1
Sally looked contentedly down the
long table. She felt happy at last. Everybody
was talking and laughing now, and her party, rallying
after an uncertain start, was plainly the success
she had hoped it would be. The first atmosphere
of uncomfortable restraint, caused, she was only too
well aware, by her brother Fillmore’s white evening
waistcoat, had worn off; and the male and female patrons
of Mrs. Meecher’s select boarding-house (transient
and residential) were themselves again.
At her end of the table the conversation
had turned once more to the great vital topic of Sally’s
legacy and what she ought to do with it. The
next best thing to having money of one’s own,
is to dictate the spending of somebody else’s,
and Sally’s guests were finding a good deal
of satisfaction in arranging a Budget for her.
Rumour having put the sum at their disposal at a high
figure, their suggestions had certain spaciousness.
“Let me tell you,” said
Augustus Bartlett, briskly, “what I’d do,
if I were you.” Augustus Bartlett, who
occupied an intensely subordinate position in the
firm of Kahn, Morris and Brown, the Wall Street brokers,
always affected a brisk, incisive style of speech,
as befitted a man in close touch with the great ones
of Finance. “I’d sink a couple of
hundred thousand in some good, safe bond-issue we’ve
just put one out which you would do well to consider and
play about with the rest. When I say play about,
I mean have a flutter in anything good that crops up.
Multiple Steel’s worth looking at. They
tell me it’ll be up to a hundred and fifty before
next Saturday.”
Elsa Doland, the pretty girl with
the big eyes who sat on Mr. Bartlett’s left,
had other views.
“Buy a theatre. Sally, and put on good
stuff.”
“And lose every bean you’ve
got,” said a mild young man, with a deep voice
across the table. “If I had a few hundred
thousand,” said the mild young man, “I’d
put every cent of it on Benny Whistler for the heavyweight
championship. I’ve private information that
Battling Tuke has been got at and means to lie down
in the seventh...”
“Say, listen,” interrupted
another voice, “lemme tell you what
I’d do with four hundred thousand...”
“If I had four hundred thousand,”
said Elsa Doland, “I know what would be the
first thing I’d do.”
“What’s that?” asked Sally.
“Pay my bill for last week, due this morning.”
Sally got up quickly, and flitting
down the table, put her arm round her friend’s
shoulder and whispered in her ear:
“Elsa darling, are you really broke? If
you are, you know, I’ll...”
Elsa Doland laughed.
“You’re an angel, Sally.
There’s no one like you. You’d give
your last cent to anyone. Of course I’m
not broke. I’ve just come back from the
road, and I’ve saved a fortune. I only said
that to draw you.”
Sally returned to her seat, relieved,
and found that the company had now divided itself
into two schools of thought. The conservative
and prudent element, led by Augustus Bartlett, had
definitely decided on three hundred thousand in Liberty
Bonds and the rest in some safe real estate; while
the smaller, more sporting section, impressed by the
mild young man’s inside information, had already
placed Sally’s money on Benny Whistler, doling
it out cautiously in small sums so as not to spoil
the market. And so solid, it seemed, was Mr.
Tuke’s reputation with those in the inner circle
of knowledge that the mild young man was confident
that, if you went about the matter cannily and without
precipitation, three to one might be obtained.
It seemed to Sally that the time had come to correct
certain misapprehensions.
“I don’t know where you
get your figures,” she said, “but I’m
afraid they’re wrong. I’ve just twenty-five
thousand dollars.”
The statement had a chilling effect.
To these jugglers with half-millions the amount mentioned
seemed for the moment almost too small to bother about.
It was the sort of sum which they had been mentally
setting aside for the heiress’s car fare.
Then they managed to adjust their minds to it.
After all, one could do something even with a pittance
like twenty-five thousand.
“If I’d twenty-five thousand,”
said Augustus Bartlett, the first to rally from the
shock, “I’d buy Amalgamated...”
“If I had twenty-five thousand...” began
Elsa Doland.
“If I’d had twenty-five
thousand in the year nineteen hundred,” observed
a gloomy-looking man with spectacles, “I could
have started a revolution in Paraguay.”
He brooded sombrely on what might have been.
“Well, I’ll tell you exactly
what I’m going to do,” said Sally.
“I’m going to start with a trip to Europe...
France, specially. I’ve heard France well
spoken of as soon as I can get my passport;
and after I’ve loafed there for a few weeks,
I’m coming back to look about and find some
nice cosy little business which will let me put money
into it and keep me in luxury. Are there any
complaints?”
