<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='small'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c000' /></div>
<p class='c001'> </p>
<div class='lg-container-r'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'><span class='large'><i>Fresh</i></span></div>
<div class='line'><span class='large'><i>Every</i></span></div>
<div class='line'><span class='large'><i>Hour</i></span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c002' /></div>
<div class='box1'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><span class='xxlarge'>FRESH</span></div>
<div><span class='xxlarge'>EVERY HOUR</span></div>
</div></div>
<hr class='c003' />
<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_65 c004'>DETAILING <i>the</i> Adventures,
Comic <i>and</i> Pathetic
<i>of one</i> Jimmy Martin, Purveyor
of Publicity, <i>a Young</i>
Gentleman Possessing <i>Sublime</i>
Nerve, <i>Whimsical</i> Imagination,
<i>Colossal</i> Impudence, <i>and</i>,
Withal, <i>the</i> Heart <i>of a</i> Child.</p>
<p class='c005'><i>By</i> <span class='large'>JOHN PETER TOOHEY</span></p>
<hr class='c003' />
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c006'>
<div>BONI AND LIVERIGHT</div>
<div><i>Publishers</i> :: <i>New York</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div>
<h1 class='c008'><span class='large'><i>FRESH EVERY HOUR</i></span></h1></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c000'>
<div><span class='sc'>Copyright, 1922, by</span></div>
<div><span class='sc'>Boni & Liveright, Inc.</span></div>
<div class='c000'><span class='small'><i>Printed in the United States of America</i></span></div>
</div></div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c002' /></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div><span class='large'>TO</span></div>
<div><span class='large'>MY MOTHER</span></div>
</div></div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c002' /></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'><i>Fresh</i></div>
<div class='line'><i>Every</i></div>
<div class='line'><i>Hour</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c002' /></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div><span class='xxlarge'>FRESH EVERY HOUR</span></div>
</div></div>
<hr class='c009' />
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter One</i></b></h2></div>
<hr class='c009' />
<div class='c011'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/j.jpg' width-obs='100' height-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi0_7'>
JIMMY MARTIN’S heart persisted
in acting like the well-known eyes
of the young lady in the song. He
just couldn’t make it behave. Up
to the third week of his summer
season as press agent at Jollyland,
the big summer amusement park
near New York, it had always been a fairly well-mannered
and dependable organ which performed
its physiological functions with becoming regularity
and which was not accustomed to respond to any
external stimuli with anything beyond an occasional
slight flutter. To be sure it had acted up a little
three years back in connection with a certain dark-eyed
beauty who presided over the destinies of the
cigar counter up in the Grand Hotel in New Haven,
but that had only been a slight attack and it had
resumed the even tenor of its ways after a brief
interval and had been unobtrusively going through
with its routine activities ever since.</p>
<p class='c012'>A most prepossessing young person whose parents
had inflicted upon her the name of Lolita Murphy
was directly responsible for the alarming symptoms
already hinted at. From the precise moment that
Lolita came within his ken Jimmy ceased to be a
rational being in full control of his faculties and his
heart, in sympathetic accord with the agitated condition
of its owner, began to put on an antic disposition
and indulged in curious palpitations of a most
annoying nature on the slightest pretext. The usual
provocation at first was the sight of Lolita herself,
but after a day or two even the thought of her produced
a cardiac ratiplan that would have done credit
to the trap drummer of a jazz band.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita, it may be mentioned in passing, lived up
to all the implications of the somewhat picturesque
cognomen given her by McClintock, the park manager,
when Jimmy first pointed her out to his superior.</p>
<p class='c012'>“She sure is Miss Lulu Looker,” McClintock had
remarked emphatically.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita was all of that and a little more. Jimmy
was not a poet and he was therefore unable to
properly voice the feelings he had about her beauty.
Had he been one he might have justly said that her
cheeks seemed to have been kissed by the rosy
flush of dawn; that in her sable eyes there lurked
the eternal mystery of night beneath tropic skies;
that her dark hair was as fragrant as the spices of
Araby and that her lithe figure had all the gracile
curves of a bounding antelope. As it was he contented
himself with the frequent repetition of the
decidedly unpoetic expression “some gal,” but this
represented to him all the ideas noted above and
a liberal assortment of others equally glamorous.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita hailed from Cedar Rapids, Ia., and ever
since the memorable occasion when Maude Adams
played “Peter Pan” in that city for “one night
only” she had cherished a great and overwhelming
ambition. Her father ran the drug store next
door to the Opera House and was a great crony of
the manager. A number of boys and girls were
picked up in each town to play the children in the
Never Never Land scene and Lolita’s fond parent
had persuaded the manager to select her as one of
the group. It was a step that father was to regret
vainly for many years, but on the night of her
debut he was blissfully unconscious of the possibility
of any bitter repining in the future and enjoyed
the proceedings almost as much as Lolita did.</p>
<p class='c012'>From that time on Lolita felt the call of the
footlights and became convinced that, given the
proper opportunities for the externalization of the
emotional feelings that lay dormant within her,
she was destined to become an international celebrity
and the queen regnant of the English speaking
stage. Chauncey Olcott came to town a few
weeks later and she persuaded father to work her
in as one of the youngsters to whom he sang a
lullaby in a high tenor voice down in the “glen”
which is always the setting for the third act of an
Irish play. After that there was no holding her.
She became a student of Miss Amanda Holliday’s
School of Dramatic Expression which occupied
three rooms on the second floor of the Turner block
on Main Street and she participated in the semi-annual
entertainments given by the budding geniuses
who were under the tutelage of that small town
preceptress of the arts. Versatility was her middle
name. At one time she would play Ophelia in the
mad scene from “Hamlet” and appear later on the
program in a Spanish dance with castanets, a lace
mantilla and all the other necessary properties. Six
months later she would combine the balcony scene
from “Romeo and Juliet” with an imitation of an
imitation of Eddie Foy she had heard given by a
monologue artist at the Orpheum Theatre. At the
age of nineteen she was the town wonder. The
dramatic editor of the Democrat-Chronicle predicted
that within a short time “this talented
daughter of our esteemed fellow townsman Henry
P. Murphy seems destined to occupy one of the
stellar places in the front ranks of the worth-while
artists of our fair country.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita moved on to New York armed with a letter
of commendation from Miss Amanda Holliday
setting forth that she was “worthy of any role no
matter what its importance” and urging theatrical
managers “not to neglect this opportunity of obtaining
the services of one who is a mistress of the
mimetic art in all its manifold manifestations.” She
also carried a full set of clippings from the Democrat-Chronicle,
one half of her male parent’s attenuated
account in the First National Bank and
an over-abundant supply of cheery optimism.</p>
<p class='c012'>The metropolitan managers’ office boys were decidedly
cold to the advances of this gifted daughter
of the Middle West. They treated her with
that air of careless indifference so characteristic of
their profession. With one accord all the big and
little producers decided to take a big chance and
neglect the opportunity which fate was offering
them. They were unmoved by the clippings from
the Democrat-Chronicle with which Lolita bombarded
them through the mails and they were callous
to the eulogistic outpourings of Miss Amanda
Holliday, copies of which accompanied each written
request for an interview. Lolita’s cash reserve
grew perilously low and disaster threatened. Then,
on a morning when disillusionment and despair
moved in and took lodgings in her soul, she saw
an advertisement in a newspaper which was like a
life buoy tossed to a drowning man.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ambitious Young Women Wanted for Stage
Work,” it read. “Opportunity Afforded Ambitious
Amateurs to Perfect Themselves in Dramatic
Technique—Apply Immediately at Manager’s Office,
‘Jollyland.’”</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita, filled with high hopes, took a trolley to
the great playground by the sea. There destiny
handed her one of those cold douches that are
sometimes held in reserve for those whose ambitions
o’erleap themselves. The dramatic opportunity
promised in the advertisement proved to
be what might be vulgarly termed a “job.”</p>
<p class='c012'>A great free open-air spectacle was in process
of preparation at Jollyland under the supervision
of a famous moving picture director who specialized
in that form of animated art technically known
as “serials.” He had personally conducted a gazelle-eyed
cinema celebrity known as June Delight
through four fifteen reel affairs of this sort in
which she had been threatened with mayhem, aggravated
assault and battery, felonious wounding,
and total and complete annihilation at the hands
of numerous bands of cut-throats, bandits, thieves
and white slavers. In the course of these proceedings
she had performed every breath-catching feat
that the festive imagination of the director had
been capable of conjuring up and had succeeded,
by a miracle, in keeping out of both the hospital
and the obituary columns of the daily press.</p>
<p class='c012'>Now it was proposed to let the public have a
close-up view of this death-defying marvel in the
flesh in the act of performing one of her most
famous exploits “before your very eyes and for
your attention,” as the circus announcer would put
it. To permit of this the director had evolved something
which he called a “dramatic spectacle” and
had persuaded the management of Jollyland to arrange
for its production in a huge, specially constructed
open-air auditorium as a “special added
attraction” intended to put a final quietus on the
presumptuous efforts of a rival group of showmen
who were endeavoring to arouse interest in a new
park just opened that summer.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita found herself in a long line of applicants,
many of whom were pathetically peaked and undernourished
looking, and when her turn came to
meet the director she made up her mind to pocket
her pride and accept whatever fate offered rather
than run the risk of finding herself in like straits.
Ambition still fired her soul and she was determined
not to return to the little old home town
until she could enter it in something at least closely
akin to a spirit of triumph. To be sure the opportunity
offered her was not particularly roseate. It
did not hold forth much promise of either pecuniary
reward or even of passing fame, but it meant that
Lolita would not have to telegraph home for funds
and there was a faint glimmer of hope in a remark
made by the director.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You can mingle in the front ranks of the
crowd,” he said. “We’ll pay you eighteen a week.
There’ll only be two shows a day.” Then he had
looked at her critically. “You’re almost a ringer
for Miss Delight,” he continued. “Maybe, if you’re
a good little girl I might take a notion to try you
out as understudy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>So Lolita Murphy, the pride of Cedar Rapids, became
a small and almost infinitesimal part of the
great out-door spectacle entitled “Secret Service
Sallie” which was the big sensation of the Jollyland
season.</p>
<p class='c012'>In the role of an agent of the United States secret
service the charming and fascinating June Delight
was swept through a series of thrilling adventures
set against spectacular backgrounds depicting
scenes in Berlin, Tokio, Rio de Janeiro and other
world capitals and as a culminating feature she
was pursued to the roof of a building in London
by a howling mob which suspected her of being a
spy in the employ of the Central Powers. She was
saved from its hands, in the proverbial nick of
time, by her fiancé, dashing Lieutenant Thurston
Turner, Commander of the U.S. Dirigible N-24,
who happened to be cruising about the neighborhood
at the moment and who effected a rescue by
circling his ship around the roof and deftly lifting
the young woman into the shelter of the gondola
which hung from the great gas balloon just as she
was about to be beaten to death by the infuriated
crowd.</p>
<p class='c012'>Inasmuch as the spectacle was given in the open
air, it was possible to use for the purposes of this
scene a real dirigible which was manned by a crew
commanded by one Bobby Wilkins, a personable
young gentleman from Chicago who had come back
from France with a major’s commission, a reputation
for dare-deviltry as an aviator surpassed by
no other ace in the American service and a collection
of a half dozen assorted war medals bestowed
by three grateful nations. Bobby had left a snug
berth as “assistant to the president” of a big varnish
company to go into the army, the said president being
a somewhat indulgent parent who had sanguine
expectations concerning his son’s commercial
and industrial future and who was even now
sending him daily wires to the Ritz urging
him to “cut the carabets and get down to a solid
rock foundation.” Father labored under the delusion
that Bobby was simply vacationing in New
York. Had he had an inkling of just what his son
was doing he would have (to use the young major’s
own expression) “tried for a new altitude record
himself.” He could hardly be expected to know
that dictating fool business letters and checking
up the new efficiency expert’s monthly report of
economies effected at the Dayton plant wouldn’t
exactly appeal any more to an adventuresome
young man who had been skyhooting through the
upper reaches of the atmosphere for nearly two
years and dodging German machine gun bullets.</p>
<p class='c012'>Bobby had overheard the general who commanded
the aviation camp at which he was demobilized
remarking about a request made by the moving
picture director that he recommend some
aviator for the task of piloting the dirigible which
was to play such an important role in the spectacle
and he had offered himself for the sacrifice just as
a lark. He found the experience rare sport and
until something giving greater promise of adventure
appeared in the offing he was determined to
go on with it. Twice a day he reached down and
plucked up the beautiful Miss Delight as lightly
as if she were a fragile doll while the assembled
thousands, on the qui vive with excitement, burst
into rapturous applause. In order to insure the
peace of mind of Robert Wilkins, Sr., Jimmy Martin
had consented, rather reluctantly it must be admitted,
to respect the wishes of the impersonator
of Lieut. Thurston Turner, U.S.N., who had expressed
a desire to remain incognito. Otherwise
the consequences might have been lurid.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy itched to give out a story concerning the
social and business connections of the young soldier,
but he had given his word, and being an ex-newspaper
man, that was sacred. He temporarily forgot
about Bobby and devoted his spare moments to
figuring out ways and means for the sensational
exploitation of Lolita Murphy to whose charms he
had become a shackled slave from the moment he
first glimpsed her at rehearsal. Lolita, it may be
mentioned in passing, was a trifle discouraged at
the comparatively slight opportunities for uplifting
and otherwise ennobling the American stage offered
by her participation in “Secret Service Sallie.” Her
name wasn’t even mentioned on the program. She
figured under an impersonal heading at the bottom,
together with a couple of hundred other young
women who were listed as “Berlin citizens, Japanese
geisha girls, South Americans, Londoners,
etc., etc.”</p>
<p class='c012'>It needed all the soaring optimism of Jimmy to
keep her from slipping into a nervous decline. The
press agent had obtained an introduction through
the stage director and his sympathetic interest in
her temporarily side-tracked ambitions had won
him her esteem and high regard from the beginning.
Jimmy was a rapid worker and within three
days from the time of their first meeting he had
vowed his ardent and palpitating devotion, and
while Lolita had not completely committed herself
to a reciprocal affirmation she had succeeded, nevertheless,
by devious and subtle devices not unknown
to her sex, in conveying the distinct impression that
the star of hope was visible in the eastern sky.</p>
<p class='c012'>It might be parenthetically recorded that Jimmy
was accustomed to arriving at his destination when
once he embarked on a journey. He had been kidnapped
from an assistant sporting editor’s desk on
a middle western paper by a small circus, while still
young, and for seven years he had been touring
these United States ahead of an infinite variety of
attractions ranging all the way from Curran’s
Colossal Carnival company (playing state fairs) to
the more or less splendiferous “revues” which have
their origin and their brief span of popularity along
the middle reaches of Broadway.</p>
<p class='c012'>Being more familiar with the batting averages
of the best ten players in the American League
than with George Henry Lewes’, “The Art of Acting,”
and being utterly incapable of writing a didactic
essay on “The Psychology of Laughter”, Jimmy
had never been cast for one of the so-called “kid-glove
jobs” in the realm of theatrical publicity, that
being the name given to the positions held by the
literati who seek and occasionally obtain publicity
for the highbrow drama. He was not of the chosen
company of the sleek and self-satisfied elect. Elegantly
written stories and gracefully worded little
pieces, supposedly composed by charming feminine
stars, meant nothing in his young and energetic life.
“Stunts” were what he specialized in, the creation
of news that was so unusual, so bizarre, so full of
human interest that the newspapers not only felt
obliged to print it, but usually assigned their own
reporters to write it up. He wasn’t dignified; his
conversation reeked with slang and his methods
sometimes offended against all the established
canons of good taste, but he sometimes landed with
one foot and not infrequently with both.</p>
<p class='c012'>His summer engagement at Jollyland was a “fill-in”
between seasons and when he entered upon it
he had no notion that it would shortly become
pregnant with possibilities of a most disturbing
sort. He had no idea that he would presently be
directing all of his energies to assuaging the anxieties
and soothing the troubled spirit of a somewhat
forlorn maiden from what he was in the habit
of scornfully referring to as a “hick town.”</p>
<p class='c012'>There came a night when Lolita’s disappointment
was past all bearing and when she sobbed out on
Jimmy’s shoulders a bitter protest against the fate
that had driven her into believing that she was
destined to be a great actress. They were sitting
on the beach in the moonlight after the show and
off in the murky distance the great Sandy Hook
light was blinking like some monster fire-fly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Jimmy,” she said, half-chokingly. “I just don’t
belong. I wish I was back in Cedar Rapids.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Gosh, that’s an awful wish, girlie,” responded the
press agent with a foolish attempt at a pleasantry
which he instantly regretted.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita drew away from him quickly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Cedar Rapids is all right,” she retorted. “It’s
better than this lonesome place.” She lapsed almost
immediately into a wistful mood. “It’s just ten
o’clock there now and the movies are letting out,
and there’s a crowd in dad’s store and the fellows
are treating the girls to sundaes or just plain ice
cream and dad is fussing around and maybe helping
out himself. I want to go back, Jimmy, I want
to go back.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy squeezed her hand softly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Listen, girlie,” he said comfortingly. “I know
just how you feel—the cards ain’t runnin’ right and
you want to quit the game, but I’m going to cut in
with a clean deck and start a new deal. I’m goin’
to fix things so that when you do go back for a
visit to the little old home town and dear old dad,
the Peerless Silver Cornet band is goin’ to be down
at the station and his honor the mayor is goin’ to
speak a few well chosen words of welcome in the
presence of a cheering crowd of friends and well-wishers.
Leave it to me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita laughed a little in spite of her mood.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You’re a great little jollier, Jimmy,” she, said,
“and I’d like to believe you, but somehow I can’t.
I’m a nobody, a Cedar Rapids’ nobody.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But you’re goin’ to be little Miss Lolita Somebody
of the well known world,” he responded cheerily,
“before I get through with you. I’m goin’ to
drop you right into the direct center of the front
page of every paper in the U.S.A. from the New
York Gazette to the Wyalusing, Pa., Rocket.
You’re goin’ to make those two chaps with the
whiskers on the cough drop boxes and that fat
old colored dame in the pancake flour ads look like
shrinkin’ violets on a foggy afternoon when I finish
up with you. You just wait and see.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How long have I got to wait, Jimmy,” ventured
Lolita who was adrift in the realms of fancy,
carried thence by the soothing cadences of Jimmy’s
voice.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Only until some afternoon when this June Delight
person fails to show up,—I hear she’s talkin’
of layin’ off for a few days. If you’ll promise not
to even talk about it in your sleep I’ll hand you a
little advance information.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Only the silent stars and the discreet moon shared
Jimmy’s confidence with Lolita. Its general tone
and tenor lifted that despairing daughter of the
plains out of the rut of hopeless striving into which
she felt she had fallen and filled her with such anticipatory
delight that when she said good-bye at
the door of her boarding house she impulsively
reached forward and kissed him full on the mouth.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You’re a darling,” she murmured.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll take an encore on that, girlie,” he replied.</p>
<p class='c012'>And he did.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Two</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Miss June Delight summoned Manager McClintock
to her dressing room just before the Saturday
night performance and successfully simulated the
classic symptoms of impending nervous prostration
while she sniffed at a vial of smelling salts and
submitted to the ministrations of a tired maid who
gently massaged her forehead with her finger-tips.
Miss Delight, in a voice that was barely audible,
informed the manager that she could not possibly
endure the trying ordeal of further performances
after that evening without a brief period of rest
and that she was leaving for a week’s stay at a
sanitarium on the following morning.</p>
<p class='c012'>McClintock gave voice to low moans and flew
other signals of distress, but Miss Delight was obdurate
to his more or less frenzied expostulations
and remarked that while she was disturbed at having
to disappoint her “dear, lovely, friendly public,”
she felt that her health was the prime consideration.
The manager was in a surly mood when he
left her to seek out the stage director.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Who’s the understudy?” he inquired.</p>
<p class='c012'>“She calls herself Lolita Murphy,” replied the
director, “but I understand there’s a certain party
connected with the publicity department who calls
her even flossier names than that.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Jimmy’s gal, eh?” commented the manager.
“Well, she’s there with the looks anyway. Has
she had a rehearsal?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“She’s been through the thing roughly with the
rest of the understudies, but I can have the whole
troupe called for tomorrow morning, and we can
run straight through. We’ll get out the dirigible
and go through with the rescue stunt. We mustn’t
fall down on that. The little lady seems to be there
with the nerve, but I’d like to try it out.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy was permitted to break the news to Lolita.
He met her after the performance that night and
imparted the glad tidings. When he left he gave
her a final word of caution.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Keep the little old nerve up, girlie,” he said
earnestly, “and we’ll wake up the whole country
on Monday morning.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll try, Jimmy,” she whispered. “You’re just
the—well, just the dearest boy I’ve ever known.”</p>
<p class='c012'>On the following morning Lolita, athrill with excitement
and a little nervous, assumed the title role
in “Secret Service Sallie” at a rehearsal to the
complete satisfaction of McClintock, the stage director
and Jimmy Martin. The latter watched her
with adoring eyes, and when she successfully essayed
the sensational rescue scene he was moved to
wild and clamorous applause which sounded a bit
startling in the great empty auditorium. Under
Bobby Wilkins’ expert direction the big clumsy
dirigible was manoeuvred around the edge of the
roof and Lolita was lifted into the car by the former
ace with such adroit ease that the whole thing
seemed to be simply part of a casual everyday occurrence.
When it was over Lolita had been safely
landed back on earth and had received the congratulations
of everyone concerned, she drew Jimmy
aside and clutched at his arm for support.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m ready to faint,” she said weakly. “I believe
I would have up on the roof when I saw that big
thing coming towards me if that fellow hadn’t
grabbed me off so quickly.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You need a little nap,” responded Jimmy soothingly.
“The worst is over and the best is yet to
come. Don’t forget that young Mr. Arthur H.
Opportunity has a date with you this afternoon,
and that the big splash is due tomorrow morning.
Now you go in and get a little sleep and I’ll have a
talk with my friend, the handsome lieutenant. I
fixed things with him last night, but I’ve got to go
over some details again.”</p>
<p class='c012'>A few minutes later the press agent was closeted
with Bobby Wilkins in the hangar in which the
dirigible was housed. The park gates had just been
opened for the day and crowds of holiday merry-makers
were surging through them in quest of the
fifty-seven varieties of feverish and hectic entertainment
which Jollyland provided for those in
search of diversion.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>If anyone had called Jimmy Martin a “psychotherapist”
he would have denied the soft impeachment
promptly, and then asked for a dictionary and
an explanatory blueprint. And yet, as a direct result
of a random idea which had bobbed into his
active mind a few weeks before, he was unconsciously
serving in that capacity for a large and
ever increasing throng of metropolitan society
women of varying ages who flocked to Jollyland
in search of a new thrill which he had provided.
The winding up of war charity work which had
followed close upon the return to these shores of
the larger part of the American army had turned
many of these women back upon their own resources
and their innate restless activity, which had
found such an altruistic outlet in new channels for
several years, now imperiously demanded fresh excitement,
and it was this that Jimmy offered them.</p>
<p class='c012'>On the occasion in question, Jimmy had overheard
a coy young debutante who was watching
a performance of “Secret Service Sallie” remark
to a group of friends who accompanied her that
she’d “just love to go up on the stage and mix with
the crowd.” That was enough for the press agent.
Ten minutes later, during the intermission, he escorted
the entire party behind the scenes, and, under
his guidance, they participated in the London episode
which concluded the show. They mingled with
the crowd of supernumeraries and entered into the
proceedings attendant upon the thrilling dirigible
rescue with such gusto that the stage manager
gave Jimmy carte blanche to encourage the idea.</p>
<p class='c012'>It happened that in this particular party were
several of the socially elect and the papers next
morning carried extensive stories chronicling the
event coupled with the announcement that the park
management would, throughout the season, be
pleased to extend the privilege of participating in
the entertainment to other groups who might wish
to take advantage of the opportunity for this unusual
form of entertainment. Society seized upon
the idea voraciously and Jollyland parties gave a
new filip to the summer season at all the Long
Island resorts. Elderly matrons of ample girth vied
with the members of the younger set in setting the
pace and in many instances came again and again to
become a part of the great spectacle. For the first
time in its history Jollyland began to figure in the
society columns of the daily press and great was
the prestige which Jimmy enjoyed in McClintock’s
eyes as a result.</p>
<p class='c012'>The particular luminary of the Long Island season
at the moment and the prospective lion of the
month of August at Newport was none other than
the Hon. Betty Ashley, daughter of the second
Lord Norbourne, and the most talked about young
woman in English society for a period the beginnings
of which antedated the war by several years.
Before the great European conflagration the Hon.
Betty, though then still in her early twenties, was
a European celebrity. Spirited, impulsive, and
headstrong by nature she had early rebelled against
the ultra-conservative traditions of her family and
had so thoroughly flouted convention that her name
was on the tip of the tongue of everyone in the
tight little island. She began it by publicly slapping
the face of a certain deposed kinglet who had
sought refuge and a safe haven in England and
whose sole offense had been a mild protestation of
love made at a fashionable garden party. There
had followed her sensational and entirely unarranged
presentation of a petition for woman’s suffrage
to England’s monarch himself at a formal
court (an incident which sent her dignified father
to his bed for two weeks); her arrest on suspicion
of being implicated in a militant attempt to set
fire to the parliament buildings and her subsequent
acquittal after she had refused to make any defense
against a damaging array of circumstantial evidence;
her jilting of the Earl of Maidsley in an explanatory
and derisive letter to the Times; her winning
of the amateur tennis championship and a host
of other incidents of a distinctly unconventional
nature. Then the war had come and she had gone
over to France in the first months as a motor driver
and had still managed to keep in the public eye for
five years despite the somewhat considerable
amount of attention devoted by the newspapers to
the main phases of the great struggle itself. She
had, for one thing, won a D.S.O. for bravery under
fire in the first battle of Ypres and she had, for
another, been reprimanded in orders for organizing
a ball at a certain chateau occupied by the staff of
a certain corps during the absence of the commanding
general at a conference at G.H.Q.</p>
<p class='c012'>Now she had come to the United States for the
first time and had materially assisted in putting zest
and “punch” into a round of festive house parties
on Long Island given by prominent members of
the swiftest moving coterie of the so-called smart
set. Small wonder that when she heard of the expeditions
to Jollyland which were enjoying such a
vogue that she should elect to organize one herself.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m not entirely a rank amateur, my dear,” she
confided to her hostess when the party was preparing
to depart. “I went on for two nights running
in the chorus at the Alhambra last winter on a five
pound wager, and I’d have stuck it out for a whole
week for the fun of it if the pater’s blood pressure
hadn’t been running abnormally high. The old dear
would have gone all to smash if he had found out
and he might if I’d kept on.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The Hon. Betty, her dark beauty set off by a
rose-pink silk sweater and a Tam o’ Shanter to
match, was in the first car of the string of six
which disgorged a laughing crowd of merry-makers
in front of Jollyland on Sunday afternoon.
They made for the big arena immediately as it was
within a few minutes of the advertised time for the
ringing up of the curtain on the great spectacle.
The Hon. Betty let it be known to an usher, who
was duly impressed by her air of authority, that
she craved an immediate interview with the manager.
McClintock, still disturbed at the defection
of the capricious Miss Delight, responded begrudgingly;
was apprised of the identity and mission of
the distinguished visitor and sought out Jimmy
Martin in great excitement. He found the press
agent back on the stage.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, young fellow,” he said enthusiastically,
“I’ve got a Monday morning story for you already
made and ready to try on. This Betty Ashley
who’s been grabbing off space all over the world
for a long time and who’s the big noise with the
real folks over here this summer, is out in front
with a crowd right out of the social register, and
she wants to go on in the London scene. I told her
she could. Get busy now and prepare for a general
assault on the helpless press.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy received this intelligence with a glumness
that rather annoyed McClintock.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What did she want to pick out today for?” he
inquired uneasily.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the matter with today? It’s the best
day possible for a good break for us. The papers
are always glad of anything that makes a noise like
a story on Sunday. What’s the matter?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, nothin’,” replied Jimmy absent-mindedly,
“only I wish she’d waited until the middle of the
week. I was kinda figurin’ on—oh, never mind,
it’ll be all right.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Three</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>An acute observer would have detected signs of
suppressed excitement in the general demeanor of
Jimmy Martin during the progress of the early
scenes of the great spectacle in which Lolita Murphy
was essaying the leading role for the first time
on any stage. He had exchanged his customary
cigarette for the solace of a particularly formidable
looking cigar which he puffed at nervously as he
sat in the manager’s box with his cap pulled down
over his eyes. His whole body was tense and rigid
and though there was a look of adoration in his
eyes there was something more—a vague something
that seemed to spell apprehension.</p>
<p class='c012'>Justice compels the admission that Lolita was
doing Cedar Rapids proud. She moved through
the thrilling situations of “Secret Service Sallie”
with the ease and calm assurance of a veteran and
more than merited the applause which the vast
holiday audience showered on her. When the curtain
rose on the final scene—the one depicting the
streets of London—the audience, keyed up to expectant
excitement by the gaudy promises of the
program—held its collective breath and Jimmy sunk
his teeth viciously into what remained of his cigar.
McClintock slid into the seat alongside of him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That gal of yours is sure making good,” he
remarked good-naturedly. “If she goes through to
the finish as nicely she’ll find a surprise in her envelope
on Saturday night. There’s that English society
dame and her party strolling along just as
if they were back in dear old London. I had Lawrence,
the assistant stage manager, go on with ’em
to put ’em wise to all the business.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The mimic street on the stage was thronged
with a motley crowd of supernumeraries who were
supposed to represent the populace of the British
metropolis out for an airing on a bank holiday.
The rose-pink sweater of the Hon. Ashley was the
most conspicuous object in view. That patrician
lady bobbed in and out among the others, apparently
having the time of her life and urging her
friends, with violent pantomime, to enter into the
festivities with something akin to her own enthusiasm.</p>
<p class='c012'>Presently the audience heard a murmur pass
through the crowd on the stage and Jimmy’s acute
ear detected the muffled purr of the motor on the
dirigible which was, at that moment, manoeuvering
for position and awaiting its cue two hundred feet
in the air just behind the backs of the last row of
spectators. The press agent grabbed the railing
in front of him and leaned eagerly forward. He
was watching the right side of the stage.</p>
<p class='c012'>A motor car shot out of the wings through a
lane in the crowd. In it sat Lolita Murphy in the
role of queen of the American secret service! It
was plain that she was simulating great anxiety and
that she was being followed. She looked apprehensively
over her shoulder and the audience could
catch excited shouts of “stop her, stop her.” A
gigantic bobby stepped directly in the path ahead of
the car and drew his revolver. The chauffeur pulled
a lever and the car stopped abruptly. A man on a
motor-cycle came dashing up.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Arrest her,” he shouted and he sprang from the
saddle. “She’s a German spy from the Wilhelm-strasse.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita looked about furtively, poised herself for
just a moment and then leaped out of the car,
overturning an athletic super and making for a
doorway as the crowd broke into frenzied cries of
“kill her, kill her.” The incident had been rehearsed
with the utmost regard for actuality and
as the mob surged after the suspected spy the vast
throng of spectators swayed with excitement like
a field of tall grass in a breeze. Lolita reached the
safety of the doorway by almost the fraction of an
inch and disappeared. The crowd poured in after
her and McClintock caught Jimmy’s arm as he detected
a vanishing flash of rose-pink.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Damned if that English dame isn’t right in at
the death,” he said excitedly. “She’s going up on
the roof.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy didn’t reply. He was watching the top of
the make-believe building with eyes that were
strained and staring. As Lolita emerged from the
hatchway and plunged forward, with a fine gesture
of despair, he looked back over his shoulder for a
moment and noted that the N-24 was slowly swinging
forward and that the alert and eager face of
Bobby Wilkins was visible over the edge of the car
which hung from the rear of the big balloon.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita held out appealing hands and gave voice
to cries for assistance. The crowd, in the vanguard
of which was a lady in a rose-pink sweater with
cheeks that were flaming and with eyes that were
dancing, swarmed up through the opening and surrounded
the suspected spy. The supernumeraries’
voices became a blended babble of inarticulate cries
and 3467 spectators watched the developments in
a tense silence.</p>
<p class='c012'>Nearer and nearer swung the great dirigible.
Lolita was now in the hands of the mob with which
she struggled fiercely. As the N-24 swung around
the corner of the roof she turned as per instructions,
but Jimmy noticed with a gasp of concern that she
had turned in the wrong direction and that she was
making her way to the wrong side. She was evidently
bewildered. Bobby Wilkins was leaning out
of the car with his arms outstretched and was beseeching
her to run toward the other side of the
roof. In another five seconds the dirigible would
have passed on and the spectacular finish of the
big show would be ruined. McClintock swore
softly. Jimmy sat as one entranced.</p>
<p class='c012'>Some of the supers were pushing Lolita to the
other side, but she seemed to be in a panic and
struggled with them as if still acting the earlier
scene. At this juncture Jimmy noticed that a lady
in a rose-pink sweater had run to the edge of the
roof just above which the dirigible was moving,
and that she was holding up her arms. His cigar
dropped from his mouth a second later when he
saw Bobby Wilkins grab her outstretched hands,
swing her free of the roof and pull her into the
car as the great dirigible finally cleared the stage
setting and, in quick response to the hand of the
pilot in the front car, nosed her way upward at a
higher rate of speed. The curtain fell and the repressed
excitement of the great audience found vent
in tumultuous applause. The thing had happened so
quickly that there were apparently few who had
noticed that the wrong young woman had been
saved from certain death by the timely arrival of
Lieut. Thurston Turner, U.S.N.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My God, what a whale of a story,” chortled
McClintock, gripping Jimmy’s arm so fiercely that
the press agent winced with pain.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, isn’t it?”, responded Jimmy dreamily as he
watched the N-24 winging her way over the park
and out towards the sea. The spectators had risen
from their seats and were applauding again as a big
American flag was unfurled from the rear car of
the dirigible.</p>
<p class='c012'>The balloon kept on its way toward the ocean
and McClintock noticed that it didn’t make the turn
it usually did when it reached the giant roller
coaster that ran along the shore. A puzzled expression
came over his face. If he had looked at
Jimmy sharply just then he would have observed
the first beginnings of a pleased smile tilting the
corners of the press agent’s mouth. A minute
passed and the great yellow gas bag receded farther
and farther in the distance. McClintock stepped
down and borrowed a field glass from a spectator.
He glued his eyes to it for a few moments and
then dropped his arms. His face was pale.</p>
<p class='c012'>“His motor’s dead,” he said weakly, “and he’s
drifting out to sea. The propellor’s stopped and
he’s being carried out by this land breeze. We’ve
got to do something—we’ve got to get help of some
kind.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The manager was plainly worried. He pressed
the glass on Jimmy, who had followed him out of
the box, and the latter watched the clumsy balloon,
now at the mercy of the stiff breeze which had
blown up, slowly but surely disappearing in the
opalescent haze which hung above the line where
sky and ocean seemed to meet. The owner of the
glasses had overheard McClintock’s remark and had
passed the word to his neighbor. In two minutes
the news had spread through the great crowd and
thousands of eyes were focused on the drifting
speck which presently vanished.</p>
<p class='c012'>McClintock, pushing Jimmy before him, started
for the main office and found himself surrounded
by an excited group of men and women. An upstanding
chap in a British major’s uniform who
wore a cap on which was the red velvet band of
a staff officer, stepped forward.</p>
<p class='c012'>“We’re Miss Ashley’s friends,” he said, with a
touch of feeling in his voice, “and we’ll do everything
we can to assist you. She’s a bit untamed,
sir, and she shouldn’t have done that wild, foolish
thing, but she’s the best woman alive for all of
that and now that she’s in danger we’re going to
help you see her out of it. Has that dirigible got a
wireless on board?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No,” replied the manager. “There wasn’t any
need for one. Since it’s been here it’s never been
more than a mile or two away from the hangar
before.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s bad—damned bad,” responded the officer.
“Of course, maybe they’ll be able to fix the engine
but we can’t take chances on that. If you’ll let
me use your telephone I’ll call up our embassy in
Washington and get them to get in touch with the
Navy Department. We’ll have all the ships in range
of the Arlington station on the lookout in an hour.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The thoroughly sobered group of pleasure seekers
who had accompanied the Hon. Betty to Jollyland
two hours before, followed McClintock and Jimmy
Martin into the offices in the administration building
and talked in low voices while the major began
to fuss in the telephone booth with the long distance
operator. Some of the women were weeping.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Four</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>In the seclusion of his private office Jimmy telephoned
the Associated Press, the police and the
nearest United States life saving station, in the
order named, while McClintock, who was plainly
tremendously worried, paced restlessly up and down
the floor, pausing occasionally to glance out of the
window at the broad expanse of sky and sea in the
vain hope that some sight of the lost dirigible
might greet his eye. Just as Jimmy began calling
up the metropolitan newspaper offices in a fine
frenzy of excitement, both men heard the office
door slam violently. They turned in unison and
found themselves confronted by Lolita Murphy.
