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"Thank you, Brennon," she said, without much attention, entering the car.
When she reached Blainey's office, she was forced to wait some time, Sada Quichy being in conference with the manager. _The Red Prince_ had made an enormous success, and the diva had leaped into instant popularity. Of a consequence, Blainey, who had treated her with abrupt tolerance on the night of the dress rehearsal, now accorded her the honors due to royalty. At the end of a quarter of an hour he appeared at the door, according her the favor of a personal escort, which she, comedian herself, repaid with an extra languishing adieu, each sublimely indifferent to the motley audience of actors, agents, authors and musicians who a.s.sisted respectfully at this sport of the G.o.ds.
Blainey perceived Dore, and giving her the preference with a curt bob of his head, reentered his den. There was in the gesture something unusually abrupt that struck her. When she followed him into the room, this impression was reinforced by the evident atmosphere of ill-humor.
"What's the matter with you, Blainey?" she asked directly.
He turned--hostility in every movement--flinging himself back into his chair, c.o.c.king his cigar in the corner of his mouth, running his hands into the arm-pits of his vest, frowning, determined.
"See here, kid, it's no go! Don't start anything! You've worked me for a sucker once!... Thanks; I've retired from charity committees!"
"What do you mean? I don't understand!"
"Ain't you come here to get me to take back that stuffed doll you panned off on me?"
"Take back!" she cried, amazed. "You mean to say Horning's fired?"
"Come off!" he said, grinning.
"Honest, Blainey, I didn't know! Since when?"
"Ten days. Say, she was fierce! I wouldn't trust her to carry a spear!
The next time you try to work me, kid, on the charity racket, just pick my pockets. It'll save time!"
"Horning fired!" she repeated, suddenly furnished with a clue to all that had happened.
"Clever kid!" he said, watching her appreciatively. "You don't have to be taught!"
"Honest, Blainey, I didn't know!"
"What you come here for?"
"I came to get you to bounce her," she said. "That's straight!"
He gave a long delighted whistle.
"Cripes! Why, p.u.s.s.y's got claws! You don't say! What's she been up to?
Crossing the heart line?" he added, possessed always with the idea that he had divined the cause of her troubles.
"No. Tried to double-cross me with a friend--but one that counted!
However, if she's bounced, all right! No need to bother you!"
"No hurry, no hurry, kid!" he said, with profound disdain for the forty-odd clamorers in the outer purgatory. "Don't get a chance to look you over often. Well, how's the heart?"
She laughed.
"Better!"
"What's that mean--worse?"
"Perhaps!"
He shifted his cigar.
"Better get to work!"
"Be patient!" she said, shaking her curls. "Only three months more!"
"_Hein?_"
"The tenth of March is when my season closes!"
"Honest?"
"Quite so!"
"You'll begin to work?"
"Either that, or other things!" she said provokingly.
"What other things?"
"Oh, I might marry!"
He snorted with rage. Then, drawing his calendar to him, he turned ahead.
"March ten, eh?" He paused, and put a big cross on the day before. "I'd like an option of the ninth myself!"
"How so?"
"Let me discuss a little contract with you before you come to any other decision. What do you say? Promise!"
She laughed. She had no illusions in her mind as to the nature of what he might propose.
"Listen to what I've in mind before you close anywhere else!" he persisted.
"All right, Blainey!"
He rose, dragging himself up from his chair.
"Heavens, Blainey, do I get the honors of Sada Quichy?" she said, laughing, as she perceived his intention was to accompany her to the outer door.
"Come to me, kid, when you need a tip or for anything else!" he said quietly. He put out his stumpy hand, tapping her shoulder. "I'd like to do a lot for you--know that, don't you? All right! Good luck!"
She gave him a quick pressure of her hand and went out. The atmosphere of the theater always impressed her, throwing her other life into futile outlines. Here was something definite--the satisfaction of a purpose, the reality of work. And as she returned, thinking of Ma.s.singale, of the wild romance she had created for themselves, she felt more and more drawn to a career. A woman who achieved things, who had even a trace of genius, had a right, in the eyes of the world, to her own life, to be judged differently.
The news she had received of Winona doubled her suspicions. If this chance had failed the girl, no wonder that she had set herself deliberately toward a marriage with Peavey. Dodo was wildly indignant at this double dealing. She considered the least of her admirers her inviolate property, and she never saw one desert without a feeling of resentment. In Peavey's case it was thrice blameworthy, considering all the prodigies of planning she had spent to bring him to the point and maintain him in the _status quo_. For Peavey was in truth, as Judge Ma.s.singale had laughingly expressed it, the "man behind the rock," and even in the wildest flights of her imagination she retained, unconsciously, a prudent spirit toward the uncharted future. She might fly in the face of society, and then, again, at the last, she might not find in herself all the audacity she desired to believe in. Peavey was a bridge back into conventionality, security and certain necessary luxuries which she never for a moment, in her thrifty mind, intended to neglect.
As soon as she reached her room, she sat down to write to him. This letter called for her deepest intuition; it was a very difficult letter to compose. She tried a dozen methods, rejecting each as too obvious. In the midst of her labors, Josephus, to her surprise, arrived with the basket of champagne, which, strangely enough, it appeared, had been below, forgot, all this time. This at once relieved her, and suggested a bold stroke. She wrote: