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"Thanks for the warning. When you know, you know what to do!" said Dore carelessly. "Just let him try!"
The admonition troubled her not at all. She had met and scored others before who in the secret code of the Salamanders were written down unfair. The prospect of such an antagonist brought to her a little more animation. She bolted into a snug-fitting fur toque, brightened by a flight of feathers at the side, green with a touch of red.
"There!" she exclaimed merrily. "A bit of the throat, a bit of the ankle, and a slash of red--that's Dodo! What's the time?"
"Twenty past. Who's your prop?"
"Stacey."
"Prop," in the lexicon of the Salamanders, is a term obviously converted from the theatrical "property." A "prop," in Salamanderland, is a youth not too long out of the nest to be rebellious, possessed of an automobile--a _sine qua non_--and agitated by a patriotic craving to counteract the evil effects of the h.o.a.rding of gold. Each Salamander of good standing counts from three to a dozen props, carefully broken, kept in a state of expectant grat.i.tude, genii of the telephone waiting a summons to fetch and carry, purchase tickets of all descriptions, lead the way to theater or opera, and, above all, to fill in those blank dates, or deferred engagements, which otherwise might become items of personal expense.
At this moment the curly brown head of Ida Summers, of the second floor back, bobbed in and out, saying in a stage whisper:
"Black Friday! Beware! The cat's loose--rampaging!"
It was a warning that Miss Pim, in a periodic spasm of alarm, was spreading dismay through the two houses in her progress in search of long-deferred rents.
"Horrors!" exclaimed Winona Horning. She sprang to the door which gave into her room, ready to use it as an escape from either attack.
"Twice this week. Um-m--means business!" said Dore solemnly. "I'm three weeks behind. How are you?"
"Five!"
"We must get busy," said Dore pensively. "I have just two dollars in sight!"
"Two? You're a millionaire!"
"The champagne will bring something," said Dore, fingering the basket, "but I can't let it go until Mr. Peavey--If he'd only call up for to-night! Zip might take the perfume, but I need it so! Worse luck, the flowers have all come from the wrong places. There's twenty dollars there, if it were only Pouffe. And look at this!"
She went to her bureau, and opening a little drawer, held up a bank-note.
"Fifty dollars!" exclaimed Winona, amazed.
"Ridiculous, isn't it?" said Dore, with a laugh, shutting it up again.
"Joe Gilday had the impertinence to slip it in there, after I had refused a loan!"
"What! Angry for that?" said Winona, carried away by the famine the money had awakened in her.
"Certainly I am!" said Dore energetically. "Do you think I'd allow a man to give me money--like that?"
This ethical point might have been discussed, but at the moment a knock broke in upon the conversation. The two girls started, half expecting to behold Miss Pim's military figure advancing into the room.
"Who is it?" said Dore anxiously.
"It's Stacey," said a docile voice.
"Shall I go?" inquired Winona, with a gesture.
"No, no--stay! Always stay!" said Dore, hastily stuffing back the overflowing contents of a trunk and signaling Winona to close the lid nearest her.
Stacey Van Loan crowded into the room. He was a splendid grenadier type of man, with the smiling vacant face of a boy. He wore shoes for which he paid thirty dollars, a suit that cost a hundred, a great fur coat that cost eight times more, enormous fur gloves, and a large pearl pin in his cravat. On entering, he always blushed twice, the first as an apology and the second for having blushed before. The most captious Salamander would have accepted him at a glance as the beau ideal of a prop--a perfect blend of radiating expensiveness and docile timidity.
Van Loan Senior, of the steel n.o.bility of Pennsylvania, had insisted on his acquiring a profession after two unfortunate attempts at collegiate culture, and had exiled him to New York to study law, allotting him twenty thousand dollars a year to defray necessary expenses.
"Bingo! what a knock-out!" said Stacey, gazing open-mouthed, heels together, at the glowing figure that greeted him.
Dore, who had certain expectations as to his arrival, perceiving that he held one hand concealed behind his back, broke into smiles.
"You sly fellow, what are you hiding there?"
"All right?" said Van Loan, with an anxious gulp. "How about it?"
He thrust out an enormous bouquet of orchids, which, in his fear of appearing parsimonious, he had doubled beyond all reason. The sight of these flowers of luxury, the price of which would have gone a long way toward placating Miss Pim, brought a quick telegraphic glance of irony between the two girls.
"Isn't he a darling?" said Dore, taking the huge floral display and stealing a glance at the ribbon, which, alas, did not bear the legend Pouffe, who was approachable in time of need. "Stacey is really the most thoughtful boy, and everything he gets is in perfect taste. He never does anything by halves!"
As she said this in a careless manner, which made the young fellow redden to the ears with delight, she was secretly smothering a desire to laugh, and wondering how on earth she was to divide the monstrous display without discouraging future exhibitions of lavishness. She moved presently toward the back of the room, saying carelessly:
"Look at my last photographs, Stacey."
Then she quickly slipped a third of the bouquet behind a trunk, signaling Winona, and turning before the long mirror, affixed the orchids, spreading them loosely to conceal the defection.
"Quarter of. You'll be late!" said Winona, masking the trunk with her skirts.
"I want to be! I'm not going to have a lot of society women find me on the door-step!" said Dore, for the benefit of the prop. "Come on, Stacey; you can look at the photos another day!" She flung about her shoulders a white stole from the floor below, and buried her hands in a m.u.f.f of the same provenance. "Good-by, dear. Back late. Go ahead, Stacey!"
A moment later she reentered hurriedly.
"Give me the others, quick!" she said, detaching those at her waist.
"These are from Granard's. Take them there--tell them Estelle sent you; she has an arrangement with them. See what you can get. Tell them we'll send 'em custom."
She completed the transfer of the smaller bunch, carefully arranging the wide stole, which she pinned against accidents.
"Listen. If Joe telephones again, make him call me up at six--don't say I said it! It's possible Blainey may get it in his head to call up. I'll go with him, unless--unless Peavey wants me for dinner. I must see him before I dispose of the champagne--understand? You know what to answer the rest." She hesitated, looking at the orchids: "We ought to get fifteen out of them. Remember, promise them our custom; use Pouffe on them. Good-by, dear!"
"Be careful!"
"Yes--yes--yes!"
"Dangerous!"
"Bah! If they only were--but they're not!"
She rejoined Stacey, whose nose was sublimely at the wheel, crying:
"Let her go, Stacey. Up to Tenafly's. Break the speed law!"
She started to spring in, but suddenly remembering the offending stocking, stopped and ascended quietly--on the left foot.