<h2 id="CH5"> CHAPTER V </h2>
<div class="chtitle"> THE RETURN OF BATTLING BILLSON </div>
<p>It was a most embarrassing moment, one of those
moments which plant lines on the face and turn the
hair a distinguished grey at the temples. I looked
at the barman. The barman looked at me. The
assembled company looked at us both impartially.</p>
<p>“Ho!” said the barman.</p>
<p>I am very quick. I could see at once that he was not in
sympathy with me. He was a large, profuse man, and his
eye as it met mine conveyed the impression that he regarded
me as a bad dream come true. His mobile lips curved
slightly, showing a gold tooth; and the muscles of his
brawny arms, which were strong as iron bands, twitched a
little.</p>
<p>“Ho!” he said.</p>
<p>The circumstances which had brought me into my present
painful position were as follows. In writing those stories
for the popular magazines which at that time were causing
so many editors so much regret, I was accustomed, like one
of my brother-authors, to take all mankind for my province.
Thus, one day I would be dealing with dukes in their castles,
the next I would turn right round and start tackling the
submerged tenth in their slums. Versatile. At the
moment I happened to be engaged upon a rather poignant
little thing about a girl called Liz, who worked in a fried-fish
shop in the Ratcliff Highway, and I had accordingly gone
down there to collect local colour. For whatever Posterity
may say of James Corcoran, it can never say that he shrank
from inconvenience where his Art was concerned.</p>
<p>The Ratcliff Highway is an interesting thoroughfare, but
on a warm day it breeds thirst. After wandering about
for an hour or so, therefore, I entered the Prince of
Wales public-house, called for a pint of beer, drained it
at a draught, reached in my pocket for coin, and found
emptiness. I was in a position to add to my notes on the
East End of London one to the effect that pocket-pickery
flourishes there as a fine art.</p>
<p>“I’m awfully sorry,” I said, smiling an apologetic smile
and endeavouring to put a debonair winsomeness into my
voice. “I find I’ve got no money.”</p>
<p>It was at this point that the barman said “Ho!” and
moved out into the open through a trick door in the counter.</p>
<p>“I think my pocket must have been picked,” I said.</p>
<p>“Oh, do you?” said the barman.</p>
<p>He gave me the idea of being rather a soured man. Years
of association with unscrupulous citizens who tried to get
drinks for nothing had robbed him of that fine fresh young
enthusiasm with which he had started out on his career of
barmanship.</p>
<p>“I had better leave my name and address,” I suggested.</p>
<p>“Who,” enquired the barman, coldly, “wants your
blinking name and address?”</p>
<p>These practical men go straight to the heart of a thing.
He had put his finger on the very hub of the matter. Who
did want my blinking name and address? No one.</p>
<p>“I will send——” I was proceeding, when things began
to happen suddenly. An obviously expert hand gripped
me by the back of the neck, another closed upon the seat of
my trousers, there was a rush of air, and I was rolling across
the pavement in the direction of a wet and unsavoury
gutter. The barman, gigantic against the dirty white
front of the public-house, surveyed me grimly.</p>
<p>I think that, if he had confined himself to mere looks—however
offensive—I would have gone no farther into the
matter. After all, the man had right on his side. How
could he be expected to see into my soul and note its snowy
purity? But, as I picked myself up, he could not resist the
temptation to improve the occasion.</p>
<p>“That’s what comes of tryin’ to snitch drinks,” he said,
with what seemed to me insufferable priggishness.</p>
<p>Those harsh words stung me to the quick. I burned with
generous wrath. I flung myself on that barman. The
futility of attacking such a Colossus never occurred to me.
I forgot entirely that he could put me out of action with one
hand.</p>
<p>A moment later, however, he had reminded me of this
fact. Even as I made my onslaught an enormous fist came
from nowhere and crashed into the side of my head. I sat
down again.</p>
<p>“’Ullo!”</p>
<p>I was aware, dimly, that someone was speaking to me,
someone who was not the barman. That athlete had already
dismissed me as a spent force and returned to his professional
duties. I looked up and got a sort of general
impression of bigness and blue serge, and then I was lifted
lightly to my feet.</p>
<p>My head had begun to clear now, and I was able to look
more steadily at my sympathiser. And, as I looked, the
feeling came to me that I had seen him before somewhere.
That red hair, those glinting eyes, that impressive bulk—it
was my old friend Wilberforce Billson and no other—Battling
Billson, the coming champion, whom I had last
seen fighting at Wonderland under the personal management
of Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge.</p>
<p>“Did ’e ’it yer?” enquired Mr. Billson.</p>
<p>There was only one answer to this. Disordered though
my faculties were, I was clear upon this point. I said,
“Yes, he did hit me.”</p>
<p>“’R!” said Mr. Billson, and immediately passed into the
hostelry.</p>
<p>It was not at once that I understood the significance of
this move. The interpretation I placed upon his abrupt
departure was that, having wearied of my society, he had
decided to go and have some refreshment. Only when the
sound of raised voices from within came pouring through
the door did I begin to suspect that in attributing to it such
callousness I might have wronged that golden nature.
