Hubert raised his hat courteously.
“Good evening, Miss West.
Of course you may speak to me!” he said.
“Can I do anything for you?”
“Yes,” answered the girl
with a quickness which sounded abrupt, but which,
as could easily be seen, was born of shyness and not
of incivility. “You can get me an engagement
if you like, Mr. Lepel; and I wish you would.”
Hubert laughed, not thinking that
she was in earnest, and surveyed her critically.
“You will not have much difficulty
in getting one for yourself, I should think,”
he said.
Miss West colored and drew back rather
haughtily. It was evident that she did not like
remarks of a personal bearing, although Mr. Lepel had
spoken only as he would have thought himself licensed
to speak to girls of her profession, who are generally
open to such compliments and indeed she
was not very likely to escape compliments. As
he looked at her in the light of the gas-lamps before
the theatre, Hubert Lepel became gradually aware that
there stood before him one of the most beautiful women
he had ever seen.
She was tall nearly as
tall as himself but so finely proportioned
that she gave the impression of less height than she
really possessed. Every movement of her lithe
limbs was full of grace; she was slender without being
thin, and lissom as an untrained beautiful creature
of the woods. In after-days, when Hubert knew
her better, he used to compare her to a young panther
for grace and freedom of motion. It was a pleasure
to watch her walk, although her step was longer and
freer than to Enid Vane’s teachers would have
seemed desirable. Her features were perfectly
cut; the broad forehead, the straight nose, the curved
lips and slightly-puckered chin were of the type recognised
as purely Greek, and the complexion and eyes accompanying
these features were rich in the coloring that glows
upon the canvases of Murillo and Velasquez. The
skin was of a creamy brown, heightened by a carmine
tint in the oval cheeks; the eyes were large, dark,
and lustrous, with long black lashes and well-defined
black brows. It seemed somehow to Hubert as if
those eyes were familiar to him, but he could not
recollect how or why. For the rest, Miss Cynthia
West was a very well-dressed, stylish-looking young
woman, neither fast nor shabby in her mode of attire;
and the things that she wore served intentionally
or not to set off her good looks to the
best advantage. Hubert had seen her several times
off and on the stage during the past few weeks since
his return to England; she took none but minor parts,
but was so remarkably handsome that she had begun
to attract remark. He was a little surprised by
her speech to him, and hardly thought she could be
in earnest. In fact, he suspected her of a mere
desire to attract his attention.
“I thought you were at the Frivolity?”
he said.
“I have left the Frivolity,”
she answered abruptly. “This afternoon’s
engagement is the only one I have had for a fortnight;
and I have nothing in prospect.”
He gave her a keener look, and in
spite of her brave bearing and her dainty clothes,
he thought he perceived a slight pinching of the delicate
features, a dark shade beneath the eyes which if
he remembered rightly had not been there
two months before. Was it possible that the girl
was really in want? Could he put his hand into
his pocket and offer her money? He might make
the attempt at any rate.
“Can I be of any use to you in
this way?” he began, inserting two fingers into
his waistcoat-pocket in a sufficiently significant
manner.
He was aware of his mistake the next
moment. An indignant flush spread over the girl’s
whole face; her eyes expressed such hurt surprise that
Mr. Lepel felt rather ashamed of his suggestion.
“I did not ask you for money,”
said Miss West; “I asked if you could get me
something to do.” Then she turned away with
a gesture which Hubert took for one of mere petulance,
though the feeling that actuated it bordered more
nearly on despair. “Oh,” she said
with a quick nervous irritation audible in her tone,
“I thought that you would understand!” and
her beautiful dark eyes swam in tears.
They were still standing on the pavement,
and at that moment two or three passers-by shouldered
Hubert somewhat roughly, and stared at the girl to
whom he was speaking. Hubert placed himself at
her side.
“Come,” he said “Walk
on a few paces with me, and make me understand what
you want when we get to a quieter spot.”
She bowed her head; it was evident that if she had spoken the
tears would have fallen from her eyes. Hubert turned up the comparatively
dark and quiet street in which stood the theatre that he had just visited; but
for a few minutes he did not speak. At last he said in the soothing voice
which was sometimes thought to be his greatest charm
“Now will you make me understand?
I beg your pardon for having offended you by my offer
of help; I meant it in all kindness. You have
not an engagement just now, you say?”
