Cat-II
The Truth about Pyecraft
He sits not a dozen
yards away. If I glance over my shoulder I can see him. And if I catch his
eye--and usually I catch his eye-- it meets me with an expression.
It is mainly an
imploring look--and yet with suspicion in it.
Confound his
suspicion! If I wanted to tell on him I should have told long ago. I don't tell
and I don't tell, and he ought to feel at his ease. As if anything so gross and
fat as he could feel at ease! Who would believe me if I did tell?
Poor old Pyecraft!
Great, uneasy jelly of substance! The fattest clubman in London.
He sits at one of the
little club tables in the huge bay by the fire, stuffing. What is he stuffing?
I glance judiciously and catch him biting at a round of hot buttered tea-cake,
with his eyes on me. Confound him!--with his eyes on me!
That settles it,
Pyecraft! Since you will be abject, since you will behave
as though I was not a man of honour, here, right under your embedded eyes, I write
the thing down--the plain truth about Pyecraft. The man I helped, the man I
shielded, and who has requited me by making my club unendurable, absolutely
unendurable, with his liquid appeal, with the perpetual "don't tell"
of his looks.
And, besides, why does
he keep on eternally eating?
Well, here goes for
the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth!
Pyecraft--. I made the
acquaintance of Pyecraft in this very smoking- room. I was a young, nervous new
member, and he saw it. I was sitting all alone, wishing I knew more of the
members, and suddenly he came, a great rolling front of chins and abdomina,
towards me, and grunted and sat down in a chair close by me and wheezed for a
space, and scraped for a space with a match and lit a cigar, and then addressed
me. I forget what he said--something about the matches not lighting properly,
and afterwards as he talked he kept stopping the waiters one by one as they
went by, and telling them about the matches in that thin, fluty voice he has.
But, anyhow, it was in some such way we began our talking.
He talked about
various things and came round to games. And thence to my figure and complexion.
"You ought to be a good cricketer," he said. I suppose I
am slender, slender to what some people would call lean, and I suppose I am
rather dark, still--I am not ashamed of having a Hindu great-grandmother, but,
for all that, I don't want casual strangers to see through me at a glance
to her. So that I was set against Pyecraft from the beginning.
But he only talked about
me in order to get to himself.
"I expect,"
he said, "you take no more exercise than I do, and probably you eat no
less." (Like all excessively obese people he fancied he ate nothing.)
"Yet,"--and he smiled an oblique smile-- "we differ."
And then he began to
talk about his fatness and his fatness; all he did for his fatness and all he
was going to do for his fatness; what people had advised him to do for his
fatness and what he had heard of people doing for fatness similar to his.
"A priori," he said, "one would think a question of nutrition
could be answered by dietary and a question of assimilation by drugs." It
was stifling. It was dumpling talk. It made me feel swelled to hear him.
One stands that sort
of thing once in a way at a club, but a time came when I fancied I was standing
too much. He took to me altogether too conspicuously. I could never go into the
smoking-room but he would come wallowing towards me, and sometimes he came and
gormandised round and about me while I had my lunch. He seemed at times almost
to be clinging to me. He was a bore, but not so fearful a bore as to be limited
to me; and from the first there was something in his manner--almost as though
he knew, almost as though he penetrated to the fact that I might--that
there was a remote, exceptional chance in me that no one else presented.
"I'd give
anything to get it down," he would say--"anything," and peer at
me over his vast cheeks and pant.
Poor old Pyecraft! He
has just gonged, no doubt to order another buttered tea-cake!
He came to the actual
thing one day. "Our Pharmacopoeia," he said, "our Western
Pharmacopoeia, is anything but the last word of medical science. In the East,
I've been told--"
He stopped and stared
at me. It was like being at an aquarium.
I was quite suddenly
angry with him. "Look here," I said, "who told you about my
great-grandmother's recipes?"
"Well," he
fenced.
"Every time we've
met for a week," I said, "and we've met pretty often--you've given me
a broad hint or so about that little secret of mine."
"Well," he
said, "now the cat's out of the bag, I'll admit, yes, it is so. I had
it--"
"From
Pattison?"
"Indirectly,"
he said, which I believe was lying, "yes."
"Pattison,"
I said, "took that stuff at his own risk."
He pursed his mouth
and bowed.
"My great-grandmother's
recipes," I said, "are queer things to handle. My father was near
making me promise--"
"He didn't?"
"No. But he
warned me. He himself used one--once."
"Ah! . . . But do
you think--? Suppose--suppose there did happen to be one--"
"The things are
curious documents," I said.
"Even the smell
of 'em. . . . No!"
