LADIES AND GENTLEMEN V. PLAYERS
P. G. WODEHOUSE
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Quite without meaning it, I really won the Gentlemen
I cut the report of the match out of the
The rest is all about what Bill will do when he plays against Australia. Riddell is Bill. He is Aunt Edith's son, He is at New College, Oxford. Father says he is the best bat Oxford have had since he was up. But if you had seen him at lunch that day, you would never have dreamed of his making a century, or even double figures.
If you read what I wrote once about a thing that happened at our cricket week, you will remember who Batkins is. He came down to play for Sir Edward Cave's place against Much Middleford last year, and got everybody out except father, who made forty-nine not out. And he didn't get father out because I got my maid Saunders, whom he was in love with, to get him to bowl easy to father so that he could make fifty. He didn't make fifty, because the last man got out before he could; but it was all right. Anyhow, that's who Batkins was.
Perhaps you think that I tried the same thing again, and got Saunders to ask him to bowl easy to my cousin Bill in the Gentlemen
And that's really how the whole thing happened.
I really came into the story one night just before I was going to bed. Saunders was doing my hair. I was rather sleepy, and I was half dozing, when suddenly I heard a sort of curious sound behind me — a kind of mixture of a sniff and a gulp. I looked in the glass, and there was the reflection of Saunders with a sort of stuffed look about the face. Just then she looked up, and our eyes met in the glass. Hers were all reddy.
I said: 'Saunders!'
'Yes, miss.'
'What's the matter?'
'Matter, miss? Nothing, miss.'
'Why are you crying?'
She stiffened up and tried to look dignified. I wish she hadn't because she was holding a good deal of my hair at the time, and she pulled it hard.
'Crying, miss! I wouldn't demean myself — no, I wouldn't.'
So I didn't say anything more for a bit, and she went on brushing my hair.
After about half a minute there was another gulp, I turned round.
'Look here, Saunders,' I said, 'you might as well tell me. You'll hurt yourself if you don't. What is up?'
(Because Saunders had always looked after me, long before I had my hair up — when I had it right down, not even tied half-way with a black ribbon. So we were rather friends.)
'You might say. I won't tell a soul.'
Then there was rather a ghark. A ghark is anything that makes you feel horrid and uncomfortable. It was a word invented by some girls I know, the Moncktons, and it supplied a long-felt want. It is a ghark if you ask somebody how somebody else is, and it turns out that they hate them or that they're dead. If you hurt anybody's feelings by accident, it is a ghark. This was one, because Saunders suddenly gave up all attempt at keeping it in, and absolutely howled. I sat there, not knowing what to do, and feeling wretched.
After a bit she got better, and then she told me what was the matter. She had had a quarrel with Mr Batkins, and all was over, and he had gone off, and she had not seen him since.
'I didn't know, miss, he'd take on so about me talking to Mr Harry Biggs when we met in the village. But he