With the sudden reappearance of the barman—who shot out
as if impelled by some imperious force and did a sort of
backwards fox-trot across the pavement—suspicion became
certainty.</p>
<p>The barman, as becomes a man plying his trade in the
Ratcliff Highway, was made of stern stuff. He was no
poltroon. As soon as he had managed to stop himself from
pirouetting, he dabbed at his right cheek-bone in a delicate
manner, soliloquised for a moment, and then dashed back
into the bar. And it was after the door had swung to
again behind him that the proceedings may have been said
formally to have begun.</p>
<p>What precisely was going on inside that bar I was still too
enfeebled to go and see. It sounded like an earthquake,
and no meagre earthquake at that. All the glassware in
the world seemed to be smashing simultaneously, the populations
of several cities were shouting in unison, and I could
almost fancy that I saw the walls of the building shake and
heave. And then somebody blew a police-whistle.</p>
<p>There is a magic about the sound of a police-whistle. It
acts like oil on the most troubled waters. This one brought
about an instant lull in the tumult. Glasses ceased to
break, voices were hushed, and a moment later out came Mr.
Billson, standing not upon the order of his going. His nose
was bleeding a little and there was the scenario of a black
eye forming on his face, but otherwise there seemed nothing
much the matter with him. He cast a wary look up and
down the street and sprinted for the nearest corner. And I,
shaking off the dreamy after-effects of my encounter with
the barman, sprinted in his wake. I was glowing with
gratitude and admiration. I wanted to catch this man up
and thank him formally. I wanted to assure him of my
undying esteem. Moreover, I wanted to borrow sixpence
from him. The realisation that he was the only man in the
whole wide East End of London who was likely to lend me
the money to save me having to walk back to Ebury Street
gave me a rare burst of speed.</p>
<p>It was not easy to overtake him, for the sound of my
pursuing feet evidently suggested to Mr. Billson that the
hunt was up, and he made good going. Eventually, however,
when in addition to running I began to emit a plaintive
“Mr. Billson! I say, Mr. Billson!” at every second stride,
he seemed to gather that he was among friends.</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s you, is it?” he said, halting.</p>
<p>He was plainly relieved. He produced a murky pipe and
lit it. I delivered my speech of thanks. Having heard me
out, he removed his pipe and put into a few short words the
moral of the whole affair.</p>
<p>“Nobody don’t dot no pals of mine not when I’m
around,” said Mr. Billson.</p>
<p>“It was awfully good of you to trouble,” I said with
feeling.</p>
<p>“No trouble,” said Mr. Billson.</p>
<p>“You must have hit that barman pretty hard. He came
out at about forty miles an hour.”</p>
<p>“I dotted him,” agreed Mr. Billson.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid he has hurt your eye,” I said, sympathetically.</p>
<p>“Him!” said Mr. Billson, expectorating with scorn.
“That wasn’t him. That was his pals. Six or seven of
’em there was.”</p>
<p>“And did you dot them too?” I cried, amazed at the
prowess of this wonder-man.</p>
<p>“’R!” said Mr. Billson. He smoked awhile. “But I
dotted ’im most,” he proceeded. He looked at me with
honest warmth, his chivalrous heart plainly stirred to its
depths. “The idea,” he said, disgustedly, “of a ——
—— ’is size”—he defined the barman crisply and, as far as
I could judge after so brief an acquaintanceship, accurately—“goin’
and dottin’ a little —— —— like you!”</p>
<p>The sentiment was so admirable that I could not take
exception to its phraseology. Nor did I rebel at being
called “little.” To a man of Mr. Billson’s mould I supposed
most people looked little.</p>
<p>“Well, I’m very much obliged,” I said.</p>
<p>Mr. Billson smoked in silence.</p>
<p>“Have you been back long?” I asked, for something to
say. Outstanding as were his other merits, he was not
good at keeping a conversation alive.</p>
<p>“Back?” said Mr. Billson.</p>
<p>“Back in London. Ukridge told me that you had gone
to sea again.”</p>
<p>“Say, mister,” exclaimed Mr. Billson, for the first time
seeming to show real interest in my remarks, “you seen
’im lately?”</p>
<p>“Ukridge? Oh, yes, I see him nearly every day.”</p>
<p>“I been tryin’ to find ’im.”</p>
<p>“I can give you his address,” I said. And I wrote it
down on the back of an envelope. Then, having shaken his
hand, I thanked him once more for his courteous assistance
and borrowed my fare back to Civilisation on the Underground,
and we parted with mutual expressions of good
will.</p>
<p>The next step in the march of events was what I shall call
the Episode of the Inexplicable Female. It occurred two
days later. Returning shortly after lunch to my rooms in
Ebury Street, I was met in the hall by Mrs. Bowles, my
landlord’s wife. I greeted her a trifle nervously, for, like
her husband, she always exercised a rather oppressive effect
on me. She lacked Bowles’s ambassadorial dignity, but
made up for it by a manner so peculiarly sepulchral that
strong men quailed before her pale gaze. Scotch by birth,
she had an eye that looked as if it was for ever searching for
astral bodies wrapped in winding-sheets—this, I believe,
being a favourite indoor sport among certain sets in North
Britain.</p>
<p>“Sir,” said Mrs. Bowles, “there is a body in your sitting-room.”</p>
<p>“A body!” I am bound to say that this Phillips-Oppenheim-like
opening to the conversation gave me something
of a shock. Then I remembered her nationality.