Gone was the shy manner, the demure smile and
the air of coy ingenuousness. Her checks were
flushed, her eyes were blazing and her whole manner
indicated that she was in what is generally referred
to as a “state of mind.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hello, girlie,” Jimmy called out pleasantly,
“what’s the matter?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t you dare girlie me, Mr. James T. Martin,”
retorted Lolita in a voice that she was palpably
trying, with a great effort, to keep at an even and
menacing tone. “Don’t you dare to speak to me
again. I came in to tell you that and to let you
know that even if I do come from Cedar Rapids
I can’t be fooled by any New York—by any New
York—bunco man.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Her voice broke on the last word and tears came
into her eyes despite the struggle she was making
to hold herself in hand. Jimmy came toward her,
but she waved him off hysterically. McClintock
watched the proceedings in amazement.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the idea, Lolita?”, began the press agent
beseechingly. “I don’t get you. I don’t understand.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t try to tell me that,” ran on Lolita, who
was now half sobbing. “Don’t try to tell me that
you didn’t turn me down when that English girl
came into the park with all those society people
and that you didn’t get together with that Wilkins
fellow to have me left there so you could get a
better story out of it with her. You fixed it all up
and you can’t tell me that you didn’t because I just
know, that’s all. I had a sweater on under my
dress so’s I wouldn’t catch cold, and I had milk
chocolate in my pocket and I’d written home to
mother about it’s going to happen and telling her
not to worry about anything she might read in the
papers the first day, and now nothing’s happened
at all to me and I’ve been made a fool of and it’s
all your fault if you ever try to come near me again
or speak to me I’ll slap your face, Mr. James T.
Martin, I’ll slap your face. Do you hear me, Mr.
James T. Martin?—I’ll slap your fresh little face.”</p>
<p class='c012'>She was gone before Jimmy could remonstrate.
The door closed behind her with a more reverberating
bang than the one which had heralded her entrance.
Jimmy dropped into the nearest chair and
gazed vacantly into space. McClintock shook him
roughly by the shoulder.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say,” he shouted. “What in hell is this all
about?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“She handed me the mitt, Mac—she’s handed
me the mitt, and she wouldn’t even let me explain,”
responded Jimmy brokenly. “It’s the real heart-throb
stuff this time, Mac, the real heart-throb
stuff. I had everything framed up for her and this
English jane just drops in like a joker runnin’
wild and wins the hand.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You had what framed?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why—this drifting out to sea stunt,” replied
Jimmy in a dead voice.</p>
<p class='c012'>“This drifting out to sea—you don’t—you can’t
mean that this thing is a plant,” gasped the manager
incredulously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course it is,” returned the press agent with
something of the old note of self-assertiveness in
his voice. “I had it all fixed up for Lolita, and now
this society dame is goin’ to get away with all the
head-lines. When I saw Wilkins pull her into the
car I didn’t think he’d go all the way through, but
it looks as if he’s decided to. There’s no use in
worryin’ about it. Every little thing is comin’ out
all right—and say—don’t forget to remember that
it’s goin’ to be some story now—some story.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Just let me get this big idea through my head,”
persisted McClintock. “What happens next?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course his motor hasn’t really gone dead,”
replied Jimmy. “He’s just ordered his engineer to
shut it off so they can drift with the wind. That
was all framed up between us. He’ll probably turn
on the gas again and cruise around out of sight of
land for a couple of hours and shut off his engine
every time he sees a ship comin’ in sight. That’ll
be an alibi for the story. When the little old sun
starts to sink in the west he’ll turn that gas bag
towards the Jersey coast and he’ll make a landing
just before dark at a place we picked out yesterday
morning. He’s going to lay under cover there, and
we’ll keep the country guessin’ all day tomorrow.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But someone will see him land,” criticized the
manager.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t think there’s a chance of that,” replied
Jimmy jauntily. “We picked out a spot that’s as
lonesome lookin’ as an iceberg. There isn’t a house
within two miles, and there’s nothin’ but marsh-land
all around. There’s one little place right in
the center that’s high and dry. That’s where he
lands. Wilkins has got his car planted a couple of
miles away and his chauffeur is goin’ to be right on
the job in a row-boat—you see there’s a little creek
that runs through the swamp—and the girl is goin’
to be taken away in the boat and slipped away to
a hotel—that is, Lolita was goin’ to be slipped away
and was goin’ to keep dark until she got the signal
to appear again. Maybe this society queen’ll be
game enough to go through with it just for the fun
of the thing.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“We were goin’ to keep the agony up until tomorrow
night at the earliest and maybe until the
day after tomorrow. Then Wilkins was goin’ to
telephone that he’d just landed after bein’ tossed
about in the air and all that, and Lolita was goin’
to have a nervous collapse and be interviewed in
bed by a flock of reporters with a couple of trained
nurses and three doctors hoverin’ around in the
offing. You can fill in the other details yourself.
Anyhow, it’s a grand little notion for a story even
if this Betty Ashley person doesn’t come through.
We’ll know about that tonight.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“How so?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, the chauffeur has instructions to telephone
me the minute he gets to the hotel. That ought to
be not later than nine-thirty.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why didn’t you tell me all about this beforehand?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy smiled a bit guiltily before replying.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I had a hunch that maybe you’d put the kibosh
on the whole scheme because I was featurin’ a
certain party too much,” he responded. He grew
serious again for a minute and a far-away look
crept into his eyes. “Say, Mac,” he went on, “I
had a number that called for the grand prize, and
I’ve lost the ticket. It’s rotten luck. From the
way she spoke a few minutes ago I’ll bet I don’t
ever get out again, not even on probation.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s be all right,” consoled McClintock. “I’ll
fix that part of it for you. It’s a great story even
if the Hon. Betty Ashley doesn’t go through and
if she does—why, if she does, it’ll be the biggest
thing ever pulled off in this country. Think of that
for a little while.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The Associated Press and the metropolitan newspapers
were inclined to be a bit skeptical of the
facts which Jimmy telephoned them at the outset,
but outside confirmation was forthcoming promptly
and within two hours after Major Bobby Wilkins
and Hon. Betty Ashley had disappeared in the general
direction of the open sea the story was the
sensation of the summer in journalistic circles.</p>
<p class='c012'>A squad of picked feature writers invaded Jollyland
in quest of detailed particulars concerning the
events leading up to the beginning of the ill-fated
balloon trip; seven sob sisters motored to the palatial
home at which the Hon. Betty was a house
guest and interviewed a weeping and distraught
maiden aunt of that lady who had been acting as a
submissive chaperone, and who was certain that
when “dear Ned, her father, hears the news he’ll
froth at the mouth and have a stroke;” cables were
frantically dispatched to London instructing correspondents
to break the news to “dear Ned” and
watch the results; city editors pawed over assortments
of photographs of the beautiful heroine and
conferred with art department heads as to the most
suitable ones to use for decorative lay-outs; dozens
of “leg-men” were sent out to points along the
Jersey and Long Island coasts with directions to
watch for any possible news of the return of the
balloon and to keep on the lookout for any pleasure
yacht owner who might have seen the dirigible
after she passed out of sight of land; the Washington
offices were instructed to post a man in the
navy department all night long to watch for any
wireless news which might come flashing back from
the torpedo boat destroyers which, at the urgent
solicitation of the British ambassador, were to be
sent out to scour the sea in search of the missing
airship, and it was unanimously decided at editorial
councils in every office to let the story “lead” the
paper the following morning unless some great
unforeseen national or international calamity transpired
in the meantime.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy Martin became the focus point of more
importunate newsgatherers than he had ever
fancied, in his wildest dreams, would assail him for
information and when a delegation of correspondents
from a half dozen London papers looked in on
him at eight o’clock and told him that they had
been instructed to rush as much stuff as the cables
would carry he almost passed into a trance.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mac,” he confided to the manager when the
English correspondents had gone, “I feel like the
fellow who looked at the giraffe and said ‘there ain’t
no such animal.’ There ain’t no such story. It’s a
dream.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I’ve left instructions that we’re not to be
called,” returned McClintock. “Let’s dream a little
more.”</p>
<p class='c012'>In the star dressing room on the big stage of the
open air auditorium Lolita Murphy was getting
ready for the evening performance of “Secret Service
Sallie,” and was making a brave effort to control
herself. She was as forgotten as yesterday’s
newspaper and the realization of it sent great tears
of bitter disappointment coursing down her rouged
cheeks into the make-up box on the little table in
front of which she sat.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Five</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>It was nearly midnight when Bobby Wilkins’
chauffeur reported over the telephone to Jimmy
Martin and McClintock, who had been keeping anxious
vigil in the office all night.</p>
<p class='c012'>“There ain’t a sign of him,” he said hurriedly.
“I waited right where you told me to wait, and if
he’d have been anywhere within a couple of miles I
could have seen him after it got dark. The moon
has been shining bright for a long time, and I had
a pair of glasses with me. I’m afraid it’s all up
with him if he hasn’t landed some place else along
the coast. It’s tough for all of us if anything’s
gone wrong, ain’t it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>The chauffeur was instructed to make another
trip to the selected landing place and to stay there
until dawn when relief was promised. Jimmy was
pale and over-wrought when he hung up the telephone
receiver and turned to McClintock.</p>
<p class='c012'>“If he had landed any place else,” he remarked,
“he’d have made every effort to get to a phone.
He’d know we’d be worried. Gee, Mac, supposin’
somethin’s happened to ’em. If there has little old
Robert B. Remorse’ll be my side-partner for life.
He told me he’d be prepared for all emergencies
and he’s there with the nerve, but maybe they ran
into a squall or something. Why’d I ever think of
this stunt? I’ve got too much imagination, Mac,
I’ve got to teach it to lie down and behave.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The two sat up all night, smoking incessantly and
discussing the variety of fates which they fancied
might have overtaken the adventuresome Bobby
Wilkins and his distinguished fellow passenger.
Jimmy called up one of the newspaper offices every
fifteen minutes for news, but there wasn’t any
worth mentioning. The dirigible had not been
sighted by any ship with which the navy wireless
had been able to get into communication and the
half dozen destroyers sent out to search for it were
reported to be without definite information.</p>
<p class='c012'>The entire country seethed with the story in the
morning. The Associated Press had carried fifteen
hundred words into every newspaper office in every
city of importance from coast to coast and the big
dailies in Chicago, Philadelphia and Boston had
three and four column stories from their metropolitan
correspondents, liberally illustrated with pictures
of the Hon. Betty, who was one of the most
photographed women of her time. McClintock,
who had no knowledge of Jimmy’s promise to keep
Bobby Wilkins’ real name out of print, had blurted
it out to a group of reporters in the evening and
the salient facts concerning the modest wearer of
three war medals were incorporated in all of the
accounts. Robert Wilkins, Sr., forgot that he was
a mere business machine, wiped a few tears out of
the corners of his eyes, looked tenderly at a picture
of a curly headed boy he always kept in one of the
drawers of his desk and started east on a special
train.</p>
<p class='c012'>The total haul in the New York morning papers
was seventy-six columns of solid reading matter
and thirty-eight photographic illustrations. Every
angle of the story was covered in great detail and
in addition to the main narrative there were extended
biographical sketches of the Hon. Betty and
of Bobby Wilkins. There were cabled stories from
London concerning the festive career of the former
and containing an expression of deep concern from
the British premier. There were also eulogies of
the one time ace from personages no less important
than the American commander in chief in
France and the generalissimo of the allied armies.
All in all it was the most spectacular “feature
story” in years and the greatest achievement in
the history of American press agentry. McClintock
admitted that much when the first editions came in.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Jimmy,” he said, “it’s a dog-goned shame that
you’ve got to lie low and never get credit for this.
Still you’ve got company. I was reading in the
paper the other day that there’s a well defined
rumor that the more or less celebrated covenant of
the well known League of Nations was finally
framed up by a clerk in the British foreign office.
You can drop over later on and take a little drink
with him and cry it all out on each other’s
shoulder.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy’s only response was a mournful attempt
at a smile. He lit another cigarette, jerked out of
his chair and began to swear softly as he walked
up and down the room. He made a vicious lunge
with his foot at a waste-basket and kicked it
through the door into the next office. Then he took
off his soft hat, rolled it into a lump and slammed
it down on the floor with a wide, sweeping gesture.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t mind that so much,” he said testily.
“After landin’ a smear like that, though, I’d kinda
like to have a good time with myself for a few minutes.
I’d kinda like to throw a few assorted flowers
up in the air and let ’em drop on me, but I’m so
gosh-darned worried about what’s actually happened
that I can’t even have that much fun.”</p>
<p class='c012'>His anxiety increased as the day wore on and
the early editions of the evening papers which
played up the story even more extensively than the
“mornings” failed to buoy him up. There was still
no word of the N-24, and navy department officials
in Washington were reported to be gravely alarmed
at the possibilities.</p>
<p class='c012'>At noon the British embassy gave out the announcement
that “a distinguished person” had cabled
for detailed information and had begged to be kept
in hourly touch with the developments. Flaming
head-lines carried the legend “King Anxious About
Lost Dirigible.” Upon reading this three rival publicity
promoters who had suspected the presence
of the fine Italian hand of Jimmy Martin in the proceedings
from the beginning and who had foregathered
for lunch in their favorite club, simultaneously
started out on a joint jamboree that was to become
a memorable minor historical incident in the turgid
annals of Broadway. It offered the only means of
escaping from the tragic feeling of profound and
passionate envy that surged up from the very
depths of their beings.</p>
<p class='c012'>At 3 o’clock as Jimmy, red-eyed and haggard,
nodded at his desk between telephone calls, a messenger
boy dropped a cablegram in front of him.
He tore it open and gazed bewilderingly at this
cryptic message:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line in13'>HAMILTON, BERMUDA.</div>
<div class='line'>JAMES T. MARTIN.</div>
<div class='line in2'>JOLLYLAND PARK,</div>
<div class='line in4'>CONEY ISLAND, N. Y.</div>
<div class='line in2'>COME ON IN—THE WATER’S FINE—GIVE</div>
<div class='line'>MY REGARDS TO LOLITA, BUT CAN’T</div>
<div class='line'>SAY I’M SORRY IT HAPPENED AS YET.</div>
<div class='line in16'>BOBBY WILKINS.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c015'>Jimmy gave a second look at the heading and
rushed into the next office where McClintock was
snoring sonorously on a sofa. He shook the manager
savagely and waved the cablegram in front of
his eyes.</p>
<p class='c012'>“All’s right with the world, Mac,” he shouted
joyously. “They’ve landed in Bermuda. Can you
beat that fresh son-of-a-gun doin’ a thing like that?
What’s the big idea, I wonder?”</p>
<p class='c012'>McClintock grabbed the message and read it hurriedly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I guess maybe he’s mailing the answer,” he remarked.
“It beats me. You’d better get a wire off
to him asking for particulars.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The shrill summons of the telephone brought
Jimmy back into his own office the next moment.
The voice of his friend, Lindsay, the day desk man
of the Associated Press, came over the wire in crisp,
staccato sentences.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Got some news for you,” he said. “It’s going to
make this morning’s headlines look sick. Here’s
the way our first bulletin reads:</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘Washington, D. C.—July 7—The British ambassador
has just given out the following cablegram
received from the Governor-General of the Bermuda
Islands:—‘Please announce to press the marriage
this morning in St. John’s chapel, Hamilton,
of the Hon. Elizabeth Ardsley Ashley, eldest daughter
of Lord Norbonne, Bart., of London, England,
to Robert Benjamin Wilkins, Jr., only son of Robert
Benjamin Wilkins, Sr., of Chicago, Ill., U.S.A.
The ceremony was entirely informal.’”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m ordering three thousand words from our
Bermuda correspondent,” went on Lindsay, “and
I’m having London break the news gently to dear,
old dad. I suppose if I came down on Sunday with
the wife and the kiddies you could slip us into a few
of your side-shows.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say,” responded Jimmy exultingly, “you’re goin’
to get a life pass good for each and every attraction
within the big enclosure.”</p>
<p class='c012'>As he hung up the telephone and swung around
in his swivel chair the door leading into the hall
opened ever so gently and the pale and tear-stained
face of Lolita Murphy peered through the opening.
Jimmy gazed at her, open-eyed, as she came
slowly into the room. He noticed that she had a
crumpled bit of paper in her hand.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Jimmy,” she said timidly, as she held out her
arms in appealing suppliance, “I’m just a—just a
foolish small town kid. I didn’t understand—I
didn’t understand.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy, in a daze, took the paper which she held
towards him. It was another cablegram. He
smoothed it out and the peace that surpasseth understanding
settled down upon him as he read these
words:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line in12'>HAMILTON, BERMUDA.</div>
<div class='line'>LOLITA MURPHY,</div>
<div class='line in2'>JOLLYLAND PARK,</div>
<div class='line in4'>CONEY ISLAND, N. Y.</div>
<div class='line in2'>WON’T IT EASE YOUR DISAPPOINTMENT</div>
<div class='line'>A LITTLE TO KNOW THAT THE</div>
<div class='line'>MAD IMPULSIVE THING I DID YESTERDAY</div>
<div class='line'>AND THE RASH ACT I HAVE JUST</div>
<div class='line'>COMMITTED IN THE CHAPEL HAVE</div>
<div class='line'>TRANSFORMED ME INTO QUITE THE</div>
<div class='line'>HAPPIEST WOMAN ALIVE—BOBBY HAS</div>
<div class='line'>TOLD ME ALL ABOUT EVERYTHING AND</div>
<div class='line'>HE FEARS THAT YOU MAY THINK YOUR</div>
<div class='line'>FRIEND MR. MARTIN HAD A FINGER IN</div>
<div class='line'>THE PIE—HE HAD NOTHING TO DO</div>
<div class='line'>WITH IT, MY DEAR—IT WAS JUST FATE.</div>
<div class='line'>OUR BEST REGARDS TO YOU BOTH.</div>
<div class='line in7'>ELIZABETH ASHLEY WILKINS.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c015'>McClintock, coming into the room just then, tip-toed
out again and closed the door softly behind
him, thus proving himself to be a gentleman of
singular tact and discretion.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Six</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>An understanding with Lolita which contained
certain qualifying clauses was one of the net results
of the Adventure of the Lost Dirigible. Jimmy
filed a number of demurrers, but they were over-ruled
as soon as they were entered on the docket.
He had been foolish enough to imagine on the celebrated
morning after the night before that a perceptible
scent of orange blossoms clogged the circumambient
air, but this belief was soon dissipated
by the young lady herself.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I can’t get married, Jimmy,” she said earnestly,
“until I find out about my career.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s that got to with it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, just—why, everything. I was reading an
article only the other day by Mary Garden in which
she said that marriage cramped the career of a
woman on the stage. She said that husbands were
a handicap—that they held you back with the tail
end of the procession and kept you from getting
on. She said——”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy broke in with a scornful laugh.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I suppose she mentioned Mrs. Fiske and Laurette
Taylor and Ethel Barrymore and Blanche Bates
and all the other selling platers who’ve been left
at the post because they were foolish enough to
enter the matrimonial stakes,” he scoffed. “It’s
really too bad about ’em. It looked once as if they
had a chance.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Her mouth stiffened at this and she tossed her
head with a little gesture that spelled stubborn
defiance.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well—anyway—,” she said, “I’m going to see
how it works—for a little while. Maybe there isn’t
going to be any career for me beyond—well, beyond
‘Secret Service Sallie.’ If there isn’t I might possibly——”</p>
<p class='c012'>She paused thoughtfully. Jimmy’s scornful mood
had passed and he looked at her appealingly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You might possibly what?” he ventured, cautiously.
“There isn’t goin’ to be <i>another</i> catch in
it, is there?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m afraid there is,” she replied, quietly. “You’ll
have to settle down some place first. I don’t think
I’d ever learn how to keep house permanently in a
hotel bed-room and besides——”</p>
<p class='c012'>Again a disturbing pause. Jimmy was rapidly
becoming a pitiful object to behold.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Get it all out of your system, sister,” he said,
weakly. “I’m a glutton for punishment.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well,” she resumed evenly, “besides settling
down you’d have to have some money in the bank—quite
a little. That’s the most important thing.
There was a girl in our town once who ran off with
a fellow in the show business and lived a hand-to-mouth
sort of a life for several seasons after passing
up a lot of good chances among the boys she
knew. She’s back selling stockings in Boyd’s Emporium
on First avenue now and she looks kind of
faded out and tired. I like you a lot, Jimmy, and
you’ve treated me better than I deserved and you’re
the nicest fellow I ever knew, but we’ve got to be
sensible and wait and see how things work out.
Won’t you—please?”</p>
<p class='c012'>The “please” was long drawn out and a bit plaintive.
It touched the heart-strings of the hapless
press agent and played a tender little strain upon
them. He meekly agreed to all the qualifying
clauses in the agreement and he would have signed
on the dotted line if they had been three times as
numerous.</p>
<p class='c012'>Filled with a new enthusiasm his imagination
began to run riot and within two weeks his surprise
assaults upon the front line trenches of the forces
defending the serried columns of the metropolitan
daily newspapers resulted in space returns that established
new records.</p>
<p class='c012'>He contrived to have a member of the President’s
cabinet who happened to take a ride on the Dippy
Dip stalled in his gondola one hundred and seventy-five
feet in the air for half an hour while a squad
of mechanicians labored feverishly to get things
straightened out. That landed on the front page of
every paper in town. He married off the Armless
Wonder in Bisbee’s Carnival of Freaks to the Legless
Marvel with a new result of six “picture
spreads” and five and a half columns of solid reading
matter. His discovery that the little dark-haired
girl who danced on the open air stage in the big
free show every afternoon and evening was the
daughter of a grand duke who had fled in disguise
from Soviet Russia and who had feared to reveal
her identity because of the possibility of attack
by Bolshevik sympathizers in this country was his
biggest coup, however. This was sensationally
played up for all it was worth and considerably
more in every New York daily and had been telegraphed
all over the country. As a “follow-up” on
this he arranged to have two uniformed guards accompany
the young woman wherever she went.
This, too, landed heavily and Jimmy’s customary
high opinion of his own prowess was perhaps more
noticeable than ever.</p>
<p class='c012'>One evening while he was sauntering through
the incandescent splendor of Jollyland in a mood of
supreme elevation, he heard the booming voice of
McClintock hailing him from the porch of the administration
building.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Come out of it,” the manager shouted.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy dropped back to earth with a start and
sauntered toward the office.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Gosh,” observed McClintock, “you looked as if
you were off on a long journey. I hope you brought
an idea back with you. We need one. That’s what
I wanted to talk to you about.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy smiled the inscrutable smile of one who
is the custodian of the wisdom of the ages.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ve got a neat little assortment of goods I
picked up,” he responded cockily. “What can I
offer you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, it’s this way,” returned McClintock. “You
haven’t pulled anything yet about our co-worker,
Signor Antonio Amado, and his trained animal
show. He’s just been bawling his head off to me.
Says there’s a conspiracy on foot to keep him out
of the papers and threatens all kinds of trouble if
we don’t slip something over about his concession
right away. I know you planned to get around to
him before long, but you’d better start something
right off. Can you think of anything?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy didn’t reply for nearly half a minute. His
general manner betokened profound mental concentration.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I guess we can accommodate that bird,” he
finally remarked. “I don’t want to hurl any purple
pansies at myself, but I think I’ve got a stunt that’ll
pretty nearly crowd everything else on to the back
page. I’ve got seven other animal stories ready, but
I think this one has a shade on all of ’em. I’ll slip
over and ooze it into our Dago friend’s intellect.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The manager laughed good-naturedly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say,” he commented, “you’re the best little
friend of yourself you ever had, aren’t you? Just
hand out a little of that conversation to Tony and
he’ll lie down and behave for a few hours. Tell
him you’ll get his picture in all the papers. That’ll
make a hit with him. He’s a member of your lodge.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The implications of the last remark made about
as much impression on Jimmy as did the idle wind
which at that moment was lightly brushing his
cheek. He strolled over to the garish and gaudy
building which housed Amado’s Colossal and Gargantuan
Collection of Trained Wild Beasts from the
Trackless Jungle; paused just long enough at the
main entrance to tell the dark-eyed lady cashier
that she looked like a pocket edition of Maxine
Elliott and passed into the auditorium where Signor
Amado was directing the progress of the final show
of the night.</p>
<p class='c012'>The animal trainer was a short, stocky, swarthy-hued
Latin with beady eyes, shiny black hair, and
a moustache to the care of which he devoted himself
with self-effacing solicitude. It was a fierce
looking affair with ends pointed like a rapier, which
thrust themselves aggressively upwards at a sharp
angle giving the signor’s dark countenance a look
of great ferocity. He tried desperately hard at
all times to live up to that moustache and he had
a habit of working himself into violent rages which
were, in reality, rather hollow and empty affairs,
as even the most casual observer could see. He was
at heart, a weak and excessively vain little man.
Only the animals who leaped or cowered at his
command were fooled by his appearance of ferocity.</p>
<p class='c012'>At the conclusion of the show he retired to his
office and began to pour into the unreceptive ears
of the general director of promotion and publicity
a voluble stream of protest against the neglect of
himself which Jimmy was able to check only with
great difficulty.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Listen, Signor,” he finally managed to remark.
“You’re wastin’ gas you’ll need some day when
you’re climbin’ uphill. I came in to tell you about
a scheme I’ve got that’ll put you and your show
right in the center of the map in bright green, and
you begin this eruption stuff that doesn’t get you
even a look-in. Will you listen to me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“All right. I makea de listen,” replied Signor
Amado, “but eef eet eesa nota one gooda schema
thata makea me hava de face—Signor Antonio
Amado’s face—all ever de—what you call?—all over
de whole damned place—I queeta de park—so.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He snapped his fingers airily and shrugged his
shoulders. Jimmy proceeded to expound and expatiate,
and as he did so the signor’s face took on a
look of intense interest. Presently it was wreathed
in smiles, and he was patting the press agent on
the back and uttering words expressive of pleased
delight. The conspirators conferred for a half an
hour, carefully going over Jimmy’s plan of campaign
and adjusting the smallest details thereof so
that there would be no disturbing faux pas on the
morrow. They pledged the success of the enterprise
just before midnight in brimming glasses of
Chianti which the signor drew from a secret hiding
place in his desk.</p>
<p class='c012'>At about ten o’clock on the following morning an
express wagon drove up in front of Signor Amado’s
concession and four husky attendants brought out
a large box which was placed on it. Jimmy drew
the driver aside and gave him final instructions.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Get right near the tower on the Manhattan side
of the Brooklyn bridge,” he said, “and figure on
making it at just about noon. Drive slowly and if
anyone near you makes a noise like a cop don’t pull
anything just then. Wait till there’s no one lookin’
and then reach back, unfasten the hasp and lift the
lid. Then you’ve got to register surprise, consternation
and annoyance and suggest calling up Signor
Amado when the plot begins to thicken, if you get
what I mean.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The driver, a typical “wise” product of the New
York streets, nodded his head, Signor Amado spoke
a few mystic words through a wire netting at one
end of the box and the “plant” started on its way
after Jimmy gave a final parting instruction.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll probably be in the immediate vicinity when
things begin to break,” he cautioned, “but for the
love of P. T. Barnum don’t make any signs of
recognition.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Seven</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>And so it came to pass that at the appointed hour
Jimmy, nonchalantly strolling along the promenade
near the great stone tower on the Manhattan side
of the bridge, cast a wary glance down towards the
roadway and observed the express wagon slowly
jogging along directly underneath. The driver,
covertly glancing to the right and the left, reached
behind the seat with a quick movement, fumbled
for an instant with the hasp and, after lifting back
the lid of the box, resumed his two-handed control
of the reins, perceptibly slowing up the speed of
the wagon.</p>
<p class='c012'>The next instant the mischievous and uncannily
human looking head of a large-sized monkey appeared
above the top of the box. He blinked for a
moment in the strong sunlight, reassured himself
that the driver was not watching him, leaped lightly
to the roadway and made for the network of auxiliary
cables which run from the main supporting
cables of the great bridge. Following him came a
procession of other monkeys of varying sizes and
kinds—short-tails and long-tails, some with weird
whiskers and others as devoid of facial adornment
as a new-born babe—all of them chattering and
gibbering, each one intensely alive and apparently
determined on having the time of his or her young
life as the case might be. There were fifteen of
them in all and as they sprang out of the wagon,
one by one, and started to join the venturesome
leader of the expedition they attracted the attention
of scores of pedestrians, chauffeurs and drivers.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hey, there, young fellow,” shrieked a man on
the promenade. “You gosh-darned zoo is escaping.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The driver stopped the wagon suddenly, turned
around and proceeded to give a perfect imitation of
a man in that particular frame of mind popularly
known as a “blue funk.” He jumped to the roadway
and tried to clutch the last of the escaping simians
by the hind legs. That agile creature eluded his
grasp and joined two of his brethren who were
chattering gaily at the base of the labyrinthian
maze of cables and supports. By this time the first
dozen of the monkeys had clambered aloft and were
surveying the constantly increasing crowd of joyous
onlookers from points of vantage anywhere
from twenty to a hundred feet in the air.</p>
<p class='c012'>A policeman shouldered his way through the front
ranks of the crowd and looked up at the galaxy of
nimble apes. He was sputtering and fuming with
rage.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Come down out of that,” he yelled helplessly,
shaking his club in an absurdly futile attempt to
wield authority.</p>
<p class='c012'>The crowd roared with delight. One of the
monkeys still on the ground darted toward him,
leaped on his shoulder and sprang from it to the
nearest cable far above his head before he was conscious
of exactly what had happened. He struck
vainly at it with his stick. The crowd rocked with
laughter. Two other policemen joined him, forcing
their way with difficulty through the dense mass of
pedestrians on the promenade.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Maybe if we whistled at him, Dinny,” observed
one of these sagely, “they might come down.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The three guardians of the law proceeded to
pucker up their lips and to emit a series of plaintive
whistles which so startled the one-time denizens
of the jungle that all of them, as if swayed by some
common impulse, swung lightly to places ten or
twelve feet higher.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sing ’em a little song,” shouted at ribald youth
and the crowd once more chortled with glee.</p>
<p class='c012'>At this juncture a police lieutenant arrived on
the scene, attracted from a distance by the great
congestion of traffic. More than two thousand persons
were now gathered on the promenade and
vehicular progress in both directions was clogged.
A long line of trolley cars was strung out to the
east and the west, and several hundred motor cars
and trucks were stalled while their drivers crowded
forward to enjoy the fun. The lieutenant sized up
the seriousness of the situation instantly. He dispatched
one of the patrolmen to telephone for the
reserves and to send in a still alarm for the fire
department, and then turned to Jimmy’s willing
tool, the driver. That individual, still registering
dazed bewilderment, shrugged his shoulders when
asked to assist in bringing down the escaped
monkeys, who were now festooned in irregular
formation along the interlocking cables for a distance
of several hundred feet. Most of them were
swinging by their tails and otherwise comporting
themselves with a supreme disregard for law and
order.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I can’t do a thing, boss,” persisted the driver.
“I don’t know the first name of a single one of the
bunch. Maybe if some one telephoned for the gink
that owns ’em he might be able to bring ’em down.”</p>
<p class='c012'>And so it further came to pass that Signor Antonio
Amado was reached on the telephone at Jollyland;
that he swore lustily in three languages in
simulation of great consternation and that he promised
to come to the scene of hostilities as rapidly
as his touring car could bring him. When he arrived
forty minutes later; the crowd had grown to
ten thousand and the greatest tie-up of traffic in
the history of the bridge was in progress. The firemen
from two hook and ladder companies were
making ineffectual efforts to bring down the innocent
disturbers of the great city’s peace and dignity
and a certain press agent, watching the proceedings
from a discreet distance, was enjoying the biggest
emotional experience of a somewhat checkered and
not altogether drab career. He was getting the
same sort of thrill that comes to the playwright as
he stands in the rear of a theatre during a tense
scene in a play of his writing and watches a great
audience swayed by something he has originated.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy noticed with keen interest that a group
of newspaper men had already gathered on the
scene, and that among them was no less a celebrity
than Frank Malia, of the Item, the star feature
writer of the Eastern Seaboard and a specialist in
stories with a humorous angle. Jimmy knew that
there were standing orders in the Item office to
“let Malia’s stuff run,” and he felt reasonably sure
of at least a column and half in that particular
paper.</p>
<p class='c012'>It may be recorded that the arrival of Signor
Amado, resplendent in the snappy green and white
huzzar uniform he wore while directing the performances
in his concession, brought the festivities
to a rapid conclusion. In response to sharply
spoken words of command from the fierce-looking
little trainer the truant apes descended rather reluctantly
from their perches and permitted themselves
to be herded together once more into the
wooden cage, the top of which was now securely
fastened down under the personal direction of the
police inspector who had arrived to take charge of
affairs a few minutes before.</p>
<p class='c012'>The great throng cheered the Signor vociferously
when he had finished and stepped into his car. He
bowed again and again, kissed his hand, waved his
busby and gave other indications of profound satisfaction
with himself and with what he felt to be the
justly merited plaudits accorded him. Jimmy permitted
himself to be swallowed up in the eddies
of the dispersing crowd, as the signor’s car whirled
him back to Jollyland.</p>
<p class='c012'>The subsequent proceedings were all that the
most sanguine and optimistic press agent could desire.
The story landed with a big splash in all the
evening papers, and four of the morning papers
covered it with feature yarns running all the way
from three quarters of a column to nearly two columns
in length. The longest story of all was written
by Malia. It was a delightful bit of foolery
written in a spirit of satirical burlesque and full of
whimsical little touches that made it the talk of the
week in journalistic circles.</p>
<p class='c012'>There was only one thing that marred the perfect
symmetry of the general effect. While the fact
that the monkeys’ temporary habitat was Jollyland
was properly chronicled in headlines and in
the body of all the stories, there was no mention
made by name of Signor Antonio Amado except in
one paper and then his alliterative cognomen was
atrociously misspelled and appeared as Andy
Amato. He was referred to, of course, and described
as well, but impersonally. Mention was
made in one story of “a funny little fellow who
looked as if he had escaped from the chorus of a
Balkan operatta,” and Malia had called him “a
bandit king with the manners of a marquis and the
sang-froid of Subway guard.”</p>
<p class='c012'>After glimpsing the evening papers and observing
this omission Jimmy had turned over the conduct
of affairs in his office for the night to his
assistant, hoping that the morning papers would
use the signor’s name. When he read the others at
breakfast his elation at the general success of his
personally conducted enterprise was tempered
somewhat by the prospect of an eruption from the
Vesuvian temperament of the animal trainer. He
wasn’t particularly disturbed at this because he had
sized the signor up as a false alarm from the start,
but it meant a disconcerting half hour or so and he
was a little bit peeved that the fates should have
allotted him anything that was not rosy and serene
on what should have been a day of general rejoicing
and glad acclaim.</p>
<p class='c012'>McClintock met him at the entrance to Jollyland.
The manager wore an anxious look.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Tony’s off the reservation,” he confided. “He
did a series of flip-flops in my office a half hour ago
and I understand that he’s turning handsprings all
around his arena at the present writing. He inquired
about your health. I told him you had gone
over to Philadelphia on a little business for me.
Better stick to the office all day. He never keeps
these things up for more than twenty-four hours.