“Even a couple of thousand on
Benny Whistler...” said the mild young man.
“I don’t want your Benny
Whistler,” said Sally. “I wouldn’t
have him if you gave him to me. If I want to
lose money, I’ll go to Monte Carlo and do it
properly.”
“Monte Carlo,” said the
gloomy man, brightening up at the magic name.
“I was in Monte Carlo in the year ’97,
and if I’d had another fifty dollars... just
fifty... I’d have...”
At the far end of the table there
was a stir, a cough, and the grating of a chair on
the floor; and slowly, with that easy grace which actors
of the old school learned in the days when acting was
acting, Mr. Maxwell Faucitt, the boarding-house’s
oldest inhabitant, rose to his feet.
“Ladies,” said Mr. Faucitt,
bowing courteously, “and...” ceasing to
bow and casting from beneath his white and venerable
eyebrows a quelling glance at certain male members
of the boarding-house’s younger set who were
showing a disposition towards restiveness, “...
gentlemen. I feel that I cannot allow this occasion
to pass without saying a few words.”
His audience did not seem surprised.
It was possible that life, always prolific of incident
in a great city like New York, might some day produce
an occasion which Mr. Faucitt would feel that he could
allow to pass without saying a few words; but nothing
of the sort had happened as yet, and they had given
up hope. Right from the start of the meal they
had felt that it would be optimism run mad to expect
the old gentleman to abstain from speech on the night
of Sally Nicholas’ farewell dinner party; and
partly because they had braced themselves to it, but
principally because Miss Nicholas’ hospitality
had left them with a genial feeling of repletion,
they settled themselves to listen with something resembling
equanimity. A movement on the part of the Marvellous
Murphys new arrivals, who had been playing
the Bushwick with their equilibristic act during the
preceding week to form a party of the extreme
left and heckle the speaker, broke down under a cold
look from their hostess. Brief though their acquaintance
had been, both of these lissom young gentlemen admired
Sally immensely.
And it should be set on record that
this admiration of theirs was not misplaced.
He would have been hard to please who had not been
attracted by Sally. She was a small, trim, wisp
of a girl with the tiniest hands and feet, the friendliest
of smiles, and a dimple that came and went in the
curve of her rounded chin. Her eyes, which disappeared
when she laughed, which was often, were a bright hazel;
her hair a soft mass of brown. She had, moreover,
a manner, an air of distinction lacking in the majority
of Mrs. Meecher’s guests. And she carried
youth like a banner. In approving of Sally, the
Marvellous Murphys had been guilty of no lapse from
their high critical standard.
“I have been asked,” proceeded
Mr. Faucitt, “though I am aware that there are
others here far worthier of such a task Brutuses
compared with whom I, like Marc Antony, am no orator I
have been asked to propose the health...”
“Who asked you?” It was
the smaller of the Marvellous Murphys who spoke.
He was an unpleasant youth, snub-nosed and spotty.
Still, he could balance himself with one hand on an
inverted ginger-ale bottle while revolving a barrel
on the soles of his feet. There is good in all
of us.
“I have been asked,” repeated
Mr. Faucitt, ignoring the unmannerly interruption,
which, indeed, he would have found it hard to answer,
“to propose the health of our charming hostess
(applause), coupled with the name of her brother,
our old friend Fillmore Nicholas.”
The gentleman referred to, who sat
at the speaker’s end of the table, acknowledged
the tribute with a brief nod of the head. It was
a nod of condescension; the nod of one who, conscious
of being hedged about by social inferiors, nevertheless
does his best to be not unkindly. And Sally,
seeing it, debated in her mind for an instant the advisability
of throwing an orange at her brother. There was
one lying ready to her hand, and his glistening shirt-front
offered an admirable mark; but she restrained herself.
After all, if a hostess yields to her primitive impulses,
what happens? Chaos. She had just frowned
down the exuberance of the rebellious Murphys, and
she felt that if, even with the highest motives, she
began throwing fruit, her influence for good in that
quarter would be weakened.
She leaned back with a sigh.
The temptation had been hard to resist. A democratic
girl, pomposity was a quality which she thoroughly
disliked; and though she loved him, she could not
disguise from herself that, ever since affluence had
descended upon him some months ago, her brother Fillmore
had become insufferably pompous. If there are
any young men whom inherited wealth improves, Fillmore
Nicholas was not one of them. He seemed to regard
himself nowadays as a sort of Man of Destiny.