“Oh, you mean a man?”</p>
<p>“A woman,” corrected Mrs. Bowles. “A body in a pink
hat.”</p>
<p>I was conscious of a feeling of guilt. In this pure and
modest house, female bodies in pink hats seemed to require
explanation. I felt that the correct thing to do would have
been to call upon Heaven to witness that this woman was
nothing to me, nothing.</p>
<p>“I was to give you this letter, sir.”</p>
<p>I took it and opened the envelope with a sigh. I had
recognised the handwriting of Ukridge, and for the hundredth
time in our close acquaintanceship there smote me
like a blow the sad suspicion that this man had once more
gone and wished upon me some frightful thing.</p>
<div class="opening"> “My dear old Horse,— </div>
<p class="p1">“It’s not often I ask you to do anything for me...</p>
<p>I laughed hollowly.</p>
<div class="opening"> “My dear old Horse,— </div>
<p class="p1">“It’s not often I ask you to do anything for me, laddie,
but I beg and implore you to rally round now and show
yourself the true friend I know you are. The one thing I’ve
always said about you, Corky my boy, is that you’re a real
pal who never lets a fellow down.</p>
<p>“The bearer of this—a delightful woman, you’ll like her—is
Flossie’s mother. She’s up for the day by excursion
from the North, and it is absolutely vital that she be lushed
up and seen off at Euston at six-forty-five. I can’t look
after her myself, as unfortunately I’m laid up with a
sprained ankle. Otherwise I wouldn’t trouble you.</p>
<p>“This is a life and death matter, old man, and I’m relying
on you. I can’t possibly tell you how important it is that
this old bird should be suitably entertained. The gravest
issues hang on it. So shove on your hat and go to it, laddie,
and blessings will reward you. Tell you all the details
when we meet.</p>
<div class="closure"> “Yours ever,</div>
<div class="signature">“S. F. Ukridge.</div>
<p>“P.S.—I will defray all expenses later.”</p>
<p>Those last words did wring a faint, melancholy smile from
me, but apart from them this hideous document seemed to
me to be entirely free from comic relief. I looked at my
watch and found that it was barely two-thirty. This
female, therefore, was on my hands for a solid four hours
and a quarter. I breathed maledictions—futile, of course,
for it was a peculiar characteristic of the demon Ukridge on
these occasions that, unless one were strong-minded enough
to disregard his frenzied pleadings altogether (a thing which
was nearly always beyond me), he gave one no chance of
escape. He sprang his foul schemes on one at the very last
moment, leaving no opportunity for a graceful refusal.</p>
<p>I proceeded slowly up the stairs to my sitting-room. It
would have been a distinct advantage, I felt, if I had known
who on earth this Flossie was of whom he wrote with such
airy familiarity. The name, though Ukridge plainly
expected it to touch a chord in me, left me entirely unresponsive.
As far as I was aware, there was no Flossie of any
description in my life. I thought back through the years.
Long-forgotten Janes and Kates and Muriels and Elizabeths
rose from the murky depths of my memory as I stirred it,
but no Flossie. It occurred to me as I opened the door that,
if Ukridge was expecting pleasant reminiscences of Flossie
to form a tender bond between me and her mother, he was
building on sandy soil.</p>
<p>The first impression I got on entering the room was that
Mrs. Bowles possessed the true reporter’s gift for picking out
the detail that really mattered. One could have said many
things about Flossie’s mother, as, for instance, that she was
stout, cheerful, and far more tightly laced than a doctor
would have considered judicious; but what stood out above
all the others was the fact that she was wearing a pink hat.
It was the largest, gayest, most exuberantly ornate specimen
of head-wear that I had ever seen, and the prospect of
spending four hours and a quarter in its society added the
last touch to my already poignant gloom. The only gleam
of sunshine that lightened my darkness was the reflection
that, if we went to a picture-palace, she would have to
remove it.</p>
<p>“Er—how do you do?” I said, pausing in the doorway.</p>
<p>“’Ow do you do?” said a voice from under the hat.
“Say ‘’Ow-do-you-do?’ to the gentleman, Cecil.”</p>
<p>I perceived a small, shiny boy by the window. Ukridge,
realising with the true artist’s instinct that the secret of all
successful prose is the knowledge of what to omit, had not
mentioned him in his letter; and, as he turned reluctantly
to go through the necessary civilities, it seemed to me that
the burden was more than I could bear. He was a rat-faced,
sinister-looking boy, and he gazed at me with a frigid
distaste which reminded me of the barman at the Prince of
Wales public-house in Ratcliff Highway.</p>
<p>“I brought Cecil along,” said Flossie’s (and presumably
Cecil’s) mother, after the stripling, having growled a
cautious greeting, obviously with the mental reservation
that it committed him to nothing, had returned to the
window, “because I thought it would be nice for ’im to say
he had seen London.”</p>
<p>“Quite, quite,” I replied, while Cecil, at the window,
gazed darkly out at London as if he did not think much of
it.</p>
<p>“Mr. Ukridge said you would trot us round.”</p>
<p>“Delighted, delighted,” I quavered, looking at the hat
and looking swiftly away again. “I think we had better
go to a picture-palace, don’t you?”</p>
<p>“Naw!” said Cecil. And there was that in his manner
which suggested that when he said “Naw!” it was final.</p>
<p>“Cecil wants to see the sights,” explained his mother.
“We can see all the pictures back at home. ’E’s been
lookin’ forward to seein’ the sights of London. It’ll be an
education for ’im, like, to see all the sights.”</p>
<p>“Westminster Abbey?” I suggested. After all, what
could be better for the lad’s growing mind than to inspect
the memorials of the great past and, if disposed, pick out a
suitable site for his own burial at some later date? Also,
I had a fleeting notion, which a moment’s reflection exploded
before it could bring me much comfort, that women
removed their hats in Westminster Abbey.</p>
<p>“Naw!” said Cecil.</p>
<p>“’E wants to see the murders,” explained Flossie’s
mother.</p>
<p>She spoke as if it were the most reasonable of boyish
desires, but it sounded to me impracticable. Homicides do
not publish formal programmes of their intended activities.
