THE INTRUSION OF JIMMY BY P.G. WODEHOUSE

travels. Once inside, having closed the door, he set this aglow, and

looked about him.

Spike had given him minute directions as to the position of the

jewel-box. He found it without difficulty. To his untrained eye, it

seemed tolerably massive and impregnable, but Spike had evidently

known how to open it without much difficulty. The lid was shut, but

it came up without an effort when he tried to raise it, and he saw

that the lock had been broken.

“Spike’s coming on!” he said.

He was dangling the necklace over the box, preparatory to dropping

it in, when there was a quick rustle at the other side of the room.

The curtain was plucked aside, and Molly came out.

“Jimmy!” she cried.

Jimmy’s nerves were always in pretty good order, but at the sight of

this apparition he visibly jumped.

“Great Scott!” he said.

The curtain again became agitated by some unseen force, violently

this time, and from its depths a plaintive voice made itself heard.

“Dash it all,” said the voice, “I’ve stuck!”

There was another upheaval, and his lordship emerged, his yellow

locks ruffled and upstanding, his face crimson.

“Caught my head in a coat or something,” he explained at large.

“Hullo, Pitt!”

Pressed rigidly against the wall, Molly had listened with growing

astonishment to the movements on the other side of the curtain. Her

mystification deepened every moment. It seemed to her that the room

was still in darkness. She could hear the sound of breathing; and

then the light of the torch caught her eye. Who could this be, and

why had he not switched on the regular room lights?

She strained her ears to catch a sound. For a while, she heard

nothing except the soft breathing. Then came a voice that she knew

well; and, abandoning her hiding-place, she came out into the room,

and found Jimmy standing, with the torch in his hand, over some dark

object in the corner of the room.

It was a full minute after Jimmy’s first exclamation of surprise

before either of them spoke again. The light of the torch hurt

Molly’s eyes. She put up a hand, to shade them. It seemed to her

that they had been standing like this for years.

Jimmy had not moved. There was something in his attitude that filled

Molly with a vague fear. In the shadow behind the torch, he looked

shapeless and inhuman.

“You’re hurting my eyes,” she said, at last.

“I’m sorry,” said Jimmy. “I didn’t think. Is that better?” He turned

the light from her face. Something in his voice and the apologetic

haste with which he moved the torch seemed to relax the strain of

the situation. The feeling of stunned surprise began to leave her.

She found herself thinking coherently again.

The relief was but momentary. Why was Jimmy in the room at that

time? Why had he a torch? What had he been doing? The questions shot

from her brain like sparks from an anvil.

The darkness began to tear at her nerves. She felt along the wall

for the switch, and flooded the whole room with light.

Jimmy laid down the torch, and stood for a moment, undecided. He had

concealed the necklace behind him. Now, he brought it forward, and

dangled it silently before the eyes of Molly and his lordship.

Excellent as were his motives for being in. that room with the

necklace in his hand, he could not help feeling, as he met Molly’s

startled gaze, quite as guilty as if his intentions had been

altogether different.

His lordship, having by this time pulled himself together to some

extent, was the first to speak.

“I say, you know, what ho!” he observed, not without emotion.

“What?”

Molly drew back.

“Jimmy! You were–oh, you can’t have been!”

“Looks jolly like it!” said his lordship, judicially.

“I wasn’t,” said Jimmy. “I was putting them back.”

“Putting them back?”

“Pitt, old man,” said his lordship solemnly, “that sounds a bit

thin.”

“Dreever, old man,” said Jimmy. “I know it does. But it’s the

truth.”

His lordship’s manner became kindly.

“Now, look here, Pitt, old son,” he said, “there’s nothing to worry

about. We’re all pals here. You can pitch it straight to us. We

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