Third of a Series of Six Stories [First
published in Pictorial Review, July 1916]
It was one of those hard, nubbly rolls.
The best restaurants charge you sixpence for having
the good sense not to eat them. It hit Roland
Bleke with considerable vehemence on the bridge of
the nose. For the moment Roland fancied that
the roof of the Regent Grill-room must have fallen
in; and, as this would automatically put an end to
the party, he was not altogether sorry. He had
never been to a theatrical supper-party before, and
within five minutes of his arrival at the present one
he had become afflicted with an intense desire never
to go to a theatrical supper-party again. To
be a success at these gay gatherings one must possess
dash; and Roland, whatever his other sterling qualities,
was a little short of dash.
The young man on the other side of
the table was quite nice about it. While not
actually apologizing, he went so far as to explain
that it was “old Gerry” whom he had had
in his mind when he started the roll on its course.
After a glance at old Gerry a chinless child
of about nineteen Roland felt that it would
be churlish to be angry with a young man whose intentions
had been so wholly admirable. Old Gerry had one
of those faces in which any alteration, even the comparatively
limited one which a roll would be capable of producing,
was bound to be for the better. He smiled a sickly
smile and said that it didn’t matter.
The charming creature who sat on his
assailant’s left, however, took a more serious
view of the situation.
“Sidney, you make me tired,”
she said severely. “If I had thought you
didn’t know how to act like a gentleman I wouldn’t
have come here with you. Go away somewhere and
throw bread at yourself, and ask Mr. Bleke to come
and sit by me. I want to talk to him.”
That was Roland’s first introduction
to Miss Billy Verepoint.
“I’ve been wanting to
have a chat with you all the evening, Mr. Bleke,”
she said, as Roland blushingly sank into the empty
chair. “I’ve heard such a lot about
you.”
What Miss Verepoint had heard about
Roland was that he had two hundred thousand pounds
and apparently did not know what to do with it.
“In fact, if I hadn’t
been told that you would be here, I shouldn’t
have come to this party. Can’t stand these
gatherings of nuts in May as a general rule.
They bore me stiff.”
Roland hastily revised his first estimate
of the theatrical profession. Shallow, empty-headed
creatures some of them might be, no doubt, but there
were exceptions. Here was a girl of real discernment a
thoughtful student of character a girl
who understood that a man might sit at a supper-party
without uttering a word and might still be a man of
parts.
“I’m afraid you’ll
think me very outspoken but that’s
me all over. All my friends say, ’Billy
Verepoint’s a funny girl: if she likes any
one she just tells them so straight out; and if she
doesn’t like any one she tells them straight
out, too.’”
“And a very admirable trait,”
said Roland, enthusiastically.
Miss Verepoint sighed. “P’raps
it is,” she said pensively, “but I’m
afraid it’s what has kept me back in my profession.
Managers don’t like it: they think girls
should be seen and not heard.”
Roland’s blood boiled.
Managers were plainly a dastardly crew.
“But what’s the good of
worrying,” went on Miss Verepoint, with a brave
but hollow laugh. “Of course, it’s
wearing, having to wait when one has got as much ambition
as I have; but they all tell me that my chance is
bound to come some day.”
The intense mournfulness of Miss Verepoint’s
expression seemed to indicate that she anticipated
the arrival of the desired day not less than sixty
years hence. Roland was profoundly moved.
His chivalrous nature was up in arms. He fell
to wondering if he could do anything to help this
victim of managerial unfairness. “You don’t
mind my going on about my troubles, do you?”
asked Miss Verepoint, solicitously. “One
so seldom meets anybody really sympathetic.”
Roland babbled fervent assurances,
and she pressed his hand gratefully.
“I wonder if you would care
to come to tea one afternoon,” she said.
“Oh, rather!” said Roland.
He would have liked to put it in a more polished way
but he was almost beyond speech.
“Of course, I know what a busy man you are ”
“No, no!”
“Well, I should be in to-morrow afternoon, if
you cared to look in.”
Roland bleated gratefully.