I had no notion what murders were scheduled for to-day.</p>
<p>“’E always reads up all the murders in the Sunday
paper,” went on the parent, throwing light on the matter.</p>
<p>“Oh, I understand,” I said. “Then Madame Tussaud’s
is the spot he wants. They’ve got all the murderers.”</p>
<p>“Naw!” said Cecil.</p>
<p>“It’s the places ’e wants to see,” said Flossie’s mother,
amiably tolerant of my density. “The places where all
them murders was committed. ’E’s clipped out the
addresses and ’e wants to be able to tell ’is friends when he
gets back that ’e’s seen ’em.”</p>
<p>A profound relief surged over me.</p>
<p>“Why, we can do the whole thing in a cab,” I cried.
“We can stay in a cab from start to finish. No need to
leave the cab at all.”</p>
<p>“Or a bus?”</p>
<p>“Not a bus,” I said firmly. I was quite decided on a cab—one
with blinds that would pull down, if possible.</p>
<p>“’Ave it your own way,” said Flossie’s mother, agreeably.
“Speaking as far as I’m personally concerned, I’m shaw
there’s nothing I would rather prefer than a nice ride in a
keb. Jear what the gentleman says, Cecil? You’re goin’
to ride in a keb.”</p>
<p>“Urgh!” said Cecil, as if he would believe it when he
saw it. A sceptical boy.</p>
<p>It was not an afternoon to which I look back as among the
happiest I have spent. For one thing, the expedition far
exceeded my hasty estimates in the matter of expense.
Why it should be so I cannot say, but all the best murders
appear to take place in remote spots like Stepney and Canning
Town, and cab-fares to these places run into money.
Then, again, Cecil’s was not one of those personalities which
become more attractive with familiarity. I should say at a
venture that those who liked him best were those who saw
the least of him. And, finally, there was a monotony about
the entire proceedings which soon began to afflict my nerves.
The cab would draw up outside some mouldering house in
some desolate street miles from civilisation, Cecil would
thrust his unpleasant head out of the window and drink the
place in for a few moments of silent ecstasy, and then he
would deliver his lecture. He had evidently read well and
thoughtfully. He had all the information.</p>
<p>“The Canning Town ’Orror,” he would announce.</p>
<p>“Yes, dearie?” His mother cast a fond glance at him
and a proud one at me. “In this very ’ouse, was it?”</p>
<p>“In this very ’ouse,” said Cecil, with the gloomy importance
of a confirmed bore about to hold forth on his favourite
subject. “Jimes Potter ’is nime was. ’E was found at
seven in the morning underneaf the kitchen sink wiv ’is
froat cut from ear to ear. It was the landlady’s brother
done it. They ’anged ’im at Pentonville.”</p>
<p>Some more data from the child’s inexhaustible store, and
then on to the next historic site.</p>
<p>“The Bing Street ’Orror!”</p>
<p>“In this very ’ouse, dearie?”</p>
<p>“In this very ’ouse. Body was found in the cellar in an
advanced stige of dee-cawm-po-sition wiv its ’ead bashed in,
prezoomably by some blunt instrument.”</p>
<p>At six-forty-six, ignoring the pink hat which protruded
from the window of a third-class compartment and the stout
hand that waved a rollicking farewell, I turned from the
train with a pale, set face, and, passing down the platform
of Euston Station, told a cabman to take me with all speed
to Ukridge’s lodgings in Arundel Street, Leicester Square.
There had never, so far as I knew, been a murder in Arundel
Street, but I was strongly of opinion that that time was ripe.
Cecil’s society and conversation had done much to neutralise
the effects of a gentle upbringing, and I toyed almost luxuriously
with the thought of supplying him with an Arundel
Street Horror for his next visit to the Metropolis.</p>
<p>“Aha, laddie,” said Ukridge, as I entered. “Come in,
old horse. Glad to see you. Been wondering when you
would turn up.”</p>
<p>He was in bed, but that did not remove the suspicion
which had been growing in me all the afternoon that he was
a low malingerer. I refused to believe for a moment in that
sprained ankle of his. My view was that he had had the
advantage of a first look at Flossie’s mother and her engaging
child and had shrewdly passed them on to me.</p>
<p>“I’ve been reading your book, old man,” said Ukridge,
breaking a pregnant silence with an overdone carelessness.
He brandished winningly the only novel I had ever written,
and I can offer no better proof of the black hostility of my
soul than the statement that even this did not soften me.
“It’s immense, laddie. No other word for it. Immense.
Damme, I’ve been crying like a child.”</p>
<p>“It is supposed to be a humorous novel,” I pointed out,
coldly.</p>
<p>“Crying with laughter,” explained Ukridge, hurriedly.</p>
<p>I eyed him with loathing.</p>
<p>“Where do you keep your blunt instruments?” I asked.</p>
<p>“My what?”</p>
<p>“Your blunt instrument. I want a blunt instrument.