But after going so far
Pyecraft was resolved I should go farther. I was always a little afraid if I
tried his patience too much he would fall on me suddenly and smother me. I own
I was weak. But I was also annoyed with Pyecraft. I had got to that state of
feeling for him that disposed me to say, "Well, take the
risk!" The little affair of Pattison to which I have alluded was a
different matter altogether. What it was doesn't concern us now, but I knew,
anyhow, that the particular recipe I used then was safe. The rest I didn't know
so much about, and, on the whole, I was inclined to doubt their safety pretty
completely.
Yet even if Pyecraft
got poisoned--
I must confess the
poisoning of Pyecraft struck me as an immense undertaking.
That evening I took
that queer, odd-scented sandalwood box out of my safe and turned the rustling
skins over. The gentleman who wrote the recipes for my great-grandmother
evidently had a weakness for skins of a miscellaneous origin, and his
handwriting was cramped to the last degree. Some of the things are quite
unreadable to me--though my family, with its Indian Civil Service associations,
has kept up a knowledge of Hindustani from generation to generation--and none are
absolutely plain sailing. But I found the one that I knew was there soon
enough, and sat on the floor by my safe for some time looking at it.
"Look here,"
said I to Pyecraft next day, and snatched the slip away from his eager grasp.
"So far as I--can
make it out, this is a recipe for Loss of Weight. ("Ah!" said
Pyecraft.) I'm not absolutely sure, but I think it's that. And if you take my
advice you'll leave it alone. Because, you know-- I blacken my blood in your
interest, Pyecraft--my ancestors on that side were, so far as I can gather, a
jolly queer lot. See?"
"Let me try
it," said Pyecraft.
I leant back in my
chair. My imagination made one mighty effort and fell flat within me.
"What in Heaven's name, Pyecraft," I asked, "do you think you'll
look like when you get thin?"
He was impervious to
reason. I made him promise never to say a word to me about his disgusting
fatness again whatever happened--never, and then I handed him that little piece
of skin.
"It's nasty
stuff," I said.
"No matter,"
he said, and took it.
He goggled at it.
"But--but--" he said.
He had just discovered
that it wasn't English.
"To the best of
my ability," I said, "I will do you a translation."
I did my best. After
that we didn't speak for a fortnight. Whenever he approached me I frowned and
motioned him away, and he respected our compact, but at the end of a fortnight
he was as fat as ever. And then he got a word in.
"I must
speak," he said. "It isn't fair. There's something wrong. It's done
me no good. You're not doing your great-grandmother justice."
"Where's the
recipe?"
He produced it
gingerly from his pocket-book.
I ran my eye over the
items. "Was the egg addled?" I asked.
"No. Ought it to
have been?"
"That," I
said, "goes without saying in all my poor dear great-grandmother's
recipes. When condition or quality is not specified you must get the worst. She
was drastic or nothing. . . . And there's one or two possible alternatives to
some of these other things. You got fresh rattlesnake
venom."
"I got a
rattlesnake from Jamrach's. It cost--it cost--"
"That's your
affair, anyhow. This last item--"
"I know a man
who--"
"Yes. H'm. Well,
I'll write the alternatives down. So far as I know the language, the spelling
of this recipe is particularly atrocious. By-the-bye, dog here probably means
pariah dog."
For a month after that
I saw Pyecraft constantly at the club and as fat and anxious as ever. He kept
our treaty, but at times he broke the spirit of it by shaking his head
despondently. Then one day in the cloakroom he said, "Your great-grandmother--"
"Not a word
against her," I said; and he held his peace.
I could have fancied
he had desisted, and I saw him one day talking to three new members about his
fatness as though he was in search of other recipes. And then, quite
unexpectedly, his telegram came.
"Mr.
Formalyn!" bawled a page-boy under my nose, and I took the telegram and
opened it at once.
"For Heaven's
sake come.--Pyecraft."
"H'm," said
I, and to tell the truth I was so pleased at the rehabilitation of my great
grandmother's reputation this evidently promised that I made a most excellent
lunch.
I got Pyecraft's
address from the hall porter. Pyecraft inhabited the upper half of a house in
Bloomsbury, and I went there so soon as I had done my coffee and Trappistine. I
did not wait to finish my cigar.
"Mr.
Pyecraft?" said I, at the front door.
They believed he was
ill; he hadn't been out for two days.
"He expects
me," said I, and they sent me up.
I rang the bell at the
lattice-door upon the landing.
"He shouldn't
have tried it, anyhow," I said to myself. "A man who eats like a pig
ought to look like a pig."