Grand little story, that, even if it did annoy the
King of Beasts.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Eight</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Another of life’s irritations managed to try the
soul of McClintock that morning. One of the more
or less wild and untutored savages from the South
Sea Island Village on the ocean side of the park
came into the possession of a pint flask of the
Demon Rum which had been washed up on the
beach, and with no regard for the refined niceties
of imbibing had swallowed the contents in a series
of continuous gulps. The subsequent proceedings
relieved the ennui and lethargy which always enfolded
Jollyland in the morning hours before the
gates were thrown open to the general public.</p>
<p class='c012'>The savage gentleman—a thin, wiry person with
wicked looking eyes from whose slit ear lobes, nose
and lower lip there hung a choice collection of
carved sea shells and brass rings, went into executive
session with himself and proclaimed a Reign
of Terror as the best means of establishing a dictatorship
over the fellow members of his tribe, and
the entire park as well. He started proceedings by
invading his straw-thatched domicile and seriously
damaging, with a well-directed blow, the facial
contour of the companion of his joys. That lady, a
most formidable party who had been taken unawares,
retaliated in kind with such verve and
energy that the self-constituted dictator left his domestic
hearth with great suddenness and started on
the rampage through the village street.</p>
<p class='c012'>He seemed to have no carefully calculated plan
of campaign and no particular objective. A general
demolishment of all existing institutions, a comprehensive
destruction of private property in general
and a leveling of class distinctions appeared to be
his vague aim. He leaped through a frame on which
one of the natives was weaving a blanket, completely
ruining the work of months; he overturned
a shelf full of crude earthenware jugs which the
potter of the establishment had contrived; and he
playfully kissed the stout and principal wife of
Mumbo Tom, the chief of the village. When that
venerable worthy attempted to remonstrate in an
outburst of outraged dignity, he tweaked the old
fellow’s nose three times in rapid succession.</p>
<p class='c012'>Passing out through the main gateway of the village
into the esplanade he continued his ruthless
assaults on organized society. Uttering weird and
entirely unintelligible invocations to the spirits of
his savage ancestors in a high-pitched voice, he
vaulted on to the back of a patient-looking camel
which was being groomed by a red-fezzed Egyptian
from Greenville, Mississippi, preparatory to being
ridden by visitors to the park at twenty-five cents
per head. He dug his bare heels into the beast’s
sides and emitted a wild whoop. The camel turned
her head, surveyed him rather bewilderingly and
started down the roadway on a brisk canter for
about a hundred feet. Then she gave a little snort
and heaved her humps convulsively. The social
rebel from the South Seas shot through the air and
landed in the direct center of a booth presided
over by a gentleman from Nippon and devoted to
what is known as the “Japanese ball game.” The
results here were disastrous. When he picked himself
from the clutter of broken china and glass with
which he was almost entirely covered his head was
bloody, but unbowed. He shook himself like some
shaggy dog just emerging from a dip in the ocean,
bounded over the counter and made for Antonio
Amado’s wild animal show, pursued by a howling
mob of attendants and special policemen who had
gathered from the four corners of the park.</p>
<p class='c012'>He burst through the entrance to the enclosure
and ran along a passageway into the private office
of Signor Amado himself. That ferocious looking
worthy was, at the moment, delivering a philippic
to his principal assistant, a pungent diatribe directed
against the press, press agents, stupid park
managements and the inherent injustice of mankind
in general. At the sight of the wild-eyed and blood-stained
visitor from an alien clime in the doorway,
he passed in the middle of a sentence. His jaw
dropped and his face turned ghastly white. He
ducked behind a desk and mumbled a fervid appeal
to the patron saint of his native village in Lombardy.
The visitor looked around for something to
destroy. His gaze encountered a half empty bottle
of Chianti on a table and he sprang for it with the
fierce avidity of a lion leaping at his prey from ambush.
The contents of the bottle were gurgling
down his throat to the accompaniment of half-choked
chuckles of delight when the pursuing mob
closed in a few seconds later and quelled the revolution.
McClintock rushed in as the special policemen
were putting a pair of handcuffs on the would be
Trotsky. Signor Amado, arising from behind the
desk, confronted him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Whatafor you leta theese fella in here, eh?” he
cried belligerently, his old pose of aggressiveness
automatically asserting itself at the sight of the
pinions which held the savage intruder safely bound.</p>
<p class='c012'>McClintock laughed at the sheer absurdity of this
remark.</p>
<p class='c012'>“We didn’t let him in any place, Tony,” he replied.
“He just happened to drop in here and several
places along the line before we could catch up
with him.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Whata make him so bada man, er?” inquired
the animal trainer.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Booze, Tony, plain old-fashioned booze. They
tell me he picked up a bottle on the beach some one
must have dropped off an excursion boat. These
fellows can’t stand intoxicants of any kind. It
makes ’em wild. I see he’s been cutting into your
Chianti.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He gave orders for the temporary bestowal of
the now thoroughly chastened and mollified revolutionary,
and was following the latter’s captors out
of the office when Signor Amado plucked him by
the sleeve.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, meester,” inquired the latter. “You geta
my face in de papers tomor’, eh?”</p>
<p class='c012'>The manager shook his head.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m afraid that won’t be possible—that is tomorrow,”
he replied. “I told you this morning
we’d do the very best we could to work up another
story about you next week when this monkey yarn
was sort of died down. Then we’ll see what we
can do about landing your picture right. Don’t
worry. Leave it all to me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Signor Amado assumed a defiant attitude.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I giva you—what you call, eh?—a warning. You
have my face in alla de papers tomor’ or, by dam, I
feexa de park gooda.”</p>
<p class='c012'>McClintock had heard threats like that before.
He shrugged his shoulders and walked out. Signor
Amado’s shifting glance fell upon the overturned
Chianti bottle on the table and remained there for a
few seconds. A malicious gleam slowly crept into
his beady eyes and he smiled.</p>
<p class='c012'>It is hardly necessary to chronicle the fact that
the classic features of Signor Antonia Amado did
not decorate the pages of any of the metropolitan
newspapers on the following day. McClintock
hadn’t bothered to tell Jimmy anything about the
animal trainer’s threat. He refused to take it seriously
himself and he saw no reason for worrying
the press agent with any mention of it, particularly
as that gentleman was busily engaged in working
out the details of a fresh story which was to center
around the fake kidnapping of two babies from the
Infant Incubator.</p>
<p class='c012'>When Signor Amado himself had carefully
scanned the papers, and had convinced himself once
more of the existence of a secret conspiracy to keep
his name out of print he was strangely silent for
one prone to burst into vociferous vocalization on
the slightest provocation. He even chuckled a little
when he put the last paper down and his beady eyes
glinted nastily again. He strolled out into the room
where his animals paced restlessly back and forth
in the cramped limits of their stuffy cages and he
spoke to several of them on his parade of inspection.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dey teenka day make beega foola of your boss,
Lena,” he remarked to a great lioness who pushed
her nose against the bars of her cage at his approach,
“but, by dam, he makea dem feel ver’ foolish
eh, Lena? He puta de whole parka on de bum.
What you say, Lena, eh?”</p>
<p class='c012'>He playfully poked at the splendid creature’s
flank and she responded with a long drawn out roar
of really terrifying volume. Signor Amado felt
moved to sinister laughter.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dat’s right, olda girl,” he continued. “I puta de
whole park on de bum?”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Nine</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Rain began to fall early that afternoon, a steady
persistent downpour that held no immediate promise
of abatement. A melancholy grayness enveloped
Jollyland, converting it into a bleak and dismal
habitation wherein dwelt people who seemed to
have drunk of the chalice of desolation. Rain at
the seaside is depressing enough, but rain in a summer
park in the height of the season, rain that
comes up just after the gates are opened and that
looks as if it would last for twenty-four hours,
produces an effect of gloom that almost defies description.
Thousands of once gay flags twisted
themselves limply around their poles; dozens of
lady cashiers who hadn’t taken in a cent for hours
and who were tired of their novels and incessant
gum-chewing gazed listlessly into the leaden sky
and wished they were home in Flatbush or Astoria;
low-spirited concessionaires figured up their losses
with pencil and paper and would have cursed the
Fates if they had known of the existence of those
divinities; performers, literally sick with ennui,
clustered in little groups under cover and querulously
argued with each other about trivialities; the
waiters in the “Trianon” restaurant at the end of
what was called the Street of a Thousand Delights,
foreseeing that there would be no largesse forthcoming
until the dawn of another day, rolled dice
for the previous night’s pickings or aimlessly discussed
Flying Scud’s chances in the fifth race at
Belmont Park; the South Sea Islanders crooned
weird chants under the shelter of their grass huts
and McClintock smoked thick, black cigars and
called up his friend in the weather bureau every
fifteen minutes in a vain search for cheerful tidings.
At seven o’clock in the evening—not a single patron
having crossed the threshold of the park for four
hours and the weather man’s report still being
“continued rain”––he ordered Jollyland officially
closed for the night, shut his desk with a vicious
slam and stepped over to Jimmy Martin’s office for
a chat.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well,” remarked the press agent, glancing up
from his typewriter, “it looks as if we were in for
a nice quiet evening at home. Has there been any
squawk lately from my Italian friend?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“There’s hasn’t been a peep out of him since yesterday,”
replied the manager. “This rain has given
him something else to worry about. He loves
money as the flowers love the dew, and I’ll bet he
hasn’t taken in $8.25 all day.”</p>
<p class='c012'>McClintock dropped into a chair, swung one foot
on Jimmy’s desk and lazily puffed at his cigar while
the press agent ground out on the clicking machine
a romantic tale concerning a lady rejoicing in the
cognomen of Montana Maggie, who rode a cow
pony in Laramie Ike’s Wild West Show and who
totally annihilated dozens of glass balls with her
trusty rifle at every exhibition given in that concession.
Outside the rain poured incessantly. A
mist-laden breeze found its way through the open
windows, but it didn’t seem to dampen the pristine
enthusiasm of Jimmy Martin who was working
with all the fervor of a reporter trying to catch an
edition with a big murder story and the “dead line”
only ten minutes away.</p>
<p class='c012'>Presently there came to the ears of both men the
echo of a far-off sound that penetrated through the
monotonous murmur of the dripping rain. It
seemed like the blended babble of many voices and
yet it was vaguely indistinct. McClintock jerked
his foot off the desk and straightened up in his
chair.</p>
<p class='c012'>“If it wasn’t raining so-dog-goned hard,” he remarked
“I’d say someone was staging a doughboy’s
‘welcome home’ parade or a young riot. What is
it, I wonder?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“There’s doings somewhere close at hand,” was
Jimmy’s comment as he stood up, walked towards
one of the windows, and peered out. “Here’s little
old Paul Revere now, coming to tell us the news.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The next instant a dripping park attendant,
white-faced and trembling with excitement, burst
through the door.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mr. McClintock,” he stammered, “there’s particular
hell to pay down in the South Sea village.
That bunch of wild-eyed nuts is all soused and they
look as if they was gettin’ ready to go on the warpath.
They’re crazy drunk—where they got the
stuff beats me,——and they’re dancin’ around and
singing’ songs fierce and when Patsy Burke tried to
go in and argue with ’em they threw spears at him.
He got cut in the shoulder—it ain’t anything bad—but
you can’t tell what’ll happen and the rest of
us is kinda upset. You’d better come along right
away. We’ve got guards posted all around the
fence, but I’m afraid if they start to come out
something pretty rough’ll happen.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“The end of a perfect day,” murmured the manager
as he jammed his hat on his head and plunged
out into the driving rain, closely followed by Jimmy
and the attendant.</p>
<p class='c012'>The events of the next hour were as full of exciting
incident as the entire fifteen reels of a movie
“serial.” The attendant had spoken truly when he
stated that the forty-odd savages in the village were
drunk. They were roaring, raving drunk. When
McClintock and Jimmy reached their habitat they
were filling the air with wild cries and maniacal
shrieks. They were brandishing spears and vicious
looking war clubs, and were dancing about the
grass hut of Chief Mumbo Tom with all the fierce
abandon of whirling dervishes. That ancient dignitary
was sitting in front of the royal palace on his
throne chair in a state of maudlin stupor, draining
the last dregs of a bottle which he held to his lips
and directing the festivities with encouraging
waves of his free hand. The steady downpour of
rain seemed to have no effect whatever on the celebration.</p>
<p class='c012'>Finally the chief dropped the bottle and clapped
his hands. There was silence for a moment and he
made a brief speech, liberally punctuated by hiccoughs.
When he had finished the others gave a
concerted cheer and turned towards the stockade
which surrounded the village.</p>
<p class='c012'>“They’re coming out,” shouted McClintock, who
was peering through an opening, “get your clubs
ready, boys. Don’t anybody shoot. We’ll get into
all kinds of a mix-up if you do.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The battle royal which followed lasted for several
minutes. The special policeman and other attendants
gathered outside the enclosure won out
after a desperate struggle and drove all but three
of the rioters back. These three managed to worm
their way through the press and went shrieking up
the main street of Jollyland in emulation of their
brother whose adventures of the day before have
already been duly chronicled. The net damage
which they wrought before capture was appraised
on the following day at several thousand dollars.
When the partially sobered villagers renewed their
effort to get out of the stockade fifteen minutes
later they were met with decided opposition from
the park’s fire company, which had been called out
by McClintock. A well directed high-pressure
stream of water from a fire hose sent them tumbling
over one another in disordered array and
brought about a final cessation of hostilities.</p>
<p class='c012'>In the excitement attendant upon the suppression
of the incipient revolution no one observed a spectator
who watched the proceedings from a sheltered
position directly opposite the main entrance of the
village. No one overheard his chuckles or saw him
twirl the ends of his waxed moustache with a little
gesture expressive of pleased satisfaction with himself.
For that matter no one had seen one of his
assistants unload three cases of Chianti from a
push-cart in the rear of Mumbo Tom’s dwelling
late in the afternoon during a particularly heavy
downpour of rain or had overheard the announcement
that the villagers were requested to drink to
Signor Antonio Amato’s health. And there was no
one to overhear the signor murmur as he stole back
to his office through the gathering darkness.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I tella dem I putta de park on de bum.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Ten</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Fifteen minutes after peace had been declared
McClintock and Jimmy, both thoroughly soaked
and decidedly uncomfortable, foregathered in the
latter’s office for a comparison of notes and a general
consultation.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’d make a pippin’ of a story if you’d dare to
let it get out,” ventured the press agent as he
wrung out the corner of his saturated coat into a
waste-basket.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I don’t take the dare,” returned the manager
peevishly. “That’s one story that the censor
isn’t going to let get through if he can stop it.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the harm?” inquired Jimmy innocently.</p>
<p class='c012'>McClintock looked him over carefully before replying.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the idea?” he remarked scornfully. “Is
your reason tottering on its throne? Don’t you
know that if this thing got out it’d scare away the
family parties that are the backbone of our patronage?
You couldn’t induce women to come within
half a mile of the park if they heard about this
rumpus. They’d think it might happen again any
minute and they’d remain away in a body—and
they’d keep father and the boys away too. Get
that straight.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“There’s something in it, I guess,” opined Jimmy
slowly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You put your money three ways on that. You’ve
got a new job tonight, mister man. You’ve got to
forget about putting things in the papers. It’s up
to you to keep something out for a change.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Maybe somebody’ll blab the whole thing.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ve issued orders to have everyone instructed
to give an imitation of a tongue-tied clam, but so
dog-goned many people were in on this that it’s
pretty certain there’ll be a leak somewhere. That’s
where you come in.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What can I do?” inquired the press agent ruefully.
He was plainly displeased with the vista
opened up by his superior.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You can do every little thing there is to do,”
returned McClintock firmly. “I want you to make
a personal matter of this. I want you to drop into
town and make the rounds of all the morning
papers. I want you to see every city editor and
make a special plea to have the thing hushed up.
Tell ’em it’ll ruin us for the summer if it gets out.
Make it strong. It’s going to be the acid test of
how useful you really are around here. String ’em
along. Let ’em understand that you won’t take ‘no’
for an answer. I’m going to dust over home in my
car for a clean-up and a long, dreamy nap. Goodnight.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy started to expostulate, but he stopped
short when the office door slammed in his face. He
stood irresolutely as the chug-chug of McClintock’s
machine died away in the distance. Then he
dropped into a chair, reached for a pack of cigarettes
on the table, lit one and indulged himself in
painful cogitation. Under ordinary circumstances
he would have experienced profound physical discomfort
from his water-soaked clothes and the general
feeling of stickiness that enveloped him from
head to feet, but physical feelings were matters of
slight importance to him at the moment. The distress
which was registered upon his face was purely
mental in its origin, but it was intense and singularly
disturbing. He felt that he was up against
the hardest job of his life and he could see no way
to hurdle what seemed to be the insurmountable
barriers that confronted him.</p>
<p class='c012'>In the language of journalism Jimmy “knew
news.” He knew precisely what sort of an incident
or happening or bit of romancing, for that matter,
would appeal to the trained newspaper executive
as worth playing up and precisely the sort of stuff
that would be passed up. By all the tests he was
familiar with, by all the general rules and regulations
of the game, the story of the jamboree of the
savage gentlemen from the far-flung isles of the
Pacific, of their attempt to raid the park, of the
battle between them and the guards and of their
final defeat was one of the biggest bits of “feature
news” that had transpired in or about New York
that summer.</p>
<p class='c012'>If it had “leaked” into any newspaper office he
knew there was about as much chance of his keeping
it out of print by making a personal plea, as
there would be of suppressing the announcement
of the engagement of a daughter of the president
of the United States to the Prince of Wales. If it
hadn’t “leaked”—and there was a fair chance that
it hadn’t—because of the state of the weather—he
was painfully aware of the fact that by calling on
the city editors in person and asking them not to
use it he would simply be handing them a tip on
which they would base an investigation. The story
was decidedly too good to be hushed up by any
plaintive wail about “ruining our business.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He would have mentioned all of these things
to McClintock if the latter hadn’t made such an
abrupt departure. He told himself now that even if
he had been able to voice them the manager
wouldn’t have comprehended the impossible nature
of the task he had so casually mapped out. Folks
who haven’t smelt the smell of the paste-pot and
heard the presses roar usually have the weirdest
sort of naive notions concerning just what and just
what cannot be done in the way of either inserting
news in the columns of a great metropolitan daily
or keeping it out.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The acid test”—Jimmy kept remembering these
three words and the oftener they recurred to him
the more distressed he became. He sat hunched
up in his chair looking out into the pouring rain
and consuming cigarettes at a most alarming rate.
At about the middle of the sixth cigarette he
straightened up; at the beginning of the seventh
he arose and began to pace the floor while a new
idea slowly unfolded in his active mind; when he
was two puffs into the eighth he flung it into a
corner with a resolute sweep of his arm, dived for
the telephone, called up “Beekman 4,000,” and impatiently
joggled the hook until a response came.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hello, World?” he said jerkily, “give me the city
desk ... hello ... city desk?... Who is that?
McCarthy?... Say, Mr. McCarthy, this is Martin
of Jollyland—Martin—M-A-R-T-I-N—publicity
director of Jollyland—raining here? You betcha—say,
I’ve got something pretty good for you ... hot
stuff.... Be on the lookout for it, will you?—Dope?—No,
sir, this is the real goods. No fooling—on
the level—you can expect it before midnight.
Good-bye.”</p>
<p class='c012'>In the next ten minutes Jimmy, in a frenzy of
feverish haste, called up the city desks of all the
other morning papers and repeated practically the
same message to each. Then he ordered three
messenger boys to report to him in half an hour,
stuck six sheets of carbon between seven long
sheets of copy paper, inserted the numerous layers
in his typewriter and began to pound out, with
ever increasing speed, a narrative that was to either
make or break him.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>It was nearly midnight when an office boy
dropped a long manila envelope marked “NEWS—RUSH”
on the desk in front of Larry McCarthy,
night city editor of the World. The early mail edition
had gone to press ten minutes before and
McCarthy had just come up for air for a brief
interval before plunging into the final activities of
the night. The tension had relaxed and he was
joking with the managing editor who had stopped
to give a few parting instructions on his way home.</p>
<p class='c012'>McCarthy tore the envelope open almost unconsciously
as he went on talking and unfolded the
four long sheets of paper which it contained, sheets
covered with closely written typewritten matter.
His gaze drifted carelessly to the top page where
it lingered as something seemed immediately to interest
him. A cynical smile began to play over his
features as he read. Presently it broadened into
something more mellow and human. Then he burst
into hearty laughter.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Shades of Tody Hamilton,” he chortled. “Here’s
the last word in hysterical romance. This fellow
makes ’em all look like pikers. He called me up on
the phone to tell it was hot stuff. Well, it certainly
is. It certainly is.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What is it?” questioned the managing editor.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It’s a pipe dream by a bright young gentleman
who seems to be trying to make a living by getting
pieces in the paper for Jollyland. He must come
from some place in the tall, tall grass if he labors
under the delusion that he can put anything as raw
as this over on a New York paper. I’ll give him
credit, though. It’s a masterpiece of its kind. If
someone ever starts a press agent’s school this
could be used verbatim as a horrible example of the
kind of a contribution <i>not</i> to send out.</p>
<p class='c012'>Just listen to this heading:</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i086.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c012'>“Isn’t that immense?” went on McCarthy. “Can
you tie the colossal nerve of that fellow sending a
thing like that out? Get his opening paragraph:</p>
<p class='c012'>“‘Maddened with a thirst for human blood and
believed to be acting under instructions from a Bolshevik
agitator who was seen prowling about in
the early evening 186 naked savages from the South
Sea Islands made a desperate attempt last night to
massacre all the whites in Jollyland, the gigantic
summer park on Coney Island. Giving utterance to
blood-curdling cries of vengeance and undaunted
by the driving rain which was falling at the time
they made an attempt to break out of the village,
where they give daily exhibitions of their quaint
and curious native customs, and were held in check
by the park attendants only after a wild and furious
struggle lasting for nearly half an hour!...’”</p>
<p class='c012'>The managing editor laughed uproariously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The poor old Bolsheviki,” he chuckled. “Even
the press agents are using ’em. That story’s certainly
a gem of purest ray serene. I’d like to meet
that young fellow. He’d make an interesting
study.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The telephone bell on McCarthy’s desk rang just
then and the city editor reached for the receiver.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hello,” he shouted. “Yes—McCarthy—yes, I
got one, too—it’s a bird—we’ve just had the best
laugh of the month over it—most sublime imagination
uncovered since Dante—you bet!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s Carlton of the Gazette—night desk man,”
he said as he hung up. “He’s got a great sense of
humor. Wanted to know if I’d had this and offered
to send me his copy if I’d been forgotten.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He crumpled Jimmy’s composition up in a ball
and tossed it in the big waste-basket at his side
as a boy slipped him a first copy of the mail edition
wet from the press.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Eleven</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>The rain ceased falling at midnight. The moon
emerged from behind a bank of sombre clouds and
threw a silvery radiance over the weird and wonderful
architecture of Jollyland. Dozens of the concessionaires
and their employees who elected to live
in the park throughout the summer and who had
been penned in all day by the downpour came out
for a breath of air and a stroll along the broad
esplanade. Among them was Signor Antonio
Amado, who sauntered out of his living quarters
smoking a long cheroot and smiling a wicked smile.
He was still inwardly chuckling at the success of
his little plot and he had consumed a most particular
bottle of a most particular wine in proper celebration
of his achievement. The Signor’s attention
was attracted by a conversation between two of
the special night watchmen who were chatting in
front of the tortuous roller coaster known as the
Belvidere Bend. He slipped into a shadow to listen.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Did he give you orders not to say a word?” one
of the men was saying.</p>
<p class='c012'>“He did that!” replied the other. “Shure it’s tryin’
hard they are to keep the thing out of the
papers. They’re afraid it’ll put the place on the
blink, and faith, I think they’re right. It’s mesel’
that won’t be breathin’ a word of it to a livin’ soul
from now to the risin’ of the judgment dawn.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The Signor tip-toed noiselessly around a corner
and disappeared in the direction of his concession.
Three minutes later he was talking to the World on
his private telephone and trying to make a tired
operator understand what he was saying.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I havea de news,” he shouted, “de beega news—de
damned beega news—de beega, besta news you
ever hear—Who? Wella givea me data man
McCart’—Hello, eesa dat McCart’?... Say, McCart’,
deesa eesa Signor Antonio Amado who maka
de lions jumpa—eh?—I say I maka de lions jumpa
at Jollyland,—well, meester, deres one beega time
down at Jollyland tonighta—one beega time—dey
eesa try to keepa it outa de papers—but I tella you—deesa
wilda men from de South Seas dey raisa
hella—dey hava beega fight—dey—what you say?
Seet on a tack?—I no seet on a tack—hello—hello.”</p>
<p class='c012'>But only echo answered. McCarthy had hung up.
The Signor swore a large, round, succulent oath
and went to bed.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>Jimmy was at his office at the customary hour
the next morning. He hadn’t slept all night and
he was dog-tired, but his soul was filled with satisfaction.
His ruse had worked. Not a single paper
had carried a line about the fracas. He had taxied
over to Manhattan and had kept vigil along Park
Row until the final editions appeared. Then he had
chartered a touring car and had taken a long ride
along the Long Island roads until it was time for
him to report for duty. He found McClintock on
the job already. The manager was in a jubilant
mood.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well,” remarked the latter cordially, “you stood
the test, all right. I’ve got to give you credit. I
didn’t think you’d get away with it, to tell you the
gospel truth. Pretty decent bunch after all, I guess.
Did any of ’em put up much of an argument?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Any of who?” inquired Jimmy.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why the city editors, of course. You saw ’em
all personally, didn’t you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy smiled a little guiltily, coughed nervously
and then laughed quietly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I might as well confess, Mr. McClintock,” he
said finally. “I didn’t see any of ’em. I tried out a
new scheme and it worked like a little old Liberty
motor. I figured that the story was altogether too
good to keep out by any personal visit and I was
afraid, anyway, that if any of the papers hadn’t
been tipped off my going in with an argument
would start ’em out hot-foot after the yarn. So I
wrote it and sent it out myself.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You sent it out yourself!” gasped McClintock.
“I don’t get you. Slip me a blueprint.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I took a big chance and I got away with it,”
replied Jimmy. “I knew that there isn’t a chance
any more of anything that a press agent writes gettin’
into the news columns of a New York paper.
They’ve been shy on that kind of stuff for a great
many years. So I said to myself that if I wrote
out this yarn like as if I was some kind of a rank
amateur, dressin’ it up with a lot of flossy adjectives
and makin’ it read so that it sounded like a
foolish pipe-dream they’d size it up as pure fake
and throw it in the little old waste-basket. Then
if any reporter or anyone else <i>did</i> shoot in a tip on
the story they’d figure out someone had been tryin’
to bunk <i>him</i> too, and would pass it up. I made
it good and strong, and it looks like they fell for it
hook, line and sinker. And say, I know somethin’
I never knew before. If I ever lose out in this game
I can get a job writin’ a series for the Boy’s Nickle
Library.”</p>
<p class='c012'>McClintock patted him affectionately on the back.</p>
<p class='c012'>“All I’ve got to say, Jimmy,” he remarked enthusiastically,
“is that you’re a great little press
agent.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m a great little sup-press agent, you mean,”
responded the other with a grin.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twelve</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>One morning two weeks after the summer season
at Jollyland had ended Jimmy found himself in a
state of moody dejection in the club car of a fast
express train en route from Washington to Baltimore.
He dropped into a chair in the rear end of
the car and let himself slowly slide forward until
his shoulder blades nearly touched the seat. He
swung one leg over the other, wedged both hands
into his trousers pockets and puffed viciously at the
somewhat frayed cigarette which hung from one
corner of his mouth.</p>
<p class='c012'>Somehow or other his brain wasn’t functioning
properly. His imagination wasn’t yielding up the
customary assortment of bizarre ideas and freak
suggestions from which he always was able to select
one particular inspiration to serve the need of
the moment. To make the situation more exasperating
the last words of Meyerfield kept bobbing up
in his train of thought. He could see and hear the
manager of the famous “Meyerfield Frolics” as
he had stood in the lobby of the New National Theatre
in Washington the night before, smoking the
inevitable cigar and talking in a loud booming
voice.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Remember,” Meyerfield had announced with
great impressiveness, “I want you to smear us all
over the front page of every paper in Baltimore.
We’ve never played the ‘Frolics’ there and we’ve
got to have ’em properly introduced. I’m depending
upon you to plant something that will stir that town
up like an earthquake. Get the girls into it some
way. They’re the best card we have.”</p>
<p class='c012'>As Jimmy slouched in his seat the memory of a
hundred spectacular exploits which he had engineered
swam through his mind, but he couldn’t
fasten on a new idea or on anything that hadn’t
been worked and re-worked. He was just beginning
his first season with Meyerfield and that
worthy was a showman who expected results.</p>
<p class='c012'>A memory picture of Lolita flashed into his mind
and with it came the realizing sense that her silence
was perhaps responsible for his present frame of
mind. Since he said good-bye to her in New York
a week before to go ahead of the “Frolics” there
had been only two letters from her, letters written
on the first two days of their separation. In the
last she had mentioned, with great enthusiasm, that
she had signed a contract to play a tiny part with
a road company which was to regale the theatre-goers
of the small towns in the Middle West with
a chaste little farce then sensationally successful in
New York. It was called “Ursula’s Undies,” and it
was a dainty affair designed to provoke the curiosity
of that type of male who carries around a
pen-holder with a little glass-eye piece at one end.
You look in at his suggestion (he’s sure to ask you)
and you behold a couple of large and lumpy females
in one-piece bathing suits in what is alleged to be a
scene suggestive of Oriental abandon. “Ursula’s
Undies” wasn’t even as wicked as that, but its advertising
manager distinctly sought to convey the
impression that it was too terrible for words and
Jimmy had been moved to remonstrate with Lolita
by means of a telegram in which he had rather
peremptorily directed her to throw up her job and
“get into something decent.”</p>
<p class='c012'>There had been no reply to this wire nor to a
frantic series of letters which had followed it and
Jimmy had begun to fancy that morning that all
was lost. He turned and looked out at the endless
procession of fleeting telegraph poles and at the
dreary landscape apparently afloat in a shimmering
haze of mist which had followed a drizzling rain.
He was aroused from his reveries by a pleasant
voice, a voice with something a bit “precious” in
its soft cadences, a voice that betokened a rather
too thick overlay of what Jimmy scornfully called
“culchaw.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Good morning, Mr. Martin,” said the voice.
“What’s the matter? You seem sicklied o’er with
the pale cast of thought.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy turned and recognized the speaker, a tall
young man who wore enormous tortoise shell spectacles,
an impeccable two button cutaway and a
smile in which there was a touch of supercilious
superiority. He was one of Jimmy’s pet aversions,
a highbrow press agent—J. Herbert Denby by
name—who was “doing a little special literary
work,” as he himself described it, ahead of a company
that was presenting a repertoire of dank and
morbid Scandinavian plays on tour. He had been
associate editor of a literary magazine and had
written a number of choice essays on what he
called the “new movement in the theatre” which
had been published in more or less obscure periodicals
and which had been undoubtedly unread by a
vast multitude of persons. He was now enjoying
his first experience in the business world of the
theatre and he had met Jimmy a few nights before
in Washington. His abysmal ignorance of practicalities
had aroused a sympathetic feeling in the
latter which had been later completely dissipated
by his patronizing manner. His company was to
be Jimmy’s “opposition” in Baltimore, and he was
journeying there on the same errand that Jimmy
was.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Good morning,” grunted Jimmy. “What’s that
you say?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I say that you seem sicklied o’er with the pale
cast of thought,” responded Mr. Denby, sitting
down in the next chair with great deliberation and
carefully disposing of the tails of his coat. “By
that I mean that you seem lost in abstraction, as
it were.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not as it were,” replied Jimmy. “As it is. I’m
certainly lost in abstraction all right, all right, only
I never called it that before. The old idea box
ain’t workin’ right. It’s back firin’ on me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the problem?” asked Mr. Denby judicially.
“Maybe I can be of some slight assistance.
We represent opposite poles of the world of the
theatre, but an interchange of thought may clear
up the situation.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“The problem is one that can’t be cleared up by
a flossy little piece of writin’ marked ‘not duplicated
in your city,’ old scout,” replied Jimmy disconsolately.
“Essays ain’t any more use in this
situation than curry combs in a garage.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But perhaps I may be able to venture a practical
suggestion that might be of value,” persisted
the other.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Practical suggestion!” snorted Jimmy. “Not a
chance. You fellows are all right, I guess, for this
Ibsen stuff, but you don’t know anything about
girl shows, not a single, little thing.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I presume you mean the chorus girls,” suggested
Mr. Denby. “Do you wish to use them in
some way for publicity purposes?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You’re talking,” said Jimmy. “I not only wish to
I’ve got to. I’ve got to smear ’em over the front
pages of all the papers in Baltimore to keep my job.
And, believe me, Baltimore is some tight town when
it comes to handin’ out space for the showshops.
The lid’s on and you’ve got to murder someone to
get it off.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. J. Herbert Denby cocked his head at a
thoughtful angle and gazed judicially through his
spectacles.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It mightn’t be a bad idea,” he said finally, weighing
every word carefully, “to get a delegation of
prominent citizens to meet them at the station with
automobiles. Had you thought of that?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy turned a look of concentrated scorn on
him that would have caused an ordinary mortal to
shrivel up and pass quietly and unobtrusively into
a state of complete dissolution, but it had no such
effect on J. Herbert. He simply smiled a superior
smile and awaited an answer.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And it would be a good stunt, too,” snapped
Jimmy, “to get the Governor of the State to dance
the tango with Madeline La Verne in the waiting
room of the station and to arrange to have the professors
at the university carry all the girls on their
backs up to the hotel. For the love of Mike, talk
sense, man.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course, they would have to be extremely
prominent citizens,” went on J. Herbert Denby,
utterly ignoring Jimmy’s biting sarcasm, “the leading
men of the city. It might be possible to arrange
to have them go over to Washington in their
cars and bring the young ladies to Baltimore in
them instead of just meeting them at the station.
That would add a touch of piquancy to the proceedings
that——”</p>
<p class='c012'>He got no farther, for Jimmy choked off further
utterance by springing up and grabbing both his
hands in wild exultation, almost upsetting the
porter who was emptying a bottle of mineral water
for the man in the next seat.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You’ve got it, you old highbrow son-of-a-gun,”
he shouted. “You don’t know how good it is yourself.
You know that old stuff about ‘and a child
shall lead them on.’ Well, that’s you. No offense,
mind you, no offense, but you <i>are</i> a child in this line.
I’ve got a notion to kiss you right out in public.”</p>
<p class='c012'>J. Herbert backed away and almost landed in the
lap of a stout party who was reading a paper.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Please don’t,” he murmured. “Please don’t, I
pray. It would embarrass me fearfully.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The stout party turned to his companion and
spoke quietly under the cover of his hand.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Nuts,” he confided. “Pure Brazilian.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy bade J. Herbert Denby a most enthusiastic
farewell at the station in Baltimore.</p>
<p class='c012'>“There’s a dinner coming to you, old George B.
Bookworm,” he shouted as he jumped into a taxicab,
“a nice young dinner with a little grape on the
sidelines and no stops for way-stations when we get
our feet under the table. See you later, old dear.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Thirteen</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Jimmy arrived at the Lyric Theatre in that glow
of exultant feeling which every great artist should
feel when driven to accomplishment by the urge of
a great imaginative idea. He dashed through the
lobby, pushed his way through a swinging door adjoining
the ticket window marked “Manager’s Office”
and leaned over a desk at which was seated a
slender man with what might be called the old-young
face, a face on which disillusionment and
blase boredom seemed indelibly stamped. This was
George Seymour, manager of the theatre, popularly
known among traveling press agents as the “human
icicle” because of his inborn and inherent distaste
for humanity as a whole and for publicity men in
particular. Mr. Seymour was going over a set of
plans for the remodeling of the entrance of the
theatre with an architect, and seemed supremely
busy, but this little detail didn’t phase Jimmy.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, Georgie, old man,” he said breezily, “here
we are back again and this time we’ve brought the
big idea along for a little visit. I want you to meet
him.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He slipped his hat down on the blueprint in front
of Mr. Seymour, completely obliterating the graceful
outlines of the architect’s new front elevation
and swung himself up to a seat on the edge of the
desk. A dangerous glint crept into Mr. Seymour’s
eyes as he unconsciously fingered a heavy brass
paperweight to the right of Jimmy’s hat.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Perhaps,” he said in a voice whose quiet intensity
was deadly in its menace, “perhaps you may
not have noticed that I’m busy, Mr. Martin. I’m
not interested in any big ideas just now except the
one I’m discussing with this gentleman.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Forget that,” said Jimmy jauntily, pulling a
cigar out of his pocket and lighting it while Mr.
Seymour glowered at him. “That’s just an old
blueprint for some improvement or other that can
wait. My big idea can’t wait. I’ve got to put it
over right now. And you’ve got to help me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Seymour’s architect, a precise man unused
to such unceremonious business methods, laughed
quietly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I guess, Seymour,” he said, “you’d better hear
what he has to say. I’ve got a few minutes to spare.