“I’ll write down the address
for you,” said Miss Verepoint, suddenly businesslike.
Exactly when he committed himself
to the purchase of the Windsor Theater, Roland could
never say. The idea seemed to come into existence
fully-grown, without preliminary discussion. One
moment it was not the next it was.
His recollections of the afternoon which he spent drinking
lukewarm tea and punctuating Miss Verepoint’s
flow of speech with “yes’s” and
“no’s” were always so thoroughly
confused that he never knew even whose suggestion
it was.
The purchase of a West-end theater,
when one has the necessary cash, is not nearly such
a complicated business as the layman might imagine.
Roland was staggered by the rapidity with which the
transaction was carried through. The theater
was his before he had time to realize that he had
never meant to buy the thing at all. He had gone
into the offices of Mr. Montague with the intention
of making an offer for the lease for, say, six months;
and that wizard, in the space of less than an hour,
had not only induced him to sign mysterious documents
which made him sole proprietor of the house, but had
left him with the feeling that he had done an extremely
acute stroke of business. Mr. Montague had dabbled
in many professions in his time, from street peddling
upward, but what he was really best at was hypnotism.
Altho he felt, after the spell of
Mr. Montague’s magnetism was withdrawn, rather
like a nervous man who has been given a large baby
to hold by a strange woman who has promptly vanished
round the corner, Roland was to some extent consoled
by the praise bestowed upon him by Miss Verepoint.
She said it was much better to buy a theater than to
rent it, because then you escaped the heavy rent.
It was specious, but Roland had a dim feeling that
there was a flaw somewhere in the reasoning; and it
was from this point that a shadow may be said to have
fallen upon the brightness of the venture.
He would have been even less self-congratulatory
if he had known the Windsor Theater’s reputation.
Being a comparative stranger in the metropolis, he
was unaware that its nickname in theatrical circles
was “The Mugs’ Graveyard” a
title which had been bestowed upon it not without
reason. Built originally by a slightly insane
old gentleman, whose principal delusion was that the
public was pining for a constant supply of the Higher
Drama, and more especially those specimens of the
Higher Drama which flowed practically without cessation
from the restless pen of the insane old gentleman
himself, the Windsor Theater had passed from hand
to hand with the agility of a gold watch in a gathering
of race-course thieves. The one anxiety of the
unhappy man who found himself, by some accident, in
possession of the Windsor Theater, was to pass it
on to somebody else. The only really permanent
tenant it ever had was the representative of the Official
Receiver.
Various causes were assigned for the
phenomenal ill-luck of the theater, but undoubtedly
the vital objection to it as a Temple of Drama lay
in the fact that nobody could ever find the place
where it was hidden. Cabmen shook their heads
on the rare occasions when they were asked to take
a fare there. Explorers to whom a stroll through
the Australian bush was child’s-play, had been
known to spend an hour on its trail and finish up
at the point where they had started.
It was precisely this quality of elusiveness
which had first attracted Mr. Montague. He was
a far-seeing man, and to him the topographical advantages
of the theater were enormous. It was further from
a fire-station than any other building of the same
insurance value in London, even without having regard
to the mystery which enveloped its whereabouts.
Often after a good dinner he would lean comfortably
back in his chair and see in the smoke of his cigar
a vision of the Windsor Theater blazing merrily, while
distracted firemen galloped madly all over London,
vainly endeavoring to get some one to direct them to
the scene of the conflagration. So Mr. Montague
bought the theater for a mere song, and prepared to
get busy.
Unluckily for him, the representatives
of the various fire offices with which he had effected
his policies got busy first. The generous fellows
insisted upon taking off his shoulders the burden of
maintaining the fireman whose permanent presence in
a theater is required by law. Nothing would satisfy
them but to install firemen of their own and pay their
salaries. This, to a man in whom the instincts
of the phoenix were so strongly developed as they
were in Mr. Montague, was distinctly disconcerting.
He saw himself making no profit on the deal a
thing which had never happened to him before.