An obviously worthy
woman, with an anxious face and a carelessly placed cap, came and surveyed me
through the lattice.
I gave my name and she
let me in in a dubious fashion.
"Well?" said
I, as we stood together inside Pyecraft's piece of the landing.
"'E said you was
to come in if you came," she said, and regarded me, making no motion to
show me anywhere. And then, confidentially, "'E's locked in, sir."
"Locked in?"
"Locked himself
in yesterday morning and 'asn't let any one in since, sir. And ever and
again swearing. Oh, my!"
I stared at the door
she indicated by her glances.
"In there?"
I said.
"Yes, sir."
"What's up?"
She shook her head
sadly, "'E keeps on calling for vittles, sir. 'eavy vittles 'e
wants. I get 'im what I can. Pork 'e's 'ad, sooit puddin', sossiges, noo bread.
Everythink like that. Left outside, if you please, and me go away. 'E's eatin',
sir, somethink awful."
There came a piping
bawl from inside the door: "That Formalyn?"
"That you,
Pyecraft?" I shouted, and went and banged the door.
"Tell her to go
away."
I did.
Then I could hear a
curious pattering upon the door, almost like some one feeling for the handle in
the dark, and Pyecraft's familiar grunts.
"It's all right,"
I said, "she's gone."
But for a long time
the door didn't open.
I heard the key turn.
Then Pyecraft's voice said, "Come in."
I turned the handle
and opened the door. Naturally I expected to see Pyecraft.
Well, you know, he
wasn't there!
I never had such a
shock in my life. There was his sitting-room in a state of untidy disorder,
plates and dishes among the books and writing things, and several chairs
overturned, but Pyecraft--
"It's all right,
o' man; shut the door," he said, and then I discovered him.
There he was right up
close to the cornice in the corner by the door, as though some one had glued
him to the ceiling. His face was anxious and angry. He panted and gesticulated.
"Shut the door," he said. "If that woman gets hold of it--"
I shut the door, and
went and stood away from him and stared.
"If anything
gives way and you tumble down," I said, "you'll break your neck,
Pyecraft."
"I wish I
could," he wheezed.
"A man of your
age and weight getting up to kiddish gymnastics--"
"Don't," he
said, and looked agonised.
"I'll tell
you," he said, and gesticulated.
"How the
deuce," said I, "are you holding on up there?"
And then abruptly I
realised that he was not holding on at all, that he was floating up there--just
as a gas-filled bladder might have floated in the same position. He began a
struggle to thrust himself away from the ceiling and to clamber down the wall
to me. "It's that prescription," he panted, as he did so. "Your
great-gran--"
He took hold of a
framed engraving rather carelessly as he spoke and it gave way, and he flew
back to the ceiling again, while the picture smashed onto the sofa. Bump he
went against the ceiling, and I knew then why he was all over white on the more
salient curves and angles of his person. He tried again more carefully, coming
down by way of the mantel.
It was really a most
extraordinary spectacle, that great, fat, apoplectic-looking man upside down
and trying to get from the ceiling to the floor. "That prescription,"
he said. "Too successful."
"How?"
"Loss of
weight--almost complete."
And then, of course, I
understood.
"By Jove,
Pyecraft," said I, "what you wanted was a cure for fatness! But you
always called it weight. You would call it weight."
Somehow I was
extremely delighted. I quite liked Pyecraft for the time. "Let me help
you!" I said, and took his hand and pulled him down. He kicked about,
trying to get a foothold somewhere. It was very like holding a flag on a windy
day.
"That
table," he said, pointing, "is solid mahogany and very heavy. If you
can put me under that---"
I did, and there he
wallowed about like a captive balloon, while I stood on his hearthrug and
talked to him.
I lit a cigar.
"Tell me," I said, "what happened?"
"I took it,"
he said.
"How did it
taste?"
"Oh, beastly!"
I should fancy they
all did. Whether one regards the ingredients or the probable compound or the
possible results, almost all of my great-grandmother's remedies appear to me at
least to be extraordinarily uninviting. For my own part--
"I took a little
sip first."
"Yes?"
"And as I felt
lighter and better after an hour, I decided to take the draught."
"My dear
Pyecraft!"
"I held my
nose," he explained. "And then I kept on getting lighter and
lighter--and helpless, you know."
He gave way to a
sudden burst of passion. "What the goodness am I to do?"
he said.
"There's one
thing pretty evident," I said, "that you mustn't do. If you go out of
doors, you'll go up and up." I waved an arm upward. "They'd have to
send Santos-Dumont after you to bring you down again."
"I suppose it
will wear off?"
I shook my head.