Give me a blunt instrument. My God! Don’t tell me you
have no blunt instrument.”</p>
<p>“Only a safety-razor.”</p>
<p>I sat down wearily on the bed.</p>
<p>“Hi! Mind my ankle!”</p>
<p>“Your ankle!” I laughed a hideous laugh, the sort of
laugh the landlady’s brother might have emitted before
beginning operations on James Potter. “A lot there is the
matter with your ankle.”</p>
<p>“Sprained it yesterday, old man. Nothing serious,” said
Ukridge, reassuringly. “Just enough to lay me up for a
couple of days.”</p>
<p>“Yes, till that ghastly female and her blighted boy had
got well away.”</p>
<p>Pained astonishment was written all over Ukridge’s face.</p>
<p>“You don’t mean to say you didn’t like her? Why, I
thought you two would be all over each other.”</p>
<p>“And I suppose you thought that Cecil and I would be
twin souls?”</p>
<p>“Cecil?” said Ukridge, doubtfully. “Well, to tell you
the truth, old man, I’m not saying that Cecil doesn’t take a
bit of knowing. He’s the sort of boy you have to be patient
with and bring out, if you understand what I mean. I think
he grows on you.”</p>
<p>“If he ever tries to grow on me, I’ll have him amputated.”</p>
<p>“Well, putting all that on one side,” said Ukridge, “how
did things go off?”</p>
<p>I described the afternoon’s activities in a few tense words.</p>
<p>“Well, I’m sorry, old horse,” said Ukridge, when I had
finished. “I can’t say more than that, can I? I’m sorry.
I give you my solemn word I didn’t know what I was letting
you in for. But it was a life and death matter. There was
no other way out. Flossie insisted on it. Wouldn’t budge
an inch.”</p>
<p>In my anguish I had forgotten all about the impenetrable
mystery of Flossie.</p>
<p>“Who the devil is Flossie?” I asked.</p>
<p>“What! Flossie? You don’t know who Flossie is?
My dear old man, collect yourself. You must remember
Flossie. The barmaid at the Crown in Kennington. The
girl Battling Billson is engaged to. Surely you haven’t
forgotten Flossie? Why, she was saying only yesterday
that you had nice eyes.”</p>
<p>Memory awoke. I felt ashamed that I could ever have
forgotten a girl so bounding and spectacular.</p>
<p>“Of course! The blister you brought with you that
night George Tupper gave us dinner at the Regent Grill.
By the way, has George ever forgiven you for that?”</p>
<p>“There is still a little coldness,” admitted Ukridge, ruefully.
“I’m bound to say old Tuppy seems to be letting
the thing rankle a bit. The fact of the matter is, old horse,
Tuppy has his limitations. He isn’t a real friend like you.
Delightful fellow, but lacks vision. Can’t understand that
there are certain occasions when it is simply imperative
that a man’s pals rally round him. Now you——”</p>
<p>“Well, I’ll tell you one thing. I am hoping that what I
went through this afternoon really was for some good cause.
I should be sorry, now that I am in a cooler frame of mind,
to have to strangle you where you lie. Would you mind
telling me exactly what was the idea behind all this?”</p>
<p>“It’s like this, laddie. Good old Billson blew in to see
me the other day.”</p>
<p>“I met him down in the East End and he asked for your
address.”</p>
<p>“Yes, he told me.”</p>
<p>“What’s going on? Are you still managing him?”</p>
<p>“Yes. That’s what he wanted to see me about. Apparently
the contract has another year to run and he can’t fix
up anything without my O.K. And he’s just had an offer
to fight a bloke called Alf Todd at the Universal.”</p>
<p>“That’s a step up from Wonderland,” I said, for I had a
solid respect for this Mecca of the boxing world. “How
much is he getting this time?”</p>
<p>“Two hundred quid.”</p>
<p>“Two hundred quid! But that’s a lot for practically an
unknown man.”</p>
<p>“Unknown man?” said Ukridge, hurt. “What do you
mean, unknown man? If you ask my opinion, I should say
the whole pugilistic world is seething with excitement about
old Billson. Literally seething. Didn’t he slosh the
middleweight champion?”</p>
<p>“Yes, in a rough-and-tumble in a back alley. And
nobody saw him do it.”</p>
<p>“Well, these things get about.”</p>
<p>“But two hundred pounds!”</p>
<p>“A fleabite, laddie, a fleabite. You can take it from me
that we shall be asking a lot more than a measly couple of
hundred for our services pretty soon. Thousands, thousands!
Still, I’m not saying it won’t be something to be
going on with. Well, as I say, old Billson came to me and
said he had had this offer, and how about it? And when I
realised that I was in halves, I jolly soon gave him my blessing
and told him to go as far as he liked. So you can
imagine how I felt when Flossie put her foot down like this.”</p>
<p>“Like what? About ten minutes ago when you started
talking, you seemed to be on the point of explaining about
Flossie. How does she come to be mixed up with the
thing? What did she do?”</p>
<p>“Only wanted to stop the whole business, laddie, that
was all. Just put the kybosh on the entire works. Said he
mustn’t fight!”</p>
<p>“Mustn’t fight?”</p>
<p>“That was what she said. Just in that airy, careless
way, as if the most stupendous issues didn’t hang on his
fighting as he had never fought before. Said—if you’ll
believe me, laddie; I shan’t blame you if you don’t—that
she didn’t want his looks spoiled.” Ukridge gazed at me
with lifted eyebrows while he let this evidence of feminine
perverseness sink in. “His looks, old man! You got the
word correctly? His looks! She didn’t want his looks
spoiled. Why, damme, he hasn’t got any looks. There
isn’t any possible manner in which you could treat that
man’s face without improving it. I argued with her by the
hour, but no, she couldn’t see it. Avoid women, laddie,
they have no intelligence.”</p>
<p>“Well, I’ll promise to avoid Flossie’s mother, if that’ll
satisfy you. How does she come into the thing?”</p>
<p>“Now, there’s a woman in a million, my boy. She saved
the situation. She came along at the eleventh hour and
snatched your old friend out of the soup. It seems she has
a habit of popping up to London at intervals, and Flossie,
while she loves and respects her, finds that from ten minutes
to a quarter of an hour of the old dear gives her the pip to
such an extent that she’s a nervous wreck for days.”</p>
<p>I felt my heart warm to the future Mrs. Billson. Despite
Ukridge’s slurs, a girl, it seemed to me, of the soundest
intelligence.</p>
<p>“So when Flossie told me—with tears in her eyes, poor
girl—that mother was due to-day, I had the inspiration of a
lifetime. Said I would take her off her hands from start
to finish if she would agree to let Billson fight at the Universal.