And then Roland Bleke occurred, and
Mr. Montague’s belief that his race was really
chosen was restored. He sold the Windsor Theater
to Roland for twenty-five thousand pounds. It
was fifteen thousand pounds more than he himself had
given for it, and this very satisfactory profit mitigated
the slight regret which he felt when it came to transferring
to Roland the insurance policies. To have effected
policies amounting to rather more than seventy thousand
pounds on a building so notoriously valueless as the
Windsor Theater had been an achievement of which Mr.
Montague was justly proud, and it seemed sad to him
that so much earnest endeavor should be thrown away.
Over the little lunch with which she
kindly allowed Roland to entertain her, to celebrate
the purchase of the theater, Miss Verepoint outlined
her policy.
“What we must put up at that
theater,” she announced, “is a revue.
A revue,” repeated Miss Verepoint, making, as
she spoke, little calculations on the back of the
menu, “we could run for about fifteen hundred
a week or, say, two thousand.”
Saying two thousand, thought Roland
to himself, is not quite the same as paying two thousand,
so why should she stint herself?
“I know two boys who could write
us a topping revue,” said Miss Verepoint.
“They’d spread themselves, too, if it was
for me. They’re in love with me both
of them. We’d better get in touch with them
at once.”
To Roland, there seemed to be something
just the least bit sinister about the sound of that
word “touch,” but he said nothing.
“Why, there they are lunching
over there!” cried Miss Verepoint, pointing
to a neighboring table. “Now, isn’t
that lucky?”
To Roland the luck was not quite so
apparent, but he made no demur to Miss Verepoint’s
suggestion that they should be brought over to their
table.
The two boys, as to whose capabilities
to write a topping revue Miss Verepoint had formed
so optimistic an estimate, proved to be well-grown
lads of about forty-five and forty, respectively.
Of the two, Roland thought that perhaps R. P. de Parys
was a shade the more obnoxious, but a closer inspection
left him with the feeling that these fine distinctions
were a little unfair with men of such equal talents.
Bromham Rhodes ran his friend so close that it was
practically a dead heat. They were both fat and
somewhat bulgy-eyed. This was due to the fact
that what revue-writing exacts from its exponents is
the constant assimilation of food and drink.
Bromham Rhodes had the largest appetite in London;
but, on the other hand, R. P. de Parys was a better
drinker.
“Well, dear old thing!” said Bromham Rhodes.
“Well, old child!” said R. P. de Parys.
Both these remarks were addressed
to Miss Verepoint. The talented pair appeared
to be unaware of Roland’s existence.
Miss Verepoint struck the business
note. “Now you stop, boys,” she said.
“Tie weights to yourselves and sink down into
those chairs. I want you two lads to write a
revue for me.”
“Delighted!” said Bromham Rhodes; “but ”
“There is the trifling point
to be raised first ” said
R. P. de Parys.
“Where is the money coming from?” said
Bromham Rhodes.
“My friend, Mr. Bleke, is putting
up the money,” said Miss Verepoint, with dignity.
“He has taken the Windsor Theater.”
The interest of the two authors in
their host, till then languid, increased with a jerk.
“Has he? By Jove!” they cried.
“We must get together and talk this over.”
It was Roland’s first experience
of a theatrical talking-over, and he never forgot
it. Two such talkers-over as Bromham Rhodes and
R. P. de Parys were scarcely to be found in the length
and breadth of theatrical London. Nothing, it
seemed, could the gifted pair even begin to think of
doing without first discussing the proposition in all
its aspects. The amount of food which Roland
found himself compelled to absorb during the course
of these debates was appalling. Discussions which
began at lunch would be continued until it was time
to order dinner; and then, as likely as not, they
would have to sit there till supper-time in order to
thrash the question thoroughly out.
The collection of a cast was a matter
even more complicated than the actual composition
of the revue. There was the almost insuperable
difficulty that Miss Verepoint firmly vetoed every
name suggested. It seemed practically impossible
to find any man or woman in all England or America
whose peculiar gifts or lack of them would not interfere
with Miss Verepoint’s giving a satisfactory performance
of the principal rôle. It was all very perplexing
to Roland; but as Miss Verepoint was an expert in
theatrical matters, he scarcely felt entitled to question
her views.