I’ll go into the next room. Persistence seems to be
this gentleman’s middle name.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Seymour, loathe to give in, looked around
helplessly. Jimmy leaned over and deftly flecked
a bit of cigar ashes from the lapel of the manager’s
coat, a manoeuvre which sent his stock down ten
points more.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Stick around, old man,” he said pleasantly to the
architect. “I don’t mind if you hear what I’ve got
to say and I’m sure Georgie won’t either.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t Georgie me, my friend,” replied Seymour,
“state your business and get it over with. The only
way I can get rid of you without calling for the
police, I suppose, is to listen to you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, it’s this way,” said Jimmie eagerly. “I’ve
got to smear the Frolics girls all over the front page
of one of your newspapers, and I’ve got an idea how
to do it. Now don’t stop and pull that ‘it can’t be
done’ gag on me. That’s the pet line of every house
manager from Bangor, Maine, to San Diego. Every
time you spring a new one they throw up their
mitts and tell you that ‘it can’t be done.’ Clean the
sand out of your running gear and go along with
me on this one for once in your life.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Seymour raised a protesting hand and tried
to break in, but Jimmy rattled on.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m going to pull a story,” he continued, “that
a bunch of prominent members of the Washington
Automobile Club are going to take all the girls for
a joy ride next Sunday morning to a point midway
between Washington and Baltimore and that another
bunch of leading citizens—members of the
automobile club of your own fair city are going
to pick ’em up there in their cars and bring ’em into
town. Ain’t it a great little idea?”</p>
<p class='c012'>A sardonic smile brightened the face of the
cynical Mr. Seymour.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It’s certainly a great little idea, Mr. Martin,” he
said, “and I have no doubt that all the city editors
in town will be so grateful to you for letting them
in on the story that they will have gold medals
struck off commemorating the event.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The underlying sarcasm of this speech did not
check Jimmy’s enthusiasm.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course, someone will have to stand for the
story,” he said. “I’m not going up cold to any
paper with a yarn like that and expect ’em to fall
for it, without some confirmation. What I want
you to do is to tip me off to some friend of yours,
some nice, agreeable party who’s a member of the
club and whose name carries a lot of class, a party
who’s a good enough scout to help a fellow in a
pinch. I’ll talk him into standing for the yarn, and
slipping me a list of names. Can’t you suggest
someone?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Seymour’s eyes gleamed maliciously. He
leaned over and grasped Jimmy’s arm in a pretense
of great friendliness.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I know just the man,” he said, “just the man.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, spill his name,” replied Jimmy. “I’ll get
to him before lunch.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Donald McDonald’s the man,” said Mr. Seymour.
“He’s the vice-president of the club and the
president of the Merchant’s Trust Company. He’s
a jovial, jolly, good fellow who’d be tickled to death
to stand for a stunt like that. Just mention my
name. There’s no doubt in the world, but what he’ll
help us out. Is there, Larabee?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Larabee, the architect, who was having a
desperate time trying to smother a chuckle, assumed
an expression of great wisdom and remarked:</p>
<p class='c012'>“You couldn’t have suggested a better choice,
Seymour.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“His office is on the eleventh floor of the Merchants’
Trust building,” broke in Seymour. “Two
blocks down and one block to the right.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy jumped down from the desk, jabbed on
his hat and started for the door.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Thanks, fellows, for the tip,” he called back over
his shoulder. “I’ll see you in a little while.”</p>
<p class='c012'>As the door swung after him Seymour turned to
Larabee and burst into a Mephistophelian laugh
that would have been a credit to the late Lewis
Morrison.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Larabee,” he said. “They’ll pick him up in pieces
down on Eleventh street just two minutes after
he hits McDonald’s office. Can you imagine anyone
going to that old boy with a fool proposition
like that? Can you imagine it!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You certainly picked the last man in the world,”
agreed Larabee. “Chorus girls and automobiles to
meet ’em and a theatrical press agent. My God,
Seymour, I really believe he won’t live long enough
to even tell the doctor his name.”</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>It was mid-afternoon when Jimmy Martin returned
to the Lyric Theatre. He breezed into
George Seymour’s office with a grin on his face and
an air of assurance that rather flabbergasted the
manager.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, Georgie,” he said, “you certainly gave me
the right dope. I landed buttered side up. Fine
fellow, McDonald. Great personality. Best little
old scout I’ve met in years.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You <i>saw</i> him?” gasped Seymour incredulously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Saw him?” echoed Jimmy. “I should say I did.
I lunched with him over at the Bankers’ Club and
I’ve been out for a ride on the boulevard with him
in his car. Fixed me up all right and he’s going
to stand for everything.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What brand of dope is that you use, Martin?”
inquired the manager sarcastically. “I’d like to
recommend it to some of my friends.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Come down off the flying rings, Georgie,” retorted
Jimmy. “What are you up in the air about?
Didn’t you sic me onto him and didn’t he run to
form just as you said he would. How’s this for a
reception committee?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy reached in his coat pocket and drew out a
folded piece of paper.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Some class to that bird,” he said. “He had the
little old stenographer write it out for me. Here’s
the names: Jonathan Wilde, president of the Kewanee
Packing Company; Judson Davis, secretary and
general manager of the Twistwool Knitting Company;
Horace Chadwick, president of the Oystermen’s
First National Bank; Col. Hannibal Roundtree,
president of the Carrolton Country Club; Jefferson
Tait, retired gentleman; Henry Quinby
Blugsden, Maximilian Hendricks, Marshall....”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Stop,” shouted Seymour. “You mean to tell me
that McDonald gave you that list of names and
said he’d stand for it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You can play that three ways, Georgie,” responded
Jimmy, shoving the paper under the other’s
nose. “There’s the list on his own personal stationery.
This is the reception committee that’s
going to motor out Sunday morning to bring our
flossy frails into your beautiful city. At least my
friend McDonald says they are and of course, I’ve
got to take his word. So have the papers. I gather
he’s some important person.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course he is,” replied the dazed manager.
“Of course he is—one of the biggest citizens in
town. And that list—why that list just reeks with
distinction. I can’t understand it. That crowd
meeting chorus girls? Why the idea is—well, it’s
just impossible. That’s the only word!”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Gosh, if that’s the way you feel about it the
darned thing must be going to develop into a bear
of a story. Speaking for myself, I never met up
with old James K. Impossible. He doesn’t belong
to any of my clubs and whenever I think I see him
coming I duck up a side street.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“If you get any paper to stand for that story,”
said Seymour, “it’ll stir up the whole town.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s where I belong,” replied the press agent
jauntily. “Stirring up towns is one of the best
little things I do. Choose your exit door, Georgie.
I’m going to plant this yarn tonight and the intense
excitement will begin to develop in the morning.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He swung briskly out of the office and Seymour
sat down, tried to figure the thing out. Somehow
he couldn’t.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Fourteen</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Nick Jennings, night city editor of the Baltimore
Bulletin, stifled a yawn, stretched his arms, stood
up and lounged over to the copy desk. He was
utterly unlike the city editor of fiction. He was a
short, stocky person with a round and jovial face
and there wasn’t a trace of the fabulous steely glint
in his grey eyes.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not a line of stuff worth sending up,” he observed
to Tom North, the head copy-reader. “Unless something
breaks the local end of the old sheet tomorrow
is going to be about as interesting as a seed
catalog. I’ve marked Milligan’s story on the food
inspection scandal for a two column head, but it’s
pretty dead stuff. Got an idea?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Tom North shook his head.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I thought for a minute there might be a feature
in that North Side Woman’s Club resolution protesting
against the psycho-analysis movement,” he
said, “but I didn’t suggest it to you because that
Arline Dupont Maxwell introduced it. That dame
can cook up more schemes to get her name on the
front page than any three prima donnas I know of.
There isn’t anything else that’s worth wasting good
ink on.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The city editor yawned again and looked at the
clock. It was after ten.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It’s tough turkey,” he rejoined. “I’ll bet you
there was more news stirring out in Twisted Twig,
Oregon, today than in this burg.”</p>
<p class='c012'>An office boy touched him on the arm and handed
him a card. He looked at it, hesitated for a second
or two and then remarked:</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll take a look at that bird. Send him in.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He turned to his co-worker again.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Zip goes another resolution,” he said with a
half-laugh. “I’m going to see a press agent. I’ll
take any kind of a chance on a night like this.
Persistent gink. Sent in his card an hour ago and
I turned him down flat. Now he sends it in again
marked ‘absolutely imperative I see you—great
story with a local angle.’”</p>
<p class='c012'>He had just settled himself again at his desk
when Jimmy Martin swung through the city room
and greeted him with an expansive smile.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, Mr. Martin?” grunted Jennings interrogatively
as he bent over a page of typewritten copy
on his desk in simulation of great pre-occupation.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mr. Jennings,” began Jimmy eagerly, “I’ve got
a great story with a local angle, a story that’ll stir
this little old town up considerable and then some.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Uh, uh,” said the city editor, never looking up.</p>
<p class='c012'>There wasn’t the slightest trace of interest in
Jennings’ attitude and Jimmy felt his own enthusiasm
flagging for just a moment. Cold-blooded
fish, these city editors, he said to himself, always
afraid someone is going to put one over on them.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You see, Mr. Jennings,” he resumed, “I’m with
Meyerfields’ Frolics. We play the Lyric next week
and——</p>
<p class='c012'>“I saw your card,” snapped Jennings. “What’s
the finale?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, I just heard tonight that the Baltimore
Automobile Club is going to pull off a little private
stunt next Sunday—sort of under cover. Someone
slipped me a hot tip. I made the chairman of
the committee in charge cough up. A bunch of the
prominent members are going to pick up the girls of
our show in a flock of cars over at Annapolis Junction
and bring ’em into town. It’s a cooperative
stunt they’re pulling off with the Washington club.
The fellows from the capital are going to bring ’em
as far as the Junction and——”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Nothing doing,” broke in the city editor.</p>
<p class='c012'>“But it isn’t a fake,” persisted Jimmy eagerly,
“it’s dead on the level. I’ve got the names of the
reception committee with me. The chairman had
his stenographer write them out for me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He shoved his typewritten list across the desk
directly under Jennings’ hand. The latter looked
up in annoyance, started to push it back, caught
the name on the letterhead and gave the paper a
cursory glance. He looked up again.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Been looking through Seymour’s copy of the
Blue Book, eh?” he remarked testily. “Where’d
you dig up this letter head?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m telling you that Mr. McDonald had his stenographer
write it out for me. I don’t ask you to
believe me, Mr. Jennings. Mr. McDonald said you
could call him up before eleven. I’m not trying to
steer you wrong.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The fierce intensity of Jimmy’s voice and manner
caused the skeptical Jennings to bore him with a
searching look. His eyes dropped to the paper
again. He skimmed through the names. What if
by some queer quirk the story was really true?
Donald McDonald, Horace Chadwick, Col. Roundtree
and all those others joy-riding with chorus
girls under the official auspices of the Automobile
Club—why, the thing would rock the town like an
earthquake! And the fellow had said McDonald
would verify the story. Why had he taken a
chance and said that if it wasn’t true? It was an
easy matter to reach McDonald. He looked up
warily.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Been spilling this story any place else?”, he
asked.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not a syllable. It’s exclusive for you if you
promise to use it. Of course, if you don’t I’ll have
to drop in over at the Gazette office. It’s too good
to waste.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jennings seemed to look through Jimmy for a
full half minute while he pondered deeply.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Young man,” he said finally. “I’m going to investigate
this little yarn, but let me tell you that
if it turns out to be a fake, I’ll have you deported
as an undesirable alien.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He turned his gaze towards the little group of
reporters on the other side of the room grinding
out copy to the tune played by a dozen clicking
typewriters.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Crandall,” he called out, “I’ve got a story for
you to look up.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy effaced himself as the Bulletin’s star
feature writer jumped up briskly in response to his
chief’s summons.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Fifteen</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>The Horace Chadwicks were breakfasting in
their stately old colonial home in the environs of
the city. The shrill song of twittering robins came
through the half-open windows on a gentle spring
breeze and the morning sunlight flooded the room.
A benign spirit of peace and domestic tranquility
seemed to brood over the scene. Mr. Chadwick,
a solid and substantial looking man of fifty-five,
was supping his coffee and glancing through the
financial columns of the Gazette. Mrs. Chadwick
had finished her grape-fruit and had just picked up
the Bulletin. She was a matronly person whose
ample bosom seemed to be but the continuation of
a rippling series of superfluous chins. She carried
herself, even in her morning negligee, with that
air of conscious rectitude and commanding importance
which she felt to be fitting for a prominent
banker’s wife who was a member of three important
women’s clubs, secretary of the anti-cigarette
section of the local branch of the W. C. T. U., vice-president
of the Baltimore chapter of the League
Opposed to Woman’s Suffrage and chairman of the
Advisory Committee to the State Board of Moving
Picture Censors.</p>
<p class='c012'>If Mr. Chadwick hadn’t been deeply immersed
in the Gazette’s account of the proposed merger
of certain copper interests he might have noticed
gathering storm clouds a few feet away, but he was
blissfully unconscious of any impending catastrophe.
Screened by his paper he had no inkling of
the passing train of emotions that were registered
upon the extensive facial areas of the partner of
his joys. Amazement, incredulity, bewilderment,
chagrin, unholy rage—all of these feelings were depicted
upon the countenance of Mrs. Chadwick and
were succeeded in turn, by an expression of scornful
calm that was pregnant with possibilities of
a most unpleasant nature. She laid down the Bulletin,
removed her glasses and addressed her husband
in a voice that was cold and menacing.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What car do you propose using Sunday, Horace?”
she asked.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s that?”, said Mr. Chadwick looking
around his newspaper. “What car? Sunday? Oh,
I guess I’ll take the new touring car out?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t you think the limousine would be better?”,
she continued in an even voice. “More sheltered,
more screened from the public gaze as it
were?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“More screened from the public gaze?”, he repeated.
“What are you getting at, Elizabeth? No
limousine for me if this weather keeps up. Wonderful
morning, my dear, a wonderful morning.
I’ll bet the crocuses sprouted three inches over
night. A few more days like this and I’ll peel a
half dozen years off. Nothing like spring to put
life into you, my dear, nothing like it.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Nothing like spring to make foolish nincompoops
out of a lot of old men,” corrected Mrs.
Chadwick in a voice that was positively glacial.</p>
<p class='c012'>Something in the tone of it stirred her husband’s
curiosity. He put down his paper and looked up
quickly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What are you talking about, Elizabeth?” he
inquired sharply.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I suppose Colonel Roundtree has picked a
blonde,” went on Mrs. Chadwick icily, utterly
ignoring his question. “Have you decided on a
brunette, Horace?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Blondes—brunettes?” murmured Mr. Chadwick
hazily. “Have I decided—say, Elizabeth, what’s
got into you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I dare say brunettes are a little too seriously
inclined for you,” ran on his wife in the same even,
ironic tone. “Blondes are livelier and they have
the funniest names, I’m told. Which do you prefer,
Horace—Trixie, Mazie or Delphine?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Chadwick surveyed his wife with alarm.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the joke, Elizabeth?”, he inquired with
an attempt at a smile that was really pathetic.
“Where do I laugh?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Into her little pink ear, Horace,” responded
Mrs. Chadwick.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Look here, Elizabeth,” he shouted, “either you
need a doctor or the air around here needs clearing.
Humor was never your strong forte. There are a
lot of sly little innuendos floating about that I’m
going to choke off right here and now. Some
damned old meddler in petticoats has been buzzing
about this house and I’m going to find out who
it is.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mrs. Chadwick composedly confronted him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“A pretty well known meddler, Horace,” she remarked
with irritating suavity. “A meddler known
to thousands. I refer you to the Bulletin.”</p>
<p class='c012'>She carelessly indicated the paper in front of her.
Mr. Chadwick grabbed it and hurriedly glanced at
the front page. A three column headline attracted
his attention.</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i114.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c012'>By the time Mr. Chadwick got that far he was
spluttering like a leaky radiator valve. By the
time he had finished reading through the flossy
little yarn that Billy Crandall had woven out of
Jimmy Martin’s story, he looked as if he had overstayed
the time limit in the hot room at a Turkish
bath by fifteen minutes. His face was fiery red
and the veins stood out on his forehead in knotty
little lumps.</p>
<p class='c012'>The fragmentary remarks that Mrs. Chadwick
was able to extract from the almost incoherent
jumble of sounds that escaped from the lips of her
spouse during the reading were of such a general
nature and tone that she put her hands to her ears
in sheer self-defense and sat wildly tapping her feet
on the floor to drown them out. The next minute
her husband crashed out of the room and through
the hall to his waiting car.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Cut her loose, Martin, and drive me to the Bulletin
office,” he shouted to the trim chauffeur. “I’m
going over the top after that crowd of pestiferous
puppies.”</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>Though it was not quite nine o’clock when Horace
Chadwick arrived at the Bulletin office he found
eight other apoplectic prominent citizens gathered
in excited colloquy in the ante-room to the office of
Richard Chilvers, the owner and editor-in-chief of
the paper. Col. Hannibal Roundtree, a handsome
and stately old gentleman with a militant imperial
and a flowing white moustache, was addressing remarks
to a thoroughly scared young man who had
thoughtlessly confessed a minute before that he
was Mr. Chilver’s secretary.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You listen to me, young man,” he was saying.
“You march into that office there and get Dick
Chilvers on that private wire of his and tell him
that if he’s a gentleman he’ll drop his breakfast
and come down heah and meet a delegation of irate
and fightin’ mad citizens of this community face
to face, instead skulkin’ in the trenches.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The youthful secretary vanished through a
swinging door marked “Private” and Colonel
Roundtree turned to his friends.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Damned, rascally, cowardly hounds—that’s
what I call ’em. They print a dastardly canard
like that and then they skedaddle in the face of the
common enemy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You’re talking, colonel,” broke in Mr. Chadwick.
“I haven’t met anybody I know, but I’ll bet
we’re the laughing stock of the whole town.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I can’t take that bet,” responded Col. Roundtree
bitterly. “Unfortunately for my peace of mind
I have met some of my friends. Why, gentlemen,
we should take matters into our own hands, mount
a machine gun right heah at this door and keep ’em
from gettin’ out another edition of this lyin’, treachous,
no-account sheet.”</p>
<p class='c012'>There were murmurs of approval of these belligerent
sentiments from the little group of protestants
which had just been increased by the arrival
of Jonathan Wilde, a thin dyspeptic looking man
with a disappearing Adam’s apple and of Henry
Quinby Blugsden, a former United States senator
who carried the dignity of America’s foremost debating
society about with him on all occasions.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Legal measures, my dear colonel,” said the former
senator, “are, I think, the soundest in such an
emergency. So far as I am concerned my suit will
be filed this afternoon. I shall name the sum of
$250,000 as insufficient damages for the mental pain
I have already undergone. Mrs. Blugsden, as many
of you know, is a woman of decided prejudices and
a strong mind.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“She hasn’t a shade on my wife,” remarked Mr.
Wilde. “She’s got two doctors working on her this
minute. Went right off into hysterics at the breakfast
table and began smashing china.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My own deah Julia,” remarked the colonel, “professed
not to believe the damned nonsense, but
there was a look in her off eye as I was passin’ out
the door that made me feel more uncomfortable
than I have since the day Yellow Boy lost the
Eastern Shore Handicap.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The elevator door out in the corridor clanged just
then and the brisk step of Richard Chilvers was
heard approaching the little delegation of prominent
citizens. Colonel Roundtree moved to a strategic
position at the head of the group. The publisher—a
tall, forthright, hearty looking man—stopped
at the doorway and affected great surprise
at the combination of wealth, social position and
business power he found confronting him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, well,” he remarked buoyantly, “the Bulletin
seems to be honored this morning. It can’t be
possible that you’re all waiting to see me, is it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Colonel Roundtree lost his voice for a moment at
the breezy assurance of this greeting. He coughed
violently and then composed himself with a mighty
effort.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You know perfectly well why we’re here, Dick
Chilvers,” he said majestically. “We’re here because
the honor and the sacred dignity of our
homes and hearths have been ruthlessly assailed in
the public prints.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The publisher walked toward the door leading
to his office. He held it open.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Just step inside, gentlemen,” he said quietly. “I
never discuss business out here.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The prominent citizens moved inside and disposed
themselves about the desk in the centre of the room.
Mr. Chilvers, who was irritatingly calm, laid his hat
and gloves on the desk and faced them.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Won’t you be seated, gentlemen?” he asked
suavely.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Seated! Hell!” retorted Colonel Roundtree.
“We want to talk to you standin’ up. Why did
you print that lyin’ yarn this mornin’?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I presume you refer to the story about the Automobile
Club,” returned the publisher. “I’m not
aware that it is a lying yarn, as you call it. I’ve
been up several hours, colonel, and I’ve been doing
a little investigating on my own.”</p>
<p class='c012'>There were excited murmurs from the group of
protestants at this remark. Horace Chadwick, who
stood next to Colonel Roundtree decided to go to
bat in place of the latter. The colonel was palpably
too mad to be articulate.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Dick Chilvers,” said Mr. Chadwick, “do you
mean to tell your fellow club members and business
associates that you give the slightest credence
to this fairy tale?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I mean to tell you,” replied the publisher evenly,
“that I have faith in the men I employ. I didn’t
see the story until I read it in the paper this morning.
I must confess it sounded incredible. I got
my night city editor out of bed and he told me that
the story had been thoroughly investigated and
verified.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Verified?” shouted Colonel Roundtree, finding
his voice again. “Who in the name of Andrew
Jackson verified it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“A gentleman we all know extremely well,” returned
the editor. “I’m going to call him up.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He reached for the telephone book on his desk,
looked up a number and gave it to the operator.
His visitors gathered around his desk whispering
excitedly to each other. There was a moment or
two of tense silence and then the bell rang.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is that 3459 Parkway?” he asked. “Please give
me Mr. McDonald.”</p>
<p class='c012'>As he waited the distinguished citizens looked
at each other in amazement. They moved closer
to the telephone. Presently the publisher was talking
again.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is that you, Mac?” he asked. “This is Dick
Chilvers. You know what I want to talk to you
about, I guess—yes, that’s it—hell?—I should say
so—I’ve got nearly an even dozen irate citizens
here now and I’m dead certain there are more on
the way—Roundtree?—yes, he’s here—yes, he’s a
little excited about it——”</p>
<p class='c012'>An indignant snort from the colonel interrupted
the conversation. His associates nudged him into
silence.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Jennings said you gave Crandall the story,”
Chilvers was saying. “You did, eh?—what’s the
idea? Come now, Mac, this is serious—don’t laugh
like that—why if Roundtree ever heard that laugh
he’d commit aggravated assault and battery on the
spot—y-e-s—y-e-s—well, of course——”</p>
<p class='c012'>The little group bent forward eagerly to catch
every word. The one-sided conversation began to
get more and more cryptic to them.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You will, eh,” the publisher continued. “No—not
this time. I’ll get this particular story myself—noon,
eh?—all right, Mac.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Chilvers hung up the phone and turned to his friends.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Gentlemen,” he remarked easily. “I’m going
out on a little assignment myself. I’m going to
interview Mr. Donald McDonald of the Merchants
Trust Company. He says he’s got another story
that’s better than this one. I’ll have to ask you
to excuse me until I see him.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“We’ll meet you at his office,” blurted Colonel
Roundtree. “There’s something powerful queer
about this thing and we’re going to see it through.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mac won’t be at his office,” responded the publisher.
“He said he’d prefer not to meet any of you
until tomorrow. We’ve arranged a—well, a sort
of a secret rendezvous.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Sixteen</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Horace Chadwick was stirring the next morning
before anyone else in the house. He crept down
the main stairway in a suit of pink pajamas and a
purple bathrobe and made straight for the front
door. He opened it and peered out on the porch.
The morning papers had not yet arrived. He
slipped back in the hallway and sat down on a
settee. He had had a sleepless night and he was
in a rotten humor. The wife of his bosom hadn’t
spoken a word to him since the affair of the breakfast
table the day before and he had been so unmercifully
“guyed” by every friend he met that he
had taken refuge in his library early in the afternoon
and had smoked three times as many black
cigars as were good for him.</p>
<p class='c012'>Chilvers had been inaccessible since the visit of
the deputation and every effort to get in touch with
anyone on the Bulletin had been met with the response
that “explanations will be made in tomorrow’s
paper.” To make matters worse the Rev. Dr.
Chaddow had called to offer spiritual consolation
to “dear, kind Mrs. Chadwick.” He had heard the
cleric intoning his sympathy in the drawing room
and had been obliged to stand at an open window
to cool off and keep himself from rushing in and
laying violent hands on the reverend gentleman.
The story was the talk of the town and telephonic
reports from other members of the aggrieved group
of prominent citizens brought word of the continuance
of violent hostilities in nearly a score of households.</p>
<p class='c012'>The memory of these things seethed in Mr. Chadwick’s
mind as he sat with his aching head bent
forward on his hands and heard the library clock
chime six. Presently a dull thud was heard against
the door. Mr. Chadwick jumped up and stepped
out on the porch again. He picked up the tightly
rolled little bundle of newspapers a boy had just
thrown in from the sidewalk, and slammed the door
shut behind him. He eagerly unrolled the package,
picked out the Bulletin and held up the front page
under the shade of a tall hall-lamp.</p>
<p class='c012'>Della, the cook, who was coming down the front
stairs in direct violation of a household rule at this
particular moment, was frozen in her tracks by the
incisive explicitness of a blistering exclamation
which came up out of the hall below. It was followed
by murmurs and mumbles which she couldn’t
quite make out, then by a chuckle or two and finally
by a hearty laugh that sent her scurrying upstairs
again and down the back way, convinced that the
gentleman of the house had suddenly gone out of
his mind.</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Chadwick followed her up with the nimbleness
of a school boy, waving the paper in his hand.
He knocked loudly at his wife’s door.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Elizabeth,” he shouted, “God’s in his heaven—all’s
right with the world.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s that?” came a sleepy voice from behind
the locked door.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The blonde peril has passed on out to sea,” he
said gayly. “Take a look at this morning’s Bulletin.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mrs. Chadwick unlocked the door and admitted
her husband. He blithely escorted her over to the
window, drew up the curtain and flashed the paper
in front of her blinking eyes. At first she saw only
a smear of black type and a dancing set of little
pictures. The type presently resolved itself into
a five column headline which told a story that the
whole town would be chuckling over in another
hour:</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i123.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c012'>Mrs. Chadwick gazed bewilderingly at the flaming
headline and at the pen and ink sketches illustrating
the story which followed—sketches picturing
with comic effect little scenes like that which
transpired at her own breakfast table the morning
before.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t understand,” she said weakly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Read the first few paragraphs and you will,”
chuckled her husband.</p>
<p class='c012'>His wife obediently read the introduction to the
long story which Crandall had written.</p>
<p class='c016'>On a certain Spring night a score
of years ago a certain Baltimorean
gazed up at the star spangled heavens
on the desolate shores of a little
inlet of Chesapeake Bay twenty long
miles from a railroad and fifteen
from any human habitation and
swore by all the nine gods that sometime,
somehow, some place he would
get even collectively and appropriately
with two dozen of his fellow club
members who had just played him
what he considered the scurviest
trick known to mortal man. He had
been kidnapped on his wedding night
and dumped without ceremony on
the loneliest spot in this corner of
the world—all by way of a joke.</p>
<p class='c017'>This same man sat yesterday in the
living room of his country home with
a perpetual grin on his face and a
heartful of joy. He knew that every
living man of that party of jokesters
was suffering something approximating
the torments he suffered on that
night of nights and that he had
stirred up more trouble in a score of
households than a half a hundred
genuine vampires might have succeeded
in doing.</p>
<p class='c017'>Opportunity chose the disguise of a
theatrical press agent when she finally
knocked after all these years—which
statement leads naturally to
an account of the real inside of the
story of the projected millionaires’
chorus girl joy ride party which
amused and startled this city yesterday.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Seventeen</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>The advance sale of seats for the engagement
of the Frolics opened that morning. Jimmy Martin
stood chatting with Manager George Seymour in
the lobby of the Lyric Theatre and watching the
long queue of prospective ticket purchasers which
stretched out to the sidewalk and curved up the
street for nearly half a block. Jimmy couldn’t resist
gloating just a little bit. He had adopted a
more or less casual, “I told you so” attitude the day
before when the first story appeared, but this morning
he just naturally expanded.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, Georgie old man,” he remarked cheerily.
“You’ve got to give him credit. The kid’s clever.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What kid?” asked Mr. Seymour.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That Martin fellow ahead of the ‘Frolics.’ I
told you stirring up towns was a specialty of his.
He certainly handed this one a jolt. Do you hear
’em all talking about this morning’s yarn? It’s the
biggest press story in years.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Just luck—dumb luck.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Pretty good for the little old showshop and the
little old show, though, you’ve got to admit. Come
on, Georgie, act human. Own up that if it hadn’t
been for the big idea I led in by the hand, little
old Robert B. Luck wouldn’t have had a chance to
sit in and draw five cards.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say,” remarked Seymour irrelevantly, “did you
know Meyerfield was coming over this morning?
He phoned me from Washington last night after
you’d gone.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I didn’t know it,” responded Jimmy, “but it’s
music to my ears. I want to be lingering around
when he lamps this line. You know he told me to
smear the girls all over the front page, but he
didn’t say anything about doing it two days running.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy strolled down the lobby and loitered near
the slow moving line. He felt a pleasurable little
thrill as he listened to the comments on the Bulletin’s
story. He walked out to the street and ran
his eye along the queue that nearly reached the
corner. Then a taxi drove up and Meyerfield
alighted. Jimmy caught a flash of the Bulletin
sticking out of the manager’s overcoat pocket. So
he’d seen the story already, he thought. Well, he’d
try to be modest.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hello, Martin,” said Meyerfield, holding out a
clammy hand and giving Jimmy a barely perceptible
grip. “Glad I caught you. Pittsburg’s cancelled
and we’re going straight through to Boston
from here. You’d better duck over there right
away. Come back to the office a minute. There’s
something I want to talk to you about.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The manager gave the line a look of quick appraisal
as he passed quickly back to Seymour’s office.
Jimmy followed him, a little shade downcast
at the failure of his employer to make mention of
his achievement. Meyerfield greeted Seymour
pleasantly, slid into a chair, slowly lit a cigar and
assumed his most judicial manner.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Martin,” he said presently. “I want to talk to
you about these stories that have been running in
the Bulletin. Now——”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Some little smear, eh?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“It’s a smear all right, but it isn’t the kind of
publicity I want.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But,” Mr. Meyerfield,” broke in Jimmy incredulously.
“Did you see the line? Why——”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, I saw the line, but that doesn’t mean everything.
It’s just a little flash in the pan, and besides
it’s dangerous stuff—why you can’t tell what would
come of it. Someone told me on the train coming
over that there was a quarter of a billion dollars
represented by the names in that story.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But that’s just why it’s good stuff! The more
important the people——”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I wish you wouldn’t interrupt me,” snapped
Meyerfield. “I’ve got a silent partner in New York—a
big banker—he’s going to back my new summer
show. Why, if he ever gets wise to this stuff you
can’t tell what’d happen. He may know some of
these fellows you’ve mixed up in this story and he
may call the whole thing off. You came pretty
near getting me in Dutch. Maybe you have. You’d
better pull a new line of stuff over in Boston. This
kind’ll never do.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He watched Jimmy narrowly to see how that ordinarily
enthusiastic young gentleman was responding
to this line of talk. Jimmy’s first expression of
bewilderment was replaced by one of great anxiety.</p>
<p class='c012'>“All right, Mr. Meyerfield,” he said deferentially.
“You know best. You’ve been at it longer than I
have, and, of course, you know the show business
from more angles than I do. I’m sorry it happened.
I didn’t understand. I’ll try and pull something
different over in Boston.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s it,” beamed Meyerfield. “The fireworks
stuff is all right, but sticking to facts and real legitimate
publicity is what lasts. We’ll let by-gones
be has-beens. You’d better start on the earliest
train possible. By the way, Miss Bellairs is going
to lay off for a couple of weeks after our opening
here. Her doctor says she’ll have a six month’s
session in a sanitarium if she doesn’t, but we can
get by that all right. You mustn’t let a word of
this get out. You understand?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sure I understand,” replied Jimmy. “Who’s going
on in her place?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Little Leona LeClaire,” said Meyerfield. “It’s
a chance to put her on in the leading role, but I
think she’ll fill the bill all right. She’s been under-studying
all season.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I get you, Mr. Meyerfield. I’ll try and pull
something different.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s the talk,” replied the manager, extending
a fishy hand again.</p>
<p class='c012'>As the door swung shut on the press agent,
Meyerfield turned to Seymour and gave him a prodigious
wink.</p>
<p class='c012'>“How do you like my work, George?” he asked
expansively.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t understand,” puzzled the theatre manager.
“What do you mean? I thought that newspaper
stuff was damned good, if you ask me. Best
thing pulled off here in years.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course it was George,” responded Meyerfield
with an air of great wisdom. “It was one of the
best ever, but if I told that fresh gink I thought
it was, there’d be no holding him. He’d take the
bit in his teeth and bolt down Main street. He’d
begin to think he was worth a thousand dollars a
minute. Birds like that have to be held down.
Don’t let ’em ever think they’re good, I know how
to handle all his kind.”</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>Meyerfield’s office boy dumped a big pile of Boston
Sunday papers on his desk the following Monday
morning. The manager opened the Press and
turned to the theatrical page. He skimmed it hurriedly
and then uttered a low moan. Staring him in
the face was a double column picture of Leona Le
Claire. Over it was a headline which read:</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i130.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c012'>A story detailing the facts about Bessie Bellairs’
threatened breakdown followed, together with
some account of the stage beginnings of the understudy.
Meyerfield frantically looked through the
other papers and found the photograph of the Le
Claire girl featured in each one of them with practically
the same story. He called his stenographer
and angrily dictated this telegram:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>JAMES MARTIN,</div>
<div class='line in2'>AGENT MEYERFIELD’S FROLICS,</div>
<div class='line in4'>STAR THEATRE, BOSTON, MASS.</div>
<div class='line in2'>WHY DID YOU PRINT THAT BONE-HEAD</div>
<div class='line'>STORY ABOUT UNDERSTUDY</div>
<div class='line'>AFTER MY INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CON-</div>
<div class='line'>TRARY—YOU’RE RUINING MY BUSINESS</div>
<div class='line'>—WIRE IMMEDIATELY.</div>
<div class='line in13'>MEYERFIELD.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c015'>This answer came back—collect—in an hour and
a half:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>MAURICE MEYERFIELD,</div>
<div class='line in3'>1426 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY.</div>
<div class='line in2'>GO OUT AND PLAY WITH THE CHIPPY</div>
<div class='line'>BIRDS. IF YOU WANT TO PUT ANYTHING</div>
<div class='line'>OVER ON ME YOU’LL HAVE TO</div>
<div class='line'>SET YOUR ALARM CLOCK EARLIER—I</div>
<div class='line'>RESIGN—I’M OFF SONG AND DANCE</div>
<div class='line'>SHOWS FOR LIFE—NOTHING BUT highbrow</div>
<div class='line'>STUFF FOR MINE FROM NOW ON—HAVE</div>
<div class='line'>SIGNED TO GO AHEAD OF OLGA</div>
<div class='line'>STEPHANO IN HEDDA GABLER, BY</div>
<div class='line'>HENRI K. IBSEN.</div>
<div class='line in21'>MARTIN.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Eighteen</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>A letter from Lolita, received in Cleveland a few
weeks later while Jimmy was on the first lap of
his transcontinental journey as press agent extraordinary
for Madame Olga Stephano, the noted exponent
of Ibsen, sent the dark clouds which had given
him an extremely low visibility scurrying like mist
before the sun and shot his blood pressure up almost
to the danger point.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita admitted the justice of Jimmy’s objection
to “Ursula’s Undies,” and sent word that she had
finally ceased her connection with that organization
and was “doing bits” with a stock company in Mt.
Vernon. If Jimmy would only forgive her she’d
heed his advice on all occasions in the future.
Jimmy, in a mood of extreme jubilation, had sent
her a seventy-three word night letter and had retired
early.</p>
<p class='c012'>When he bounded out of his bed in the Carlton
Hotel the next morning and looked over a copy of
the Star which a thoughtful management had slid
under his door, he began to radiate gladness and
to impart tidings of good cheer. Little Sunshine,
the sweet young orphan in the story book, who
went around making folks forget their troubles by
telling them that abscessed teeth and carbuncles
were blessings in disguise, had nothing on him.</p>
<p class='c012'>He trilled a merry roundelay while he bathed
and shaved, and he felt so good that he tossed a
“good morning, kid” to a pert little sparrow who
was hopping about on the fire escape outside the
open window.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy had a well forged alibi for his exuberance
of spirits, quite apart from the resumption of diplomatic
relations with the fair Lolita. He had just
performed that fascinating operation known in the
patois of the profession as “putting one over.” The
patient who had submitted to his deft scalpel was
no less a personage than E. Cartwright Jenkins,
dramatic editor of the Star. E. Cartwright Jenkins
was the alpha and omega, the guardian angel of the
drama in that corner of the world.</p>
<p class='c012'>It is only fair to state that just one month before
Jimmy’s advent on the scene, E. Cartwright had
declared war to the death on the bureau of publicity
and promotion. He had issued a manifesto
which took in everyone from the humblest representatives
of a “Tom show” to the avaunt couriers
of the actors and actresses deemed worthy of favorable
mention by the critics of the Big Town.</p>
<p class='c012'>The Jenkins’ ire had been aroused by a neat little
yarn submitted by a modest young gentleman with
mild blue eyes who had attested to its accuracy on
the sacred honor of his grandsires. The subsequent
developments had almost involved the Star in an
expensive libel suit and certain blistering remarks
from the owner and publisher of the paper, directed
at the dramatic editor’s head, had resulted in the
issuance of the aforementioned ultimatum. The
manager of the Standard Theatre had shown Jimmy
the letter containing it.</p>
<p class='c012'>“We shall accept from the theatre,” the letter ran,
“only the briefest sort of a general preliminary announcement
giving the name of the play and the
players concerned. Press agents’ contributions are
not wanted and will not be used. It will not be
necessary for them to call to pay their respects.