Well, it shows you what family affection is, laddie;
she jumped at it. I don’t mind telling you she broke down
completely and kissed me on both cheeks. The rest, old
horse, you know.”</p>
<p>“Yes. The rest I do know.”</p>
<p>“Never,” said Ukridge, solemnly, “never, old son, till
the sands of the desert grow cold, shall I forget how you
have stood by me this day!”</p>
<p>“Oh, all right. I expect in about a week from now you
will be landing me with something equally foul.”</p>
<p>“Now, laddie——”</p>
<p>“When does this fight come off?”</p>
<p>“A week from to-night. I’m relying on you to be at my
side. Tense nervous strain, old man; shall want a pal to
see me through.”</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t miss it for worlds. I’ll give you dinner
before we go there, shall I?”</p>
<p>“Spoken like a true friend,” said Ukridge, warmly.
“And on the following night I will stand you the banquet
of your life. A banquet which will ring down the ages.
For, mark you, laddie, I shall be in funds. In funds, my
boy.”</p>
<p>“Yes, if Billson wins. What does he get if he loses?”</p>
<p>“Loses? He won’t lose. How the deuce can he lose?
I’m surprised at you talking in that silly way when you’ve
seen him only a few days ago. Didn’t he strike you as being
pretty fit when you saw him?”</p>
<p>“Yes, by Jove, he certainly did.”</p>
<p>“Well, then! Why, it looks to me as if the sea air had
made him tougher than ever. I’ve only just got my fingers
straightened out after shaking hands with him. He could
win the heavyweight championship of the world to-morrow
without taking his pipe out of his mouth. Alf Todd,” said
Ukridge, soaring to an impressive burst of imagery, “has
about as much chance as a one-armed blind man in a dark
room trying to shove a pound of melted butter into a wildcat’s
left ear with a red-hot needle.”</p>
<p>Although I knew several of the members, for one reason or
another I had never been inside the Universal Sporting Club,
and the atmosphere of the place when we arrived on the
night of the fight impressed me a good deal. It was vastly
different from Wonderland, the East End home of pugilism
where I had witnessed the Battler make his début. There,
a certain laxness in the matter of costume had been the prevailing
note; here, white shirt-fronts gleamed on every side.
Wonderland, moreover, had been noisy. Patrons of sport
had so far forgotten themselves as to whistle through their
fingers and shout badinage at distant friends. At the
Universal one might have been in church. In fact, the
longer I sat, the more ecclesiastical did the atmosphere
seem to become. When we arrived, two acolytes in the
bantam class were going devoutly through the ritual under
the eye of the presiding minister, while a large congregation
looked on in hushed silence. As we took our seats, this
portion of the service came to an end and the priest announced
that Nippy Coggs was the winner. A reverent
murmur arose for an instant from the worshippers, Nippy
Coggs disappeared into the vestry, and after a pause of a
few minutes I perceived the familiar form of Battling Billson
coming up the aisle.</p>
<p>There was no doubt about it, the Battler did look good.
His muscles seemed more cable-like than ever, and a recent
hair-cut had given a knobby, bristly appearance to his head
which put him even more definitely than before in the class
of those with whom the sensible man would not lightly
quarrel. Mr. Todd, his antagonist, who followed him a
moment later, was no beauty—the almost complete absence
of any division between his front hair and his eyebrows
would alone have prevented him being that—but he lacked
a certain <i>je-ne-sais-quoi</i> which the Battler pre-eminently
possessed. From the first instant of his appearance in the
public eye our man was a warm favourite. There was a
pleased flutter in the pews as he took his seat, and I could
hear whispered voices offering substantial bets on him.</p>
<p>“Six-round bout,” announced the <i>padre.</i> “Battling
Billson (Bermondsey) versus Alf Todd (Marylebone).
Gentlemen will kindly stop smoking.”</p>
<p>The congregation relit their cigars and the fight began.</p>
<p>Bearing in mind how vitally Ukridge’s fortunes were
bound up in his protégé’s success to-night, I was relieved to
observe that Mr. Todd opened the proceedings in a manner
that seemed to offer little scope for any display of Battling
Billson’s fatal kind-heartedness. I had not forgotten how
at Wonderland our Battler, with the fight in hand, had
allowed victory to be snatched from him purely through a
sentimental distaste for being rough with his adversary, a
man who had had a lot of trouble and had touched Mr.
