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"If you like. No one ever calls me by that name."
"That's why I choose it. Good-bye. My regards to the father."
"Good-bye, friend. I'm ecstatic over your news."
"So am I over any news that brings you happiness. Good night."
After he left she sank down on the couch again, her brain awhirl of her new sensations and ideas. That Richard Strong had learned to care for her, during these months of intimate a.s.sociation over the story, came with as great a surprise as the astonis.h.i.+ng demand of Mr. Frohman. Her own thoughts had been so free of sentiment in regard to him; she went over every step of their advancing friends.h.i.+p, asking herself how much she was to blame for his outburst. She had only exerted her wiles for histrionic purposes on the occasion of his first visit. He certainly could not have misunderstood her intentions, then, when she had deliberately explained them to him. After close examination she exonerated herself.
Then, and only then, was she free to indulge her thoughts in the joyous news he had brought her. Chin on hand, before the fire, she worked it out. She and Jarvis would write the play together, together they would go through all the exciting stages of rehearsal and trying out, together they would make their bow before the curtain and their first-night's speech. She decided what kind of frock she would wear. It was all picturesque and successful. She never faced the possibility of failure.
Jarvis's name would be made as a playwright. At the thought that she was to bring him his opportunity at last, she flushed and smiled, though her eyes misted.
Then she began to plan how she would tell it to Jarvis, the story of her adventuring into the new field, her swift success, and now this last laurel leaf. Suddenly a new idea lifted its head. Suppose Jarvis refused to come into his own, under her mantle, as it were? He would be proud and glad for her, of course, but maybe he would resent taking his first chance from her hands. With knitted brow she pondered that for some time. The more she thought of it, the more convinced she became that even though he accepted it, and showed grat.i.tude, deep down in his heart would be the feeling that he would be only contributing to her success, that was in no way his own. Long she sat, and finally she laughed, nodded her head, and clapped her hands.
"Oh, yes, that's the way!" said she.
The Professor came in upon her at this point.
"Are you saying an incantation, my dear?"
"No, offering thanks to the G.o.ds."
"For what?"
"For the most unconscionable luck."
"In what form, may I ask?"
"Look at me!" she ordered.
He fixed his faded eyes on her closely.
"I see you."
"See how pretty I am?"
"You're not bad-looking."
"Bad-looking? I'm extremely near to being a beauty. Look at the father I have--distinguished, delightful!"
"Oh, my dear!"
"Look at the husband the G.o.ds gave me!"
"Yes, your long-distance husband."
"Look at Ardelia! Who ever heard of such a cook? Consider my brains."
"There, I grant you."
"Besides that, I am the sole possessor of a secret which is too perfectly delicious to be true."
"Do you intend to tell this secret to me?"
"Yes, as soon as it is ripe."
She caught his hands and whirled him about.
"Oh, Professor, Professor, you ought to be very glad that you are related to me!"
"Bambina, one moment. I dislike being jerked around like a live jumping-jack."
"It's evident I didn't get my dancing talents from you, old centipede.
Sit down, and I'll dance a joy dance."
She pushed him on the couch, and began a wild, fantastic dance on the hearth rug before him, the firelight flas.h.i.+ng through the thin, gray draperies. Even the Professor breathed a little faster as the lithe figure swayed and bent and curved into wonderful lines, which melted ever into new ones. It was young, elemental joy, every step of it; s.e.xless, no Bacchante dance, but rather a paeon of ecstasy, such as a dryad might have danced in the woods. At the climax she stood poised, her arms lifted in exultation. Then she dropped beside him.
"My child!" he exclaimed. "That was most extraordinary! Where did you learn it?"
"Ages back, when I lived in a tree."
"It must be a happy secret to make you dance like that."
"Oh," said she, snuggling up to him, putting her head on his shoulder, "it is the gayest, pleasantest, hopefulest secret a girl ever had. If I don't hold my hands over my mouth, it will break out of me."
"Does Jarvis know?"
"Oats, peas, beans, and barley grows, You, nor he, nor n.o.body knows!"
she laughed. "It's going to be the most amusing moment of my life when I spring it on the two of you."
"When is that to be?"
"Curiosity is death to mathematicians," she warned him, nor could he extract another word from behind the hand she held over her laughing mouth.
XX
"Appointment at three o'clock, Tuesday afternoon," announced Strong's wire on Monday morning.
"Hurray!" shouted Bambi, rus.h.i.+ng into the kitchen to break the news to Ardelia, since the Professor was not there.
"Noo Yawk, bress yo'! Ain't dat fine? Yo' gwine see Mistah Jarvis?"
"Of course I'll see him."
"Yo' can tote him back home, mebbe."