It was about this time that Roland
proposed to Miss Verepoint. The passage of time
and the strain of talking over the revue had to a
certain extent moderated his original fervor.
He had shaded off from a passionate devotion, through
various diminishing tints of regard for her, into
a sort of pale sunset glow of affection. His principal
reason for proposing was that it seemed to him to
be in the natural order of events. Her air towards
him had become distinctly proprietorial. She now
called him “Roly-poly” in public a
proceeding which left him with mixed feelings.
Also, she had taken to ordering him about, which, as
everybody knows, is an unmistakable sign of affection
among ladies of the theatrical profession. Finally,
in his chivalrous way, Roland had begun to feel a
little apprehensive lest he might be compromising Miss
Verepoint. Everybody knew that he was putting
up the money for the revue in which she was to appear;
they were constantly seen together at restaurants;
people looked arch when they spoke to him about her.
He had to ask himself: was he behaving like a
perfect gentleman? The answer was in the negative.
He took a cab to her flat and proposed before he could
repent of his decision.
She accepted him. He was not
certain for a moment whether he was glad or sorry.
“But I don’t want to get married,”
she went on, “until I have justified my choice
of a profession. You will have to wait until I
have made a success in this revue.”
Roland was shocked to find himself
hugely relieved at this concession.
The revue took shape. There did
apparently exist a handful of artistes to whom
Miss Verepoint had no objection, and these a
scrubby but confident lot were promptly
engaged. Sallow Americans sprang from nowhere
with songs, dances, and ideas for effects. Tousled-haired
scenic artists wandered in with model scenes under
their arms. A great cloud of chorus-ladies settled
upon the theater like flies. Even Bromham Rhodes
and R. P. de Parys those human pythons showed
signs of activity. They cornered Roland one day
near Swan and Edgar’s, steered him into the
Piccadilly Grill-room and, over a hearty lunch, read
him extracts from a brown-paper-covered manuscript
which, they informed him, was the first act.
It looked a battered sort of manuscript
and, indeed, it had every right to be. Under
various titles and at various times, Bromham Rhodes’
and R. P. de Parys’ first act had been refused
by practically every responsible manager in London.
As “Oh! What a Life!” it had failed
to satisfy the directors of the Empire. Re-christened
“Wow-Wow!” it had been rejected by the
Alhambra. The Hippodrome had refused to consider
it, even under the name of “Hullo, Cellar-Flap!”
It was now called, “Pass Along, Please!”
and, according to its authors, was a real revue.
Roland was to learn, as the days went
on, that in the world in which he was moving everything
was real revue that was not a stunt or a corking effect.
He floundered in a sea of real revue, stunts, and corking
effects. As far as he could gather, the main difference
between these things was that real revue was something
which had been stolen from some previous English production,
whereas a stunt or a corking effect was something
which had been looted from New York. A judicious
blend of these, he was given to understand, constituted
the sort of thing the public wanted.
Rehearsals began before, in Roland’s
opinion, his little army was properly supplied with
ammunition. True, they had the first act, but
even the authors agreed that it wanted bringing up-to-date
in parts. They explained that it was, in a manner
of speaking, their life-work, that they had actually
started it about ten years ago when they were careless
lads. Inevitably, it was spotted here and there
with smart topical hits of the early years of the
century; but that, they said, would be all right.
They could freshen it up in a couple of evenings; it
was simply a matter of deleting allusions to pro-Boers
and substituting lines about Marconi shares and mangel-wurzels.
“It’ll be all right,” they assured
Roland; “this is real revue.”
In times of trouble there is always
a point at which one may say, “Here is the beginning
of the end.” This point came with Roland
at the commencement of the rehearsals. Till then
he had not fully realized the terrible nature of the
production for which he had made himself responsible.
Moreover, it was rehearsals which gave him his first
clear insight into the character of Miss Verepoint.
Miss Verepoint was not at her best
at rehearsals. For the first time, as he watched
her, Roland found himself feeling that there was a
case to be made out for the managers who had so consistently
kept her in the background. Miss Verepoint, to
use the technical term, threw her weight about.
