Piccadilly Jim eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Piccadilly Jim.

Piccadilly Jim eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Piccadilly Jim.

There was a silence.  It seemed to Jimmy that Mr. Pett was looking at him rather more closely than was necessary for the actual enjoyment of his style of beauty.  He was just about to throw out some light remark about the health of Mrs. Pett or something about porpoises on the voyage to add local colour and verisimilitude, when his heart missed a beat, as he perceived that he had made a blunder.  Like many other amateur plotters, Ann and he had made the mistake of being too elaborate.  It had struck them as an ingenious idea for Jimmy to pretend that he had arrived that morning, and superficially it was a good idea:  but he now remembered for the first time that, if he had seen Mr. Pett on the Atlantic, the probability was that Mr. Pett had seen him.  The next moment the other had confirmed this suspicion.

“I’ve an idea I’ve seen you before.  Can’t think where.”

“Everybody well at home?” said Jimmy.

“I’m sure of it.”

“I’m looking forward to seeing them all.”

“I’ve seen you some place.”

“I’m often there.”

“Eh?”

Mr. Pett seemed to be turning this remark over in his mind a trifle suspiciously.  Jimmy changed the subject.

“To a young man like myself,” he said, “with life opening out before him, there is something singularly stimulating in the sight of a modern office.  How busy those fellows seem!”

“Yes,” said Mr. Pett.  “Yes.”  He was glad that this conversational note had been struck.  He was anxious to discuss the future with this young man.

“Everybody works but father!” said Jimmy.

Mr. Pett started.

“Eh?”

“Nothing.”

Mr. Pett was vaguely ruffled.  He suspected insult, but could not pin it down.  He abandoned his cheeriness, however, and became the man of business.

“I hope you intend to settle down, now that you are here, and work hard,” he said in the voice which he vainly tried to use on Ogden at home.

“Work!” said Jimmy blankly.

“I shall be able to make a place for you in my office.  That was my promise to your step-mother, and I shall fulfil it.”

“But wait a minute!  I don’t get this!  Do you mean to put me to work?”

“Of course.  I take it that that was why you came over here, because you realised how you were wasting your life and wanted a chance of making good in my office.”

A hot denial trembled on Jimmy’s tongue.  Never had he been so misjudged.  And then the thought of Ann checked him.  He must do nothing that would interfere with Ann’s plans.  Whatever the cost, he must conciliate this little man.  For a moment he mused sentimentally on Ann.  He hoped she would understand what he was going through for her sake.  To a man with his ingrained distaste for work in any shape the sight of those wage-slaves outside there in the outer office had, as he had told Mr. Pett, been stimulating:  but only because it filled him with a sort of spiritual uplift to think that he had not got to do that sort of thing.  Consider them in the light of fellow-workers, and the spectacle ceased to stimulate and became nauseating.  And for her sake he was about to become one of them!  Had any knight of old ever done anything as big as that for his lady?  He very much doubted it.

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Project Gutenberg
Piccadilly Jim from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.