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<h2> CHAPTER XVI THE NEW STAR </h2>
<p>Sam, Penrod, Herman, and Verman withdrew in considerable state from
non-paying view, and, repairing to the hay-loft, declared the exhibition
open to the public. Oral proclamation was made by Sam, and then the
loitering multitude was enticed by the seductive strains of a band; the
two partners performing upon combs and paper, Herman and Verman upon tin
pans with sticks.</p>
<p>The effect was immediate. Visitors appeared upon the stairway and sought
admission. Herman and Verman took position among the exhibits, near the
wall; Sam stood at the entrance, officiating as barker and ticket-seller;
while Penrod, with debonair suavity, acted as curator, master of
ceremonies, and lecturer. He greeted the first to enter with a courtly
bow. They consisted of Miss Rennsdale and her nursery governess, and they
paid spot cash for their admission.</p>
<p>"Walk in, lay-deeze, walk right in—pray do not obstruck the
passageway," said Penrod, in a remarkable voice. "Pray be seated; there is
room for each and all."</p>
<p>Miss Rennsdale and governess were followed by Mr. Georgie Bassett and baby
sister (which proves the perfection of Georgie's character) and six or
seven other neighbourhood children—a most satisfactory audience,
although, subsequent to Miss Rennsdale and governess, admission was wholly
by pin.</p>
<p>"GEN-til-mun and LAY-deeze," shouted Penrod, "I will first call your
at-tain-shon to our genuine South American dog, part alligator!" He
pointed to the dachshund, and added, in his ordinary tone, "That's him."
Straightway reassuming the character of showman, he bellowed: "NEXT, you
see Duke, the genuine, full-blooded Indian dog from the far Western Plains
and Rocky Mountains. NEXT, the trained Michigan rats, captured way up
there, and trained to jump and run all around the box at the—at the—at
the slightest PREtext!" He paused, partly to take breath and partly to
enjoy his own surprised discovery that this phrase was in his vocabulary.</p>
<p>"At the slightest PREtext!" he repeated, and continued, suiting the
action to the word: "I will now hammer upon the box and each and all may
see these genuine full-blooded Michigan rats perform at the slightest
PREtext! There! (That's all they do now, but I and Sam are goin' to train
'em lots more before this afternoon.) GEN-til-mun and LAY-deeze I will
kindly now call your at-tain-shon to Sherman, the wild animal from Africa,
costing the lives of the wild trapper and many of his companions. NEXT,
let me kindly interodoos Herman and Verman. Their father got mad and stuck
his pitchfork right inside of another man, exactly as promised upon the
advertisements outside the big tent, and got put in jail. Look at them
well, gen-til-mun and lay-deeze, there is no extra charge, and RE-MEM-BUR
you are each and all now looking at two wild, tattooed men which the
father of is in jail. Point, Herman. Each and all will have a chance to
see. Point to sumpthing else, Herman. This is the only genuine
one-fingered tattooed wild man. Last on the programme, gen-til-mun and
lay-deeze, we have Verman, the savage tattooed wild boy, that can't speak
only his native foreign languages. Talk some, Verman."</p>
<p>Verman obliged and made an instantaneous hit. He was encored rapturously,
again and again; and, thrilling with the unique pleasure of being
appreciated and misunderstood at the same time, would have talked all day
but too gladly. Sam Williams, however, with a true showman's foresight,
whispered to Penrod, who rang down on the monologue.</p>
<p>"GEN-til-mun and LAY-deeze, this closes our pufformance. Pray pass out
quietly and with as little jostling as possible. As soon as you are all
out there's goin' to be a new pufformance, and each and all are welcome at
the same and simple price of admission. Pray pass out quietly and with as
little jostling as possible. RE-MEM-BUR the price is only one cent, the
tenth part of a dime, or twenty pins, no bent ones taken. Pray pass out
quietly and with as little jostling as possible. The Schofield and
Williams Military Band will play before each pufformance, and each and all
are welcome for the same and simple price of admission. Pray pass out
quietly and with as little jostling as possible."</p>
<p>Forthwith, the Schofield and Williams Military Band began a second
overture, in which something vaguely like a tune was at times
distinguishable; and all of the first audience returned, most of them
having occupied the interval in hasty excursions for more pins; Miss
Rennsdale and governess, however, again paying coin of the Republic and
receiving deference and the best seats accordingly. And when a third
performance found all of the same inveterate patrons once more crowding
the auditorium, and seven recruits added, the pleasurable excitement of
the partners in their venture will be understood by any one who has seen a
metropolitan manager strolling about the foyer of his theatre some evening
during the earlier stages of an assured "phenomenal run."</p>
<p>From the first, there was no question which feature of the entertainment
was the attraction extraordinary: Verman—Verman, the savage tattooed
wild boy, speaking only his native foreign languages—Verman was a
triumph! Beaming, wreathed in smiles, melodious, incredibly fluent, he had
but to open his lips and a dead hush fell upon the audience. Breathless,
they leaned forward, hanging upon his every semi-syllable, and, when
Penrod checked the flow, burst into thunders of applause, which Verman
received with happy laughter.</p>
<p>Alas! he delayed not o'er long to display all the egregiousness of a new
star; but for a time there was no caprice of his too eccentric to be
forgiven. During Penrod's lecture upon the other curios, the tattooed wild
boy continually stamped his foot, grinned, and gesticulated, tapping his
tiny chest, and pointing to himself as it were to say: "Wait for Me! I am
the Big Show." So soon they learn; so soon they learn! And (again alas!)