We will take those for granted.”</p>
<p class='c012'>As Jimmy sat on the edge of his bed and read
the dramatic page of the Star over again he
chuckled gleefully. Confronting him was a three
column head which read: “Defense and a Rebuttal.”
Underneath it was a thousand word letter addressed
to the dramatic editor and signed “Very Respectfully
Yours, James T. Martin.” Following it was a
long piece bearing the signature of E. Cartwright
Jenkins.</p>
<p class='c012'>The letter was a work of surpassing art which
had been jointly composed the day before by Jimmy
and a reporter on the rival Inquirer who had covered
“sports” with him in days gone by on a St.
Louis paper and who had a freely flowing repertoire
of adjectives at his command that was dazzling in
its completeness. It was a protest against the
Star’s embargo on theatrical tidings and a defense
of the ancient and honorable calling of press agent.
It was cunningly interlarded here and there with
oily and unctuous references to the supreme wisdom
of Mr. Jenkins.</p>
<p class='c012'>That worthy gentleman was appealed to as “the
recognized authority on all things pertaining to the
serious drama in this part of the United States” and
as a “patron of the seven arts whose causeries are
the delight of the cultured and the despair of the
untutored.” Mention was made of the discouragement
such worthy artists as Madame Stephano met
with as a result of the refusal of the Star to co-operate
in the movement for the uplift of the stage,
etc., etc.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’ll get that old bird,” Jimmy had remarked
to his friend after the latter had explained what
the “seven arts” were. “He’s the chairman of the
executive committee of the I-Hate-Myself Club.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy had had prophetic vision. E. Cartwright
had fallen into the trap. He had printed the letter
in full and he had followed it with certain remarks
of his own in which he regretted that the new rule
interfered with the “proper exploitation of such
representative and distinguished players as Madame
Stephano,” etc., etc.</p>
<p class='c012'>The press agent took out a lead pencil and began
underscoring the name of his star every time it appeared
in both his letter and the dramatic editor’s
subjoined comment.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Fourteen times,” he chuckled to himself. “The
poor old boob.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He stuck his derby on his head a bit rakishly,
reached for a silver topped walking stick and
started a progress down to the lobby that was a
continuous round of cheery greetings. He joked
with the chambermaid he saw entering the room
next his own; exchanged a bit of badinage with
another who was loitering near the elevator, and
playfully slapped the elevator boy on the back with
his folded newspaper. He maintained this exalted
mood throughout breakfast during which meal he
again counted over the “Madame Stephanos” on
the sixth page to see if he’d made a mistake in his
previous reckoning.</p>
<p class='c012'>After breakfast he strolled out into the lobby
again and over to the cigar counter. As he pointed
to a box in the case marked “50¢” each, he beamed
at the slender blonde who was reaching to serve
him and the blonde beamed back.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, sister,” he asked pleasantly, “how’d you
like a couple of seats for the show Monday night
at the Standard?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Fine,” replied the young woman. “What is it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Olga Stephano,” returned the press agent as he
reached for his pass pad and his fountain pen.</p>
<p class='c012'>“She’s that Russian actress, ain’t she, that plays
in those highbrow plays?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s right,” replied Jimmy. “Ibsen stuff, but
she’s a bear at it. She makes you tremble and she
makes you sigh.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The blonde person took the proffered pass and
folded it carefully.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll take my sister,” she said. “She’ll have the
time of her life if there’s anything sad in it. I must
say you press agents are a mighty nice lot of boys.
I meet a lot of you fellows in the course of a season
and most every one slips me a pass just for sociability.
Here comes Mr. Wilson now. He just got
in this morning. He told me he’s ahead of some
new play they’re trying out for Otis Taber.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The gentleman who was approaching was a well
set-up, prosperous looking man in his early forties
who looked more like a bank cashier or a successful
professional man than the popular conception of a
theatrical advance agent. He was one of that distinguished
little group of clever newspapermen who
have been lured away from the daily grind of news-gathering
or editorial work into the pleasant bypaths
of theatrical endeavor and who have found
the fascinations of the show world too subtle to
resist no matter how hard they try.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hello, Jimmy, old man,” he said heartily. “What
are you doing out here in Cleveland? I thought you
were with ‘Meyerfield’s Frolics’.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I was,” replied Jimmy, “but I’m off song and
dance shows. I had a run in with Meyerfield.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What are you doing?” asked the other.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ve signed up with the little old uplift, Tom,”
returned Jimmy. “I’m elevating our well known
stage.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Tom Wilson looked puzzled for a moment.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You don’t mean to say that you’re ahead of
Stephano?” he gasped.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s what,” said Jimmy, with easy assurance.
“I knew it would hand a laugh to all of you kid
glove scouts, but I’m going to make good even if
I am about as much of a highbrow as a bush league
second baseman. As a matter of fact I’ve started
to clean up already. Have a cigar.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Wilson looked in the case and indicated a
modestly priced weed. Jimmy held up a deprecatory
hand.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Nothing doing, sister,” he expanded. “Slip him
one of those regular smokes.”</p>
<p class='c012'>His friend picked a thick cigar out of the box the
blonde person handed him and looked into Jimmy’s
smiling face.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say,” he inquired. “What’s the idea? Had a
legacy or something?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy motioned him towards a large leather
sofa in the center of the lobby.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ve just put one over on the censor,” he exulted,
as he settled down, “and I just naturally feel a little
frisky. You don’t mind if I pin a few war crosses
on my chest, do you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not at all,” replied the other good naturedly.
“Fire ahead.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy opened the folded newspaper in his hand
and passed it to his brother agent with a playful
little flourish. As the latter read the indicated section
Jimmy watched him out of the corner of his
eye carefully looking for signs of approval. Along
about the second paragraph a knowing smile began
to curl the corners of Mr. Wilson’s mouth. His
companion heaved a sigh of profound satisfaction
and lolled back at peace with all the vasty universe.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s a pretty good start,” commented the
other handing the paper back. “Rather a choice
line of language, too.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You said something,” returned Jimmy. “I’ve
got a date with a couple of those words the next
time I run into a dictionary. I betcha old E. Cartwright
never gets wise. Nothing succeeds like the
little old salve.”</p>
<p class='c012'>When the meeting of Local No. 78 of the Publicity
Promoters’ Mutual Admiration Society adjourned
about ten minutes later, Tom Wilson inquired
if Jimmy was planning any more attacks on
the common enemy. The latter yawned in simulation
of great nonchalance.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, I’ve got a few ideas I hope to put into general
circulation before the day is over,” he remarked
casually. “Old Henry P. Inspiration has been
working overtime for me since I turned highbrow.
I’ll walk down to the theatre with you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy’s imagination indulged in grand and lofty
tumbling on the way to the playhouse. It also
soared and it may be stated, with due regard for
veracity, that it looped the loop and otherwise
comported itself in a highly sensational manner.
If he had voiced only half of the weird notions for
publicity that came to him, Tom Wilson would
have undoubtedly felt constrained to take him
firmly by the arm and lead him to an alienist.
Jimmy’s mind always worked that way when he
was particularly exalted. Usually there were one
or two of the wild ideas that surged within him
that could afterwards stand the cold light of reason
and that served as the basis of successful onslaughts
on the custodians of newspaper space.</p>
<p class='c012'>As the pair approached the big skyscraper that
housed the Star, Jimmy turned to his companion.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You don’t mind if I drop in here and correct an
ad proof, do you?” he asked.</p>
<p class='c012'>The other shook his head and they both entered
the business office of the newspaper. Directly confronting
them was a huge sign hung over the
counter. It carried this legend in large letters:</p>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>THE STAR’S APPLE PIE</div>
<div>CONTEST IS NOW ON</div>
<div>ENTER YOUR PIES EARLY</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy stood still and let the words sink in. They
bore to him a message of infinite hope. He leaned
over eagerly to the young woman behind the
counter.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, miss,” he inquired. “Where can I get the
dope on this pie contest?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Miss Slosson, the pie editor—right in the back
of the office here,” responded the girl.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy grabbed Tom Wilson by the arm and led
him towards the rear of the room.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m going to put it over on this sheet again just
for luck,” he confided.</p>
<p class='c012'>A sign reading, “Enter Your Pies Here,” attracted
them to a railed-off corner of the big office
room. A stout woman in the skittish forties, who
was dressed like an ingenue, looked up at them
from behind a table on which a number of luscious
looking apple pies reposed. On shelves on the wall
behind her, scores of other pies, all tagged, were
arranged.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is this contest open to anyone?” inquired Jimmy
bowing pleasantly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Certainly,” gushed the pie editor. “I’m so glad
to see gentlemen in this office. So many women
have been in since we opened this contest that it
makes one feel rather lonesome for the stronger
sex. Do you wish to enter a pie?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, m’am,” replied Jimmy promptly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, a gentleman cook,” Miss Slosson rattled on.
“How utterly adorable. Do you know I’ve always
felt that there was no reason on earth why a man
shouldn’t take a hand in the kitchen if he chose.
It’s only a foolish convention——”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Please, Miss Slosson,” broke in Jimmy drowning
out a chuckle from Tom Wilson which seriously
threatened to develop into a ribald laugh, “please—the
pie I want to enter wasn’t baked by myself.
It isn’t baked yet by anyone. I wanted to know if
you’d be interested in having a pie entered by
Madame Olga Stephano?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You mean the Russian actress who’s coming to
the Standard next week?” asked Miss Slosson.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, m’am,” replied Jimmy. “I’m her manager
and I just happened to see the announcement of
your contest and I remembered that she’s a great
cook and I thought perhaps you’d like to have her
enter in the pie stakes—that is, I mean I thought
you’d like to have her bake a pie and send it in.
Apple pies are her specialty. Mr. Wilson here and
myself ate one cooked by her own hand last summer
down at her country home on Long Island.
Remember that pie, Mr. Wilson?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy’s confrere was equal to the emergency.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I should say I did,” he quickly replied in his most
dignified manner. “How could I ever forget? It
was a poem, a real lyric bit of pastry.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“This is wonderful,” gurgled Miss Slosson, “perfectly
wonderful! It will give just the filip to this
thing that I’ve been after. We can challenge the
women of the home to equal the culinary efforts
of the women of the stage. You understand, of
course, that we must insist upon your entry being
bona-fide. We must have assurance that the pie
has actually been baked by Madame Stephano.
How will she be able to bake it and how will you
get it here? Our contest closes the day after tomorrow,
you know.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’ll be all right, Miss Slosson,” returned
Jimmy. “I’ll get her on the long distance phone
just as soon as I can get back to my hotel. She’s
playing in Chicago and she’s stopping with friends
in a private home. She’ll bake it right away and
I’ll get her to ship it right through by express.
She’ll be tickled to death. The home is everything
to her. Most domestic little woman I ever met.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Isn’t that too delightful,” responded the pie editor.
“Some of them are that way I suppose. I
wonder if you have any pictures of her that I could
use?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy turned a glance toward his companion in
which there was a gleam of triumph as he began to
unbuckle the leather case he always carried with
him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I think that it’s just possible I may have one or
two right here with me,” he said. “Yes, isn’t that
lucky? Do you care for any of these?”</p>
<p class='c012'>He handed a half dozen assorted pictures of the
great Russian actress across the table. Miss Slosson
picked out three of them.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll use one tomorrow morning with a long story
about her entrance,” she said, “and I’ll use one the
day after, too. Tomorrow I’ll run a picture of Mrs.
Jefferson Andrews, one of our society leaders who
has entered, right opposite Mme. Stephano’s. It’s
a perfectly darling idea. Thank you so much and
be sure and get her on the phone right away and
don’t forget that the contest closes at six o’clock
Thursday evening.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy didn’t say a word until they reached the
sidewalk. Then he turned to his friend.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, Tom,” he remarked, “you don’t mind waiting
a minute while I pin on the little old Croy de
Gerre thing, do you? What do you think about the
way I worked the bunk on Sarah Ann Slosson?
Ain’t she just the cutest thing?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Tom Wilson looked at him rather cynically.</p>
<p class='c012'>“How are you going to go through with it?” he
asked quietly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“How am I going to go through with it?” echoed
Jimmy. “Why I’m going to do just what I said I
was going to do. I’m going to call up the beautiful
star and get her to bake that pie or have someone
else bake it and I’m going to call up Jordan, the
company manager and have him tend to the shipping.
I’ll get her to write a little note in her own
handwriting about the joys of kitchen life that they
can use for a big splash.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You will, eh,” retorted Wilson. “You talk as
if you’d never met this Stephano person.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I haven’t,” admitted Jimmy. “I joined the show
by wire. This is my first town. They sent all the
dope on by mail and I’m going to duck back here
next week for the big pow-wow. What are you
getting at?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, nothing much,” replied the other, “only you
hadn’t better call her up or Jordan either. You say
you were hired by wire. Well, you’d be fired the
same way.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t get your comedy, Tom,” cut in Jimmy a
bit uneasily.</p>
<p class='c012'>His friend put a reassuring hand on his shoulder
and spoke to him earnestly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It isn’t comedy, old man,” he said quietly. “I
thought you knew all about that ladybird. Pie contests
aren’t in her line. Now don’t misunderstand
me. It’s great publicity. I know that and I’m for
it strong and any regular actress with any real
sense of values would be, too, but this Stephano
female isn’t that kind of a person. She looks after
her dignity more carefully than most women look
after an only child. I happened to be in Washington
last season when she let poor Charlie Thompson
out.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What did he do?” inquired Jimmy cautiously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, Charlie never started well. I could figure
that he wouldn’t last when I caught a flash of the
proof for his Sunday ad lying on Seymour’s desk
over in Baltimore the week before. It read, “Olga
Stephano in Ibsen’s, ‘A Doll’s House’—Bring the
Kiddies.” I took Charlie aside and killed that, and
I tried to put him wise, but he fell down in Washington.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’d he do over there?” persisted Jimmy anxiously.</p>
<p class='c012'>Wilson retailed at length the harrowing details
of the yarn that rang the death knell for Charlie
Thompson. Madame Stephano had played the capital
on Easter week and Charlie had planted a story
in all the Monday papers stating that she would
honor the egg-rolling festivities on the White
House lawn with her sacred presence. The story
further had it that she would sit on the grassy
sward atop a little hillock and personally autograph
one egg for each little child who came up to her.
It also set forth the delectable information that she
was prepared to subsequently roll these eggs down
the hill with her own fair hands for the delight and
edification of the young ones.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m reliably informed that when she saw that
story in print she had to be forcibly restrained from
jumping out of the eleventh story window of her
hotel,” concluded Wilson. “Charlie got his in Pittsburgh
that night. That egg rolling stunt isn’t any
worse than a pie contest.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy’s enthusiasm, during this narrative, had
slowly slipped from him like a discarded garment.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What do you think I’d better do, Tom?” he asked.</p>
<p class='c012'>“If I were you, Jimmy,” said his friend gently,
“I’d go back in there and call the whole thing off.”</p>
<p class='c012'>A hurt look crept into the eyes of the exploiter
of Madame Olga Stephano.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Gee, Tom,” he murmured. “I couldn’t do that;
little old Arthur S. Family Pride and I are still
buddies. I’ve got to go through, clean through. I just
couldn’t go back there and quit cold turkey before my
new found friend, Sarah Ann. Not in a thousand
years.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, there’s one thing certain,” responded the
other with a note of finality. “If you call up little
Olga or that trained manager of hers they’ll burn
you up.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy looked sadly at his friend.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ain’t it hell, Tom?” he opined grimly. “Ain’t it
just double-distilled hell?”</p>
<p class='c012'>He stood for a moment staring straight ahead
as if lost in abstraction. And then he found speech
again.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I won’t call either of ’em up,” he said firmly,
“but I’m going to let that story ride. There must
be some way out of the mess. Apple pie, eh? I
never did like it.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Nineteen</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Jimmy wasn’t able to concentrate on his regular
duties that afternoon. He had acquired an obsession
and he couldn’t shake it off. The problem of
how to make good on his promise to the gushy
Miss Slosson occupied his entire time and attention.
A more careless or indifferent wayfarer in the field
of theatrical publicity might have been content to
let that plump and pleasing person print her story
on the following day and let it go at that, neglecting
to follow the idea up and failing to redeem his
pledges. Jimmy knew a dozen of his confreres who
would just drop the thing on the principle that half
a loaf is better than no bread, but he wasn’t that
kind of press agent. He didn’t know it, but he was
really a great creative artist in his own sphere and
he got just the same inner satisfaction out of seeing
his ideas blossom into realities that a great painter
gets as he watches an imagined color harmony
spring into life on the easel before him, or that a
stylist thrills to when he achieves a perfect phrase
after a tiresome search for the inevitable word.</p>
<p class='c012'>The thought of apple pie haunted him. He just
had to have one delivered from Chicago for Miss
Slosson, but how to accomplish this feat without
notifying Madame Stephano or her manager worried
him. He didn’t know anyone in that city he
could trust to ship one on in time and he rather
figured that even if he did wire or telephone an
acquaintance there the latter would take the request
as a weird practical joke of some sort and pay no
serious attention to it.</p>
<p class='c012'>He found himself out in the street peering into
bakeshop windows and critically appraising the
more or less appetizing pastry displayed therein.
No use to buy one of those pies and attempt to
work it off on Miss Slosson, he thought. They were
all too obviously the apple pies of commerce, pale,
anaemic affairs bearing not even a remote resemblance
to the succulent product of the home kitchen.
His artist’s soul revolted at the thought of utilizing
one of them to further his nefarious designs.</p>
<p class='c012'>He exhausted the possibilities of the bakeries on
three of the principal avenues in the center of the
city and worked himself into a fine frenzy of despair
from which he sought relief in a motion picture theatre.
What was programmed as a Nonpareil Comedy
was unfolding itself on the screen when he entered
and just as he slid into a seat in the back row
he beheld a large object hurtling through the air
propelled by the principal comedian. It struck the
comedy villain of the piece full in the face with a
disastrously liquid and messy result.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My God, apple pie,” murmured Jimmy to himself
as he clambered out into the aisle, barking the
shins and stirring up the latent profanity of an
irascible looking man who had slipped into a seat
alongside him.</p>
<p class='c012'>He met Tom Wilson again that evening in the
hotel lobby and they went into dinner together.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t ask me about that story, Tom,” he pleaded
as they sat down. “I want to forget it for a little
while.”</p>
<p class='c012'>And he did. The dinner was excellent, the waiter
was alert and extremely polite and his companion
unbosomed himself of a flow of anecdotes that kept
him in a constant state of merriment.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mighty good dinner, Tom,” he remarked heartily
near the end of the meal, “and mighty fine
service.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The waiter cleared away the dishes and presented
the menu to Jimmy.</p>
<p class='c012'>“If I may be permitted, sir,” he said deferentially,
“I might suggest that the apple pie is excellent
tonight.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy pushed his chair back from the table with
such violence that he almost upset it.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You’ll be permitted to take a punch in the eye,
Mr. Fresh,” he said bitterly and then hastened to
apologize.</p>
<p class='c012'>His companion laughed uproariously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Still on your mind, Jimmy?” he inquired.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes,” retorted the other; “seems like we’re
hooked up to do a double act for life.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy had a sleepless night. Every time he
dropped off into a fitful slumber he was bothered
by a dream in which apple pie played a central part.
Once he dreamt that he was chained to a pillar in
a great room and that Madame Stephano was forcing
him to devour an apparently inexhaustible pie
which stood on a table and which she fed him with
an enormous long handled spoon. He choked so
hard on one spoonful that he awoke with a start.</p>
<p class='c012'>At the breakfast table he read Miss Slosson’s
promised story in the Star. It was all that the most
ambitious purveyor of publicity could desire. There
was a four column headline reading:</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i150.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c012'>Underneath was a big picture of a kitchen table
on each side of which a woman was shown busily
engaged in the culinary operations that usually accompany
the creation of a pie. The bodies of these
feminine figures had been sketched in by an artist,
but the heads were excellent half-tone likenesses of
Madame Stephano and Mrs. Jefferson Andrews,
society leader.</p>
<p class='c012'>One look at the lay-out simply added to Jimmy’s
misery. After that he just <i>had</i> to make good. He
strode out of the hotel determined to take a long
walk to see if he couldn’t clarify his mental processes
and get his imagination oiled up again. He
was so busy with his thoughts that he paid little
heed to the general direction he was taking and
presently found himself in a corner of the city with
which he was not familiar. It was a quiet residential
section and rows of modest homes of the bungalow
type lined both sides of the streets. There was
a little group of shops in a stucco building on a
corner and as Jimmy passed him he let his eyes
drift toward them in a desultory fashion.</p>
<p class='c012'>Presently he stopped directly in front of one
which bore this legend across its front: “The Buy-A-Cake
Shop—Home Made Dainties and Pastry.” A
pretty girl dressed in snowy white with a cloth in
her hand was lifting into the window one of the
most appetizing looking pies he had ever seen. It
was a single crust affair which had been baked in
a deep china dish of large proportions. The pastry
looked flaky enough to crumble at the touch and
was a color symphony in brown. As Jimmy gazed
entranced the girl set down a card in front of the
pie. It read: “Mother’s Own Apple Pie.” Opportunity
had knocked and Jimmy answered “present.”
He rushed into the shop.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll take that pie, miss,” he said eagerly. “I need
it in my business.”</p>
<p class='c012'>As the young woman turned to take it out of the
window Jimmy stopped her for a moment.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say,” he said, “I want to send that a long way
off and I want you to do it up so that it will stand
the journey—you know, keep fresh and everything
and not get mussed up.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I understand,” responded the girl in white. “I’ll
wrap a cloth around it to keep the air out, and I’ll
fix it up in a strong pasteboard box that I’ve got
here. Can you wait?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sure I can,” returned Jimmy. “That’s what I’ve
been doing for twenty-four hours. I’ll smoke a
cigarette outside. Knock on the window when
you’re ready.”</p>
<p class='c012'>A half an hour later he breezed into the office of
the Standard Theatre with a large bundle under his
arm and greeted Tom Wilson, who was looking
through the morning mail.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I hear you’ve got a date with an apple pie this
morning,” grinned his friend.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Here’s the party,” replied Jimmy setting the
bundle down on the table. “The kind that mother
used to make out in the summer kitchen under the
lilac vines. You were in for the first act. Do you
want to stick around and watch me take the curtain
calls at the finish?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sure,” returned Tom Wilson.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Then come on back stage,” said Jimmy, picking
up his precious bundle. “I want to interview
the house property man. I’ve got to have the
right kind of a production for this little stunt.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The property man proved equal to the occasion,
after explanations had been made. He brought out
a substantial wooden box and began to fill the bottom
of it with crumpled newspapers. Jimmy
stopped him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Wait a minute,” he said. “Never give ’em a
chance to have anything on you is always my motto.
These are Cleveland papers and this box is supposed
to come from Chicago. Maybe someone would notice
that. Put your coat on and dust around to that
out-of-town newspaper stand over on Superior Avenue
and buy a bunch of yesterday’s Chicago
papers.”</p>
<p class='c012'>When the property man came back a few minutes
later and began to crumple up the newspapers he
brought with him, Jimmy turned to his friend again.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not a bad little touch, eh, Tom?” he remarked.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Immense,” agreed the other sincerely. “I’ve got
to hand it to you. You certainly overlook no bets.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The pasteboard box containing the pie was carefully
placed on top of the bed of newspapers and
other papers were packed in tightly around and
above it. The lid was nailed solidly on and Jimmy
affixed an express label addressed to himself. When
the box had been carefully loaded on a push wagon
in charge of a small colored boy and was on its
way down Euclid Avenue toward the Star office,
personally chaperoned by the two press agents, the
conspiracy was completed.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>E. Cartwright Jenkins, dramatic editor of the
Star, was distinctly displeased with life as a whole
and with humanity in general that morning. His
professional dignity had been subjected to a series
of frontal and flank attacks of great violence for
nearly twenty-four hours and the final insult had
been handed out by the managing editor who had
just left the little cubby hole designated by a
painted sign as the “dramatic department.”</p>
<p class='c012'>E. Cartwright had read Jimmy’s oleaginous
epistle three times at the breakfast table the morning
before and had left his home in a fine glow of
self-approval. In fancy he walked upon the misty
mountain tops of high achievement until he reached
the Star office and then he found himself hurled
suddenly into the well known slough of despond.
Billy Parsons, the advertising manager, who met
him in the elevator, started it.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, old man,” Billy, said laughingly, “I see
they got to you for a home-run this morning with
all the bases full.”</p>
<p class='c012'>E. Cartwright had bristled at this and had expressed
himself as not comprehending the esoteric
significance of the allusion. Billy had then become
more specific.</p>
<p class='c012'>“They put it over on you,” he replied. “That
press agent fellow with Olga Stephano, I mean.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Put it over on me?” the dramatic editor had
returned. “I don’t exactly understand what you
mean.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, old dear,” Billy had sarcastically responded,
“it’s a worse case than I thought it was at first.
You’d ought to see a doctor.”</p>
<p class='c012'>E. Cartwright, who abhorred slang and those
who used it, had become quite indignant at this and
had insisted upon a clear explanation of what Billy
Parsons meant. The latter gentleman obliged him
with one. He pointed out, with great clarity, the
trick that Jimmy Martin had played on the astute
and dignified dramatic editor. He dwelt upon the
number of times the name of Madame Stephano
had been cunningly inserted into the correspondence
and proved that the whole affair was a carefully
calculated scheme for the exploitation of that lady.</p>
<p class='c012'>The blinders of self-esteem having thus been torn
from the eyes of the dramatic editor, that gentleman
developed a decided distaste for further discussion
of the subject and immured himself in his
cramped office where he devoted himself to bitter
rumination. Throughout the day his fellow laborers
in the field of journalism seemed to take a
malicious delight in playfully taunting him. On the
way home for dinner he had met the dramatic editor
of the rival Inquirer and that worthy had added to
his fury by remarking, with a twinkle in his eye:</p>
<p class='c012'>“That was a mighty interesting symposium on
Stephano you ran this morning, Jenkins.”</p>
<p class='c012'>At dinner he startled his sedate and shrinking
wife by launching into a profane and pungent diatribe
on the subject of press agents and announced
his determination to start a nation-wide movement
for their suppression and final extermination. He
declared, in loud and ringing tones, that nothing but
total annihilation of the entire tribe would at all
satisfy his wishes in the matter.</p>
<p class='c012'>The sting of the affair still rankled in his breast
when he came down to the office on the following
morning. When Nathan, the managing editor,
looked in on him he was viciously assailing the
dramatic page of a New York Sunday newspaper
with a large pair of shears and wishing for a moment,
as he clipped out items of theatrical information,
that it was one Jimmy Martin instead of
an innocent sheet of paper that he was attacking.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, Jenkins,” Nathan remarked casually, “I’ve
got a little request to make of your Miss Slosson
who’s running this damned pie contest,—it closes
today, you know,—is getting swamped downstairs
and has sent out an S.O.S. to this floor for assistance.
There’s nobody around yet but you. I wish
you’d drop down there for an hour or so and give
her a hand. Just as soon as one of the cubs show
up I’ll send him down to relieve you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>E. Cartwright reeled under this final blow to his
dignity. The ends of his iron-grey walrus moustache
dropped a full half inch as he looked up, bewildered.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Pie contest—Miss Slosson,” he mumbled. “What
could I possibly do in connection with that, or with
her?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, just help her and her assistant unwrap and
tag some of the entries,” replied Nathan in a matter-of-fact
tone, as he turned quickly to suppress a
smile and hurried out of the tiny room.</p>
<p class='c012'>E. Cartwright uttered a low moan expressive of
profound and abysmal woe as he slipped on his coat
and prepared to descend to Miss Slosson’s department.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>Jimmy and his fellow conspirator found Miss
Slosson in her office almost completely hidden by
parcels containing pies. They did not notice E.
Cartwright at first. That high authority on the
spoken and written drama was in the throes of unutterable
and indescribable mental anguish at a
table fifty feet away untying innumerable bundles
and humming a hymn of hate directed at newspaper
work in general and soulless managing editors
in particular.</p>
<p class='c012'>The small colored boy, grunting under the weight
of the wooden box, deposited the burden on the
table.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, there you are, Mr. Martin,” gurgled Miss
Slosson, coming forward and surveying the box
with interest, “and what have we here?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s the little old pie I told you I’d have the
madame send on,” replied Jimmy glibly. “She made
a mistake and sent it to the theatre. It just came
by express a half an hour ago right through from
Chicago.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Isn’t that perfectly wonderful,” rhapsodized the
pie editor. “What did dear Madame Stephano say
when you spoke to her over the phone?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy paused for a moment before he replied.
He had caught a glimpse of the Star’s dramatic
editor who had turned and was approaching them.
He clutched Tom Wilson’s arm.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What did she say,” he said abstractedly. “What
did she say? Why she said—she said she’d turn
down a Drama League luncheon and go right out
in the kitchen and slip into a gingham apron, and
believe me if you knew how much she thinks of
the Drama League, you’d know that was some concession.”</p>
<p class='c012'>E. Cartwright hadn’t seen them yet. He was
apparently almost oblivious of his surroundings as
he walked slowly towards Miss Slosson.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I realize that,” the pie editor was saying. “She
has a great, big, generous nature, I’m sure and to
think of her being so domesticated, too. Oh, Mr.
Martin, I suppose you know Mr. Jenkins, our dramatic
editor. He’s kindly volunteered to help me
in the closing hours of the contest.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy straightened up and assumed his most ingratiating
smile. He had met the distinguished
critic only once, several years before, and he was
fairly certain that he would not be remembered.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I had the honor of an introduction several seasons
ago,” he said suavely, “but it is possible that
Mr. Jenkins does not recall me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>E. Cartwright had given an unconscious start at
the sound of the name “Martin,” but he seemed to
have no conscious knowledge of Jimmy’s identity.
He smiled sadly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t seem to place you,” he remarked with a
woebegone attempt at civility.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mr. Martin is Madame Stephano’s advance manager,”
broke in Miss Slosson. “The dear madame
has entered a pie in our little contest through him.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Jenkins’ facial aspect underwent an instantaneous
change. He narrowed his eyes and corrugated
his brows and gave other external indications
of rapidly mounting wrath. Also his cheeks
paled, and it may be further stated that his rather
gangling frame became suddenly taut and vibrant.
He eyed Jimmy for fully ten seconds and then
turned to Miss Slosson.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It is my duty to inform you, madame,” he said
in a voice that was tense with emotion, “that this
person is a press agent who will use you for his own
selfish ends—a paid hireling of an unscrupulous
management which has only one purpose in mind—deceit
and rank trickery.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy started to expostulate, but Tom Wilson
gave him a vicious elbow jab which effectively cut
off any utterance on his part. Miss Slosson smiled
serenely.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t be too hard on him, dear Mr. Jenkins,”
she remonstrated. “He has been a great help in our
effort to raise the general tone of culinary excellence.
He represents a most estimable lady, and if
she gets a little publicity out of it she deserves it
after all the trouble she has gone to—baking a pie
with her own hands and sending it on here all the
way from Chicago. We mustn’t be too selfish.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I warn you, madame, that there is fraud here
some place,” persisted the dramatic editor, “downright
fraud and deception. These gentlemen have a
depraved talent for that sort of thing.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Nonsense,” broke in the pie editor beckoning to
an office boy whose job it was to open such entries
as were encased in substantial packages. As the
youngster assailed the box she chirruped on. “I’m
using another picture of the clear lady in tomorrow’s
paper, Mr. Martin, and I’ll announce the arrival
of her contribution in the opening paragraph.
I’m just crazy to see it. Quite a large box, isn’t it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes,” murmured Jimmy. “She certainly seems
to have done the thing up brown.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He was the picture of serene self-satisfaction as
he watched the lid coming off the box. The prospect
of triumphing over E. Cartwright a second
time filled him with an almost ecstatic joy.</p>
<p class='c012'>When the lid was removed Mr. Jenkins darted
toward the box and pulled out the tufts of crumpled
newspapers. He carefully unfolded one and looked
at it. Jimmy caught Tom Wilson’s eye at this
juncture and winked his off eye prodigiously. E.
Cartwright, upon observing the heading and the
date line in the paper, threw it down impatiently
and began nervously to chew the ends of his moustache.</p>
<p class='c012'>“We’ve got old George B. Grouch’s goat all
right,” confided Jimmy behind his hand.</p>
<p class='c012'>Miss Slosson untied the string and lifted out the
pie which was tightly swathed in a piece of old
linen. She undid the wrapping slowly while the interested
spectators gathered close around her. The
careful young woman in the bake shop had placed a
piece of cardboard over the top of the deep china
dish, and when this was removed Miss Slosson
positively bubbled with delight as she caught sight
of the golden brown crust of the wonderful pie.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It looks perfectly heavenly,” she remarked.
“Perfectly heavenly.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“A masterpiece,” broken in the hitherto silent Mr.
Wilson.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I told you she’d bake one that would win in a
walk,” was Jimmy’s contribution to the glad chorus
of acclaim.</p>
<p class='c012'>E. Cartwright didn’t have a word to say. He
stood with his hands on his hips watching the two
press agents with a look that still betrayed cynical
distrust.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Won’t you please put it over there on that little
table all by itself, Mr. Jenkins,” said Miss Slosson.
“It certainly deserves a place of honor.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Jenkins grunted and hesitated for a moment.
He was too chivalrous at heart, however, to refuse
to obey a lady’s behest no matter how much humiliation
he might suffer. He grasped both sides of the
pie-dish firmly, lifted it high in the air and began
to turn. Jimmy was looking at him with ill-concealed
delight. As he watched a look of intense
agony spread over the dramatic editor’s face. The
next instant that gentleman dropped the pie with a
sharp cry of pain.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It’s hot,” he screamed, “red hot!”</p>
<p class='c012'>The dish smashed into a hundred pieces on the
counter and the surrounding atmosphere was filled
with flying fragments of pie. Jimmy felt something
warm and sticky on his face and he noticed with
dismay that the front of Miss Slosson’s silk dress
was a sorry looking mess. Tom Wilson’s clothes
were smeared with debris, too. E. Cartwright was
wiping apple juice out of both eyes and uttering
words that caused the pulse beats of Madame
Stephano’s personal representative to diminish almost
to the vanishing point.</p>
<p class='c012'>“A pair of damned fakirs,” he shouted. “Baked
in Chicago, eh, and shipped on here by express! It
hasn’t been out of the oven an hour. Thought
they’d put one over on us again, did they? I know
’em. I know ’em.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The tragic climax of Jimmy’s little three act
comedy came with such unexpected suddenness that
he stood in the midst of the tumult and the shouting
like one transfixed. It was a rout, an utter and
complete defeat, the most disastrous and the most
humiliating of his career. In a flash he pictured it
becoming a classic anecdote that would be bandied
to and fro by his professional brethren in Pullman
smoking rooms and theatre offices for years without
number.</p>
<p class='c012'>He looked up and about him. Enemies were surging
toward him from all directions apparently bent
on his destruction. And then he remembered Tom
Wilson. He turned around. That worthy had departed
as if on the wings of the morning. The dishevelled
and distraught editor had apparently exhausted
his vocabulary of vituperation and was approaching
him with a savage look in his eye flanked
on one side by a distinguished looking gentleman
with a most authoritative manner who had rushed
to the scene from a nearby office. Jimmy realized
that it was no place or time for heroics. He turned
and fled precipitately down an unencumbered aisle
in the general direction of the open air.</p>
<p class='c012'>He caught up with Tom Wilson two blocks down
the avenue. That gentleman was still going strong
and seemed to need no pace-maker.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The first bet I ever overlooked, Tom,” he puffed
as he swung alongside. “What’ll we do?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’ll we do?” facetiously echoed the other,
gripping him firmly by the arm and dragging him
along. “Where’ll we hide, you mean?”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty-One</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>The name of Madame Olga Stephano was conspicuously
absent from the columns of the Star next
morning, but this fact passed unnoticed by one
James Martin, who had moved on to the next town,
unwept, unhonored and unsung. Gone was the
rakish tilt to his derby hat and vanished like the
roses of yesterday were the glad, eager look and the
jaunty bearing that usually distinguished him as one
upon whom fortune was wont to smile. Gloom was
in his heart and a sweet melancholy pervaded his
thoughts.</p>
<p class='c012'>A letter dated before Jimmy’s fatal first meeting
with Miss Slosson, awaited him at the theatre. It
brought tidings that did not have a tendency to
make life more interesting. It was from Jordan,
Madame Stephano’s personal manager on tour with
the company, and it summoned him back to Cleveland
for the opening performance on Monday night.</p>
<p class='c012'>“There are many matters on which Madame
Stephano and myself wish to consult with you,” the
letter ran, “among them being the methods of publicity
best calculated to further her interests as a
star. Our appeal, as you know, is to the intellectual
element in the community and you must carefully
avoid anything in the nature of cheap or sensational
stories or what are vulgarly known as
‘stunts.’ We will go into this at greater length
when I see you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m in for a spring canning,” Jimmy observed
to the manager of the theatre when he had finished
reading Jordan’s letter. “I wouldn’t mind that so
much if I could have got my exit cue in a blaze of
glory, but this thing of being bumped off on top of
an awful fall-down like that gets under the little
old epidermis.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Madame Stephano occasionally varied her Ibsen
repertoire with performances of plays by other
European dramatists. She had chosen a modern
Spanish tragedy for her opening in Cleveland, and
the first act was under way when a certain forlorn
looking figure slouched wearily into the manager’s
office and moodily inquired for Mr. Jordan. The
company manager, a thoroughly house-broken slave
to the temperamental caprices of the star, came
forward.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m Martin,” gloomily vouchsafed the visitor.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You are, eh?” responded the manager, acridly,
looking him over with indifferently concealed scorn.