Billson’s heart thereby. Such a disaster was unlikely to
occur to-night. It was difficult to see how anyone in the
same ring with him could possibly be sorry for Alf Todd. A
tender pity was the last thing his behaviour was calculated
to rouse in the bosom of an opponent. Directly the gong
sounded, he tucked away what little forehead Nature had
given him beneath his fringe, breathed loudly through his
nose, and galloped into the fray. He seemed to hold no
bigoted views as to which hand it was best to employ as a
medium of attack. Right or left, it was all one to Alf.
And if he could not hit Mr. Billson with his hands, he was
perfectly willing, so long as the eye of authority was not too
keenly vigilant, to butt him with his head. Broad-minded—that
was Alf Todd.</p>
<p>Wilberforce Billson, veteran of a hundred fights on a
hundred scattered water-fronts, was not backward in joining
the revels. In him Mr. Todd found a worthy and a willing
playmate. As Ukridge informed me in a hoarse whisper
while the vicar was reproaching Alf for placing an elbow
where no elbow should have been, this sort of thing was as
meat and drink to Wilberforce. It was just the kind of warfare
he had been used to all his life, and precisely the sort
most calculated to make him give of his best—a dictum
which was strikingly endorsed a moment later, when, after
some heated exchanges in which, generous donor though he
was, he had received more than he had bestowed, Mr. Todd
was compelled to slither back and do a bit of fancy side-stepping.
The round came to an end with the Battler distinctly
leading on points, and so spirited had it been that
applause broke out in various parts of the edifice.</p>
<p>The second round followed the same general lines as the
first. The fact that up to now he had been foiled in his
attempts to resolve Battling Billson into his component
parts had had no damping effect on Alf Todd’s ardour. He
was still the same active, energetic soul, never sparing himself
in his efforts to make the party go. There was a wholehearted
abandon in his rushes which reminded one of a
short-tempered gorilla trying to get at its keeper. Occasionally
some extra warmth on the part of his antagonist
would compel him to retire momentarily into a clinch, but
he always came out of it as ready as ever to resume the argument.
Nevertheless, at the end of round two he was still a
shade behind. Round three added further points to the
Battler’s score, and at the end of round four Alf Todd had
lost so much ground that the most liberal odds were required
to induce speculators to venture their cash on his chances.</p>
<p>And then the fifth round began, and those who a minute
before had taken odds of three to one on the Battler and
openly proclaimed the money as good as in their pockets,
stiffened in their seats or bent forward with pale and anxious
faces. A few brief moments back it had seemed to them
incredible that this sure thing could come unstitched.
There was only this round and the next to go—a mere six
minutes of conflict; and Mr. Billson was so far ahead on
points that nothing but the accident of his being knocked
out could lose him the decision. And you had only to look
at Wilberforce Billson to realise the absurdity of his being
knocked out. Even I, who had seen him go through the
process at Wonderland, refused to consider the possibility.
If ever there was a man in the pink, it was Wilberforce
Billson.</p>
<p>But in boxing there is always the thousandth chance. As
he came out of his corner for round five, it suddenly became
plain that things were not well with our man. Some chance
blow in that last melee of round four must have found a vital
spot, for he was obviously in bad shape. Incredible as it
seemed, Battling Billson was groggy. He shuffled rather
than stepped; he blinked in a manner damping to his
supporters; he was clearly finding increasing difficulty in
foiling the boisterous attentions of Mr. Todd. Sibilant
whispers arose; Ukridge clutched my arm in an agonised
grip; voices were offering to bet on Alf; and in the
Battler’s corner, their heads peering through the ropes,
those members of the minor clergy who had been told off to
second our man were wan with apprehension.</p>
<p>Mr. Todd, for his part, was a new man. He had retired
to his corner at the end of the preceding round with the
moody step of one who sees failure looming ahead. “I’m
always chasing rainbows,” Mr. Todd’s eye had seemed to
say as it rested gloomily on the resined floor. “Another
dream shattered!” And he had come out for round five
with the sullen weariness of the man who has been helping
to amuse the kiddies at a children’s party and has had
enough of it. Ordinary politeness rendered it necessary for
him to see this uncongenial business through to the end, but
his heart was no longer in it.</p>
<p>And then, instead of the steel and india-rubber warrior
who had smitten him so sorely at their last meeting, he
found this sagging wreck. For an instant sheer surprise
seemed to shackle Mr. Todd’s limbs, then he adjusted himself
to the new conditions. It was as if somebody had
grafted monkey-glands on to Alfred Todd. He leaped at
Battling Billson, and Ukridge’s grip on my arm became
more painful than ever.</p>
<p>A sudden silence fell upon the house. It was a tense,
expectant silence, for affairs had reached a crisis. Against
the ropes near his corner the Battler was leaning, heedless
of the well-meant counsel of his seconds, and Alf Todd, with
his fringe now almost obscuring his eyes, was feinting for an
opening. There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken
at the flood, leads on to fortune; and Alf Todd plainly
realised this. He fiddled for an instant with his hands, as
if he were trying to mesmerise Mr. Billson, then plunged
forward.</p>
<p>A great shout went up. The congregation appeared to
have lost all sense of what place this was that they were in.
