "Someone talking French.
Must be Boussac. Don't want to miss Boussac. Come along, Moke. This girl," said Rory, putting a loving arm round her shoulder, "talks French with both hands. You coming, Mrs.
Spottsworth? It's the Derby Dinner on television."
"I will join you later, perhaps," said Mrs.
Spottsworth. "I left Pomona out in the garden, and she may be getting lonely."
"You, Captain?"
Captain Biggar shook his head. His face was more rugged than ever.
"I have a word or two to say to Lord Rowcester first. If you can spare me a moment, Lord Rowcester?"
"Oh, rather," said Bill faintly.
Jeeves returned with the brandy, and he sprang for it like Whistler's Mother leaping at the winning post.
But brandy, when administered in one of those small after-dinner glasses, can never do anything really constructive for a man whose affairs have so shaped themselves as to give him the momentary illusion of having been hit in the small of the back by the Twentieth Century Limited. A tun or a hogshead of the stuff might have enabled Bill to face the coming interview with a jaunty smile. The mere sip which was all that had been vouchsafed to him left him as pallid and boneless as if it had been sarsaparilla. Gazing through a mist at Captain Biggar, he closely resembled the sort of man for whom the police spread drag-nets, preparatory to questioning them in connection with the recent smash-and-grab robbery at Marks and Schoenstein's Bon Ton Jewellery Store on Eighth Avenue. His face had shaded away to about the colour of the under-side of a dead fish, and Jeeves, eyeing him with respectful commiseration, wished that it were possible to bring the roses back to his cheeks by telling him one or two good things which had come into his mind from the Collected Works of Marcus Aurelius.
Captain Biggar, even when seen through a mist, presented a spectacle which might well have intimidated the stoutest. His eyes seemed to Bill to be shooting out long, curling flames, and why they called a man with a face as red as that a White Hunter was more than he was able to understand.
Strong emotion, as always, had intensified the vermilion of the Captain's complexion, giving him something of the appearance of a survivor from an explosion in a tomato cannery.
Nor was his voice, when he spoke, of a timbre calculated to lull any apprehensions which his aspect might have inspired. It was the voice of a man who needed only a little sympathy and encouragement to make him whip out a revolver and start blazing away with it.
"So!" he said.
There are no good answers to the word "So!" particularly when uttered in the kind of voice just described, and Bill did not attempt to find one.
"So you are Honest Patch Perkins!"
Jeeves intervened, doing his best as usual.
"Well, yes and no, sir."
"What do you mean, yes and no? Isn't this the louse's patch?" demanded the Captain, brandishing Exhibit A. "Isn't that the hellhound's ginger moustache?" he said, giving Exhibit B a twiddle. "And do you think I didn't recognize that coat and tie?"
"What I was endeavouring to convey by the expression "Yes and no", sir, was that his lordship has retired from business."
"You bet he has. Pity he didn't do it sooner."
"Yes, sir. Oh, Iago, the pity of it, Iago."
"Eh?"
"I was quoting the Swan of Avon, sir."
"Well, stop quoting the bally Swan of Avon."
"Certainly, sir, if you wish it."
Bill had recovered his faculties to a certain extent. To say that even now he was feeling boomps-a-daisy would be an exaggeration, but he was capable of speech.
"Captain Biggar," he said, "I owe you an explanation."
"You owe me three thousand and five pounds two and six," said the Captain, coldly corrective.
This silenced Bill again, and the Captain took advantage of the fact to call him eleven derogatory names.
Jeeves assumed the burden of the defence, for Bill was still reeling under the impact of the eleventh name.
"It is impossible to gainsay the fact that in the circumstances your emotion is intelligible, sir, for one readily admits that his lordship's recent activities are of a nature to lend themselves to adverse criticism. But can one fairly blame his lordship for what has occurred?"
This seemed to the Captain an easy one to answer.
"Yes," he said.
"You will observe that I employed the adverb "fairly", sir. His lordship arrived on Epsom Downs this afternoon with the best intentions and a capital adequate for any reasonable emergency. He could hardly have been expected to foresee that two such meagrely favoured animals as Lucy Glitters and Whistler's Mother would have emerged triumphant from their respective trials of speed. His lordship is not clairvoyant."
"He could have laid the bets off."
"There I am with you sir. Rem acu tetigisti."
"Eh?"
"A Latin expression, which might be rendered in English by the American colloquialism "You said a mouthful". I urged his lordship to do so."
"You?"
"I was officiating as his lordship's clerk."
The Captain stared.
"You weren't the chap in the pink moustache?"
"Precisely, sir, though I would be inclined to describe it as russet rather than pink."
The Captain brightened.
"So you were his clerk, were you? Then when he goes to prison, you'll go with him."
"Let us hope there will be no such sad ending as that, sir."
"What do you mean, "sad" ending?" said Captain Biggar.
There was an uncomfortable pause. The Captain broke it.
"Well, let's get down to it," he said.
"No sense in wasting time. Properly speaking, I ought to charge this sheep-faced, shambling refugee from hell—"
"The name is Lord Rowcester, sir."
"No, it's not, it's Patch Perkins.
Properly speaking, Perkins, you slinking reptile, I ought to charge you for petrol consumed on the journey here from Epsom, repairs to my car, which wouldn't have broken down if I hadn't had to push it so hard in the effort to catch you ... and," he added, struck with an afterthought, "the two beers I had at the Goose and Gherkin while waiting for those repairs to be done. But I'm no hog.
I'll settle for three thousand and five pounds two and six. Write me a cheque."
Bill passed a fevered hand through his hair.
"How can I write you a cheque?"
Captain Biggar clicked his tongue, impatient of this shilly-shallying.
"You have a pen, have you not? And there is ink on the premises, I imagine? You are a strong, able-bodied young fellow in full possession of the use of your right hand, aren't you? No paralysis?
No rheumatism in the joints? If," he went on, making a concession, "what is bothering you is that you have run out of blotting paper, never mind.
I'll blow on it."
Jeeves came to the rescue, helping out the young master, who was still massaging the top of his head.
"What his lordship is striving to express in words, sir, is that while, as you rightly say, he is physically competent to write a cheque for three thousand and five pounds two shillings and sixpence, such a cheque, when presented at your bank, would not be honoured."
"Exactly," said Bill, well pleased with this lucid way of putting the thing. "It would bounce like a bounding Dervish and come shooting back like a homing pigeon."