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"She's a oner," said Crayford. "And so are you to keep a woman like that quiet all these hours. My boy, I'm empty, I can tell you."
He said not a word to Alston about the opera that night, and Alston did not attempt to make him talk.
When Charmian arrived at Djenan-el-Maqui she found Claude in the little dining-room with Caroline, who was seated beside him on a chair, leaning her lemon-colored chin upon the table, and gazing with pathetic eyes at the cold chicken he was eating.
"O Claude!" she said, as he looked round. "Such a day! Well?"
She came to the table, pushed Caroline ruthlessly to the floor, took the dog's chair, and repeated, "Well?"
Claude's face was flushed, his short hair was untidy, and the eyes which he fixed upon her looked excited, tired, and, she thought, something else.
"Is anything the matter?"
"No, why should there be? Where have you been?"
"With Alston. He insisted on my keeping out of the way. Crayford I mean, of course. Has it gone well? Did you play the whole of it; all you've composed, I mean?"
"Yes."
"What did he say? What did he think of it?"
"It isn't easy to know exactly what that kind of man thinks."
"Was he disagreeable? Didn't you get on?"
"Oh, I suppose we did."
"What did he say, then?"
"All sorts of things."
"Go on eating. You look dreadfully tired. Tell me some of the things."
"Well, he liked some of it."
"Only some?"
"He seemed to like a good deal. But he suggested quant.i.ties of alterations."
"Where? Which part?"
"I should have to show you."
"Drink some wine. I'm sure you need it. Give me some idea. You can easily do that without showing me to-night."
"He says a march should be introduced. You know, in that scene--"
"I know, the soldiers, the Foreign Legion. Well, that would be easy enough. You could do that in a day."
"Do you think one has only to sit down?"
"Two days, then; a week if you like! You have wonderful facility when you choose. And what else? Here, I'll pour out the wine. What else?"
"Heaps of things. He wants to pull half the opera to pieces, I think."
"Oh, no, Claudie! You are exaggerating. You always do, dear old boy. And if you do what he says, what then?"
"How d'you mean?"
"Would he take it? Would he produce it?"
"He didn't commit himself."
"Of course not! They never do. But would he? You must have gathered something from his manner, from what he said, what he looked like."
"He seemed very much struck with the libretto. He said there were great opportunities for new scenic effects."
"He is going to take it! He is! He is!" she cried exultantly. "I knew he would. I always knew. Why, why do you look so grim, Claudie?"
She threw one arm round his neck and kissed him.
"Don't look like that when we are on the eve of everything we've been working for, waiting--longing for, for months and years! Caroline!
Caroline!"
Caroline hastily indicated her presence.
"Come up! The darling, she shall have a piece of cake, two pieces!
There! And the sugary part, too!"
"You'll make her ill."
"Never mind. If she is ill it is in a good cause. Claudie, just think, you are going to be another Jacques Sennier! It's too wonderful. And yet I knew it. Didn't I tell you that night in the opera house? I said it would be so. Didn't I? Can you deny it?"
"I don't deny it. But--"
"You are made of buts. If it were not for me you would go and hide away your genius, and no one would ever know you existed at all. It's pathetic. But you've married a wife who knows what you are, and others shall know too. The whole world shall know."
He could not help laughing at her wild enthusiasm. But he said, with a sobriety that almost made her despair:
"You are going too fast, Charmian. I'm not at all sure that I shall be able to consent to make changes in the opera."
Then began a curious conflict which lasted for days between Claude Heath on the one side, and Charmian, Alston Lake, and Crayford on the other.
It was really a tragic conflict, for it was, Claude believed, the last stand made by an artist in defense of his art. Never had he felt so much alone as during these days of conflict. Yet he was in his own home, with a wife who was working for him, a devoted friend who was longing for his success, and a man who was seriously thinking of bringing him and his work into the notice of the vast world that loves opera. No one knew of his loneliness. No one even suspected it. And comedy hung, as it ever does, about the heels of tragedy.
Crayford revealed himself in his conflict. He was a self-made man, and before he "went in" for opera had been a showman all over the States, and had made a quant.i.ty of money. He had run a menagerie, more than one circus, had taken about a "fake-hypnotist," a "living-magnet," and other delights. Then he had "started in" as a music-hall manager. With music halls he had been marvellously successful. He still held interests in halls all over the States. More recently he had been one of the first men to see the possibilities in moving pictures, and had made a big pile with cinematograph halls. But always, even from the beginning, beneath the blatant cleverness, the vulgar ingenuities of the showman, there had been something else; something that had ambition not wholly vulgar, that had ideals, furtive perhaps, but definite, that had aspirations. And this something, that was of the soul of the man, was incessantly feeling its way through the absurdities, the vulgarities, the deceptions, the inanities, toward a goal that was worth the winning. Crayford had always wanted to be one of the recognized leaders of what he called "high-cla.s.s artistic enterprise" in the States, and especially in his native city of New York. And he was ready to spend a lot of his "pile" to "get there."
Of late years he had been getting there. He had run a fine theater on Broadway, and had "presented" several native and foreign stars in productions which had been remarkable for the beauty and novelty of the staging and "effects." And, finally, he had built an opera house, and had "put up" a big fight against the mighty interests concentrated in the New York Metropolitan. He had dropped thousands upon thousands of dollars. But he was now a very rich man, and he was a man who was prepared to lose thousands on the road if he reached the goal at last.
He was a good fighter, a man of grit, a man with a busy brain, and a profound belief in his own capacities. And he was remarkably clever.
Somehow he had picked up three foreign languages. Somehow he had learned a good deal about a variety of subjects, among them music. Combative, he would yield to no opinion, even on matters of which he knew far less than those opposed to him. But he had a natural "flair" which often carried him happily through difficult situations, and helped him to "win out all right" in the end. The old habit of the showman made him inclined to look on those whom he presented in his various enterprises as material, and sometimes battled with an artistic instinct which often led him to pick out what was good from the seething ma.s.s of mediocrity.