They were jumping up and down in their seats and bellowing
deplorably. For the crisis had been averted. Somehow
or other Wilberforce Billson had contrived to escape
from that corner, and now he was out in the middle of the
ring, respited.</p>
<p>And yet he did not seem pleased. His usually expressionless
face was contorted with pain and displeasure. For the
first time in the entire proceedings he appeared genuinely
moved. Watching him closely, I could see his lips moving,
perhaps in prayer. And as Mr. Todd, bounding from the
ropes, advanced upon him, he licked those lips. He licked
them in a sinister meaning way, and his right hand dropped
slowly down below his knee.</p>
<p>Alf Todd came on. He came jauntily and in the manner
of one moving to a feast or festival. This was the end of a
perfect day, and he knew it. He eyed Battling Billson as if
the latter had been a pot of beer. But for the fact that he
came of a restrained and unemotional race, he would doubtless
have burst into song. He shot out his left and it landed
on Mr. Billson’s nose. Nothing happened. He drew back
his right and poised it almost lovingly for a moment. It
was during this moment that Battling Billson came to
life.</p>
<p>To Alf Todd it must have seemed like a resurrection.
For the last two minutes he had been testing in every way
known to science his theory that this man before him no
longer possessed the shadow of a punch, and the theory had
seemed proven up to the hilt. Yet here he was now behaving
like an unleashed whirlwind. A disquieting experience.
The ropes collided with the small of Alf Todd’s back.
Something else collided with his chin. He endeavoured to
withdraw, but a pulpy glove took him on the odd fungoid
growth which he was accustomed laughingly to call his ear.
Another glove impinged upon his jaw. And there the
matter ended for Alf Todd.</p>
<p>“Battling Billson is the winner,” intoned the vicar.</p>
<p>“Wow!” shouted the congregation.</p>
<p>“Whew!” breathed Ukridge in my ear.</p>
<p>It had been a near thing, but the old firm had pulled
through at the finish.</p>
<p>Ukridge bounded off to the dressing-room to give his
Battler a manager’s blessing; and presently, the next fight
proving something of an anti-climax after all the fevered
stress of its predecessor, I left the building and went home.
I was smoking a last pipe before going to bed when a violent
ring at the front-door bell broke in on my meditations. It
was followed by the voice of Ukridge in the hall.</p>
<p>I was a little surprised. I had not been expecting to see
Ukridge again to-night. His intention when we parted at
the Universal had been to reward Mr. Billson with a bit of
supper; and, as the Battler had a coy distaste for the
taverns of the West End, this involved a journey to the far
East, where in congenial surroundings the coming champion
would drink a good deal of beer and eat more hard-boiled
eggs than you would have believed possible. The fact that
the host was now thundering up my stairs seemed to indicate
that the feast had fallen through. And the fact that
the feast had fallen through suggested that something had
gone wrong.</p>
<p>“Give me a drink, old horse,” said Ukridge, bursting into
the room.</p>
<p>“What on earth’s the matter?”</p>
<p>“Nothing, old horse, nothing. I’m a ruined man, that’s
all.”</p>
<p>He leaped feverishly at the decanter and siphon which
Bowles had placed upon the table. I watched him with
concern. This could be no ordinary tragedy that had
changed him thus from the ebullient creature of joy who
had left me at the Universal. A thought flashed through
my mind that Battling Billson must have been disqualified—to
be rejected a moment later, when I remembered that
fighters are not disqualified as an after-thought half an
hour after the fight. But what else could have brought
about this anguish? If ever there was an occasion
for solemn rejoicing, now would have seemed to be the
time.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter?” I asked again.</p>
<p>“Matter? I’ll tell you what’s the matter,” moaned
Ukridge. He splashed seltzer into his glass. He reminded
me of King Lear. “Do you know how much I get out of
that fight to-night? Ten quid! Just ten rotten contemptible
sovereigns! That’s what’s the matter.”</p>
<p>“I don’t understand.”</p>
<p>“The purse was thirty pounds. Twenty for the winner.
My share is ten. Ten, I’ll trouble you! What in the name
of everything infernal is the good of ten quid?”</p>
<p>“But you said Billson told you——”</p>
<p>“Yes, I know I did. Two hundred was what he told me
he was to get. And the weak-minded, furtive, under-handed
son of Belial didn’t explain that he was to get it for
losing!”</p>
<p>“Losing?”</p>
<p>“Yes. He was to get it for losing. Some fellows who
wanted a chance to do some heavy betting persuaded him to
sell the fight.”</p>
<p>“But he didn’t sell the fight.”</p>
<p>“I know that, dammit. That’s the whole trouble. And
do you know why he didn’t? I’ll tell you. Just as he was
all ready to let himself be knocked out in that fifth round,
the other bloke happened to tread on his ingrowing toe-nail,
and that made him so mad that he forgot about everything
else and sailed in and hammered the stuffing out of him. I
ask you, laddie! I appeal to you as a reasonable man.
Have you ever in your life heard of such a footling, idiotic,
woollen-headed proceeding? Throwing away a fortune,
an absolute dashed fortune, purely to gratify a momentary
whim! Hurling away wealth beyond the dreams of avarice
simply because a bloke stamped on his ingrowing toe-nail.
His ingrowing toe-nail!” Ukridge laughed raspingly.
“What right has a boxer to <i>have</i> an ingrowing toe-nail?
And if he has an ingrowing toe-nail, surely—my gosh!—he
can stand a little trifling discomfort for half a minute. The
fact of the matter is, old horse, boxers aren’t what they were.
Degenerate, laddie, absolutely degenerate. No heart. No
courage. No self-respect. No vision. The old bulldog
breed has disappeared entirely.”</p>
<p>And with a moody nod Stanley Featherstonehaugh
Ukridge passed out into the night.</p>
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