“We’ve been waiting for you all day.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Who do you mean by ‘we’?” timidly inquired
the chastened press agent.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why, the madame and myself. We were curious
to see what you looked like. You seem fairly
intelligent.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Ordinarily Jimmy would have resented the implied
sneer in this remark and would have flared up
with an indignant rejoinder, but his spirit seemed
crushed to earth never to rise again. The surrounding
atmosphere was to him pregnant with impending
tragedy. He contented himself with a nervous
little laugh.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ve never been accused of it,” he said foolishly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course, we’ve heard about your ridiculous
fiasco last week,” went on Jordan. “You’ve certainly
let yourself in for it with the madame. I
wonder what you think this attraction is, anyway—a
circus side show or a cabaret? I’ll give you
credit, though. You had a cast iron nerve to attempt
such a thing with her. They say God looks
after fools and drunken folks. I hope He’s on your
side tonight.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy gulped before he made reply.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is she—is she a little annoyed?” he stammered.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, just a little,” laughed the other sarcastically.
“Just a wee bit put out. It’s hardly worth
mentioning, but if I were you I’d stick around on
this side of the footlights until after the show.
We’ve got eighteen hundred inside tonight and I
wouldn’t like to have to give the money back.
Something might happen if you went back stage.
I’ll see you later.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He slipped into an inner office and Jimmy was
left alone with his misery. He wandered out into
the brilliantly lighted lobby and sauntered into the
auditorium for his first view of the great actress.
She was on the stage as he entered and he peered
at her from behind the plush curtains which hung
back of the last row of seats. She was playing a
scene of brisk and brittle comedy and she moved
about the stage with all the lithe and lissome grace
of a beautiful tiger. She was making mordant
mockery of another woman in the play, assailing
her with wicked rapier thrusts of biting wit and
smiling a smile that struck terror into Jimmy’s
heart. There was a malicious gleam in her black
eyes that fascinated him. They seemed to his over-wrought
imagination like the nasty eyes of a serpent
he had once seen in a glass case in the zoo.
He shuddered with apprehension.</p>
<p class='c012'>As the curtain fell and the lights went up he
caught sight of the figure of E. Cartwright Jenkins
coming up the aisle. He effaced himself with
surprising suddenness by making for the nearest
exit door. It led to a fire-escape and he stood there
in the semi-darkness letting the cool night air
soothe his fevered brow and trying to collect his
befuddled train of thought. This last was impossible.
All that he seemed able to comprehend was
that he was in for the most disagreeable experience
of his fair young life, and that there was no
possible escape from it except in flight. He was
too good a soldier to run away. That much was
certain.</p>
<p class='c012'>When the lights went out again and the second
act began Jimmy resumed his place behind the curtains
once more and continued his observations of
Madame Stephano. It was in this act that the “big
scene” of the play occurred, the scene in which the
outraged wife reverted to the primitive passions of
her Andalusian peasant ancestors and made things
decidedly uncomfortable for her husband and several
other characters in the piece. It was full of
lines in which, as the old actor said, “one could get
one’s teeth into” and it may be stated that the
famous Russian-American actress played it for all
it was worth and then some. She erupted, exploded,
and otherwise comported herself in an extremely
violent and disturbing manner. As a final touch she
committed aggravated assault and battery on the
person of her husband and wound up the festivities
by making a general wreck of the drawing room in
which the scene was laid. Jimmy watched the early
proceedings with growing distrust. When the final
nerve-shattering moment arrived and the curtain
fell amid a wild uproar from the audience he found
himself sagging and he clutched a pillar for support.
A clammy perspiration bespangled his brow.
He felt decidedly sick and he longed for the comforts
of home and the quiet ministrations of some
gentle female who would soothe and mother him.</p>
<p class='c012'>In a daze, he sauntered out into the lobby again.
Jordan, who had just come back from back stage,
touched him on the arm.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The madame wishes to see you right after the
last act,” he remarked with a sinister smile.</p>
<p class='c012'>Only that and nothing more. He turned on his
heel and disappeared into the office. Jimmy leaned
against the wall and eyed with envy the noisy and
laughing throng of men who had come out for a
smoke between the acts.</p>
<p class='c012'>At precisely the same time an usher slipped down
one of the theatre aisles, touched E. Cartwright
Jenkins on the shoulder and handed him a note.
The critic adjusted his glasses and tore it open. This
is what he read:</p>
<p class='c018'>Mon Cher Jenkins:—</p>
<p class='c017'>May I not give myself the great pleasure of
meeting you for a moment after the play? I
have for many years been an admirer of your
great and most excellent genius, and I have
had what is called the longing to greet you.
I have had the hesitation of asking to see you
as I know you are a most busy man. Tonight
there is a matter of the so great importance
that I would speak to you concerning. Please,
my dear sir, do me this very high honor, I implore
you.</p>
<p class='c019'>OLGA STEPHANO.</p>
<p class='c015'>E. Cartwright smiled expansively. It may also
be remarked that he beamed and it may be further
added that he felt himself once more securely affixed
upon a pedestal in his personal Hall of Fame.</p>
<p class='c012'>The final moment of the Spanish play found
Madame Stephano sitting alone at the dinner table
in the heroine’s home. Fate and the fell clutch of
circumstance had resulted in her estrangement from
her family and from her friends and she had dined
alone. As the curtain fell, disillusioned and miserable,
she dropped her head in her hands and sobbed
bitterly.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy, having been assured that his nemesis
would be on the stage throughout the entire act,
had tip-toed back when the scene was half finished.
A hopeless fear gnawed at his vitals, but he tried
to put on a brave face. He watched the curtain
descend from a place in the wings and he saw it
rise again and again in response to tumultuous applause.
The actress, artist that she was, never
raised her head or stepped out of the picture.</p>
<p class='c012'>After the last call had been taken he heard the
orchestra strike up the exit march. Determined to
get the unpleasant business over with he stepped
through a door leading to the boxed-off scene. To
his utter bewilderment at precisely the same moment
there entered upon the scene from the opposite
side no less a personage than E. Cartwright
Jenkins. That gentleman’s buoyant air of self-confidence
and serene self-approval left him with an
abruptness that was startling. He stopped his
progress and stood rooted to the spot. The two
gazed at each other in amazement. E. Cartwright’s
lips moved, but he found himself inarticulate.
Swayed by a common impulse they both turned to
Madame Stephano.</p>
<p class='c012'>That lady still sat with her head in her hands. As
they looked she raised herself slowly and gazed
from one to the other. A nasty glint came into her
eyes. She sprang to her feet so suddenly that she
overturned the chair in which she had been sitting.
She swept a long arm out in front of her body and
shook it at them both in turn.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy instinctively put up his guard. E. Cartwright’s
face paled.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You have come, eh?” screamed Madame Stephano,
“you are both here. You have come to let
me tell you what I zink of you, eh?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Her voice was stridently intense and her whole
face was ablaze with uncontrolled fury. Her accent
was more marked than usual. She poured out her
words with a rapidity that was amazing.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You have come to let me tell you both zat you
have insult Olga Marie Stephano and zat Olga
Marie Stephano does not let herself be made ze
target for ze insult. You poor leetle fool, you”—this
to Jimmy—“you have meex my name up with
zis crazee pastree pie announcement. Am I to have
no deegnety. Is Olga Marie Stephano a cook or
an actress—wheech? And you, Meestaire Cartwright
Jeenkens, your paper it preent zis crazee
theeng, it preent it and it make me into one great,
beeg, foolish crazee—what you call?—what you
call, I say?—one great, beeg, foolish, crazee dam
fool. Eet ees too much, oh, much too much. Mon
Dieu, mon Dieu—eet ees too much.”</p>
<p class='c012'>She paused, her bosom heaving like a prima
donna’s after an aria. Her two visitors began to
back gingerly away. She looked from one to the
other and then there slowly broke upon her face, a
smile. It came like a blessed benison, and it presently
merged into a laugh, light and silvery at first
and then hearty and uncontrolled.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Gentlemen,” she said sweetly when the laughter
had died down, “excuse me, please, eef I make such
a laugh. You look so funee. Pardonnez moi, pardonnez
moi. Eet ees just my leetle joke, gentlemen,
just my leetle joke. I have here one grand
surprise for you. Voila!!”</p>
<p class='c012'>With all the easy grace and dexterity of a prestidigitator
she reached toward the table and plucked
a napkin off a dish in the centre. To the astonished
eyes of the press agent and the dramatic editor
there was revealed an apple pie that transcended
in appearance even that famous piece of pastry
which had met with such a disastrous end in the
Star office a few days before.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Will you not please take seats,” cooed the actress.</p>
<p class='c012'>Her hypnotized guests dropped into chairs.
Madame Stephano took the place between them.
At her side was a bowl filled with whipped cream.
Ample portions of the pie were anointed with this
by her own hands and served. A mouthful of the
delicious dessert proved to each its surpassing excellence.
The actress watched them eat with pardonable
pride.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Meestaire Jimmy,” she said, turning to the now
thoroughly flabbergasted press agent. “I have play
zis leetle scene to—what you call it?—to make
good. I have hear all about zat affaire of ze hot
pie. I have invite Meestaire Jenkeens to let heem
see zat I really can bake ze apple pie pastree. I
bake heem in ze hotel keetchen zis afternoon. It
was funee—zat hot pie, eh?”</p>
<p class='c012'>She had turned to E. Cartwright. Concealed
somewhere about his person that worthy gentleman
had a slight sense of humor which occasionally
revealed itself. This was one of the occasions. He
laughed heartily. When he left a few minutes afterwards
to write his review the entente cordiale had
been re-established between himself and Jimmy.
She had a way with her when she chose, had
Madame Stephano, and never were her wiles more
effectively utilized than a moment later when she
found herself alone with her press agent.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Meestaire Jimmy,” she purred. “I have for
many years been ze foolish woman. I have been
too much what you Americans so quaintly call—ze
up stage. I have tried to be oh, so deegnefied, so
very much deegnefied. I was mad wiz you, Meestaire
Jimmy, when I read about ze pie and when I
hear yesterday about ze catastrophe in ze newspaper
office I could have keel you. But I find I
have ze beegest advance sale I have ever had, and
I have change my mind. I am going to lose my
deegnety, Meestaire Jimmy. Go ahead, Meestaire
Jimmy, you tell ze lies and I will—what you call
him again—I will—make good.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, Madame,” responded Jimmy, whose self-assurance
once more enveloped him like an aura,
“do you know what you are?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, Meestaire Jimmy. What I am?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll say you’re one regular guy.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty-Two</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Madame Olga Stephano continued to be a “regular
guy” for the remainder of the season, but when
the summer rolled around Jimmy began to feel that
his enthusiasm for the cause in the future would
depend entirely upon an utterly sordid matter of
dollars and cents. He politely suggested that a
more obese emolument every Saturday night would
make all the difference in the world. Madame Stephano
exploded like a giant firecracker, shrugged
her shapely shoulders and walked away.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy thereupon decided to leave the uplift flat
on its back. He gave in his notice and the next day
a summons from Chester Bartlett reached him.
Bartlett offered him a place as press agent for his
newest musical comedy, “Keep Moving” at a salary
which exceeded the demand which Madame Stephano
had rejected by twenty-five dollars a week.
Jimmy went into executive session with himself and
considered a motion for a reconsideration of his
previously avowed determination to “keep all song
and dance shows for life.” It was passed by a
unanimous vote.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy smiled cynically one Saturday night in
the early fall as he stood on the Boylston Street
curb and watched a great throng of Boston amusement
seekers filing through the main entrance of
the Colonial Theatre. He was a backslider and an
apostate, but he was no longer conscious of any
scruples in the premises. His cynical aspect on this
particular occasion was the result of his contemplation
of the sign which outlined in incandescent
brilliance over the portals of the playhouse the
name of his new affiliation. It seemed to him to be,
for a moment, a symbol of his downfall and disgrace.</p>
<p class='c012'>His smile lost its hardness a minute later, however,
and became something a shade softer and
more human. A vagrant memory of a certain
young person from Cedar Rapids, Iowa,—a young
person whom Jimmy held in the highest regard—had
crossed his train of thought. It was pleasant
to think that Lolita Murphy was close at hand and
that when the performance was over he could walk
across the Common with her to her hotel, whisper
words of endearment, and bask in the effulgence
of the smiles which she so lavishly bestowed upon
him.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita, released from the oblivion of her drudgery
as a player in the Mt. Vernon Stock Company, still
cherished a great and overwhelming ambition to
climb the ladder of theatrical fame and carelessly
brush off the more or less distinguished celebrities
who, she felt, encumbered the topmost rung.</p>
<p class='c012'>She had reluctantly consented to accept a minor
position in the “Keep Moving” company at Jimmy’s
behest. The latter, filled with a pardonable desire
to be near her, had convinced her that a little musical
comedy experience was a necessary part of her
theatrical training and had persuaded Bartlett to
give her a microscopic part in the piece. In the first
act she separated herself from the ranks of the
chorus and remarked “Here comes the prince now.”
In the second act she was the hat-check girl in the
scene depicting the entrance to the dining-room of
the Carlton Hotel and was called upon to say “think
you’re fresh, don’t you?” to the principal comedian.
In the third and final act she was one of the bridesmaids
in the ragtime wedding number.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy, it must be confessed, had begun to
strongly suspect that Lolita would eventually find
out that the American stage would be able to worry
along without her assistance if the worst came to
the worst and that destiny had not selected her to
snatch the laurels from the brow of Mrs. Fiske.
That was one of the reasons which impelled him to
suggest that she associate herself with “Keep Moving.”
He didn’t want her to have any heart-aches
or artistic growing pains and he felt that she could
be spared much distress and disillusion if he were
on the sidelines at all times with words of cheer
and encouragement.</p>
<p class='c012'>A smart limousine drew up alongside him and
Chester Bartlett, “classiest” of musical comedy entrepreneurs
alighted, bringing with him something
of the flair of a Parisian boulevard as contrasted
with the Broadway manner which usually characterized
theatrical men in his particular field of endeavor.
University man, cosmopolite, patron of
amateur sports, big game hunter and intimate of
distinguished literary men in a half dozen countries,
Chester Bartlett was a unique figure in the
realm of twinkly-toes and tinkly music. As he came
towards Jimmy he seemed to exude such a suggestion
of perfect poise and supreme savoir faire that
the press agent felt for a moment as if he should
applaud.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hello, old man,” said Bartlett jovially. “What
song doth our troubadour sing next? You’ll have
to woo the muse in accents soft and low if you
expect to equal her performance this morning for
your young friend down at the Colonial. That
story had a tang that was delightful. Don’t you
think so?”</p>
<p class='c012'>The manager had intended to pierce Jimmy’s
Achillian heel and he had succeeded. If there was
anything that stirred the latent energies that lay
dormant in the press agent’s soul and filled him
with the fierce and fiery zest of a crusader it was
praise of a rival’s achievements. And that fellow
down at the Colonial had put one over that morning.
There was no gainsaying that. His story
about the group of chorus girls who had organized
a Back to Nature club and who had elected to live
in tents on the roof of one of the biggest hotels
in town had landed with a splash and an extensive
pictorial lay-out in every paper in town. Jimmy
had been nursing a grouch all day because he hadn’t
thought of the idea first. He didn’t permit any
outward signs of his annoyance to reach Bartlett,
however. He assumed his customary jaunty air of
sublime self-confidence in making reply.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll say it was pretty good,” he said, “but I’ve
got something about ready to spring that’ll send
that fellow down for the count in the first round.
I’ve got a date with this Emily Ann Muse party
tomorrow morning and when she’s listened to what
I’ve got to say she’ll jump through the paper hoop
at the word of command.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Bartlett laughed good-naturedly. Jimmy’s dazzling
metaphorical flights and picturesque similes
were a constant source of piquant delight to him.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You’re not quite as modest as the cooing dove,”
he remarked, “but you’re a darned sight more diverting.
I hope you’re going to get our stately
queens into the web you are weaving. I rather
fancy they’re on the war-path tonight after all the
notoriety their sisters in art got today.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t worry,” replied Jimmy. “They’re goin’
to be right in the little old center of the stage with
baby spot lights playin’ on ’em from all sides. There
won’t be anythin’ doin’ for about thirty-six hours or
so, though. I can’t open cold with this act. I’ve
got to call a rehearsal.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Bartlett chuckled and strolled into the lobby. As
Jimmy watched his trim figure disappear past the
door-man at the far end he experienced a sinking
sensation that was decidedly unpleasant. He suddenly
realized that in a moment of expansiveness
induced by jealousy of a hated rival he had drawn
a check against a sadly depleted bank account. As
a matter of plain, ungarnished fact he hadn’t a
notion as to how he was going to make good. He
had no more idea than Bartlett as to the nature of
the story that was to startle the natives in thirty-six
hours, but he was the original cheery optimist
and somehow he felt that the gods would be good to
him. He sauntered leisurely down the street in
quest of an inspiration.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>The walk across the Common after the performance
that night wasn’t quite as stimulating as it
generally was. Jimmy’s earlier saunter had failed
to result in the production of an idea that was even
remotely possible of materialization and he had
slowly let himself drop into one of those states of
moody pre-occupation which are usually fatal to
romance. Lolita, too, was strangely silent and detached
and their conversation at first was mono-syllabic
and intermittent. Presently they came to a
bench on the fringes of the park and sat down under
the sheltering branches of a great elm, as they
had for several nights past. Neither spoke for a
minute or two. Jimmy was the first to find voice.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I might have ’em organize a literary society and
have one of those Harvard ducks come over some
off afternoon and slip ’em a lecture,” he said abstractedly
as he stared straight ahead.</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita eyed him curiously. The speech was so
entirely disassociated from his hitherto brief remarks
that she couldn’t fathom its significance.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Who?” she asked.</p>
<p class='c012'>“There wouldn’t be time for that, though.” He
went on unheedingly. “He’d probably have to take
a couple of days to decide and another couple to get
his nerve up.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What are you talking about, Jimmy Martin?”
broke in Lolita impatiently.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy came to with a start and laughed
foolishly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Excuse me, girlie,” he replied. “I forgot that
you didn’t know anything about it. You see I ain’t
really here on this bench at all. I’m right out on a
sand-bar and the tide’s comin’ in. I’m goin’ to be
all awash in a little while if the life guards don’t
come out and pull a rescue.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t understand,” persisted Lolita.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It’s easy, girlie. I’ve got a case of goods to deliver
and the drivers are out on strike. In words of
one syllable, sweetheart, I’ve promised Bartlett that
I’m goin’ to back the peace pow-wow off on to the
inside pages on Monday morning and I’ve been
reachin’ out all night for ideas, but I don’t seem
to get anywhere at all, not anywhere at all.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is it something about some old story for the
papers or something like that that’s worrying you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy felt impelled to make a snappy rejoinder,
but his saner judgment prevailed. He checked himself
just in time.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s the general idea, girlie,” he said evenly
and lapsed into ruminative silence again.</p>
<p class='c012'>It was dark under the old elm and Jimmy couldn’t
see Lolita’s face. Had he been able to he would
have noted an expression on it that might possibly
have given him concern. It was an expression that
was a blend of petulance and of something wan
and a bit forlorn, a mixture of irritation and of
anguish that seemed perilously near the breaking
point. When she spoke again her voice was tremulous
and low.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Stories, stories, stories,”—she paused with every
repetition of the word—“that’s all you think about.
What good do they do? What’s the use of them
all? They don’t make anybody happier, do they?
They don’t mean anything, do they? They really
don’t, do they?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy slipped out of the silences instantly and
edged closer to Lolita. He tried to take her hand,
but she drew it away quickly. He was bewildered
by her attitude and there was a shade of genuine
agitation in his voice as he made reply.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the matter, honey? Didn’t you like that
little yarn and the two column picture of you the
Journal ran the other morning? That sheet’s got
a circulation of over four hundred thousand. Think
of all those people readin’ about you and seein’ your
picture and talkin’ about you. Didn’t that make you
happy? I hoped it would. That’s what I got ’em
to use it for.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Lolita touched him gently on the arm.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I didn’t mean to be nasty, Jimmy,” she said. “I
really didn’t and I hate to tell you the truth, but
you’d really ought to know it. Do you want to?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Fire ahead. You don’t even have to blindfold
me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“It didn’t make me as happy as you’d imagine.
There wasn’t a single soul that saw it who knew
anything about who I was or anything except the
folks in the company, and they were all jealous
because you’d put it in. I didn’t mean any more to
that four hundred thousand than the printer that
set up the type. Oh, no, I didn’t. You can’t tell
me.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Let me tell you something, Jimmy. Old Doc
Crandall, the city editor of the Cedar Rapids Democrat-Chronicle,
wrote a piece once about the graduation
exercises at the Central High School and he
said that I recited with ‘fine expression and wonderful
emotional control.’ There were only two lines
about me, but those two lines made me happier than
a whole page in Boston would,—yes, or New York
either. Do you know why?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy, whose ideals were crashing down to
earth, sat entranced at Lolita’s turbulent outburst.</p>
<p class='c012'>“No,” he replied. “What’s the answer?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Because nine out of every ten people that read
those two lines either know me to speak to or by
sight or knew mother or dad and what was printed
meant something to them about someone who
meant something to them. That’s kind of mixed
up, I guess, but you know what I’m trying to say.
What do I mean to anyone here or in New York
or any place else here in the east? Nothing—nothing
at all, Jimmy—just nothing at all.”</p>
<p class='c012'>She wound up at a helter-skelter pace that left
her quite out of breath and had it not been for the
sheltering elm Jimmy might have noticed that she
was biting her lip when she paused and that she
was holding herself in with a mighty effort. He
again tried to take her hand, but she would have
none of it.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Girlie,” he pleaded, making a clumsy attempt
at gentleness, “you mean a whole lot to a certain
party who’s pretty close at hand. You’ve just naturally
got the Cedar Rapids blues again tonight,
honey, but you’ll be all right in the mornin’, all
right in the mornin’, honey. Take it from me. I
don’t lose many bets.”</p>
<p class='c012'>But Lolita had lapsed into silence again and
didn’t reply. Presently she complained of being
chilly, got up wearily and begged to be taken home.
At the door of her hotel Jimmy made one last
effort to lift her out of her mood.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Paper says fair and warmer tomorrow, honey,”
he said. “Maybe we can hire a little old gas wagon
and get out among the golden rod and the daisies, if
I ain’t too busy. Would you go?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Maybe,” replied Lolita listlessly. “Good night.”</p>
<p class='c012'>And she was gone. Jimmy gazed after her despairingly.
Gloom entered his soul and made preparations
to settle down for the night.</p>
<p class='c012'>A strident voiced newsboy turned the corner just
then shrilly crying the early or “bull-dog” edition
of one of the Sunday papers.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Hi, Journal,” he called, “Sunday Morning Journal—full
account of “Billy” Williams’ sermon on
booze and tobacco—hi, Journal—all about “Billy”
Williams’ campaign—full account of both meetings—box
score world’s champion games—hi, Journal.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy mechanically bought a paper. A screaming
headline caught his glance:</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i184.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c012'>Only that and nothing more did Jimmy read. The
strained look slowly left his face and was replaced
by an expression indicative of profound satisfaction.
Even Lolita was forgotten for the nonce. The Big
Idea had just loomed up in the offing and was heading
straight for port.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty-Three</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>The Rev. “Billy” Williams at that particular moment
occupied the center of the stage in Boston,
and there was no immediate prospect of anyone
else usurping that place inasmuch as his local engagement
had six weeks more to run. He was a
sensational evangelist whose campaigns on behalf
of old-fashioned religion and of old-fashioned
morals had stirred up the profoundest depths of
human feeling in dozens of communities in all parts
of the country and had brought tens of thousands
of men and women in all stations of life to an emotional
crisis in which they pledged themselves anew
or for the first time to a faithful adherence to the
fundamental tenets of Christianity.</p>
<p class='c012'>His methods were so bizarre and so baroque and
he was such a past-master of the art of publicity
that he always afforded first-page “copy” whenever
he arrived in a city. His meetings were held in
great specially constructed tabernacles seating ten
thousand or more persons and were conducted with
a splendid sense of dramatic values for he was a
keen psychologist and he knew the things best calculated
to move and sway great groups of people.
The judicious and the ultra-dignified who came to
grieve or to sneer were usually carried away in a
tumult of emotional excitement and were literally
swept off their feet by the cumulative appeal of all
his cunningly devised plans to “get to their innards,”
as “Billy” himself was wont to phrase it in his own
inelegant, but singularly effective style.</p>
<p class='c012'>Not even Jimmy Martin himself had such a vocabulary
of arresting and original slang as “Billy”
Williams. His sermons reeked with it when he
felt that the occasion warranted its use and even
the most conservative of clergymen who at first
frowned at such language in the pulpit were eventually
obliged to admit that it had its place in a
white-hot appeal made to a vast miscellaneous audience
seated in an auditorium as long as a city
block, an audience which would unquestionably remain
unmoved if preached to in the chaste and
austere phrases of the conventional pulpit orator.
The downright sincerity of the man and the compelling
force of his powerful personality turned
scoffers into ardent followers and made him indeed
a mighty power in any city which he honored with
a visit.</p>
<p class='c012'>Early on the Sunday evening following the events
hitherto chronicled a great crowd surged about the
entrances to the huge wooden auditorium which
sprawled over a lot in the environs of the city. It
was a heterogeneous crowd not dissimilar in its
composition to the other crowds which flocked in
the summer to the great white tents which the
circus pitched on this very spot. Most of those
comprising it were quiet and orderly—apparently
a little self-conscious of the necessity for decorum—but
there were, here and there, a group of noisy
and irrepressible Spirits, all of them young, who
seemed to regard the occasion as one affording unequalled
opportunities for a lark. The doors had
not yet been opened for the evening service and
the throng grew to enormous proportions with
each passing minute.</p>
<p class='c012'>An acute observer in an aeroplane circling over
the particular group which awaited entrance on the
north side of the tabernacle would have noticed a
little cluster of femininity in the front ranks which
stood out vividly from the rather dull and neutral
tone of the rest of the crowd like some brilliant
pattern woven into a field of grayish tinge.</p>
<p class='c012'>There were rich purples, bright reds and gay
greens in this little oasis of color and from it there
arose light laughter and frivolous chatter, the
echoes of which carried to the shocked ears of
those more serious minded persons who patiently
waited on its edges for the onrush which always
followed the opening of the doors. Jimmy Martin
stood in the direct center of the oasis in his capacity
as Personal Custodian of the Big Idea and tried
to soothe those turbulent spirits among the members
of the chorus of the “Keep Moving” company
who were beginning to chafe at the delay.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, young fellow,” drawled a svelte creature
whose tawny hair glowed like an aureole as the last
rays from the setting sun caught and kindled it, “I
haven’t stood as long as this since I quit cloak and
suit modeling to decorate the drama. Where do
you get this stuff anyway? What do you think we
are—a troupe of trained seals?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s what I say,” broke in a young person
with the soft eyes of a Rubens’ seraph. “I called
off a perfectly good dinner date with a dandy little
Harvard rah-rah just because Bartlett made a personal
matter out of this thing and here we are
standing around with the other hicks waiting for
the side-show to begin and wasting perfectly good
and valuable time. Press agents always did get my
goat.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mine, too,” remarked a languid houri whose
pallid face was set off by a pair of enormous green
earrings. “In New York I wouldn’t think of standing
in line for a chance to see the signing of the
Declaration of Independence with the original cast,
and here I am getting corns on my tootsies waiting
to listen to a fellow that anyone can hear any time
for nothing at all. Really, girls, I don’t think any
of us are in our right minds.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I know it’s a nuisance, ladies,” said Jimmy
urbanely, “but when you see the smear that I think
we’re goin’ to land in tomorrow’s papers you’ll be
thankful that you stuck along. I want you all to
sit in a group by yourselves and don’t any of you
try to be too shrinking. I want the newspaper
bunch to find you’re there without my tellin’ ’em.
Then it’ll look as if your bein’ there is more on the
level than otherwise. When it comes to the singin’
I want all of you, please, to cut in for all it’s worth
just as if Bartlett was sittin’ down in front at a
dress rehearsal.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“When the trail hittin’ begins just sit tight and
register intense interest in the proceedings. If any
of you laugh it’ll spoil the whole arrangement. I
was at one of these meetin’s out in Denver a couple
of years ago and when those folks start comin’
down the aisles believe me it ain’t anything to get
funny about. If any of the newspaper crowd get to
you when it’s all over I want whoever does any
talkin’ to say that you’re all profoundly impressed
with everything and all that, and that you’re all
comin’ again tomorrow afternoon and whenever
else you get a chance.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy didn’t heed the sarcastic reception with
which his final words of instruction were greeted.
His eyes were fixed admiringly for the moment on
Lolita Murphy who stood near him talking earnestly
to one of the “ponies.” To him she never
looked prettier than she did in the simple little
tailor-made suit and the trim black velvet toque
which she had worn on the automobile ride they
had taken together that afternoon, an excursion
which seemed to have wiped out all traces of the
“Cedar Rapids blues,” and which had left her smiling
and happy again. She had protested a little
against participating in the staging of Jimmy’s Big
Idea, but had finally yielded to his persuasive arguments
and here she was now, shining and radiant
in contrast with her more elaborately attired and
highly artificial sisters.</p>
<p class='c012'>Just then a murmur swept through the crowd;
attendants at the entrance shouted “easy, please,
everyone,” and Jimmy and his group of more or
less merry chorus maidens were caught in a whirling
current of humanity which shot them through
the door, rumpled and almost panic-stricken, and
landed them at the head of a long aisle bisecting
the huge empty auditorium which yawned before
them, ablaze with lights and festooned with flags.
The press agent was the first to collect his thoughts.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Everybody make a dive for the front seats,” he
shouted. “Follow me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The “Keep Moving” girls couldn’t do anything
else. The surging crowd pressed them forward and
they took the aisle on the run to avoid being
knocked down. They all managed to get seats in
the front rows where hand-mirrors, powder puffs
and lip sticks soon came into play to the horror
and stupefaction of many in the great choir of a
thousand which occupied places on the platform directly
in front of them.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy, having successfully performed his function
as counselor and cicerone, was careful to seat
himself a considerable distance away on the other
side of the aisle where he effaced himself as much
as possible by betraying an intense interest in a
hymn book which was proffered him by an usher.
He knew that it wouldn’t do for him to be seen in
close proximity to his charges by any of the keen-eyed
reporters who were even now gathering at
the press table underneath the reading desk in the
center of the platform.</p>
<p class='c012'>One of these reporters, a curly-headed youngster
with laughing eyes, turned his chair around to get
a comprehensive view of the thousands of persons
who were jostling each other in the center and side
aisles as the vast building rapidly filled up. He
caught a glimpse of the numerous facial toilettes in
progress in the front rows, ran an appraising eye
over the entire group; smothered an unchurchly
chuckle and nudged his nearest companion. Presently
the entire press table was abuzz with whispered
comment as the identity of the visitors was
established.</p>
<p class='c012'>While the crowd was still noisily filing into the
rear rows “Billy” Williams’ principal assistant put
in an appearance on the platform and was loudly
applauded by scattered groups who were promptly
quieted by the ushers who moved quickly up and
down the aisles, ready at a moment’s notice, to insist
upon the preservation of the dignities. The
assistant was a jovial looking man with an infectious
smile. He held a cornet in one hand and he
raised the other to command the attention of the
great throng. A hush fell over the assemblage and
presently the strains of “Onward, Christian Soldiers”
cut through the silence with penetrating incisiveness.
The effect was electric. When the cornetist
had finished he turned swiftly and at precisely
the same instant the thousand singers on the platform
rose to their feet and burst into song. Another
signal and the audience stood up. In response
to a pleading gesture from the man with the smile
a voice was raised here and there in unison with
the chorus. He pleaded pantomimically once more
and, as if by the exercise of sheer hypnotic control,
he presently cajoled the great crowd into singing.</p>
<p class='c012'>From that moment he held the audience in the
hollow of his hand and played with it. Now he
would have everyone on one side of the auditorium
singing. Then he would be challenging those on
the other side to outdo their competitors. Now it
was the women who would be asked to sing alone.
Next it would be the men. The choir would be
asked to sing a verse. Then the entire audience
would be called upon to follow them. By the time
he had finished with those preliminaries he had the
throats of everyone present in such thorough working
order and the feeling of self-consciousness had
been so dissipated that when he eventually demanded
“a combined effort that will shake the
gates of glory” the result was inspiring to the last
degree.</p>
<p class='c012'>As the final words of the final chorus were
shaken out by ten thousand throats in one last
concentrated burst of glad song the Rev. “Billy”
Williams stepped through a door on the side of the
platform and quickly crossed to the reading desk.
No playwright, craftily scheming for a “good entrance”
for a stage star, could ever have contrived
a situation or a moment more pregnant with dramatic
effectiveness or more tense with emotion.
The last word of the hymn had died down and the
air seemed to still throb with the dying echoes as
the evangelist reached to the center of the platform
and held up his hand in a gesture which was an
invitation to prayer. Ten thousand heads were
bowed in humble submission to his implied command,
and in a voice which breathed sincerity and
fine feeling he offered up a simple supplication beseeching
the blessing of Divine Providence upon all
assembled and upon himself, an unworthy instrument
of a higher Power.</p>
<p class='c012'>He was a stockily built man with a rugged and
rather rough-hewn face. Blue eyes were set in it
below bushy brows that gave him, in moods of intense
earnestness, a somewhat ferocious aspect.
They were eyes that now glowed with tender
warmth, that grew hard or relentlessly cold next
moment or that would ever and anon gleam and
glint with merriment. They were the most expressive
of his features. They mirrored his moods with
uncanny accuracy. The movements of his squat
and chunky frame were quick and darting when he
was in action and even when he was in repose—which
was seldom—he seemed to be literally seething
with energy beneath the surface. When he permitted
himself the luxury of letting down the inhibitive
barriers which ordinarily held this energy
in check he became a dynamic force that was almost
irresistible in its onslaught on the emotions.</p>
<p class='c012'>The prayer over, another hymn was sung under
the magnetic leadership of the assistant, while
“Billy” Williams pulled his chair over the edge of
the platform and fraternized with the reporters as
was his custom. Jimmy Martin, who was watching
the proceedings circumspectly over the shoulder of
a prim looking maiden lady who stood next him
and whose hymn book he was sharing in a pretense
of devotional interest, noticed that the curly headed
newsgatherer was whispering to the evangelist and
directing the latter’s attention to his charges in the
front rows.</p>
<p class='c012'>He saw “Billy” Williams look interestedly at the
young women and then smile. It was such a
healthy, wholesome, frank smile that it was instantly
returned by the “Keep Moving” girls and
Jimmy found himself taking note of the fact that
even the most utterly blase members of the group
seemed to drop their affected air of supreme world-weariness
for a moment and become human once
more. He noticed the evangelist turn away from
the press table as the final chorus of the hymn was
sung by everyone in the auditorium and look up
towards the flag-bedecked rafters for a half minute
or so as if pondering on an idea that had occurred
to him. As the great audience seated itself he
sprang to his feet with an air of decision.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My friends,” he announced in a voice which
swept to the farthest corners of the vast building,
“I have an announcement to make that may disappoint
some of you. I regret this but my duty
is as clear to me as the unclouded noon-day sky. A
Divine opportunity for service presents itself to me
tonight and I would be recreant to my ideals if I
did not embrace it. I had intended to preach to
you on some of the lessons which I draw from the
disgusting exhibition of prize-fighting which was
tolerated in this city during the past week and I
had announced that I would tan the hides of some
of the city officials responsible for its sanction, and
that I would nail those hides on the door of the
house wherein abideth decency and honor.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I have changed my plan, my friends, not because
of any fear of the skulking swine whom I
had intended to attack. Their turn on the griddle
will come tomorrow night. Instead of preaching on
that theme I have decided to devote this evening’s
discourse to an attack upon the pernicious evils of
the modern theatre,—that hell-hole, that cesspool,
that slimy sink of iniquity and despair. Bear with
me, my friends, for tonight I may be the humble
medium by means of which the truth may be
brought not only into your own lives, but into the
lives and into the hearts of those more directly
connected with this unholy institution for the degradation
of mankind.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He paused for a moment while a whispered buzz
of comment spread through the auditorium. Jimmy
Martin, who had sat fascinated throughout these introductory
remarks and who could hardly credit
the validity of his own auditory sensations, darted
an apprehensive glance at the chorus girls. A few
were registering haughty and contemptuous disdain
and were sniffing the circumambient air. The majority,
however, seemed gifted with a saving sense
of humor and were smiling good-naturedly. Jimmy
sighed with relief. It was pleasant to think that
the Rev. “Billy” Williams was unconsciously playing
into his hand so successfully that the story
which was now certain to develop would take on
an added value and would unquestionably be featured
in the headlines.</p>
<p class='c012'>There was another hymn and then the evangelist
plunged into the body of his discourse. It was a
sermon that he had already delivered with sensational
success in no less than twenty-three states.