There were not many good lines in the script of act
one of “Pass Along, Please!” but such
as there were she reached out for and grabbed away
from their owners, who retired into corners, scowling
and muttering, like dogs robbed of bones. She
snubbed everybody, Roland included.
Roland sat in the cold darkness of
the stalls and watched her, panic-stricken. Like
an icy wave, it had swept over him what marriage with
this girl would mean. He suddenly realised how
essentially domestic his instincts really were.
Life with Miss Verepoint would mean perpetual dinners
at restaurants, bread-throwing suppers, motor-rides everything
that he hated most. Yet, as a man of honor, he
was tied to her. If the revue was a success,
she would marry him and revues, he knew,
were always successes. At that very moment there
were six “best revues in London,” running
at various theaters. He shuddered at the thought
that in a few weeks there would be seven.
He felt a longing for rural solitude.
He wanted to be alone by himself for a day or two
in a place where there were no papers with advertisements
of revues, no grill-rooms, and, above all, no Miss
Billy Verepoint. That night he stole away to
a Norfolk village, where, in happier days, he had
once spent a Summer holiday a peaceful,
primitive place where the inhabitants could not have
told real revue from a corking effect.
Here, for the space of a week, Roland
lay in hiding, while his quivering nerves gradually
recovered tone. He returned to London happier,
but a little apprehensive. Beyond a brief telegram
of farewell, he had not communicated with Miss Verepoint
for seven days, and experience had made him aware
that she was a lady who demanded an adequate amount
of attention.
That his nervous system was not wholly
restored to health was borne in upon him as he walked
along Piccadilly on his way to his flat; for, when
somebody suddenly slapped him hard between the shoulder-blades,
he uttered a stifled yell and leaped in the air.
Turning to face his assailant, he
found himself meeting the genial gaze of Mr. Montague,
his predecessor in the ownership of the Windsor Theater.
Mr. Montague was effusively friendly,
and, for some mysterious reason, congratulatory.
“You’ve done it, have
you? You pulled it off, did you? And in the
first month by George! And I took you
for the plain, ordinary mug of commerce! My boy,
you’re as deep as they make ’em. Who’d
have thought it, to look at you? It was the greatest
idea any one ever had and staring me in the face all
the time and I never saw it! But I don’t
grudge it to you you deserve it my boy!
You’re a nut!”
“I really don’t know what you mean.”
“Quite right, my boy!”
chuckled Mr. Montague. “You’re quite
right to keep it up, even among friends. It don’t
do to risk anything, and the least said soonest mended.”
He went on his way, leaving Roland completely mystified.
Voices from his sitting-room, among
which he recognized the high note of Miss Verepoint,
reminded him of the ordeal before him. He entered
with what he hoped was a careless ease of manner,
but his heart was beating fast. Since the opening
of rehearsals he had acquired a wholesome respect
for Miss Verepoint’s tongue. She was sitting
in his favorite chair. There were also present
Bromham Rhodes and R. P. de Parys, who had made themselves
completely at home with a couple of his cigars and
whisky from the oldest bin.
“So here you are at last!”
said Miss Verepoint, querulously. “The valet
told us you were expected back this morning, so we
waited. Where on earth have you been to, running
away like this, without a word?”
“I only went ”
“Well, it doesn’t matter
where you went. The main point is, what are you
going to do about it?”
“We thought we’d better
come along and talk it over,” said R. P. de
Parys.
“Talk what over?” said Roland: “the
revue?”
“Oh, don’t try and be
funny, for goodness’ sake!” snapped Miss
Verepoint. “It doesn’t suit you.
You haven’t the right shape of head. What
do you suppose we want to talk over? The theater,
of course.”
“What about the theater?”
Miss Verepoint looked searchingly
at him. “Don’t you ever read the
papers?”
“I haven’t seen a paper since I went away.”
“Well, better have it quick
and not waste time breaking it gently,” said
Miss Verepoint. “The theater’s been
burned down that’s what’s happened.”