this spoiled darling of public favour, like many another, was fated to
know, in good time, the fickleness of that favour.</p>
<p>But during all the morning performances he was the idol of his audience
and looked it! The climax of his popularity came during the fifth overture
of the Schofield and Williams Military Band, when the music was quite
drowned in the agitated clamours of Miss Rennsdale, who was endeavouring
to ascend the stairs in spite of the physical dissuasion of her governess.</p>
<p>"I WON'T go home to lunch!" screamed Miss Rennsdale, her voice accompanied
by a sound of ripping. "I WILL hear the tattooed wild boy talk some more!
It's lovely—I WILL hear him talk! I WILL! I WILL! I want to listen
to Verman—I WANT to—I WANT to——"</p>
<p>Wailing, she was borne away—of her sex not the first to be
fascinated by obscurity, nor the last to champion its eloquence.</p>
<p>Verman was almost unendurable after this, but, like many, many other
managers, Schofield and Williams restrained their choler, and even laughed
fulsomely when their principal attraction essayed the role of a comedian
in private, and capered and squawked in sheer, fatuous vanity.</p>
<p>The first performance of the afternoon rivalled the successes of the
morning, and although Miss Rennsdale was detained at home, thus drying up
the single source of cash income developed before lunch, Maurice Levy
appeared, escorting Marjorie Jones, and paid coin for two admissions,
dropping the money into Sam's hand with a careless—nay, a
contemptuous—gesture. At sight of Marjorie, Penrod Schofield flushed
under his new moustache (repainted since noon) and lectured as he had
never lectured before. A new grace invested his every gesture; a new
sonorousness rang in his voice; a simple and manly pomposity marked his
very walk as he passed from curio to curio. And when he fearlessly handled
the box of rats and hammered upon it with cool insouciance, he beheld—for
the first time in his life—a purl of admiration eddying in
Marjorie's lovely eye, a certain softening of that eye. And then Verman
spake and Penrod was forgotten. Marjorie's eye rested upon him no more.</p>
<p>A heavily equipped chauffeur ascended the stairway, bearing the message
that Mrs. Levy awaited her son and his lady. Thereupon, having devoured
the last sound permitted (by the managers) to issue from Verman, Mr. Levy
and Miss Jones departed to a real matinee at a real theatre, the limpid
eyes of Marjorie looking back softly over her shoulder—but only at
the tattooed wild boy. Nearly always it is woman who puts the irony into
life.</p>
<p>After this, perhaps because of sated curiosity, perhaps on account of a
pin famine, the attendance began to languish. Only four responded to the
next call of the band; the four dwindled to three; finally the
entertainment was given for one blase auditor, and Schofield and Williams
looked depressed. Then followed an interval when the band played in vain.</p>
<p>About three o'clock Schofield and Williams were gloomily discussing
various unpromising devices for startling the public into a renewal of
interest, when another patron unexpectedly appeared and paid a cent for
his admission. News of the Big Show and Museum of Curiosities had at last
penetrated the far, cold spaces of interstellar niceness, for this new
patron consisted of no less than Roderick Magsworth Bitts, Junior, escaped
in a white "sailor suit" from the Manor during a period of severe maternal
and tutorial preoccupation.</p>
<p>He seated himself without parley, and the pufformance was offered for his
entertainment with admirable conscientiousness. True to the Lady Clara
caste and training, Roderick's pale, fat face expressed nothing except an
impervious superiority and, as he sat, cold and unimpressed upon the front
bench, like a large, white lump, it must be said that he made a
discouraging audience "to play to." He was not, however, unresponsive—far
from it. He offered comment very chilling to the warm grandiloquence of
the orator.</p>
<p>"That's my uncle Ethelbert's dachshund," he remarked, at the beginning of
the lecture. "You better take him back if you don't want to get arrested."