“It is not easy to get one,”
said the girl, with a quiver in her proud young voice.
“It is not a good time, you know. I had
two or three offers of engagements with provincial
companies this autumn, but I refused them all because
I had this one at the Frivolity. They were to
give me two pounds a week; and it was considered a
very good engagement. Besides, it was a London
engagement, which I thought it better to take while
I had the chance. But I have lost it now, and
I don’t know what to do.”
“You know the first question
one naturally feels inclined to put to you, Miss West,
is, why did you leave the Frivolity?”
“I can’t tell you the
real reason,” said the girl sharply. The
color in her face seemed now to be concentrated in
two flaming spots in her cheeks; her mouth was set,
and her brow contracted over the brilliant eyes.
“I quarrelled with the manager that
was all.”
“Let me see the manager
is Ferguson, is he not? I know him.”
“But he is not a friend of yours?”
said Cynthia, turning towards him with a look of sudden
dismay.
“Certainly not! He is the
most confirmed liar I ever met,” Hubert answered
without a smile.
But he was a little curious in his
own mind. From what he knew of Ferguson, he supposed
it likely that the man had been making love to the
young actress, that she had refused to listen to him,
and that he had therefore dismissed her from the troupe.
Such things had happened before, he knew, during Mr.
Ferguson’s reign; and the Frivolity did not
bear the very best character in the world. With
a girl of Cynthia West’s remarkable beauty,
it was pretty easy to guess the story, although the
girl in her innocence thought that she was concealing
it completely.
“He said that I was careless,”
Cynthia went on rapidly. “He changed the
hour for rehearsal twice, and let everybody know but
me; then I was fined, of course; and I complained,
and then he said I had better go.”
“What made you come to me?”
said Hubert. “I am not a manager, you know.”
“You have a great deal of influence,”
she said, rather more shyly than she had spoken hitherto.
“Very little indeed. Other
people have much more. Why did you not try Gurney
or Thomson or Macalister?” mentioning
names well known in the theatrical world.
“Oh, Mr. Lepel,” said
the girl, almost in a whisper, “you will think
me so foolish if I tell you!”
“No, I sha’n’t. Do tell me
why!”
“Well” still
in a whisper “it was because I read
a story, that you had written a tale about
a girl called Amy Maitland do you remember?”
“I ought to remember,”
said Hubert thoughtfully, “because I know I wrote
it; but an author does not always recall his old stories
very accurately, Miss West. It was a short tale
for a Christmas number, I know. What was there
in it that could cause you to honor me in this way,
I wonder?”
“Ah, don’t laugh at me,
please, Mr. Lepel!” Cynthia’s voice was
so sweet in its entreating tones that Hubert thought
he had never heard anything more musical. “It
was all about a girl who was poor like me, and whose
parents were dead, and about her adventures, you know particularly
about her not being able to get any work to do, and
nearly throwing herself into the river. I have
had the thought more than once lately that it would
end with me in that way the river looks
so deep and silent and mysterious doesn’t
it? But that’s all nonsense, I suppose!
However, when I read about Amy in the old Christmas
number, that my landlady lent me the other night,
it came to my mind that I had seen you behind the
scenes, and that, if you could write in that way, you
might be more ready ready to help ”
She stopped short, a little breathless after her long
and tremulous speech.
“My poor child,” said
Hubert, with the tender accent that showed that he
was moved, “I am afraid it does not always follow.
However, let us take the most cheerful view possible
of all things, even of novelists, and try to believe
that they practise what they preach. It would
be hard if I did not prove worthy of your confidence,
Miss West. I am sure I don’t know whether
I will be able to do anything for you or not, but I
will see.”
“Thank you, Mr. Lepel.”
She said the words very low, and drew
a quick breath of relief as she said them. By
the light of a gas-lamp under which they were passing
at the moment Hubert saw that she had turned very
pale. He halted suddenly.
“I am very thoughtless,”
he said, “not to recollect that you must be
tired, and that I am perhaps taking you out of your
way.”
“No,” said Cynthia simply;
“I always go this way. I lodge at a boarding-house
in the Euston Road.”
“Then let us to business at
once!” exclaimed Mr. Lepel, in a cheerful tone.
“What sort of engagement do you want, Miss West?”