“Burned down?”
“Burned down!” repeated Roland.
“That’s what I said, didn’t
I? The suffragettes did it. They left copies
of ‘Votes for Women’ about the place.
The silly asses set fire to two other theaters as
well, but they happened to be in main thoroughfares
and the fire-brigade got them under control at once.
I suppose they couldn’t find the Windsor.
Anyhow, it’s burned to the ground and what we
want to know is what are you going to do about it?”
Roland was much too busy blessing
the good angels of Kingsway to reply at once.
R. P. de Parys, sympathetic soul, placed a wrong construction
on his silence.
“Poor old Roly!” he said.
“It’s quite broken him up. The best
thing we can do is all to go off and talk it over
at the Savoy, over a bit of lunch.”
“Well,” said Miss Verepoint,
“what are you going to do rebuild
the Windsor or try and get another theater?”
The authors were all for rebuilding
the Windsor. True, it would take time, but it
would be more satisfactory in every way. Besides,
at this time of the year it would be no easy matter
to secure another theater at a moment’s notice.
To R. P. de Parys and Bromham Rhodes
the destruction of the Windsor Theater had appeared
less in the light of a disaster than as a direct intervention
on the part of Providence. The completion of that
tiresome second act, which had brooded over their
lives like an ugly cloud, could now be postponed indefinitely.
“Of course,” said R. P.
de Parys, thoughtfully, “our contract with you
makes it obligatory on you to produce our revue by
a certain date but I dare say, Bromham,
we could meet Roly there, couldn’t we?”
“Sure!” said Rhodes.
“Something nominal, say a further five hundred
on account of fees would satisfy us. I certainly
think it would be better to rebuild the Windsor, don’t
you, R. P.?”
“I do,” agreed R. P. de
Parys, cordially. “You see, Roly, our revue
has been written to fit the Windsor. It would
be very difficult to alter it for production at another
theater. Yes, I feel sure that rebuilding the
Windsor would be your best course.”
There was a pause.
“What do you think, Roly-poly?”
asked Miss Verepoint, as Roland made no sign.
“Nothing would delight me more
than to rebuild the Windsor, or to take another theater,
or do anything else to oblige,” he said, cheerfully.
“Unfortunately, I have no more money to burn.”
It was as if a bomb had suddenly exploded
in the room. A dreadful silence fell upon his
hearers. For the moment no one spoke. R.
P. de Parys woke with a start out of a beautiful dream
of prawn curry and Bromham Rhodes forgot that he had
not tasted food for nearly two hours. Miss Verepoint
was the first to break the silence.
“Do you mean to say,”
she gasped, “that you didn’t insure the
place?”
Roland shook his head. The particular
form in which Miss Verepoint had put the question
entitled him, he felt, to make this answer.
“Why didn’t you?”
Miss Verepoint’s tone was almost menacing.
“Because it did not appear to me to be necessary.”
Nor was it necessary, said Roland
to his conscience. Mr. Montague had done all
the insuring that was necessary and a bit
over.
Miss Verepoint fought with her growing
indignation, and lost. “What about the
salaries of the people who have been rehearsing all
this time?” she demanded.
“I’m sorry that they should
be out of an engagement, but it is scarcely my fault.
However, I propose to give each of them a month’s
salary. I can manage that, I think.”
Miss Verepoint rose. “And
what about me? What about me, that’s what
I want to know. Where do I get off? If you
think I’m going to marry you without your getting
a theater and putting up this revue you’re jolly
well mistaken.”
Roland made a gesture which was intended
to convey regret and resignation. He even contrived
to sigh.
“Very well, then,” said
Miss Verepoint, rightly interpreting this behavior
as his final pronouncement on the situation. “Then
everything’s jolly well off.”
She swept out of the room, the two
authors following in her wake like porpoises behind
a liner. Roland went to his bureau, unlocked it
and took out a bundle of documents. He let his
fingers stray lovingly among the fire insurance policies
which energetic Mr. Montague had been at such pains
to secure from so many companies.
“And so,” he said softly to himself, “am
I.”