The Psmith Omnibus. P. G. Wodehouse

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The Psmith Omnibus - P. G. Wodehouse

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was warm, but freshened by an almost imperceptible breeze. The air was full of the scent of the cut grass which lay in little heaps behind the nets. This is the real cricket scent, which calls to one like the very voice of the game.

      Mike, as he sat there watching, could stand it no longer.

      He went up to Adair.

      "May I have an innings at this net?" he asked. He was embarrassed and nervous, and was trying not to show it. The natural result was that his manner was offensively abrupt.

      Adair was taking off his pads after his innings. He looked up. "This net," it may be observed, was the first eleven net.

      "What?" he said.

      Mike repeated his request. More abruptly this time, from increased embarrassment.

      "This is the first eleven net," said Adair coldly. "Go in after Lodge over there."

      "Over there" was the end net, where frenzied novices were bowling on a corrugated pitch to a red-haired youth with enormous feet, who looked as if he were taking his first lesson at the game.

      Mike walked away without a word.

      * * * * *

      The Archaeological Society expeditions, even though they carried with them the privilege of listening to Psmith's views of life, proved but a poor substitute for cricket. Psmith, who had no counterattraction shouting to him that he ought to be elsewhere, seemed to enjoy them hugely, but Mike almost cried sometimes from boredom. It was not always possible to slip away from the throng, for Mr. Outwood evidently looked upon them as among the very faithful, and kept them by his side.

      Mike on these occasions was silent and jumpy, his brow "sicklied o'er with the pale cast of care." But Psmith followed his leader with the pleased and indulgent air of a father whose infant son is showing him round the garden. Psmith's attitude toward archaeological research struck a new note in the history of that neglected science. He was amiable, but patronizing. He patronized fossils, and he patronized ruins. If he had been confronted with the Great Pyramid, he would have patronized that.

      He seemed to be consumed by a thirst for knowledge.

      That this was not altogether a genuine thirst was proved in the third expedition. Mr. Outwood and his band were pecking away at the site of an old Roman camp. Psmith approached Mike.

      "Having inspired confidence," he said, "by the docility of our demeanor, let us slip away, and brood apart for awhile. Roman camps, to be absolutely accurate, give me the pip. And I never want to see another putrid fossil in my life. Let us find some shady nook where a man may lie on his back for a bit."

      Mike, over whom the proceedings connected with the Roman camp had long since begun to shed a blue depression, offered no opposition, and they strolled away down the hill.

      Looking back, they saw that the archaeologists were still hard at it. Their departure had passed unnoticed.

      "A fatiguing pursuit, this grubbing for mementos of the past," said Psmith. "And, above all, dashed bad for the knees of the trousers. Mine are like some furrowed field. It's a great grief to a man of refinement, I can tell you, Comrade Jackson. Ah, this looks a likely spot."

      They had passed through a gate into the field beyond. At the farther end there was a brook, shaded by trees and running with a pleasant sound over pebbles.

      "Thus far," said Psmith, hitching up the knees of his trousers, and sitting down, "and no farther. We will rest here awhile, and listen to the music of the brook. In fact, unless you have anything important to say, I rather think I'll go to sleep. In this busy life of ours these naps by the wayside are invaluable. Call me in about an hour." And Psmith, heaving the comfortable sigh of the worker who by toil has earned rest, lay down, with his head against a mossy tree stump, and closed his eyes.

      Mike sat on for a few minutes, listening to the water and making centuries in his mind, and then, finding this a little dull, he got up, jumped the brook, and began to explore the wood on the other side.

      He had not gone many yards when a dog emerged suddenly from the undergrowth, and began to bark vigorously at him.

      Mike liked dogs, and, on acquaintance, they always liked him. But when you meet a dog in someone else's wood, it is as well not to stop in order that you may get to understand each other. Mike began to thread his way back through the trees.

      He was too late.

      "Stop! What the dickens are you doing here?" shouted a voice behind him.

      In the same situation a few years before, Mike would have carried on, and trusted to speed to save him. But now there seemed a lack of dignity in the action. He came back to where the man was standing.

      "I'm sorry if I'm trespassing," he said. "I was just having a look round."

      "The dickens you--Why, you're Jackson!"

      Mike looked at him. He was a short, broad young man with a fair moustache. Mike knew that he had seen him before somewhere, but he could not place him.

      "I played against you, for the Free Foresters last summer. In passing you seem to be a bit of a free forester yourself, dancing in among my nesting pheasants."

      "I'm frightfully sorry."

      "That's all right. Where do you spring from?"

      "Of course--I remember you now. You're Prendergast. You made fifty-eight not out."

      "Thanks. I was afraid the only thing you would remember about me was that you took a century mostly off my bowling."

      "You ought to have had me second ball, only cover dropped it."

      "Don't rake up forgotten tragedies. How is it you're not at Wrykyn? What are you doing down here?"

      "I've left Wrykyn."

      Prendergast suddenly changed the conversation. When a fellow tells you that he has left school unexpectedly, it is not always tactful to inquire the reason. He began to talk about himself.

      "I hang out down here. I do a little farming and a good deal of puttering about."

      "Get any cricket?" asked Mike, turning to the subject next his heart.

      "Only village. Very keen, but no great shakes. By the way, how are you off for cricket now? Have you ever got a spare afternoon?"

      Mike's heart leaped.

      "Any Wednesday or Saturday. Look here, I'll tell you how it is."

      And he told how matters stood with him.

      "So, you see," he concluded, "I'm supposed to be hunting for ruins and things"--Mike's ideas on the subject of archaeology were vague--"but I could always slip away. We all start out together, but I could nip back, get onto my bike--I've got it down here--and meet you anywhere you liked. By Jove, I'm simply dying

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