She was silent for a minute or two. Then she said, with
some unusual timidity of manner
“I should very much like to
have an engagement at a place where I could sing.”
“Sing!” repeated Hubert,
arching his brows a little. “Can you sing?
Have you a voice?”
“Yes,” said Cynthia.
The audacity of the assertion took
away Hubert’s breath. He looked at her
pityingly.
“My dear Miss West, are you
aware that singing is a profession in itself, and
requires a professional training, like other things?”
“Yes. But I can sing,” said the girl
decidedly.
“Where did you learn?”
“At school, and then of an old
music-master in the boarding-house where I am living.”
If he had not been afraid of wounding
her feelings, Hubert would have shrugged his shoulders.
They were again standing on the pavement, face to
face, and he refrained from the scornful gesture.
“Well,” he said, after
a short pause, “if you think so, there is nothing
to do but to try you. I must hear you sing, Miss
West, before I can say anything about a musical engagement.
Shall I come and see you to-morrow?”
“Oh, no!” said Cynthia,
with such transparent horror at the suggestion that
Mr. Lepel was very much amused. “We have
no piano, and I am sure that Mrs. Wadsley would not
like it.”
“Then will you come to my rooms
at twelve o’clock to-morrow morning?”
“Thank you. Oh, Mr. Lepel,
I am so very, very much obliged to you!”
“I have done nothing yet to
merit thanks, Miss West. I shall be only glad
if I can be the means of assisting a fellow-artist
out of a difficulty.” He saw that the words
brought a bright glow of gratified feeling to the
girl’s face. “Here is my card; my
rooms are not very far off, you see in
Russell square.”
Cynthia took the card and thanked him again so warmly that
Hubert assured her that he was already overpaid. They had reached the
broad torrent of life that rolls down New Oxford street, and further
conversation became almost impossible. Hubert bent his head to say
“Shall I put you into a cab now, or may I see
you home?”
“Neither, thank you,”
she said, shaking her head. “I am quite
well used to going about alone; and it is a very little
way. Good night; and I am so much obliged to
you!”
“Let me see you over this crossing,
at any rate,” said Hubert.
She was too quick for him; she had
already plunged into the tide, and he saw her the
next moment halting on the central resting-place of
the broad thoroughfare. He attempted to follow,
but was too late, and had to wait a moment or two
for a couple of heavy carts. When the road was
clear again, he saw that she had safely reached the
other side; and, as soon as he had crossed, he dimly
perceived her graceful figure some distance ahead
on the sombre pavements of Bedford square. His
impulse was to overtake her, but after a few rapid
strides he abandoned the intention. The girl
was safe enough at that early hour; no doubt she was
accustomed, as she said, to take care of herself.
No need to launch into a romantic episode to
walk behind her, keeping watch and ward, as if she
were likely to encounter terrible danger on the way.
And yet, for some reason or another, he continued
to walk slowly now in the direction
which Cynthia West had taken.
It was quite out of his own way to go all along Gower street
and eastward down the Euston Road, yet that was what he did. He saw the
tall slight figure stop at an iron gate, push it open, and walk up the flagged
pavement to the door of a dingy but highly respectable-looking house. The
Euston Road is a neighborhood not greatly affected by people of fastidious
taste; and Hubert wondered, with a shrug of the shoulders, why Miss West had
found a lodging in the very midst of its ceaseless maddening roar. He
passed the house with a slow step, and as he did so he read an inscription on
the brass plate which adorned the gate by which Cynthia had entered
“Mrs.
Wadsley.
“Select Boarding-House for Ladies and Gentlemen.
“Moderate Terms.”
“Very moderate and very select,
no doubt,” thought Hubert cynically. “Now
is that girl making a fool of me, or is she not?
All those pretty airs might so easily be put on by
a clever actress. I shall find her out to-morrow.
She can act a little I know that; but, if
she can’t sing, after what she has said, she
may go to Jericho for me! And, if she does not
come at all, why, then I shall know that she is an
arrant little impostor, and that I am a confounded
fool!”
“He stopped to light a cigar
under a lamp-post, and a slight smile played over
his features as he struck the match.
“She’s a beautiful girl,”
he said to himself; “if she does turn out an
impostor, I shall be rather sorry. But, by Jove,
I don’t believe she will!”