It was a fine example of unrestrained denunciatory
oratory and it ranked with his other internationally
famous sermons such as “Dancing—the Devil’s Device
for Drugging Decency”; or, “Modern Women’s
Attire—Satan’s Trap for the Unwary Male.” He
traced the history of the drama from the flourishing
days of its great popularity in ancient Greece
down through twenty-five centuries to the present
day and on the way he stopped to excoriate a long
line of playwrights from Aristophanes to the writer
of a salacious bed-room farce then current in Boston.
He denounced the comedies of Terence at
which ancient Rome laughed; the immoral plays
which had their day during the Restoration in England
and the modern American musical comedy with
equal vehemence and with that complete absence
of a sense of proportion which always characterizes
the propagandist and the special pleader.</p>
<p class='c012'>He admitted, and rather gloried in the admission,
that he had not been in a theatre in twenty-five
years and declared that he would sooner be
struck dead than ever cross the threshold of one
again. On top of this assertion he declared with
convincing sincerity, that “I know whereof I speak
when I say to you that never before in the history
of the civilized world has the theatre quite so flagrantly
flaunted its indecencies in the face of an outraged
public as at the present time.” He attacked
the defenseless moving picture and consigned it
and its progenitors and abettors to the exterior
darkness.</p>
<p class='c012'>Then he grew sentimental and his voice, which
had been pitched in a high key, became touched
with something soft and tender. He gave his idea
of what he felt to be the blasting and devastating
effect of the world of the theatre upon a girl who
might had known the restraining influences of a
simple home in her childhood and he presented a
picture of the sordid contacts she would be forced
to make in seeking a career upon the stage. Jimmy
winced at the unreality of this picture; its unfairness
and its gross exaggeration, but there was no
doubting that the speaker himself believed it to be
gospel truth and that he presented it with such convincing
sincerity that the vast majority of those
present were all aquiver with moral indignation at
the charges he made. He let his voice drop to a
lower tone, and there was the vibrant tremor of a
deeply-felt emotion in it as he spoke, crouching
over the reading desk and bending his head forward
in an attitude of eager expectancy.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mayhap there is such a girl here tonight, drawn
hither by the elusive whisperings of a conscience
which was developed at the knee of a saintly mother
and under the fond paternal care of a loving father.
Perchance she comes, like so many of these poor
butterflies of the stage, from a home in a small
town untouched by the tinsel glitter and the tawdry
allurements of the pleasure-ridden metropolis. Perhaps
she was caught defenseless in a moment of
passionate revolt against what she, poor foolish
thing, felt to be the cramping restrictions of her
environment, and perhaps she was swept off her
feet into the current that leads swift and ever
swifter to destruction.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Perhaps she said good-bye to the peaceful little
town, to the heart-broken mother and to the tender,
patient father who was trying so hard to stay the
flood of tears surging in his kindly eyes; perhaps
she went to the big city and courted the muse of
tragedy or of comedy and found, for a time, a
specious joy in the glare and brilliance of the footlights.
Perhaps there came to her a measure of
success in the new realm of pleasure and mayhap
she was carried out of herself, out of her real self,
into a lotus land of dazzling splendor.”</p>
<p class='c012'>His voice grew more tremulous now. He leaned
forward and seemed to be speaking directly to the
little group of girls in the front rows. Jimmy
noticed that they were the focus point of observation
on the part of the reporters.</p>
<p class='c012'>“If there are any such girls here tonight,” pleaded
the evangelist, “let me hold out to them the helping
hand of service. Let me beg them, with all the sincerity
of my nature, to give heed to the warning I
have sounded. Let me ask them to picture the little
home back yonder with the empty chair that’s always
waiting for the daughter who has gone out to
beat her fragile wings against the candle’s flame.
Let them picture again the little mother with the
soft, grey eyes. They were so bright and lively
once, but now there is an anxious look in them.
There is sadness in her heart, too, a heavy sadness,
but she tries to be brave for the sake of him who
sits so gloomily by the fire-place and aches for the
touch of a vanished hand and the sound of a voice
that is gone.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Let me entreat you to bring the roses back to
mother’s pale cheeks again if there are any of you
here. Let me plead with you, out of a full heart,
to bring the laughter back to father’s lips and the
smile back to his care-worn face. Let me urge you
to fly from the stifling air of the playhouse back
to the clean, open spaces where the fair winds
blow, where love and tender solicitude await you
and where life is real and earnest and not an empty,
foolish dream. We will pray for guidance and when
we have finished I will ask all those who wish to
be consecrated anew to come down the aisles and
clasp my hand in a pledge of fealty to the service
of Him whom they have forgotten for a while in
the fretful rush of selfish living. Let us pray.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Down on his knees went the Rev. “Billy” Williams
and as thousands in the great audience bowed
their heads once more he prayed fervently that
everyone present who was unworthy at heart might
see the light and embrace again with the simple
faith of childhood the eternal truths of religion.
The “Keep Moving” girls bowed their heads with
the others, and if Jimmy had been a little closer
he might have noticed that here and there a rouged
face was stained with tears and that hard lines
around the mouths of one or two of the bolder
spirits had been softened as if by some subtle
alchemy beyond the ken of mortal mind.</p>
<p class='c012'>The prayer over, the evangelist sprang to his
feet and raised his hand. The great choir, in instant
response to his signal, began to softly sing,
“Lead, Kindly Light.” At a perfectly timed moment
toward the end of this most exquisite of
hymns his voice sounded above the pianissimo
phrasing of the massed singers and carried, with
penetrating clarity, to the far end of the hushed
auditorium.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Won’t someone make the break with the past,”
he exhorted. “Won’t someone be the first to lead
the strayed sheep into the vineyard of the Lord?”</p>
<p class='c012'>A tall, thin man with scraggly white hair and a
pale ascetic face stood up about fifteen rows back
from the platform and slid out into the nearest
aisle. He bent his head as if breasting a heavy
wind and his cheeks suddenly flamed at the consciousness
of the thousands of eyes which were
turned on him as he slouched awkwardly down
toward “Billy” Williams, who had stepped from the
platform and who was now standing at the end
of the aisle. The evangelist reached out his hand
and the tall man grasped it as he made a quick dive
for a handkerchief and dabbed at his face. He
mumbled something under his breath.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t be ashamed to cry, brother,” said the evangelist,
putting his arm affectionately around the
other’s shoulder. “Tears at a time like this are
drops of God’s dew that will wash your soul as
clean as morning roses.” And then he addressed
the audience as the last notes of the hymn were
sung by the choir. “Who’ll join our brother at the
mercy seat,” he shouted. “Who’ll be the next to
heed the glad tidings?”</p>
<p class='c012'>There was a movement and a scraping of feet in
every section of the building and presently men and
women of all ages and all conditions began coming
down the aisle to be greeted by “Billy” Williams
and shunted aside into the open space designed for
the reception of converts. There they stood, most
of them with drooped heads and many of them
crying. There were a few who held their heads up
and their shoulders back and who stood four-square
to all the curious glances directed toward them. On
their faces were brave smiles and there was about
them the air of spiritual elation that was inspiring
to those who noted it.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy Martin’s emotions had been subjected to
a severe grilling during the concluding portion of
the preacher’s sentimental appeal and he had lost
a little of his self-reserve and customary complacency
during the prayer. When the first of the converts
came struggling down the aisle and had begun
to weep a little, the press agent found himself,
for the first time in many years, struggling to hold
back the tears that came unbidden into his own
eyes. When the others had followed the spell was
broken and he looked furtively about to see if anyone
had noticed that he had been trembling on the
verge of weakness. He thought once more of the
mission which had brought him into this alien atmosphere
and he directed his attention to the benches
occupied by the young women for whom he was
acting as a somewhat remote escort.</p>
<p class='c012'>The converts were coming down the aisles now in
little groups of three and four and the evangelist
was keeping things at fever heat with loudly voiced
exhortations. He leaned toward the “Keep Moving”
girls and made a personal plea to them.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Isn’t there someone here in this group of girls
who has seen the light tonight,” he inquired. “Won’t
someone among you step out here and take my
hand and get right with her soul again?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll say I will,” Jimmy heard Natalie Nugent,
the girl with the pallor and the green earrings, say
as she stood up and walked toward “Billy” Williams
who gripped her outstretched hand and directed
her to a position alongside him. The press
agent looked at the other girls and noticed that
they were watching her with fascinated interest.
Somehow he couldn’t quite grasp what it all meant.</p>
<p class='c012'>“God bless you, sister,” the evangelist shouted.
“Won’t some of your friends join you?” He
plunged again into the vernacular, choosing, as always,
the effective moment. “It’s your cue, girls,”
he pleaded. “The curtain’s up and the call boy is
knocking at the door of your hearts. Don’t delay.
You can’t tell what moment the Great Stage Manager
will ring down for the last time. It may be
tonight. It may be tomorrow. Don’t be caught unprepared.
It’s a blessed opportunity, girls. Don’t
pass it up. For mother’s sake, girls, for mother’s
sake.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Three other girls got up now and came forward.
Jimmy gave an audible gasp of amazement. A fifth
and a sixth moved into place beside the others and
then Lolita Murphy stood up, hesitated for just a
moment, caught “Billy” Williams’ warm human
smile and stepped briskly forward. A half dozen
others followed. The remainder sat with bowed
heads. Those who had left their places stood in a
little circle by themselves, clustered directly about
the beaming evangelist. He made a last plea for
converts to the vast audience and a stray dozen or
more men and women, whose moral courage had
not been quite strong enough to force a decision
at the beginning, bobbed up here and there and
moved toward the platform. There was a momentary
pause and then the preacher spoke again.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My friends,” he said, “a most remarkable event
has occurred here tonight. Perhaps some of you
here near the front have surmised what it is, but
I am sure that the great majority of you have not
grasped its significance. My efforts tonight have
been blessed by an achievement of which I am extremely
proud. Thirteen members of a theatrical
company now appearing in this city—a company
presenting a conglomeration bearing the idiotic title
of ‘Keep Moving’—thirteen lovely young women
have been rescued from the insidious temptations
that lurk behind the blinding glare of the footlights
and have come out here in the open and made a
pledge to get back into the old, simple ways of living.
It’s the most wonderful thing that has happened
since I began my campaign, and while these
brave and earnest souls are here with us let us all
join in a prayer that they may be steadfast in their
new aim and that their example may be a shining
one to thousands of others in this great city. Let
us pray.”</p>
<p class='c012'>When the great throng arose after the prayer to
sing the final hymn Jimmy Martin edged out of his
seat and slipped unobtrusively up one of the aisles
and out into the chill evening air. He was dazed
and bewildered, but he had presence of mind enough
to hail a taxicab and direct the chauffeur to drive
him to his hotel. He had an idea that pictures of
the fair converts would be in demand and he wanted
to be on hand when the bright young gentlemen of
the press put in an appearance.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty-Four</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Chester Bartlett was not given to enthusiasm, but
he felt impelled to congratulate Jimmy after glancing
over the morning papers the next day and
making a mental inventory of the net results of the
press agent’s Sunday evening “plant.” The story
leaped out of the front page of every journal in
town and dwarfed, by comparison, the accounts of
a super-heated debate in the United States Senate
on disarmament, of a great strike which industrially
paralyzed Great Britain from end to end and of a
volcanic eruption in a far-flung island of the Pacific
which claimed 8,000 human lives as its toll.</p>
<p class='c012'>The “feature writers” who covered the “Billy”
Williams’ meetings had figuratively and literally
turned themselves loose on the proceedings and had
written stories with a heart-throb in every sentence
and a tear in at least every other line. They had
embellished and embroidered the actual incidents so
effectively that even Bartlett himself, case-hardened
cynic that he was, found himself growing a bit
sentimental when he read the story in the first
paper to hand. The narratives were all adorned
with photographs of the “Keep-Moving” beauties
and the name of that blithesome musical comedy
figured extensively in all of them. Bartlett particularly
liked the headline in the Journal:</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i206.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c012'>“The counter attack was well developed and the
ground gained is satisfactory to the higher command,”
was the way Bartlett framed his congratulations
over the telephone. “You can consolidate
your present position and rest up for a few days.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“All right,” Jimmy replied with a chuckle, “but
there’s no tellin’ when I may make another raid on
the enemy trenches. I’ve got ’em goin’. That one
was as easy as getting a drink on Broadway since
the U.S.A. went dry.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“In plain, everyday English,” went on Bartlett,
“that’s just about the best plant I’ve seen pulled
off in the twenty years that I’ve been in the theatrical
business. I noticed that your little Cedar
Rapids friend was one of the ring-leaders. How
you managed to get them all to play up as well as
they did is what I can’t understand. How did you
work it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy paused for a moment or two before replying
and coughed uneasily.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ve got ’em trained,” he finally replied. “They’ll—they’ll
do anything I ask ’em to do—anything.”</p>
<p class='c012'>It was characteristic of Jimmy to have decided,
after considerable speculation, that no motive other
than an unselfish desire to please himself and to
assist in adding to the greater glory of the occasion
had prompted Lolita and her associates to profess
conversion on the night before. He had tried to
reach her on the telephone several times with the
idea of thanking her for her unexpected co-operation
in furthering the success of his publicity
scheme, but had been always met with the response
that she was not in. He finally decided to defer
the expression of his gratitude until that evening at
the theatre. As a slight token of his good-will and
heart-felt thankfulness he ordered a bouquet of
roses delivered to her dressing-room and he personally
wrote out a little card to be affixed to it.</p>
<p class='c012'>“To the best little press agent ever,” it ran, “from
a cheap piker at the game—Yours with love—Jimmy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>He tried to preserve a slight semblance of becoming
modesty throughout the day, but the congratulations
which poured in upon him from all
sides were of such a fulsome nature and coincided
so perfectly with his own opinion of himself that
when evening came he was as expansive as the leading
man of a small town stock company and just
about as reticent and self-effacing as an auctioneer.
He dined alone with a fine inner glow of self-satisfaction
and strolled into the lobby of the Colonial
Theatre about half an hour before curtain time at
peace with the world.</p>
<p class='c012'>There was a long line of patrons extending from
the box-office window almost out to the sidewalk
and he watched the scramble for tickets with a feeling
of exalted serenity. The sound of voices at the
swinging doors leading into the foyer attracted his
attention. He turned to see Bartlett and the stage
manager coming through. Their mood was one
that plainly boded developments of a decidedly disagreeable
nature. They made for Jimmy and
pounced upon him simultaneously.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Where’s that girl of yours?” inquired Bartlett
in a tone that Jimmy felt was a bit menacing.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, and where’s Natalie Nugent and Hilda Hennessey
and Trixie Seville and Yvonne Elaine and
Dulcie Dolores and five or six others,” chimed in
the stage manager. “What do you know about
’em?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What do I know about ’em?” echoed Jimmy
helplessly. “I don’t know anything about ’em.
What’s the idea?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“The idea is that they haven’t shown up tonight,”
said Bartlett tartly. “Not a single one of that outfit
that put your story over last night has put in an
appearance back stage, and I have a remote suspicion
that you know why they haven’t. Have you
got some new stunt up your sleeve? If you have I
won’t stand for it. Understand me, my dear sir,
I won’t stand for it.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t know anything about it, Mr. Peters,”
said Jimmy with an air of injured innocence, “not
a single little thing. I haven’t seen Lolita all day
and I haven’t laid eyes on any of those other queens
either. What makes you think I know anything
about it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Just general principles, I fancy. You’re a very
smart young man and I had, and still have for that
matter, an idea that you may be planning a follow-up
of some sort on that yarn you landed this morning.
Let me warn you that if you are, you are
monkeyin’ with the well-known buzz-saw. Here are
a dozen or more of the best looking de luxe girls in
this show missing and the house practically sold
out. I’ve got a reputation to live up to and I don’t
propose to have it suffer just for a fool press story.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But, Mr. Bartlett,” broke in Jimmy.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Ifs and buts are superfluous at this writing,”
interrupted the manager angrily. “It’s within
fifteen minutes of curtain time, and we’ll have to
give a show that’ll look like a Number Three company
out in the tall grass. The next time you plan
a press story you’ll have to get it passed by the
censor beforehand and I’m going to be the censor.
Do you get me?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, sir,” replied Jimmy weakly as Bartlett and
the stage manager disappeared into the theatre
again.</p>
<p class='c012'>He leaned against the wall for support and tried
to collect his thoughts. Somehow he couldn’t. He
felt himself in the clutch of uncertainties beyond
his understanding at the moment and vague distress
was written large upon his face. One of the
uniformed carriage attendants tapped him on the
shoulder and slipped a letter into his hand.</p>
<p class='c012'>“A young lady left this half an hour ago, Mr.
Martin,” he said, “and told me to see as how you
got it handed to you personally.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy knew the handwriting on the envelope
and a queer feeling came over him. He hesitated
for a moment before reading it. When Matthews,
the house manager, strolled up to him two minutes
afterwards vain regret was in his heart and in
his eyes there lurked a look of blended bewilderment
and futile rage.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the matter, old man?” inquired Matthews.
“Has Bartlett been making things hard for you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy smiled a sickly smile and handed over the
letter.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I don’t mind so much what he says,” he replied,
“but this has got under the little old cuticle all
right. Read it if you like.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The manager adjusted his gold-rimmed glasses
and read the letter, written in the stiff, vertical
handwriting of a school-girl.</p>
<p class='c016'>Dear Jimmy:</p>
<p class='c017'>This is just to say good-bye. You’ve been
very nice and very kind to me and I’m thankful
for everything and all that, but I’ve just
got to get away from the sinful stage and go
back home. The other girls are all quitting,
too. I knew weeks ago that it was foolish to
pretend I’d ever be anything more than just a
fifth or sixth rater and now I’m glad that I’ve
been brought to see the wickedness of it all. I
guess maybe I’ve got the “Cedar Rapids blues”
you spoke about the other night, too. Mother
and dad have been writing me for weeks to
come home. Thank you again for your kindness
and all that and don’t bother trying to
look me up for I’m taking a train tonight.
Many thanks again—from your little friend,</p>
<div class='c020'>LOLITA.</div>
<p class='c015'>“That’s mighty tough,” commented Matthews
sympathetically. “Love is a great little gamble.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You said something,” replied Jimmy dejectedly.
“I held the right cards, but I overplayed my hand.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty-Five</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>“They’re always pickin’ on me,” moaned Jimmy
a few weeks later as he flung the letter he had just
finished reading down on his desk in a corner of the
dingy office of the Colonial Theatre and kicked
impulsively at a crumpled pile of discarded newspapers
on the floor.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the matter, old man?” inquired Matthews,
looking up from a stack of letters on his
desk and regarding the press agent with a bantering
smile. “Is Bartlett out on the rampage again?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No,” replied Jimmy in a disgusted tone of voice.
“I wish he was. He’s postin’ three sheets tellin’
what a grand little fellow I am. That’s what gets
my pet Angora.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the catch?” questioned the other.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, that’s concealed in the last paragraph. He
starts out with a lot of hot air about how good I
am and how pleased he is at the wonderful showing
I’ve landed over here in Boston, and a bunch of
other junk and then he—wait, I’ll read you the finish.
He says—‘and being desirous of showing my
appreciation of your efforts in a concrete way I
have decided to intrust to you the general direction
of the publicity campaign of ’The Ganges Princess.’
I will send someone to take over ‘Keep Moving’
on Saturday, and you will kindly report at this
office on Monday morning.’”</p>
<p class='c012'>Matthews, who had sauntered over to Jimmy’s
desk during the reading of Chester Bartlett’s letter,
looked frankly bewildered.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m pretty dense, I guess,” he said. “I don’t see
anything in that to cause you to exhibit any signs
of distress. He’s handing you the prize job of the
season on a gold platter. You couldn’t stop the
papers from printing stuff about that show with
an injunction from the Supreme Court. Don’t you
realize that?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, that part of it’s all right,” replied Jimmy.
“I suppose I’ve got a nerve to put up a holler, but
I can’t help it. It’s this thing of bein’ bounced
about like a tennis ball that makes me sore. The
minute I get sewed up with one show and the machinery
in the little old idea factory gets all oiled
up and is makin’ 286 revolutions to the minute,
along comes a letter or a wire shootin’ me on to
join somethin’ else. Gee, I wish I was workin’
for myself and not for the other guy.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy would have resented any suggestion that
the look which crept into his eyes as he said this
was wistful, but it was just that. He paused and
gazed out of the window at the scurrying throng of
early morning shoppers. Across his face there
came and went the shadow of a pathetic smile, a
smile that seemed to express for a moment the
elation of holding within his grasp the very substance
of things hoped for and which instantly
merged into something that epitomized utter hopelessness.
Matthews sensed his mood and put his
hand on the press agent’s shoulder.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why don’t you take a flier on your own?” He
asked. “Everybody in the business would wish you
well.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy snorted derisively.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What would I use for money?” he inquired sarcastically.
“Playwrights ain’t takin’ good wishes
for advance royalties and you can’t slip a few kind
words into the salary envelopes on Saturday night.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“But it don’t take so much to make a start,”
persisted the other. “Don’t you manage to save
anything at all?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Sure. I’ve got almost enough cigarette coupons
to get a gold plated safety razor or a genuine silk
umbrella, and there’s 20 shares of Flying Frog copper
stock in the tray of my trunk. That must be
worth all of a dollar and eight cents, and it cost
me about thirty dollars, too. Quit your kiddin’,
old man. An agent has about as much chance these
days of savin’ money as the Kaiser has of bein’
invited to a week-end party by the King of England.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy stood up and began to pace slowly up and
down the room. The wistful look came into his
eyes again and the longing smile touched his mouth
once more.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Still,” he said, half to himself, “it’s kind of nice
to think about ownin’ your own show even if you
know you never will, and to sort of get a flash in
your mind’s eye of a twenty-four sheet with ‘James
T. Martin presents’ splashed across the top of it in
black on yellow with red initials. ‘James T. Martin
presents’—that’d certainly look immense on that
low board on Broadway near Forty-fifth street that
hits everybody on the big street right in the eye.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Matthews, in response to a summons from the
box-office, left him still soliloquizing under his
breath and gazing pensively across the snow covered
Common.</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>“The Ganges Princess” was the dramatic sensation
of a decade. It had been running for a solid
year at the huge Hendrik Hudson Theatre in New
York, having weathered a hot summer with hardly
a noticeable falling off of receipts. It was Chester
Bartlett’s first venture into what is technically
known as the “legitimate field” and he had staged
it with that lavish disregard for expense and with
that keen sense of the artistic which had given him
pre-eminence as a producer of light musical entertainment.</p>
<p class='c012'>Written by one of America’s most flamboyant
playwrights it told a turgid story of Oriental passion
and treachery set against a spectacular background
depicting scenes in ancient India. As sheer
spectacle it quite transcended anything hitherto attempted
in the United States. It presented a series
of settings which were so flaming in their color, so
permeated with the mystery of the East and so
splendid in their suggestion of great size and vast
distances that each new revelation was invariably
greeted with gasps of amazement from the audience.
A cast bristling with distinguished names
gave verisimilitude to the somewhat bombastic dialogue
and purely incidental members of the company
included a troupe of fifty real nautch-girls,
six elephants, five camels and a flock of sheep.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The Ganges Princess” was not merely the talk
of New York. It was literally the talk of the country
and its forthcoming tour promised to be one of
the most important in the history of the American
theatre. It was booked for extended engagements
in only a few of the larger cities, there being a
comparatively limited number of places containing
playhouses with stages large enough to accommodate
the production and possessing auditoriums of
sufficient size to insure financial success.</p>
<p class='c012'>Bartlett had mapped out a plan of exploitation
which was quite the most comprehensive ever undertaken
in the annals of press agentry. No less
than half a dozen advance couriers—the pick of the
country—were to devote their energies to the advertising
and newspaper campaign alone, while the
purely business details were to be intrusted to
trained experts who were to have no other duties.
This would leave the purveyors of publicity free
and untrammeled in their assaults upon the press
and a defenseless public.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy Martin was to be generalissimo, commander-in-chief
and field marshal of the combined
forces and was to be entrusted with delegated powers
such as had never before been given to anyone
holding a similar position. Matthews had understated
the case when he referred to the place as the
prize job of the season. It wasn’t even comparable.
Nothing like it had ever been known for opportunity
and power, since the modern variety of press
agent came into being. Jimmy realized that himself
after Bartlett had finished outlining the scope
of the proposed campaign.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Go to it, my boy,” the manager said at the completion
of an hour’s talk, “and remember that the
azure dome of heaven is the limit and that in the
bright lexicon of showmanship there are no such
words as ‘it can’t be done.’ Do I make myself
clear?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Absolutely,” replied Jimmy cheerfully. “I’m to
sit with my feet in a mustard bath and I’m to play
my cards without regard to the feelin’s, digestions,
general state of temperature or politics of anyone
else in the game. I’m to see all raises and tilt it
one for luck whenever I think the time is ripe for a
killin’. Have I got the right combination?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Bartlett laughed heartily at the flavory idioms
which flowed so freely from Jimmy’s lips.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Thou hast, most potent, grave and reverend signor,”
he replied, bowing low in exaggerated mock
courtesy. “By the way,” he continued, getting back
to business again, “there’s another thing I completely
forgot. I’ve engaged a literary chap for a
special stunt, and I want you to figure out some
way of getting it across so that it seems on the
level.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The general idea is to have this fellow deliver
a series of lectures on India about three weeks
ahead of the play date. It’ll be a camouflaged boost
for the show. Every once in a while he’ll make
some casual remark about the play which he understands
is shortly to be seen in this city, et cetera,
but there won’t be enough of this stuff for anyone
to consider it as being at all out of the way.</p>
<p class='c012'>“This gentleman will be under your direct and
special control. It will be up to you to arrange to
have lectures given in every city under the auspices
of some literary society or social welfare group or
under the patronage of the Daughters of the American
Revolution—any kind of a crowd that’ll give
the stunt prestige and distinction. I’ve written Mr.
Denby to meet you at the theatre this evening.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Denby, eh? It can’t possibly be little old J.
Herbert Denby, the highbrow kid, can it?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s the name. Know him?”</p>
<p class='c012'>A grin of delight spread over Jimmy’s features.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Fairly well,” he chuckled. “He tipped me off to
a grand idea over in Baltimore a year or so ago.
Old George B. Bookworm, eh? If he’s still doin’
his regular act I’ve got a lot of laughs comin’ to me
on this trip. Say, you don’t know how good that
bird’ll be for a stunt of this kind. When it comes
to the uplift stuff and the literary bunk he’s there
in seven separate and distinct languages. And innocent!
Say, he could make a two year old
baby look like an old offender with a Sing Sing
past. They’ll fall for him on sight.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The guileless Mr. Denby greeted Jimmy in the
lobby of the Hendrik Hudson that night in his best
professorial manner and smiled benignantly through
his tortoise shell glasses.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You will, I think, concede, Mr. Martin,” said
he, proffering a rather limp hand, “that we give
the lie direct to Mr. Kipling.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Eh? What’s that?” mumbled the other. “I
don’t get you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby smiled condescendingly and replied
in a tone of voice that Jimmy felt to be a bit too
irritatingly suave.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Mr. Kipling—the poet—you know. He says,
‘East is East and West is West, and never the twain
shall meet.’ Well, we are meeting on a common
ground in a common cause and we are—may I
venture to suggest—decidedly alien to each other
in our thoughts and sympathies, are we not?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy eyed him suspiciously before replying.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Listen, old dear,” he said evenly, “I can never
quite figure whether you’re kiddin’ me or not and
I’m going to be too busy from now on to ask for
diagrams. If we’re goin’ to get together you’ve
got to get out the little old parachute and jump off
into space. In plain English you’ve got to dive
down to earth and keep both feet on the pavement.
Save the flossy stuff for your lectures. Are you
on?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course, of course,” stammered Mr. Denby.
“I meant no offense. I have an unfortunate habit
of making poetic allusions. I shall correct it. Believe
me, my dear Mr. Martin, I shall correct it.
I have much to say to you. Where shall we have
a little—a little,—shall I say pow-wow—to talk
over the—the ah—dope?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s the idea,” replied Jimmy, slapping the
other on the back and laughing heartily. “That’s
regular language. Let’s go back to the stage manager’s
office and work out a plan of attack.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The press agent led the way through a passage
which ran behind the boxes to the stage and they
presently found themselves dodging the canvas
walls of a great Indian temple which were being
deftly swung into position by a small army of stage
hands and picking their steps cautiously through
a cluttered array of papier-mache Buddhas, canopied
thrones and other properties. Once closeted
in the little office in a far corner they began a consultation
which lasted for more than an hour.</p>
<p class='c012'>It was agreed that Jimmy was to travel sufficiently
far enough ahead of J. Herbert Denby to
arrange for and advertise his lectures and the press
agent took pains to carefully instruct the latter as
to the best methods of keeping his connection with
“The Ganges Princess” company a remote and
cherished secret. The subjects chosen by the lecturer
were, to say the least, not calculated to arouse
any suspicion. Jimmy sat entranced as J. Herbert
read them off from a typewritten slip he took from
his card-case.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I shall talk first,” he said, “upon ‘The Rig-Veda—A
Primitive Folk Song Embodying the Soul of
an Ancient People.’ I shall follow that with a discourse
on ‘Brahma, Vishnu and Siva—The Triple
Manifestation of the Hindu God’ and for my third
and final lecture I have chosen perhaps a more
popular theme—‘Mogul versus Mahratta—A Study
in Dynastic Conflicts.’ Do you think that program
will fill the bill?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy was plainly a little bit groggy and he
found it difficult to articulate for a moment or two.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, old scout,” he finally managed to remark.
“I’m almost down for the count. You talk like an
encyclopedia. You’ll have ’em all pop-eyed when
you pull that stuff. The harder it is to understand
the harder they’ll fall. You’re there, George B.
Bookworm, you’re there. I can see ’em passin’
flowers over the footlights already.”</p>
<p class='c012'>J. Herbert, appreciating the sincerity of Jimmy’s
enthusiastic approval, blushed a little and tried to
appear at ease, but it was a difficult task. The two
strolled out on the darkened stage and stood in the
wings watching the unfolding of the final scene of
the second act in which the Maharajah of Rumpore
returned unexpectedly, with his followers,
from a tiger-hunting expedition to find his favorite
wife in the arms of the villainous Begum of Baroda.</p>
<p class='c012'>They found themselves suddenly wedged in the
center of a crowd of male supernumeraries who
had come clattering down the stairs leading from
the dressing rooms, accoutered in ancient armour
and ready for participation in the stirring episode
which was to bring the act to a close. Most of
these “extra people,” that being their classification
in the world of the theatre, were the usual assortment
of shiftless idlers who eke out a precarious
existence by doing such odd jobs on the stage and
whose Oriental aspect was purely a matter of simulation.
There were, however, a number of genuine
East Indians among them, random visitors
from an alien clime picked up here and there and
utilized to give an added air of verisimilitude to the
ensemble scenes.</p>
<p class='c012'>One of these latter, a handsome chap under thirty,
whose skin was the color of strong coffee diluted
with rich cream and whose features had the classic
regularity of a Grecian sculptured head, brushed
against Jimmy’s elbow and apologized profusely.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I am very much sorry if I have caused myself
to discommode you,” he murmured, smiling pleasantly
and revealing a row of teeth of dazzling
whiteness.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s all right,” replied Jimmy, looking at him
in surprise. “You’re a regular, I see. You don’t
belong to the volunteers.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, sahib, I am from the East. I am long distance
from home-land of my fathers, if that is what
you mean.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy looked at him with new interest. He had
an air about him, an indefinable air of distinction
that attracted the attention of even the aesthetic J.
Herbert Denby, who edged closer and entered the
conversation.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Your English is excellent,” he remarked. “You
have perhaps studied in one of our universities?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“No, sahib, not here—in Oxford. I have been in
this country but a few months. Life has been a
difficult problem here in this great democracy, but I
am a fatalist, sahib, and I do not make myself uneasiness
as to the future. It is useless for it is
written already on the scrolls of time.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The next instant he swept forward on to the
stage with the others in response to a signal from
the stage manager who was peering through a
small hole in the scenery.</p>
<p class='c012'>“My word,” said the astonished Mr. Denby.
“Fancy a chap like that being content to figure as
one of the mob. He has the grand manner of an
Indian prince.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy looked up at him quickly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It’s moved and seconded that we make him one,”
he said.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s that?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“All in favor of the motion signify their assent
by saying ‘Aye.’ Aye! Contrary—no. The ayes
have it and the motion is carried. What’ll we call
him?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I must confess that I don’t grasp the significance
of what you mean,” said the puzzled Mr.
Denby.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You will,” returned Jimmy as he led the way
out to the front of the house again. “I’m goin’ to
give you a little playmate on this trip if I can get
Bartlett to go along. Local color stuff. You’ve
slipped me another grand little idea, old man. It’s
a bear.”</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty-Six</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Prince Rajput Singh, the mythical only son of the
Nazir of Hydrabad, descended on Chicago two weeks
later accompanied by J. Herbert Denby, the distinguished
authority on Far Eastern affairs. Their
arrival at the Senate Hotel just before the dinner
hour was a spectacular divertissement, to say the
least, and one well calculated to make the unsuspecting
general public sit up and take notice.</p>
<p class='c012'>His Royal Highness wore a great gray cloak
when he passed through the main entrance of the
hotel flanked on his right by the impeccable Mr.
Denby and preceded by two massive and upstanding
Hindus whose bearded faces were frozen into a
semblance of stoical indifference that was as grim
and forbidding as a box-office man’s impenetrable
and imperturbable mask. On his head he wore a
white turban trimmed with golden braid and his
feet were encased in richly embroidered red slippers
with turned-up toes.</p>
<p class='c012'>He paused for a moment, surveying with a condescending
air the crowd of gaping men which
filled the lobby, and then clapped his hands sharply
twice. The Hindu attendants moved into position
back of him. Another pause and then, with a gesture
of surpassing elegance he dropped the cloak
from his shoulders into their waiting arms. No
Roman emperor had ever done it better, Mr. Denby
thought to himself. The prince stood revealed in
a gorgeous silken robe which was such a shimmering
mass of color that it almost made one blink to
look at it. Purples, flaming shades of orange and
greens which seemed to suggest the rank lush
foliage of some tropical jungle were the predominating
shades. The robe was admirably designed
to set off to the best advantage the dark and finely
chiseled features of His Royal Highness, who
greeted the manager of the hotel with an air of
haughty reserve that was positively imperial in
its implications.</p>
<p class='c012'>His progress through the lobby to the elevator
was made amid a silence that Mr. Denby afterwards
paradoxically referred to as “audible” and
when the clanging doors closed behind him and he
was shot up to his quarters on the third floor, the
feelings of all the awed onlookers found expression
in a concerted gasp.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy Martin, watching the proceedings from
behind the cover of a newspaper which he pretended
to be reading while he sprawled over a great
leather chair, chuckled quietly to himself and agreed
that he was a grand little stage manager. Then he
slipped out on to windswept Michigan avenue and
walked briskly away to his own hotel. He longed
to remain and watch his drama unfold, but discretion
warned him that it would be well for him to
keep in seclusion for the present, inasmuch as representatives
of the fourth estate would undoubtedly
descend on the hotel shortly in a body.</p>
<p class='c012'>Prince Rajput Singh graciously received the gentlemen
of the press an hour later and discoursed
at length upon the past, present and future of India.