And when Penrod, rather uneasily ignoring the interruption, proceeded to
the exploitation of the genuine, full-blooded Indian dog, Duke, "Why don't
you try to give that old dog away?" asked Roderick. "You couldn't sell
him."</p>
<p>"My papa would buy me a lots better 'coon than that," was the information
volunteered a little later, "only I wouldn't want the nasty old thing."</p>
<p>Herman of the missing finger obtained no greater indulgence. "Pooh!" said
Roderick. "We have two fox-terriers in our stables that took prizes at the
kennel show, and their tails were BIT off. There's a man that always bites
fox-terriers' tails off."</p>
<p>"Oh, my gosh, what a lie!" exclaimed Sam Williams ignorantly.</p>
<p>"Go on with the show whether he likes it or not, Penrod. He's paid his
money."</p>
<p>Verman, confident in his own singular powers, chuckled openly at the
failure of the other attractions to charm the frosty visitor, and, when
his turn came, poured forth a torrent of conversation which was
straightway damned.</p>
<p>"Rotten," said Mr. Bitts languidly. "Anybody could talk like that. <i>I</i>
could do it if I wanted to."</p>
<p>Verman paused suddenly.</p>
<p>"YES, you could!" exclaimed Penrod, stung. "Let's hear you do it, then."</p>
<p>"Yessir!" the other partner shouted. "Let's just hear you DO it!"</p>
<p>"I said I could if I wanted to," responded Roderick. "I didn't say I
WOULD."</p>
<p>"Yay! Knows he can't!" sneered Sam.</p>
<p>"I can, too, if I try."</p>
<p>"Well, let's hear you try!"</p>
<p>So challenged, the visitor did try, but, in the absence of an impartial
jury, his effort was considered so pronounced a failure that he was howled
down, derided, and mocked with great clamours.</p>
<p>"Anyway," said Roderick, when things had quieted down, "if I couldn't get
up a better show than this I'd sell out and leave town."</p>
<p>Not having enough presence of mind to inquire what he would sell out, his
adversaries replied with mere formless yells of scorn.</p>
<p>"I could get up a better show than this with my left hand," Roderick
asserted.</p>
<p>"Well, what would you have in your ole show?" asked Penrod, condescending
to language.</p>
<p>"That's all right, what I'd HAVE. I'd have enough!"</p>
<p>"You couldn't get Herman and Verman in your ole show."</p>
<p>"No, and I wouldn't want 'em, either!"</p>
<p>"Well, what WOULD you have?" insisted Penrod derisively. "You'd have to
have SUMPTHING—you couldn't be a show yourself!"</p>
<p>"How do YOU know?" This was but meandering while waiting for ideas, and
evoked another yell.</p>
<p>"You think you could be a show all by yourself?" demanded Penrod.</p>
<p>"How do YOU know I couldn't?"</p>
<p>Two white boys and two black boys shrieked their scorn of the boaster.</p>
<p>"I could, too!" Roderick raised his voice to a sudden howl, obtaining a
hearing.</p>
<p>"Well, why don't you tell us how?"</p>
<p>"Well, <i>I</i> know HOW, all right," said Roderick. "If anybody asks you,
you can just tell him I know HOW, all right."</p>
<p>"Why, you can't DO anything," Sam began argumentatively. "You talk about
being a show all by yourself; what could you try to do? Show us sumpthing
you can do."</p>
<p>"I didn't say I was going to DO anything," returned the badgered one,
still evading.</p>
<p>"Well, then, how'd you BE a show?" Penrod demanded. "WE got a show here,
even if Herman didn't point or Verman didn't talk. Their father stabbed a
man with a pitchfork, I guess, didn't he?"</p>
<p>"How do <i>I</i> know?"</p>
<p>"Well, I guess he's in jail, ain't he?"</p>
<p>"Well, what if their father is in jail? I didn't say he wasn't, did I?"</p>
<p>"Well, YOUR father ain't in jail, is he?"</p>
<p>"Well, I never said he was, did I?"</p>
<p>"Well, then," continued Penrod, "how could you be a——" He
stopped abruptly, staring at Roderick, the birth of an idea plainly
visible in his altered expression. He had suddenly remembered his
intention to ask Roderick Magsworth Bitts, Junior, about Rena Magsworth,
and this recollection collided in his mind with the irritation produced by
Roderick's claiming some mysterious attainment which would warrant his
setting up as a show in his single person. Penrod's whole manner changed
instantly.</p>
<p>"Roddy," he asked, almost overwhelmed by a prescience of something vast
and magnificent, "Roddy, are you any relation of Rena Magsworth?"</p>
<p>Roderick had never heard of Rena Magsworth, although a concentration of