"I don't think you can count on that," I said.
And then there was
another burst of passion, and he kicked out at adjacent chairs and banged the
floor. He behaved just as I should have expected a great, fat, self-indulgent
man to behave under trying circumstances--that is to say, very badly. He spoke
of me and my great-grandmother with an utter want of discretion.
"I never asked you
to take the stuff," I said.
And generously
disregarding the insults he was putting upon me, I sat down in his armchair and
began to talk to him in a sober, friendly fashion.
I pointed out to him
that this was a trouble he had brought upon himself, and that it had almost an
air of poetical justice. He had eaten too much. This he disputed, and for a
time we argued the point.
He became noisy and
violent, so I desisted from this aspect of his lesson. "And then,"
said I, "you committed the sin of euphuism. You called it not Fat, which
is just and inglorious, but Weight. You--"
He interrupted to say
he recognised all that. What was he to do?
I suggested he should
adapt himself to his new conditions. So we came to the really sensible part of
the business. I suggested that it would not be difficult for him to learn to
walk about on the ceiling with his hands--
"I can't
sleep," he said.
But that was no great
difficulty. It was quite possible, I pointed out, to make a shake-up under a
wire mattress, fasten the under things on with tapes, and have a blanket,
sheet, and coverlet to button at the side. He would have to confide in his
housekeeper, I said; and after some squabbling he agreed to that. (Afterwards
it was quite delightful to see the beautifully matter-of-fact way with which
the good lady took all these amazing inversions.) He could have a library
ladder in his room, and all his meals could be laid on the top of his bookcase.
We also hit on an ingenious device by which he could get to the floor whenever
he wanted, which was simply to put the British Encyclopaedia (tenth edition) on
the top of his open shelves. He just pulled out a couple of volumes and held
on, and down he came. And we agreed there must be iron staples along the
skirting, so that he could cling to those whenever he wanted to get about the
room on the lower level.
As we got on with the
thing I found myself almost keenly interested. It was I who called in the
housekeeper and broke matters to her, and it was I chiefly who fixed up the
inverted bed. In fact, I spent two whole days at his flat. I am a handy,
interfering sort of man with a screw-driver, and I made all sorts of ingenious
adaptations for him--ran a wire to bring his bells within reach, turned all his
electric lights up instead of down, and so on. The whole affair was extremely
curious and interesting to me, and it was delightful to think of Pyecraft like
some great, fat blow-fly, crawling about on his ceiling and clambering round
the lintels of his doors from one room to another, and never, never, never
coming to the club any more. . . .
Then, you know, my
fatal ingenuity got the better of me. I was sitting by his fire drinking his
whisky, and he was up in his favourite corner by the cornice, tacking a Turkey
carpet to the ceiling, when the idea struck me. "By Jove, Pyecraft!"
I said, "all this is totally unnecessary."
And before I could
calculate the complete consequences of my notion I blurted it out. "Lead
underclothing," said I, and the mischief was done.
Pyecraft received the
thing almost in tears. "To be right ways up again--" he said. I gave
him the whole secret before I saw where it would take me. "Buy sheet
lead," I said, "stamp it into discs. Sew 'em all over your
underclothes until you have enough. Have lead-soled boots, carry a bag of solid
lead, and the thing is done! Instead of being a prisoner here you may go abroad
again, Pyecraft; you may travel--"
A still happier idea
came to me. "You need never fear a shipwreck. All you need do is just slip
off some or all of your clothes, take the necessary amount of luggage in your
hand, and float up in the air--"
In his emotion he
dropped the tack-hammer within an ace of my head. "By Jove!" he said,
"I shall be able to come back to the club again."
The thing pulled me up
short. "By Jove!" I said faintly. "Yes. Of course--you
will."
He did. He does. There
he sits behind me now, stuffing--as I live!-- a third go of buttered tea-cake.
And no one in the whole world knows-- except his housekeeper and me--that he
weighs practically nothing; that he is a mere boring mass of assimilatory
matter, mere clouds in clothing, niente, nefas, the most inconsiderable of men.
There he sits watching until I have done this writing. Then, if he can, he will
waylay me. He will come billowing up to me. . . .
He will tell me over
again all about it, how it feels, how it doesn't feel, how he sometimes hopes
it is passing off a little. And always somewhere in that fat, abundant
discourse he will say, "The secret's keeping, eh? If any one knew of it--I
should be so ashamed. . . . Makes a fellow look such a fool, you know. Crawling
about on a ceiling and all that. . . ."
And now to elude
Pyecraft, occupying, as he does, an admirable strategic position between me and
the door.
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