Hearing that his distinguished friend, the Sahib
Denby, whom he had entertained some years ago at
his father’s palace while the former was traveling
in the far east, was planning a lecture tour he had
decided, he said, to visit America himself and lend
his aid to the project.</p>
<p class='c012'>“It has been long dream of my existence,” he announced
grandly, picking his words carefully, “to
assist in bringing to new world of the west the
culture and wisdom of the east. You have made
wonderful discoveries in the world of material
things. We have long ago found the secret of the
soul. It is well we should make ourselves friends.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The prince posed for flashlight photographs sitting
in a great arm chair with his Hindu attendants,
arms folded, standing erect and immovable behind
him. All in all a pleasant time was had by everyone
concerned and the results in the newspapers on the
following morning were all that the most optimistic
and sanguine publicity promoter could have desired.
Two and three column pictures of His Royal Highness
were given prominent positions and each interview
was tagged with a paragraph announcing the
first of Mr. Denby’s lectures which was to be given
a day later in the grand ballroom of the hotel. The
prince, it was announced, would supplement the lecturer’s
remarks with a little talk of his own.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy Martin, calling on him for the purpose of
giving him a few more instructions concerning his
general deportment and demeanor on the morrow,
was somewhat dazzled by the splendor of his surroundings
and by the extent of the apartment assigned
to him. There were five rooms in all, overlooking
the lake, and there was a canopied bed on
a raised platform in one of them as well as other
evidences of extreme luxury to which he was not
accustomed. He hunted up his friend, the assistant
manager of the hotel.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say, Wilkins,” he said cautiously. “I’ve been
up to see this prince you’ve got stopping here.
That’s some set of rooms. I wonder what they’re
going to set him back.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s the royal suite,” replied Wilkins. “We
don’t get much of a chance to get any real royalty
very often, and I’m making the old boy a special
rate. Mr. Denby arranged for it. We’re only
going to charge him two hundred dollars a day.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My God,” stammered Jimmy, almost swallowing
his cigarette and clutching the other by the arm,
“you can’t do a thing like that.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The look of hopeless distress on the press agent’s
face caused the hotel man to laugh uproariously,
for a moment, but he checked himself suddenly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the idea?” he inquired. “Why can’t we?
You act as if we were going to charge the bill to
you.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Maybe you are, old man,” was Jimmy’s response
as he led Wilkins over to the latter’s little office. “I
want to slip you a little side-line of conversation
that you’ve got to promise to keep Masonic.”</p>
<p class='c012'>So it came to pass that in the quiet sanctity of
the little office Jimmy outlined certain unpublished
details concerning the activities and real mission of
Prince Rajput Singh though he said nothing about
that dusky gentleman’s previous condition of servitude.
He represented him as being a genuine Indian
nobleman, temporarily down on his luck, who
had consented to assist in a carefully contrived and
ingenious scheme of indirect advertising.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Have a heart, old man,” he pleaded when he had
finished. “If you scale that two hundred down to
about—well, say twenty-five and Bartlett’ll have
heart failure even at that figure—I’ll arrange to
have his royal niblets have dinner every night in
your Egyptian dining room. You know yourself
you don’t do much trade in there. We’ll have those
two Hindu birds cook a lot of these curry dishes
right there in full view of the audience and wait on
him. You’ll be able to hang the little old S.R.O.
sign out in a couple of days, take it from me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The assistant manager succumbed to Jimmy’s
siren song and consented to slash the rate for the
royal suite in return for the special performance
by the prince and his entourage which the press
agent promised to stage nightly.</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. J. Herbert Denby and Prince Rajput Singh
made their joint debut on the lecture platform on
the following afternoon before a select and soulful
audience largely composed of middle-aged females
who hung rapturously on every word uttered by
both speakers.</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby was in fine form. His discourse on
“The Rig-Veda” was as vague and misty as a treatise
on the Hegelian philosophy and about as full of
real mental nourishment for that particular audience
as a scientific monograph on the bony structure
of the dactylopterus volitans would have been.
He soared into the outer void and returned with
bay-leaves on his brow and with esoteric phrases
dripping from his tongue. The more hopelessly involved
he became in the mystic mazes of his metaphysical
theme, the more ardent seemed to be the
rapt devotion with which his listeners received his
remarks. When he finished in one grand, exultant
outburst of poetic fervor a hushed silence fell upon
the gathering and when a ripple of applause broke
in upon it there were those whose brows darkened
as if something holy had been profaned.</p>
<p class='c012'>It remained, however, for the pseudo Prince Rajput
Singh to achieve the real sensation of the afternoon.
Arrayed in a purple robe and turban of exquisite
silk and carrying himself with a careless air
of superb distinction that was fascinating to watch,
he delivered a brief talk in which he pleaded for a
better understanding between the East and the
West and urged a study of Indian ways and customs
as the best method of bringing such an entente
cordiale about, such a study as was rendered possible,
for instance, by witnessing a performance of
a play he had recently seen in New York—was it
called “The Ganges Princess?”—he was not sure.</p>
<p class='c012'>His dark face gleamed with animation as he spoke
and his grey eyes sparkled. When he smiled his
white teeth flashed brilliantly in the rays of the afternoon
sun which poured through the mullioned
windows and when he laughed, tossing his head
back like some medieval troubadour in rollicking
mood, all the impressionable women there present,
young and old, went voyaging for a moment or two
into the land of romance, and forgotten memory
pictures of scenes from the Arabian Nights came
trooping back into their several and respective, not
to mention respectable, minds.</p>
<p class='c012'>Taking it by and large Ranjit Lal, former supernumerary,
devious adventurer in a foreign clime,
and now, by the grace of one James T. Martin,
Prince Rajput Singh, was, in the parlance of the
boulevards, a knockout. When the formal festivities
were over he was surrounded by a chattering
swarm of females of assorted ages and subjected to
that particular form of obsequious flattery which is
usually reserved by the weaker sex for long-haired
pianists and corpulent Italian tenors.</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. J. Herbert Denby, feeling himself somewhat
out of the picture, viewed the proceedings from a
short distance away and particularly noticed one
worshiper who had edged herself into a position
directly in front of his confrere and who seemed to
be trying to entirely monopolize the swarthy-skinned
lion of the occasion.</p>
<p class='c012'>She was at least fifty. There was no doubting
that, though she was dressed, with all the gay abandon
of a debutante, in a silken frock which did not
quite touch the tops of her extremely high boots.
She was also inclined to stoutness, though a
straight front corset kept her somewhat ample proportions
cabined and confined permitting her to
present to the world at large at least a semblance
of curvilinear grace. There was, Mr. Denby
thought, something decidedly suspicious looking
about her flaxen tresses whose symmetrically marcelled
regularity was relieved by two little curls
which hung coyly in front of each ear. She was,
it was plain to see, convinced that she was the living
embodiment of Peter Pan, the young person who
never grew old.</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby could hear her high pitched voice and
the gurgling laugh with which she punctuated almost
every remark.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I won’t take ‘no’ for an answer, you dear man,”
she was saying. “Four thirty tomorrow afternoon
in our Indian room—I’ll have just a few notables
there and I have just one favor to ask of you.
Please bring those perfectly dear gentlemen with
whiskers along to help serve. They’ll help my
background? Don’t you just love the proper
background? It’s so stimulating. Oh, yes, background
is the most important thing in life, if you
grasp what I mean.”</p>
<p class='c012'>A grunt escaped a tired looking man next to Mr.
Denby. It was so expressive that the eminent authority
on the Far East turned a questioning look
on his neighbor.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Who is she?” he inquired.</p>
<p class='c012'>“That’s Fannie Easton,” replied the tired-looking
man. “Old maid sister of Junius P. You’ve
heard of him, of course. Oodles of money, houses
in Chicago and New York, ranch in California, villa
in Florence, three private yachts and not a damned
soul to decorate ’em with except that blond nut
sundae. Life’s a weird thing, sir. Too much for
me.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby, forgetting his own isolation for the
moment, watched the continuation of the episode
with a new interest. He saw the gurgling Miss
Easton catch hold of his associate’s arm and he
observed that the latter was devoting himself to
her with assiduous attention as they walked slowly
out into the corridor and disappeared, leaving behind
a collection of thoroughly disappointed admirers.
As the echoes of a silly laugh came floating
on the air from some unseen corner of the hallway,
something seemed to tell Mr. Denby that all was
not well.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty-Seven</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Junius P. Easton, popularly known on “the
Street” as “old J. P.,” was sulking in his tent like
a certain ancient Greek, the said tent being the
Florentine library in his lake-side home. He was
pacing up and down the great sombre room with its
tapestried walls and its high raftered ceiling, chewing
ferociously on a thick cigar, mumbling incoherently
and thinking things utterly unfit for publication.
Every two or three minutes he paused at the
door opening into the music room and listened to
the confused medley of sounds which came to him
from an apartment in a far corner of the house—the
light laughter of women, the clink of china tea
things and the occasional echo of a man’s voice, an
aggravatingly bland and urbane voice with a trace
of a foreign accent in its rhythms.</p>
<p class='c012'>Every time J. P. caught the sound of that voice
his bushy and grizzled eye-brows came together
over a deep perpendicular furrow in his forehead
and he swore audibly and with gusto. This performance
had been going on ever since a quarter
to five that afternoon when he had arrived home
from his office after a particularly trying day full
of perplexing business problems and had been
greeted by the butler with the announcement that
Miss Fannie was entertaining some sort of an Indian
prince and a group of friends at tea.</p>
<p class='c012'>J. P. had tip-toed to the door of the Indian room,
had cautiously peeped through the heavy curtain
and had been greeted with the spectacle of Prince
Rajput Singh, flanked by his be-whiskered servitors,
lounging luxuriously on a divan completely
surrounded by adoring females of uncertain age
among whom his more or less revered sister was
the central figure. Fannie was running true to
form and was successfully monopolizing the attentions
of the foreign visitor.</p>
<p class='c012'>Filled with disgust J. P. had tip-toed away from
the scene to the quiet serenity of the library
and had begun his imitation of a caged beast of
the jungle. It was one of the best things he did
and he generally felt himself called upon to perform
in this manner two or three times a week for
there was no way of ever figuring what Fannie
was going to do next or who she was going to
invite into the house. One afternoon it might be
an anarchist preaching the parlor variety of red
revolutionary doctrine and the next it was just as
likely to be the latest exponent of the simple life,
tastefully attired in sandals and a robe made from
Turkish towels.</p>
<p class='c012'>As J. P. remarked once to his closest friend
“there’s only one thing you can ever be certain
about so far as Fannie is concerned—she’s always
sure to make a damned fool out of herself.”</p>
<p class='c012'>And J. P. spoke by the book. He had lived with
her for fifty years and he knew whereof he spoke.
He was always prepared for anything and yet he
was never able to maintain that air of philosophic
calm with which he would have liked to have
greeted each new ebullition of her tempestuous
temperament. He pictured himself sometimes, in
moments of reflection, treating her with cold contempt
and silent scorn, but when each new issue
arose he greeted it with an emotional outburst
which was utterly futile in its effect on her, but
which gave him some slight measure of satisfaction.
A psychologist would have told him that his
affection for his sister found expression in that way.
We can never be coldly contemptuous of those we
love. However, J. P. was no psychologist.</p>
<p class='c012'>The festivities in the other corner of the house
lasted until nearly six o’clock and when the last
guest had been given a gushing farewell by the
arch Miss Fannie the hostess bounced into the
library to meet her brother. She was attired in a
short skirted pink silk afternoon gown that looked
as if it might have been designed for a sixteen
year old high school student, and she flounced into
a sofa with an assumption of girlish ingenuousness
that was really pathetic to watch.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ve just had the darlingest afternoon, brother
dear,” she said gayly, not heeding the glowering
aspect of the head of the house, who stood facing
her with his hands in his trousers pockets. “We’ve
had the spirit and the mystery of the great, inscrutable
East with us and it’s been so uplifting and
so perfectly wonderful that I’m in a daze. I’m sorry
you didn’t meet the dear prince, brother dear. He’s
so charmingly soulful and his eyes—well, they’re
just deep pools of moonlight as some poet said.
I’m giving a dinner for him on Friday night. You’ll
have to come to that, of course.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Junius P. Easton tossed back his head and
erupted.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll be damned if I will,” he shouted, “and I’ll
be damned if I’m going to let you hob-nob with this
fellow either. I’ve stood a lot from you Fannie, but
there’s a limit. I didn’t put up much of a holler
last winter when you had that greasy Esquimeaux
here that evening with that polar explorer and I’ve
stood for Japanese, Chinese, Hawaiians, South Sea
Islanders, snake charmers, Bolshevists, shimmy
dancers, poets and short haired female nuts, but
I’m going to draw the line on darkies and don’t you
forget it.”</p>
<p class='c012'>J. P. strode over to a long table, opened a humidor,
extracted another cigar and savagely bit the
end of it off. His sister was as unruffled as the
placid surface of a mountain lake on a hot mid-summer
day. She laughed a little before replying.
It was such an irritatingly serene sort of a laugh
that J. P. winced at the sound of it.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You poor, dear, foolish man,” she said with the
patronizing condescension of an indulgent aunt rebuking
a fractious boy aged about eight years.
“He isn’t a colored man. You can be perfectly
ridiculous at times.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, he’s the next thing to it, isn’t he?” inquired
her brother helplessly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Don’t be absurd, J. P. He is the descendant
of kings and potentates and mighty warriors and
he’s quite the most fascinating man I’ve ever met.
To know him is a privilege. He calls to your soul
and bids you voyage with him to the heights
where you can leave behind you the petty affairs
of life and commune with the eternal and the unknowable.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, bunk,” retorted her brother testily. “You
give me a pain. The heights, eh? If you take a
trip up there you’d better be sure before you start
that you’ve got a return ticket. You’re likely to
get all tangled up in the cosmos and the eternal
and lose your way as well as your mind. And take
a tip from me, old lady. Choose some other companion
besides that coffee colored harem keeper if
you want to keep your friends.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“My dear brother,” returned Miss Fannie, in a
perfectly even tone of voice. “I feel extremely
sorry for you. You are of the earth earthy. You
have no soul. When the infinite calls you cannot
hear it. I, fortunately, am so attuned and delicately
adjusted that it reaches me, and I can pulsate in
harmony with its vibrations. I know because the
dear prince told me so. It’s just wonderful.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh——piffle,” retorted J. P. impotently as he
threw up his hands in a gesture of hopeless despair
and tore angrily out of the room with the bitter
realization that he had once more suffered defeat.</p>
<p class='c012'>Miss Fannie Easton smiled indulgently and fondled
a jade ring on her left hand, a ring which
Prince Rajput Singh had slipped from his own royal
finger and given her with the whispered expression
of a hope that she would wear it as a token of their
friendship. Assuring herself that no one was looking
she kissed it long and ardently as something
akin to a rapturous look crept into her foolish,
lusterless eyes.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty-Eight</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Jimmy Martin, couchant on a chaise longue in the
royal suite of the Congress Hotel, had difficulty in
persuading himself that he was wide awake and in
full possession of all his senses. Opposite him sat
the pseudo prince Rajput Singh in his shirt-sleeves,
looking decidedly unromantic. The East Indian was
talking rapidly and the inner import of the tale he
was unfolding was of such a nature that Jimmy
was aquiver with eager curiosity and aglow with
anticipatory delight. He did not notice that the
other’s eyes glinted unpleasantly as he spoke and
that there was something positively repulsive about
the smugly complacent manner in which he detailed
the progress of his love affair with the wealthy
sister of Junius P. Easton. All Jimmy could think
of at the moment were the tremendous publicity
possibilities inherent in the culmination of this incongruous
romance.</p>
<p class='c012'>“As you see, she is very much head over heels
with me,” said the prince, smiling mockingly, “is
that foolish lady with the yellow hair. I have made
a most successful attack on her young affections,
eh, Mr. Martin? Is it not so? I have but to bend
my small finger and she will do what I ask. I have
not made myself waste any time. Do you think I
have, Mr. Martin?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Say,” said Jimmy enthusiastically, as he rose to
a sitting posture, “you’re the quickest worker I
ever saw in action. A glance of the eye and a twist
of the wrist and they’re ready to break the old home
ties and kiss the pet canary good-bye. You’ve certainly
got winnin’ ways. There’s no use in denyin’
that. When’d you see her last?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“This afternoon I swear my undying love for
this lovely lady in quiet corner of her drawing
room. We have made exchange of rings. How
much you think this one is worth, eh, Mr. Martin?”</p>
<p class='c012'>The fictitious heir to the throne of Hydrabad
reached into the pocket of his waistcoat and took
therefrom a diamond ring which flashed brilliantly
as he handed it to the press agent. Jimmy examined
it critically.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh,” said he carelessly, “this is just a gaudy
little trinket that isn’t worth more than about fifteen
hundred dollars or so. I’ve got to give you
credit. You’re immense. Where do we go from
here?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Prince Rajput Singh looked puzzled.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I do not mean to go,” he said. “I mean to stay
for a little while.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course, of course,” said Jimmy. “You don’t
understand. What I mean is—what’s the next
move? You said somethin’ a little while ago about
the double harness stuff—about marryin’ this old
gal, I mean. When are we goin’ to pull the finale?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Whenever we wish, Mr. Martin. I have, as I
say, but to bend my small finger. It will make a
nice publication for you in the journals, will it not?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You said somethin’ that time, old Frank J. Bombay,”
returned Jimmy who was now in the grip of
one of his moods of exultant exuberance. “This
one’ll land in places where press agents fear to
tread. They’d stop the presses for it, if necessary,
and miss the mails. They’d leave out ads for it.
And when it’s all over you’ve got to do me a favor.
You’ve got to keep on with your tour and take Mrs.
Princess Rajput Singh along with you as a bally-hoo.
Why, say, we’ll land so much stuff in every
town that the agent of every other outfit’ll just
naturally pack up and move on to the next stand
without even leavin’ a forwardin’ address.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy’s swarthy friend nodded in response to
this enthusiastic outburst. Then he narrowed his
eyes and the mean, sordid soul of him peered
through them as he spoke.</p>
<p class='c012'>“This Mrs. Princess, as you call her, that is to
be,” he inquired cautiously, “has really much money
in her own name? I have asked many questions
from others and I find general opinion that she
has. Do you know?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Just a few millions, that’s all,” responded
Jimmy nonchalantly. “Just about five or six or
somethin’ like that. Father left it to her. You’re
in softer than you realize, you old Hindu son-of-a-gun,
you, and you’ve got to go along on this honeymoon
trip I’m plannin’. You owe a whole lot to
yours truly, Mister Man. If it wasn’t for me you’d
be makin’ six changes of costume a night for twenty-five
bones a week. Don’t forget to remember
that.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course I am very much thankful to you, my
fine, good friend, most thankful and most very
much in favor of your honeymoon plan.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy arrogated to himself the task of arranging
the details of the projected marriage. He fixed
upon an elopement to a nearby suburb as being the
best method of giving the affair a news slant that
would add to the story what are technically known
in newspaper circles as “feature values.” It would
also, he figured, prevent the possibility of any last
minute interference by some trouble-making relative.</p>
<p class='c012'>It was agreed that he was to meet the prospective
bride on the morrow in the guise of a close friend
of Prince Rajput Singh and was to go over with
both parties a detailed plan of campaign which he
was to map out in the interim. The prince was to
bend his small finger and announce that impetuous
and headlong haste was absolutely essential to his
peace of soul and was to insist upon the ceremony
being performed within twenty-four hours.</p>
<p class='c012'>When Wilkins, the assistant manager, met Jimmy
in the lobby a few minutes after the latter had left
the royal suite, he couldn’t help noticing the wild
exultant light that shone in the press agent’s eyes.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, well,” he remarked cordially, “you look
as if you’d just made a clean-up or something.
Can’t you let me in on the good news?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Not for about forty-eight hours,” returned
Jimmy, “and then I’m goin’ to let the whole U.S.A.
in on it at the same time. I’ve got somethin’
on the fire that’s just about ready to serve that’ll
make folks everywhere forget to eat their ‘ham
and’ one of these mornin’s.”</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>Jimmy permitted Prince Rajput Singh to proceed
him by half an hour to the Easton home on
the following morning. He thought it would be
better to have the blushing bride-to-be apprised
of the rough outlines of the elopement plan without
the disconcerting presence of an intruder. Mr. J.
Herbert Denby, a little disturbed and flustered at
being assigned to such a task, was even then arranging
with a clergyman in the next county to preside
at the marriage which was to take place in the parlor
of the rectory and all the other essential details
had been carefully worked out.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy had collaborated with the prince on a telegram
which was to be sent by the bridegroom to
Junius P. Easton immediately after the ceremony.
It would, he felt, give an added touch of the picturesque
to the proposed program of events: “Your
sister has done me the high honor of becoming my
princess,” it read, “and all Hydrabad will kneel
in proud homage at her feet. I have cabled my
revered father for his august blessing. May we
not hope that you will shower your honorable good
wishes on us.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The prince and Miss Fannie were in the music
room when Jimmy was announced. She had just
been singing “Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes”
to her own accompaniment on the piano and she
was as radiant as a June morning. She wore a tea
gown of baby blue, embroidered with pink rosebuds,
and her bleached hair was done up into a billowy
cluster of tiny curls which swayed with every
movement of her head and which somehow accentuated
the essential maturity of her foolish fat face.
Jimmy gave an almost audible gasp when he crossed
the threshold of the door. He was prepared for the
worst, but he had not expected to find himself face
to face with a being out of the comic supplement.
She ran to meet him, laughing sillily.</p>
<p class='c012'>“How do you do,” she said gayly, extending a
pudgy hand. “It isn’t necessary for the dear prince
to introduce you. He’s told me all about you and
I know that we’re going to be kindred souls. You
must vibrate on our plane, you know. I’m certain
you must because you are his friend and one’s
friends always vibrate on one’s plane. Don’t they,
Rajjy, dear?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Of course, my jasmine bud,” replied the prince
from the sheltered embrace of a huge arm chair.
“Mr. Martin is of our inner circle. He shares the
secrets of our hearts, sweet lily. He is my councilor
and chosen guide. Let us bid him sup coffee
with us which you will pour with your much-to-be
adored hands.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy cast a roving eye in the general direction
of his dark-skinned fellow conspirator and was
greeted by the latter with an expressive wink,
which was not visible to Miss Fannie, who was
bustling about a silver tray on which was a pot of
steaming coffee. She poured and served it with a
fluttering air of heavy coquetry which irritated the
press agent beyond measure and which made him
feel decidedly uncomfortable. She was such a simple,
trusting, foolish soul that he didn’t have the
heart to enlarge upon the merits of the bridegroom-to-be
in the expansive and flowery fashion he had
decided upon on the way from the hotel. He remained
strangely silent for a time listening to an
exchange of preposterous love words between this
oddly assorted and incongruous pair and wishing
himself a long distance away.</p>
<p class='c012'>“And when shall we visit dear Hydrabad, Rajjy?”
Miss Easton was saying. “I can see myself under
a silken awning by the shores of the little lake you
spoke of—the lake by your summer palace I mean,
and I can see you beside me and the native servants
are salaaming and serving us with a wonderful
feast. We must go there at once, Rajjy dear, at
once. My soul cries out for the sound of those
‘tinkly temple bells’ that Kipling wrote about. It
just cries out for them.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Prince Rajput Singh stirred uneasily in his
chair and leaned forward.</p>
<p class='c012'>“In time, sweet nightingale,” he said suavely. “I
must make a continuation of my lectures and then
I must visit your wonderful California. It will
please me to be your honored guest at your home
there. Then, when we have tired of the sunshine
and the flowers we shall make long journey to my
home-land. The spell of this new country is on me
and until it passes I must remain here. Besides, I
must await a salutation from my father. That
breach must be healed, fair bul-bul.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Miss Fannie sighed resignedly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Whatever you say, Rajjy dear,” she said. “You
shall stay in California as long as you wish and I’ll
write to that father of yours if you don’t hear from
him. I think it’s terrible the way the Nazir is treating
the prince, don’t you, Mr. Martin?”</p>
<p class='c012'>The bridegroom-to-be coughed nervously and
rose quickly from his chair, breaking into the conversation
before Jimmy could stammer a reply.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Fair one,” he said, gripping her by the arm, “my
friend tires of these much repeated references to
my own poor self. We have more important matters
to discuss. Let us make busy with them.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Thus pressed, Jimmy enlarged upon the detailed
arrangements which he had completed for the exciting
events of the following day, arrangements
which included provisions for everything from the
marriage license to the formal and ceremonious
delivery to all the newspaper offices of elaborately
engraved announcement cards by the Hindu attendants
of Prince Rajput Singh. Miss Fannie gushed
her approval of the program and was positively
gurgling with delight as she escorted him to the
door.</p>
<p class='c012'>“The prince is so proud,” she said, when she was
out of ear-shot of that dignitary, “that he can’t
bear to have me say anything about the perfectly
outrageous way in which he has been treated by
his father. I think it’s perfectly scandalous, don’t
you?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m not very clear about it myself,” returned the
press agent guardedly. “What’d the old gink—I
mean the old man do?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Oh, dear, I thought you knew. Why, he cut off
his allowance for a perfectly trivial something or
other—he’s never told me exactly—and here he was
on the verge of being unable to keep up appearances
and the dignity of his station. It must have
been most humiliating. Poor Rajjy cried when I
forced it out of him. He’d been so depressed that
I knew something must be the matter, and I just
made him tell me. I was so glad to help.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy cocked his head at the last sentence and
looked up at her quickly.</p>
<p class='c012'>“So you helped him, eh?” he inquired.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Just a little,” she replied. “What are a few
thousand dollars if they will bring peace to a
troubled spirit? Peace is everything, Mr. Martin,
quite everything worth while. And I’m going to
keep the poor, dear prince peaceful for ever and
always and aye. Good-bye, dear Mr. Martin. I’ll
see you in the morning.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy went down the gravel path in a thoughtful
mood. Somehow he felt rather fed up with
Prince Rajput Singh.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c007' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c010'><b><i>Chapter Twenty-Nine</i></b></h2></div>
<p class='c011'>Mr. J. Herbert Denby, between sips of his morning
coffee next day in a secluded corner of the
breakfast room of his hotel, was reading for the
second time, with an inner glow of satisfaction, a
letter which he had just received. It was a brief
communication from Chester Bartlett complimenting
him upon his success as a lecturer and announcing
the manager’s forthcoming arrival in Chicago
that very morning.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I can’t resist the temptation,” Bartlett wrote,
“to look in on one of your seances and catch His
Royal Highness and yourself in action. I must congratulate
you on the success which you have
achieved in putting this stunt over on the natives
and I have instructed the office to give you a
twenty-five per cent increase in salary.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby laid the letter down and decided that,
after all, theatrical managers had their proper place
in the scheme of existence. Up to that moment he
had always been inclined to consider them as useless
encumberers of the earth.</p>
<p class='c012'>He picked up the morning paper which lay at his
elbow, adjusted his glasses and turned to the front
page. He glanced cursorily at a story in the left-hand
column dealing with the newest series of
what are technically known in newspaper circles as
“Red Raids;” let his attention wander to an account
of the launching of a new presidential boom
and then took a look at the right hand corner. What
he saw emblazoned there caused him to almost drop
the cup which he had just daintily raised to his lips
and provoked an audible spluttering that sent the
head-waiter hurrying in his direction from the other
side of the room.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Anything wrong, sir?” deferentially inquired
the chief servitor, noting with apprehension the
startled mien of the eminent lecturer.</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby tried to compose himself.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Nothing important,” he managed to reply. “Just
some unwelcome tidings from home. I’ll be all
right in a moment or two.”</p>
<p class='c012'>When the head-waiter had bowed himself away
Mr. Denby turned to a perusal of the paper. The
words which struck his eyes seemed to spell to him
the collapse of all things temporal.</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i249.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c012'>The harrowing details which followed were
dressed up in such sarcastic verbiage that Mr.
Denby’s soul went sick and his appetite for breakfast
vanished. He paid his check and sought the
seclusion of his room. He wished to hide his face
from the public gaze and apply poultices to his
wounded dignity.</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy Martin, coming up unannounced, found
him a half hour later gazing pensively out of the
window—a picture of incarnate misery. Jimmy
wasn’t in a particularly jaunty mood himself, but
he assumed his best “cheery-oh” manner when he
caught a glimpse of his associate’s face.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s the matter, little song-bird?” he inquired
breezily. “You look about as lonely as a bartender.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby turned a pair of ineffably sad eyes on
the press agent and sighed mournfully.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’m disgraced, Mr. Martin,” he said feebly, “irretrievably
disgraced. I should never have gone
into this masquerade—never. My saner judgment
should have prevailed. I shall never recover from
this. I’m the most miserable man in Chicago this
morning—the most utterly miserable.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You’ve got another think coming, old popsy-wop,”
replied Jimmy. “I’ve just seen his royal
highness. You’re a care-free babe in arms compared
to that bird. He’s passin’ on to New York
on the twelve forty.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“What I can’t understand,” said Mr. Denby, “is
how the story got out. Have you any idea?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Yes, I have,” replied the press agent, slowly.
“As a matter of fact I gave it out myself.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You gave it out yourself,” stammered the bewildered
Mr. Denby. “I—I don’t understand. Why
did you do such a thing as that?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, the low-down of it is that I had to. I was
out to that Easton dame’s house yesterday afternoon
with his royal jiblets and when I saw the way
the poor nut was makin’ a fool out of herself over
that little brown brother it just made me sick. He’d
been milkin’ her for thousands and I could see he
was layin’ lines to wish himself into an easy life at
her expense. She’s a good-natured old gal, too, but
she’d fallen for him so hard that she’d have believed
him if he told her he was that Buddha party come
back to earth for a little holiday.</p>
<p class='c012'>“She told me about some fairy tale or other he’d
pulled—something about a row with his father and
how his allowance had been stopped and so forth
and so on and when I took one last look at her at
the front door and thought of that baby lollin’
around on sofas and lettin’ her wait on him and
callin’ her a lot of flossy names so’s to keep his
stock up I didn’t have the heart to let her go
through with the marriage thing, story or no story.
Somethin’ sort of caught hold of me and wouldn’t
let me go on. I wonder what it was?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Some philosophers call it the categorical imperative,”
replied Mr. Denby, thoughtfully.</p>
<p class='c012'>“They do, eh? Well, maybe that’s a good name
for it, but I’ve got a kind of a hunch that it was
the little old Golden Rule that made me ashamed
of myself. I thought the best of cramp Rajjy’s
style would be to get word to that brother of the
blushin’ bride so I got in to see him last night and
coughed up everything. He’s a fine fellow. They
don’t grow ’em better. He was mighty grateful,
but he said it wouldn’t do any good for him to
say anything to her. He figured that would make
it worse. He said she wouldn’t believe him. The
only thing that’d get to her, he said, would be to
have some paper expose his royal job-lots and make
him ridiculous in the eyes of all her friends.</p>
<p class='c012'>“So I came down town and slipped an ear-full to
Cunningham, a friend of mine on the Times, and
he did the rest. I’m sorry, old boy, but I just
couldn’t help it. It’d a been one of the best stories
ever put over if we’d let it go through and it puts
the kibosh on the lecture tour, but there just
naturally wasn’t anythin’ else to do. Women and
children first, as they say when the ship hits an
iceberg. Am I right?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby sprang up and grasped Jimmy by the
hand.</p>
<p class='c012'>“You certainly are,” he said enthusiastically. “I
feel better already. I’m sure Mr. Bartlett will
understand. Did you know he was coming to town
today?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“I did not,” returned Jimmy. “That’s a good
exit cue, though. I haven’t the nerve to face him
until this thing kind of blows over. I’ll duck under
cover for twenty-four hours and let you break the
news to mother. Slip him the real inside stuff.
Maybe he’ll fall for it.”</p>
<hr class='c013' />
<p class='c012'>Chester Bartlett was the maddest man in the
entire state of Illinois when he read the story of
the expose on the incoming train to Chicago that
morning and the quips which were hurled at him
by dozens of his friends in his club at luncheon gave
substance and solidity to his rage. His interview
with Mr. Denby was a stormy affair and his reaction
to what Jimmy termed the “real inside stuff”
was violent in the extreme. While still in the throes
of his anger he wrote a brief message to the press
agent which the erstwhile lecturer on far eastern
affairs was requested to deliver in person to his
friend.</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby found Jimmy at his hotel immersed
in the preparation of advertising copy. He looked
up hopefully; Mr. Denby handed him the note in
silence and he tore it open with a foreboding of
disaster.</p>
<p class='c012'>“No man can make me ridiculous and remain in
my employ,” it ran. “You’re through the moment
you receive this. You should never have encouraged
such an affair as the romance Denby tells me
about. As a matter of fact it was a foolhardy
thing to try and palm that fellow off as a prince.
You might have known you’d come a cropper
sooner or later. You’ve got too many ideas for
your own good and I’ll be satisfied to go along
hereafter with someone who’s perhaps a little shy
on brilliancy, but who’s long on balance.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Can you beat ’em,” inquired Jimmy, helplessly.
“They’re all alike. No matter what you do you’re
always in wrong.”</p>
<p class='c012'>The telephone bell rang just then and he barked a
rude “hello” into the transmitter. The voice at the
other end was hearty and good-natured.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Is that Mr. Martin—Mr. James T. Martin?—this
is Easton talking—Easton—Junius P. Easton—thought
I’d let you know that my sister is cured—can’t
begin to thank you for what you did—tried
to reciprocate this morning—told my brokers to
carry a thousand shares of Consolidated Gutta
Percha in your name—closed out at a quarter to
three—ten point rise—you’ll get the check in the
morning—had a little inside information, you know—did
pretty well myself, too—say, you impress me
as being a pretty clever sort of a lad—ever think
of going into business on your own?—it’s the only
game—why work for anyone?—think it over.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy was still mumbling his thanks when the
other excused himself and hung up. Mr. Denby,
who hadn’t grasped the import of the telephonic
conversation, betrayed an intense interest in the
proceedings.</p>
<p class='c012'>“What’s up?” he questioned.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Consolidated Gutta Percha,” replied Jimmy.
“Want a job?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“You know I do. Who with?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Why with me, of course, you old highbrow. And
look here. Don’t you go palmin’ off any fake dukes
or rajahs or anythin’ like that. If you do you’ll
get the bum’s rush and I won’t take the trouble to
write you a letter about it, either.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby raised a deprecatory hand.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I’ll promise to be good,” he said, “but may I be
permitted to ask another question?”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Shoot—while the shootin’s good.”</p>
<p class='c012'>“Well, then, in the parlance of the theatrical profession—with
which, I take it, we are still to be
identified—‘where do we go from here?’”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy pulled a pink letter out of an inside
pocket and proffered it to his friend with a flourish.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Cedar Rapids is our next stand, you old adjective
hound,” he said heartily. “Take a look at
this little message.”</p>
<p class='c012'>It was, Mr. Denby found, a note from Lolita
Murphy and it contained a contrite plea for forgiveness
for her abrupt departure from Boston
many weeks before and a hope that the diplomatic
relations then severed might be renewed.</p>
<p class='c012'>“Old Mr. Higgins,” she wrote, “wants someone
to take the lease of the Opera House off his hands.
He’s had a cataract on his left eye for two years,
and now he’s got rheumatism in his right hip and
he wants to go out to California. He’s been doing
great business this season and on the nights when
he hasn’t had regular shows he’s been putting on
big extra special feature films and packing people
in. I thought maybe you’d like to try your hand at
settling down and running a theatre. Of course,
Main Street isn’t Broadway, but I like it lots better
and maybe you could learn to, too. It means
home folks to me. Maybe it might come to mean
the same thing to you—some time.”</p>
<p class='c012'>Mr. Denby gasped when he read this. When he
tried to talk the words did not come trippingly....</p>
<p class='c012'>“You mean you’re going to—to—run the opera
house in Cedar Rapids?”</p>
<p class='c012'>Jimmy grabbed him by the shoulders and shook
him in an outburst of fierce joviality.</p>
<p class='c012'>“I mean that <i>we’re</i> going to run it,” he said. “All
<i>three</i> of us. What do you think about smearing
a catch-line all over town—‘A Homey Theatre for
Home Folks’? I’ve got an idea that’d make a hit
with a Certain Party.”</p>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>THE END</div>
</div></div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c002' /></div>
<p class='c012'> </p>
<div class='tnbox'>
<ul class='ul_1 c007'>
<li>Transcriber’s Notes:
<ul class='ul_2'>
<li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
</li>
<li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
</li>
<li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
form was found in this book.
</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul></div>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />