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CHAPTER II
CINDERELLA
The next time that Jean saw Him was at the theater. She and her father went to wors.h.i.+p at the shrine of Maude Adams, and He was there.
It was Jean's yearly treat. There were, of course, other plays. But since her very-small-girlhood, there had been always that red-letter night when "The Little Minister" or "Hop-o'-my-Thumb" or "Peter Pan"
had transported her straight from the real world to that whimsical, tender, delightful realm where Barrie reigns.
Peter Pan had been the climax!
_Do you believe in fairies?_
Of course she did. And so did Miss Emily. And so did her father, except in certain backsliding moments. But Hilda didn't.
Tonight it was "A Kiss for Cinderella"--! The very name had been enough to set Jean's cheeks burning and her eyes s.h.i.+ning.
"Do you remember, Daddy, that I was six when I first saw her, and she's as young as ever?"
"Younger." It was at such moments that the Doctor was at his best.
The youth in him matched the youth in his daughter. They were boy and girl together.
And now the girl on the stage, whose undying youth made her the interpreter of dreams for those who would never grow up, wove her magic spells of tears and laughter.
It was not until the first satisfying act was over that Jean drew a long breath and looked about her.
The house was packed. The old theater with its painted curtain had nothing modern to recommend it. But to Jean's mind it could not have been improved. She wanted not one thing changed. For years and years she had sat in her favorite seat in the seventh row of the parquet and had loved the golden proscenium arch, the painted G.o.ddesses, the red velvet hangings--she had thrilled to the voice and gesture of the artists who had played to please her. There had been "w.a.n.g" and "The Wizard of Oz"; "Robin Hood"; the tall comedian of "Casey at the Bat"; the short comedian who had danced to fame on his crooked legs; Mrs.
Fiske, most incomparable Becky; Mansfield, Sothern--some of them, alas, already G.o.ds of yesterday!
At first there had been matinees with her mother--"The Little Princess," over whose sorrows she had wept in the harrowing first act, having to be consoled with chocolates and the promise of brighter things as the play progressed.
Now and then she had come with Hilda. But never when she could help it. "I'd rather stay at home," she had told her father.
"But--why--?"
"Because she laughs in the wrong places."
Her father never laughed in the wrong places, and he squeezed her hand in those breathless moments where words would have been desecration, and wiped his eyes frankly when his feelings were stirred.
"There is no one like you, Daddy," she had told him, "to enjoy things."
And so it had come about that he had pushed away his work on certain nights and, sitting beside her, had forgotten the sordid and suffering world which he knew so well, and which she knew not at all.
As her eyes swept the house, they rested at last with a rather puzzled look on a stout old gentleman with a wide s.h.i.+rt-front, who sat in the right-hand box. He had white hair and a red face.
Where had she seen him?
There were women in the box, a sparkling company in white and silver, and black and diamonds, and green and gold. There was a big bald-headed man, and quite in the shadow back of them all, a slender youth.
It was when the slender youth leaned forward to speak to the vision in white and silver that Jean stared and stared again.
She knew now where she had seen the old gentleman with the wide s.h.i.+rt front. He was the shabby old gentleman of the Toy Shop! And the youth was the shabby son!
Yet here they were in state and elegance! As if a fairy G.o.dmother had waved a wand--!
The curtain went up on a feverish little slavey with her mind set on going to the ball, on Our Policeman wanting a shave, on the orphans in boxes, on baked potato offered as hospitality by a half-starved hostess, on a waiting Cinderella asleep on a frozen doorstep.
And then the ball--and Mona Lisa, and the d.u.c.h.ess of Devons.h.i.+re, and The Girl with the Pitcher and the Girl with the m.u.f.f--and Cinderella in azure tulle and cloth-of-gold, dancing with the Prince at the end like mad--.
Then the bell boomed--the lights went out--and after a little moment, one saw Cinderella, stripped of her finery, staggering up the stairs.
Jean cried and laughed, and cried again. Yet even in the midst of her emotion, she found her eyes pulled away from that appealing figure on the stage to those faintly illumined figures in the box.
When the curtain went down, her father, most surprisingly, bowed to the old gentleman and received in return a genial nod.
"Oh, do you know him?" she demanded.
"Yes. It is General Drake."
"Who are the others?"
"I am not sure about the women. The boy in the back of the box is his son, DeRhymer Drake."
Derry!
"Oh,"--she had a feeling that she was not being quite candid with her father--"he's rather sw.a.n.k, isn't he, Daddy?"
"Heavens, what slang! I don't see where you get it. He is rich, if that's what you mean, and it's a wonder he isn't spoiled to death. His mother is dead, and the General is his own worst enemy; eats and drinks too much, and thinks he can get away with it."
"Are they very rich--?"
"Millions, with only Derry to leave it to. He's the child of a second wife."
Oh, lovely, lovely, lovely Cinderella, could your G.o.dmother do more than this? To endow two rained-on and shabby gentlemen with pomp and circ.u.mstance!
Jean tucked her hand into her father's, as if to anchor herself against this amazing tide of revelation. Then, as the auditorium darkened, and the curtain went up, she was swept along on a wave of emotions in which the play world and the real world were inextricably mixed.
And now Our Policeman discovers that he is "romantical." Cinderella finds her Prince, who isn't in the least the Prince of the fairy tale, but much nicer under the circ.u.mstance--and the curtain goes down on a gla.s.s slipper stuck on the toes of two tiny feet and a c.o.c.kney Cinderella, quite content.
"Well," Jean drew a long breath. "It was the loveliest ever, Daddy,"
she said, as he helped her with her cloak.
And it was while she stood there in that cloak of heavenly blue that the young man in the box looked down and saw her.
He batted his eyes.
Of course she wasn't real.