the sentence yesterday pronounced upon her had burned, black and horrific,
upon the face of every newspaper in the country. He was not allowed to
read the journals of the day and his family's indignation over the
sacrilegious coincidence of the name had not been expressed in his
presence. But he saw that it was an awesome name to Penrod Schofield and
Samuel Williams. Even Herman and Verman, though lacking many educational
advantages on account of a long residence in the country, were informed on
the subject of Rena Magsworth through hearsay, and they joined in the
portentous silence.</p>
<p>"Roddy," repeated Penrod, "honest, is Rena Magsworth some relation of
yours?"</p>
<p>There is no obsession more dangerous to its victims than a conviction
especially an inherited one—of superiority: this world is so full of
Missourians. And from his earliest years Roderick Magsworth Bitts, Junior,
had been trained to believe in the importance of the Magsworth family. At
every meal he absorbed a sense of Magsworth greatness, and yet, in his
infrequent meetings with persons of his own age and sex, he was treated as
negligible. Now, dimly, he perceived that there was a Magsworth claim of
some sort which was impressive, even to boys. Magsworth blood was the
essential of all true distinction in the world, he knew. Consequently,
having been driven into a cul-de-sac, as a result of flagrant and
unfounded boasting, he was ready to take advantage of what appeared to be
a triumphal way out.</p>
<p>"Roddy," said Penrod again, with solemnity, "is Rena Magsworth some
relation of yours?"</p>
<p>"IS she, Roddy?" asked Sam, almost hoarsely.</p>
<p>"She's my aunt!" shouted Roddy.</p>
<p>Silence followed. Sam and Penrod, spellbound, gazed upon Roderick
Magsworth Bitts, Junior. So did Herman and Verman. Roddy's staggering lie
had changed the face of things utterly. No one questioned it; no one
realized that it was much too good to be true.</p>
<p>"Roddy," said Penrod, in a voice tremulous with hope, "Roddy, will you
join our show?"</p>
<p>Roddy joined.</p>
<p>Even he could see that the offer implied his being starred as the
paramount attraction of a new order of things. It was obvious that he had
swelled out suddenly, in the estimation of the other boys, to that
importance which he had been taught to believe his native gift and natural
right. The sensation was pleasant. He had often been treated with effusion
by grown-up callers and by acquaintances of his mothers and sisters; he
had heard ladies speak of him as "charming" and "that delightful child,"
and little girls had sometimes shown him deference, but until this moment
no boy had ever allowed him, for one moment, to presume even to equality.
Now, in a trice, he was not only admitted to comradeship, but patently
valued as something rare and sacred to be acclaimed and pedestalled. In
fact, the very first thing that Schofield and Williams did was to find a
box for him to stand upon.</p>
<p>The misgivings roused in Roderick's bosom by the subsequent activities of
the firm were not bothersome enough to make him forego his prominence as
Exhibit A. He was not a "quick-minded" boy, and it was long (and much
happened) before he thoroughly comprehended the causes of his new
celebrity. He had a shadowy feeling that if the affair came to be heard of
at home it might not be liked, but, intoxicated by the glamour and bustle
which surround a public character, he made no protest. On the contrary, he
entered whole-heartedly into the preparations for the new show. Assuming,
with Sam's assistance, a blue moustache and "side-burns," he helped in the
painting of a new poster, which, supplanting the old one on the wall of
the stable facing the cross-street, screamed bloody murder at the passers
in that rather populous thoroughfare.</p>
<h4>
SCHoFiELD & WiLLiAMS <br/> NEW BIG SHoW <br/> RoDERiCK MAGSWoRTH BiTTS
JR <br/> ONLY LiViNG NEPHEW <br/> oF <br/> RENA MAGSWORTH <br/> THE FAMOS
<br/> MUDERESS GoiNG To BE HUNG <br/> NEXT JULY KiLED EiGHT PEOPLE <br/>
PUT ARSiNECK iN THiER MiLK ALSO <br/> SHERMAN HERMAN AND VERMAN <br/> THE
MiCHiGAN RATS DOG PART <br/> ALLiGATOR DUKE THE GENUiNE <br/> InDiAN DoG
ADMISSioN 1 CENT oR <br/> 20 PINS SAME AS BEFORE Do NoT <br/> MISS THIS
CHANSE TO SEE RoDERICK <br/> ONLY LiViNG NEPHEW oF RENA <br/> MAGSWORTH
THE GREAT FAMOS <br/> MUDERESS <br/> GoiNG To BE <br/> HUNG
</h4>
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