To converse with him was for the ordinary human being
like being received in audience by some more than
stand-offish monarch. It had taken Sally over
an hour to persuade him to leave his apartment on Riverside
Drive and revisit the boarding-house for this special
occasion; and, when he had come, he had entered wearing
such faultless evening dress that he had made the
rest of the party look like a gathering of tramp-cyclists.
His white waistcoat alone was a silent reproach to
honest poverty, and had caused an awkward constraint
right through the soup and fish courses. Most
of those present had known Fillmore Nicholas as an
impecunious young man who could make a tweed suit last
longer than one would have believed possible; they
had called him “Fill” and helped him in
more than usually lean times with small loans:
but to-night they had eyed the waistcoat dumbly and
shrank back abashed.
“Speaking,” said Mr. Faucitt,
“as an Englishman for though I have
long since taken out what are technically known as
my ‘papers’ it was as a subject of the
island kingdom that I first visited this great country I
may say that the two factors in American life which
have always made the profoundest impression upon me
have been the lavishness of American hospitality and
the charm of the American girl. To-night we have
been privileged to witness the American girl in the
capacity of hostess, and I think I am right in saying,
in asseverating, in committing myself to the statement
that his has been a night which none of us present
here will ever forget. Miss Nicholas has given
us, ladies and gentlemen, a banquet. I repeat,
a banquet. There has been alcoholic refreshment.
I do not know where it came from: I do not ask
how it was procured, but we have had it. Miss
Nicholas...”
Mr. Faucitt paused to puff at his
cigar. Sally’s brother Fillmore suppressed
a yawn and glanced at his watch. Sally continued
to lean forward raptly. She knew how happy it
made the old gentleman to deliver a formal speech;
and though she wished the subject had been different,
she was prepared to listen indefinitely.
“Miss Nicholas,” resumed
Mr. Faucitt, lowering his cigar, “... But
why,” he demanded abruptly, “do I call
her Miss Nicholas?”
“Because it’s her name,” hazarded
the taller Murphy.
Mr. Faucitt eyed him with disfavour.
He disapproved of the marvellous brethren on general
grounds because, himself a resident of years standing,
he considered that these transients from the vaudeville
stage lowered the tone of the boarding-house; but
particularly because the one who had just spoken had,
on his first evening in the place, addressed him as
“grandpa.”
“Yes, sir,” he said severely,
“it is her name. But she has another name,
sweeter to those who love her, those who worship her,
those who have watched her with the eye of sedulous
affection through the three years she has spent beneath
this roof, though that name,” said Mr. Faucitt,
lowering the tone of his address and descending to
what might almost be termed personalities, “may
not be familiar to a couple of dud acrobats who have
only been in the place a week-end, thank heaven, and
are off to-morrow to infest some other city.
That name,” said Mr. Faucitt, soaring once more
to a loftier plane, “is Sally. Our Sally.
For three years our Sally has flitted about this establishment
like I choose the simile advisedly like
a ray of sunshine. For three years she has made
life for us a brighter, sweeter thing. And now
a sudden access of worldly wealth, happily synchronizing
with her twenty-first birthday, is to remove her from
our midst. From our midst, ladies and gentlemen,
but not from our hearts. And I think I may venture
to hope, to prognosticate, that, whatever lofty sphere
she may adorn in the future, to whatever heights in
the social world she may soar, she will still continue
to hold a corner in her own golden heart for the comrades
of her Bohemian days. Ladies and gentlemen, I
give you our hostess, Miss Sally Nicholas, coupled
with the name of our old friend, her brother Fillmore.”
Sally, watching her brother heave
himself to his feet as the cheers died away, felt
her heart beat a little faster with anticipation.
Fillmore was a fluent young man, once a power in his
college debating society, and it was for that reason
that she had insisted on his coming here tonight.
She had guessed that Mr. Faucitt,
the old dear, would say all sorts of delightful things
about her, and she had mistrusted her ability to make
a fitting reply. And it was imperative that a
fitting reply should proceed from someone. She
knew Mr. Faucitt so well. He looked on these
occasions rather in the light of scenes from some play;
and, sustaining his own part in them with such polished
grace, was certain to be pained by anything in the
nature of an anti-climax after he should have ceased
to take the stage. Eloquent himself, he must be
answered with eloquence, or his whole evening would
be spoiled.
Fillmore Nicholas smoothed a wrinkle
out of his white waistcoat; and having rested one
podgy hand on the table-cloth and the thumb of the
other in his pocket, glanced down the table with eyes
so haughtily drooping that Sally’s fingers closed
automatically about her orange, as she wondered whether
even now it might not be a good thing...
It seems to be one of Nature’s
laws that the most attractive girls should have the
least attractive brothers. Fillmore Nicholas had
not worn well. At the age of seven he had been
an extraordinarily beautiful child, but after that
he had gone all to pieces; and now, at the age of
twenty-five, it would be idle to deny that he was something
of a mess. For the three years preceding his
twenty-fifth birthday, restricted means and hard work
had kept his figure in check; but with money there
had come an ever-increasing sleekness. He looked
as if he fed too often and too well.
All this, however, Sally was prepared
to forgive him, if he would only make a good speech.
She could see Mr. Faucitt leaning back in his chair,
all courteous attention. Rolling periods were
meat and drink to the old gentleman.
Fillmore spoke.
“I’m sure,” said
Fillmore, “you don’t want a speech...
Very good of you to drink our health. Thank you.”
He sat down.
The effect of these few simple words
on the company was marked, but not in every case identical.
To the majority the emotion which they brought was
one of unmixed relief. There had been something
so menacing, so easy and practised, in Fillmore’s
attitude as he had stood there that the gloomier-minded
had given him at least twenty minutes, and even the
optimists had reckoned that they would be lucky if
they got off with ten. As far as the bulk of
the guests were concerned, there was no grumbling.
Fillmore’s, to their thinking, had been the ideal
after-dinner speech.
Far different was it with Mr. Maxwell
Faucitt. The poor old man was wearing such an
expression of surprise and dismay as he might have
worn had somebody unexpectedly pulled the chair from
under him. He was feeling the sick shock which
comes to those who tread on a non-existent last stair.
And Sally, catching sight of his face, uttered a sharp
wordless exclamation as if she had seen a child fall
down and hurt itself in the street. The next
moment she had run round the table and was standing
behind him with her arms round his neck. She spoke
across him with a sob in her voice.
“My brother,” she stammered,
directing a malevolent look at the immaculate Fillmore,
who, avoiding her gaze, glanced down his nose and
smoothed another wrinkle out of his waistcoat, “has
not said quite quite all I hoped he was
going to say. I can’t make a speech, but...”
Sally gulped, “... but, I love you all and of
course I shall never forget you, and... and...”
Here Sally kissed Mr. Faucitt and burst into tears.
“There, there,” said Mr.
Faucitt, soothingly. The kindest critic could
not have claimed that Sally had been eloquent:
nevertheless Mr. Maxwell Faucitt was conscious of
no sense of anti-climax.
2
Sally had just finished telling her
brother Fillmore what a pig he was. The lecture
had taken place in the street outside the boarding-house
immediately on the conclusion of the festivities, when
Fillmore, who had furtively collected his hat and
overcoat, had stolen forth into the night, had been
overtaken and brought to bay by his justly indignant
sister. Her remarks, punctuated at intervals by
bleating sounds from the accused, had lasted some
ten minutes.
As she paused for breath, Fillmore
seemed to expand, like an indiarubber ball which has
been sat on. Dignified as he was to the world,
he had never been able to prevent himself being intimidated
by Sally when in one of these moods of hers.
He regretted this, for it hurt his self-esteem, but
he did not see how the fact could be altered.
Sally had always been like that. Even the uncle,
who after the deaths of their parents had become their
guardian, had never, though a grim man, been able
to cope successfully with Sally. In that last
hectic scene three years ago, which had ended in their
going out into the world, together like a second Adam
and Eve, the verbal victory had been hers. And
it had been Sally who had achieved triumph in the
one battle which Mrs. Meecher, apparently as a matter
of duty, always brought about with each of her patrons
in the first week of their stay. A sweet-tempered
girl, Sally, like most women of a generous spirit,
had cyclonic potentialities.
As she seemed to have said her say,
Fillmore kept on expanding till he had reached the
normal, when he ventured upon a speech for the defence.
“What have I done?” demanded Fillmore
plaintively.
“Do you want to hear all over again?”
“No, no,” said Fillmore
hastily. “But, listen. Sally, you don’t
understand my position. You don’t seem to
realize that all that sort of thing, all that boarding-house
stuff, is a thing of the past. One’s got
beyond it. One wants to drop it. One wants
to forget it, darn it! Be fair. Look at
it from my viewpoint. I’m going to be a
big man...”
“You’re going to be a fat man,”
said Sally, coldly.
Fillmore refrained from discussing the point.
He was sensitive.
“I’m going to do big things,”
he substituted. “I’ve got a deal on
at this very moment which... well, I can’t tell
you about it, but it’s going to be big.
Well, what I’m driving at, is about all this
sort of thing” he indicated the lighted
front of Mrs. Meecher’s home-from-home with
a wide gesture “is that it’s
over. Finished and done with. These people
were all very well when...”
“... when you’d lost your
week’s salary at poker and wanted to borrow a
few dollars for the rent.”
“I always paid them back,”
protested Fillmore, defensively.
“I did.”
“Well, we did,” said Fillmore,
accepting the amendment with the air of a man who
has no time for chopping straws. “Anyway,
what I mean is, I don’t see why, just because
one has known people at a certain period in one’s
life when one was practically down and out, one should
have them round one’s neck for ever. One
can’t prevent people forming an I-knew-him-when
club, but, darn it, one needn’t attend the meetings.”
“One’s friends...”
“Oh, friends,” said Fillmore.
“That’s just where all this makes me so
tired. One’s in a position where all these
people are entitled to call themselves one’s
friends, simply because father put it in his will that
I wasn’t to get the money till I was twenty-five,
instead of letting me have it at twenty-one like anybody
else. I wonder where I should have been by now
if I could have got that money when I was twenty-one.”
“In the poor-house, probably,” said Sally.
Fillmore was wounded.
“Ah! you don’t believe in me,” he
sighed.
“Oh, you would be all right if you had one thing,”
said Sally.
Fillmore passed his qualities in swift
review before his mental eye. Brains? Dash?
Spaciousness? Initiative? All present and
correct. He wondered where Sally imagined the
hiatus to exist.
“One thing?” he said. “What’s
that?”
“A nurse.”
Fillmore’s sense of injury deepened.
He supposed that this was always the way, that those
nearest to a man never believed in his ability till
he had proved it so masterfully that it no longer required
the assistance of faith. Still, it was trying;
and there was not much consolation to be derived from
the thought that Napoleon had had to go through this
sort of thing in his day. “I shall find
my place in the world,” he said sulkily.
“Oh, you’ll find your
place all right,” said Sally. “And
I’ll come round and bring you jelly and read
to you on the days when visitors are allowed...
Oh, hullo.”
The last remark was addressed to a
young man who had been swinging briskly along the
sidewalk from the direction of Broadway and who now,
coming abreast of them, stopped.
“Good evening, Mr. Foster.”
“Good evening. Miss Nicholas.”
“You don’t know my brother, do you?”
“I don’t believe I do.”
“He left the underworld before
you came to it,” said Sally. “You
wouldn’t think it to look at him, but he was
once a prune-eater among the proletariat, even as
you and I. Mrs. Meecher looks on him as a son.”
The two men shook hands. Fillmore
was not short, but Gerald Foster with his lean, well-built
figure seemed to tower over him. He was an Englishman,
a man in the middle twenties, clean-shaven, keen-eyed,
and very good to look at. Fillmore, who had recently
been going in for one of those sum-up-your-fellow-man-at-a-glance
courses, the better to fit himself for his career
of greatness, was rather impressed. It seemed
to him that this Mr. Foster, like himself, was one
of those who Get There. If you are that kind
yourself, you get into the knack of recognizing the
others. It is a sort of gift.
There was a few moments of desultory
conversation, of the kind that usually follows an
introduction, and then Fillmore, by no means sorry
to get the chance, took advantage of the coming of
this new arrival to remove himself. He had not
enjoyed his chat with Sally, and it seemed probable
that he would enjoy a continuation of it even less.
He was glad that Mr. Foster had happened along at
this particular juncture. Excusing himself briefly,
he hurried off down the street.
Sally stood for a minute, watching
him till he had disappeared round the corner.
She had a slightly regretful feeling that, now it was
too late, she would think of a whole lot more good
things which it would have been agreeable to say to
him. And it had become obvious to her that Fillmore
was not getting nearly enough of that kind of thing
said to him nowadays. Then she dismissed him
from her mind and turning to Gerald Foster, slipped
her arm through his.
“Well, Jerry, darling,”
she said. “What a shame you couldn’t
come to the party. Tell me all about everything.”
3
It was exactly two months since Sally
had become engaged to Gerald Foster; but so rigorously
had they kept the secret that nobody at Mrs. Meecher’s
so much as suspected it. To Sally, who all her
life had hated concealing things, secrecy of any kind
was objectionable: but in this matter Gerald
had shown an odd streak almost of furtiveness in his
character. An announced engagement complicated
life. People fussed about you and bothered you.
People either watched you or avoided you. Such
were his arguments, and Sally, who would have glossed
over and found excuses for a disposition on his part
towards homicide or arson, put them down to artistic
sensitiveness. There is nobody so sensitive as
your artist, particularly if he be unsuccessful:
and when an artist has so little success that he cannot
afford to make a home for the woman he loves, his
sensitiveness presumably becomes great indeed.
Putting herself in his place, Sally could see that
a protracted engagement, known by everybody, would
be a standing advertisement of Gerald’s failure
to make good: and she acquiesced in the policy
of secrecy, hoping that it would not last long.
It seemed absurd to think of Gerald as an unsuccessful
man. He had in him, as the recent Fillmore had
perceived, something dynamic. He was one of those
men of whom one could predict that they would succeed
very suddenly and rapidly overnight, as
it were.
“The party,” said Sally,
“went off splendidly.” They had passed
the boarding-house door, and were walking slowly down
the street. “Everybody enjoyed themselves,
I think, even though Fillmore did his best to spoil
things by coming looking like an advertisement of What
The Smart Men Will Wear This Season. You didn’t
see his waistcoat just now. He had covered it
up. Conscience, I suppose. It was white and
bulgy and gleaming and full up of pearl buttons and
everything. I saw Augustus Bartlett curl up like
a burnt feather when he caught sight of it. Still,
time seemed to heal the wound, and everybody relaxed
after a bit. Mr. Faucitt made a speech and I
made a speech and cried, and...oh, it was all very
festive. It only needed you.”
“I wish I could have come.
I had to go to that dinner, though. Sally...”
Gerald paused, and Sally saw that he was electric with
suppressed excitement. “Sally, the play’s
going to be put on!”
Sally gave a little gasp. She
had lived this moment in anticipation for weeks.
She had always known that sooner or later this would
happen. She had read his plays over and over
again, and was convinced that they were wonderful.
Of course, hers was a biased view, but then Elsa Doland
also admired them; and Elsa’s opinion was one
that carried weight. Elsa was another of those
people who were bound to succeed suddenly. Even
old Mr. Faucitt, who was a stern judge of acting and
rather inclined to consider that nowadays there was
no such thing, believed that she was a girl with a
future who would do something big directly she got
her chance.
“Jerry!” She gave his
arm a hug. “How simply terrific! Then
Goble and Kohn have changed their minds after all
and want it? I knew they would.”
A slight cloud seemed to dim the sunniness
of the author’s mood.
“No, not that one,” he
said reluctantly. “No hope there, I’m
afraid. I saw Goble this morning about that,
and he said it didn’t add up right. The
one that’s going to be put on is ‘The Primrose
Way.’ You remember? It’s got
a big part for a girl in it.”
“Of course! The one Elsa
liked so much. Well, that’s just as good.
Who’s going to do it? I thought you hadn’t
sent it out again.”
“Well, it happens...”
Gerald hesitated once more. “It seems that
this man I was dining with to-night a man
named Cracknell...”
“Cracknell? Not the Cracknell?”
“The Cracknell?”
“The one people are always talking
about. The man they call the Millionaire Kid.”
“Yes. Why, do you know him?”
“He was at Harvard with Fillmore.
I never saw him, but he must be rather a painful person.”
“Oh, he’s all right.
Not much brains, of course, but well, he’s
all right. And, anyway, he wants to put the play
on.”
“Well, that’s splendid,”
said Sally: but she could not get the right ring
of enthusiasm into her voice. She had had ideals
for Gerald. She had dreamed of him invading Broadway
triumphantly under the banner of one of the big managers
whose name carried a prestige, and there seemed something
unworthy in this association with a man whose chief
claim to eminence lay in the fact that he was credited
by metropolitan gossip with possessing the largest
private stock of alcohol in existence.
“I thought you would be pleased,” said
Gerald.
“Oh, I am,” said Sally.
With the buoyant optimism which never
deserted her for long, she had already begun to cast
off her momentary depression. After all, did
it matter who financed a play so long as it obtained
a production? A manager was simply a piece of
machinery for paying the bills; and if he had money
for that purpose, why demand asceticism and the finer
sensibilities from him? The real thing that mattered
was the question of who was going to play the leading
part, that deftly drawn character which had so excited
the admiration of Elsa Doland. She sought information
on this point.
“Who will play Ruth?”
she asked. “You must have somebody wonderful.
It needs a tremendously clever woman. Did Mr.
Cracknell say anything about that?”
“Oh, yes, we discussed that, of course.”
“Well?”
“Well, it seems...”
Again Sally noticed that odd, almost stealthy embarrassment.
Gerald appeared unable to begin a sentence to-night
without feeling his way into it like a man creeping
cautiously down a dark alley. She noticed it
the more because it was so different from his usual
direct method. Gerald, as a rule, was not one
of those who apologize for themselves. He was
forthright and masterful and inclined to talk to her
from a height. To-night he seemed different.
He broke off, was silent for a moment, and began again
with a question.
“Do you know Mabel Hobson?”
“Mabel Hobson? I’ve seen her in the
‘Follies,’ of course.”
Sally started. A suspicion had
stung her, so monstrous that its absurdity became
manifest the moment it had formed. And yet was
it absurd? Most Broadway gossip filtered eventually
into the boarding-house, chiefly through the medium
of that seasoned sport, the mild young man who thought
so highly of the redoubtable Benny Whistler, and she
was aware that the name of Reginald Cracknell, which
was always getting itself linked with somebody, had
been coupled with that of Miss Hobson. It seemed
likely that in this instance rumour spoke truth, for
the lady was of that compellingly blonde beauty which
attracts the Cracknells of this world. But even
so...
“It seems that Cracknell...”
said Gerald. “Apparently this man Cracknell...”
He was finding Sally’s bright, horrified gaze
somewhat trying. “Well, the fact is Cracknell
believes in Mabel Hobson...and... well, he thinks
this part would suit her.”
“Oh, Jerry!”
Could infatuation go to such a length?
Could even the spacious heart of a Reginald Cracknell
so dominate that gentleman’s small size in heads
as to make him entrust a part like Ruth in “The
Primrose Way” to one who, when desired by the
producer of her last revue to carry a bowl of roses
across the stage and place it on a table, had rebelled
on the plea that she had not been engaged as a dancer?
Surely even lovelorn Reginald could perceive that
this was not the stuff of which great emotional actresses
are made.
“Oh, Jerry!” she said again.
There was an uncomfortable silence.
They turned and walked back in the direction of the
boarding-house. Somehow Gerald’s arm had
managed to get itself detached from Sally’s.
She was conscious of a curious dull ache that was
almost like a physical pain.
“Jerry! Is it worth it?” she burst
out vehemently.
The question seemed to sting the young
man into something like his usual decisive speech.
“Worth it? Of course it’s
worth it. It’s a Broadway production.
That’s all that matters. Good heavens!
I’ve been trying long enough to get a play on
Broadway, and it isn’t likely that I’m
going to chuck away my chance when it comes along
just because one might do better in the way of casting.”
“But, Jerry! Mabel Hobson!
It’s... it’s murder! Murder in the
first degree.”
“Nonsense. She’ll
be all right. The part will play itself.
Besides, she has a personality and a following, and
Cracknell will spend all the money in the world to
make the thing a success. And it will be a start,
whatever happens. Of course, it’s worth
it.”
Fillmore would have been impressed
by this speech. He would have recognized and
respected in it the unmistakable ring which characterizes
even the lightest utterances of those who get there.
On Sally it had not immediately that effect.
Nevertheless, her habit of making the best of things,
working together with that primary article of her creed
that the man she loved could do no wrong, succeeded
finally in raising her spirits. Of course Jerry
was right. It would have been foolish to refuse
a contract because all its clauses were not ideal.
“You old darling,” she
said affectionately attaching herself to the vacant
arm once more and giving it a penitent squeeze, “you’re
quite right. Of course you are. I can see
it now. I was only a little startled at first.
Everything’s going to be wonderful. Let’s
get all our chickens out and count ’em.
How are you going to spend the money?”
“I know how I’m going
to spend a dollar of it,” said Gerald completely
restored.
“I mean the big money. What’s a dollar?”
“It pays for a marriage-licence.”
Sally gave his arm another squeeze.
“Ladies and gentlemen,”
she said. “Look at this man. Observe
him. My partner!”