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"I haven't the pleasure of your acquaintance, Mr. Ralston, if that is your name, and I don't know your friend Steadman."
There was something about her manner that convinced Ralston that she knew more than she admitted, but it was obvious that for purposes of her own she had made up her mind to treat him with the scant courtesy usually extended by show girls to people who are not worth while, and to people it is worth while to keep for a time at a distance.
"I'm very sorry," said Ralston. "I believed that you were the one person in New York who could tell me where he was. Of course, you might know him under some other name."
"Why are you so interested in finding this Mr.--Steadman?" asked the partridge, studiously inserting her foot in a shoe that seemed all toe.
"Simply for his own sake."
"Don't you ever come behind for yours?" she inquired abstractedly.
Ralston suppressed a smile.
"See here, young lady--" he began, changing his tactics.
"All on for the second!" shouted a big man in a Derby hat. "Here you, Hudson, stop fooling and get into your place! Clear the wings."
From behind the wall of curtain came the distant crash of the contending chords of the overture. "Port Arthur" with its rocks was in place, the j.a.panese flag flying defiantly in a strong current of air, generated by a frenzied electric fan held by a "super" in the moat. The chorus trooped from the flies, and came tumbling down fire escapes and staircases.
The partridge knocked her heels together and jumped lightly to her feet.
"Peep-peep!" she said. "See you later, old man. Stage door about eleven-thirty."
She nodded at him and started hopping toward the stage. The other partridges were forming in long lines, with much jostling of tail feathers and fluttering of pinions.
"Hurry up there!" shouted the a.s.sistant "stage" in Miss Hudson's direction, and then turned hastily toward the opposite flies where some mix-up had attracted his attention.
Ralston saw his last clew hopping away from him. A bell rang loudly, and the orchestra struck up the first few bars of the opening chorus. Hardly conscious of what he was doing Ralston strode quickly after the partridge and, grasping her firmly by the wings, drew her back into the flies.
"Let me go!" she gasped, struggling to free herself. "Let me go! What are you trying to do? Do you want to get me fined?"
"Keep quiet," whispered Ralston, "I've got to speak to you. Do you understand? I can't let you go on. I'll stand for any fine, and square you into the bargain. It's too late, anyway! The curtain's up already."
"Let me go!" she cried, the tears starting into her eyes. "You're hurting me, you brute! I'll lose my job. The management don't stand for this kind of thing. You're a fine gentleman, _you_ are! Oh, what shall I do?"
Ralston's heart smote him. He knew well the hideous uncertainty which being out of a job means to the chorus girl, and its more hideous possibilities.
"I'm sorry," he said humbly. "I had to do it, and I promise you shall lose nothing by it. Now, quick, where can we talk? Not here? The manager would see you."
The partridge wiped her eyes.
"Do you promise to square the management?"
"I certainly do--on my honor as a gentleman."
"Then come!" Hudson darted quickly back among the scenery, and Ralston followed her down a flight of iron steps which led beneath the stage.
Pipes ran in all directions, and great heaps of old flies and useless properties reached toward the low ceiling, between which narrow alleys led off into the darkness. A smell of mold and of paint filled the air.
Even the scant gas jets seemed to burn with a peculiar dimness in the damp atmosphere.
"Come along!" whistled the partridge.
Beyond a pile of lumber in a sort of catacomb she stopped. A bead of gas showed blue against some whitewashed brickwork.
"Turn it up," said Hudson, and Ralston did so.
"Hungry?" she continued. "_I_ could eat anything that 'didn't bite me first!'"
Ralston laughed.
"Were you in that show?" he asked. "It was a good one. No, I'm not hungry. Suppose I were?"
"This is our rathskeller," she laughed. "Are you thirsty?"
Ralston admitted to a certain degree of dryness.
"Certainly," he said, "I should like nothing better than a large schooner of dark, imported beer. What will you have?" he continued, carrying on the jest.
Hudson, who had seated herself on a low seat by the wall, got up and struck sharply on the wooden part.i.tion with a stick.
"What's that?" asked Ralston.
"Perhaps some beer will come out!" remarked the partridge. "Moses was not the only one."
A rattling followed, and a square opening appeared in the wall, in which the s.h.a.ggy tow-head of a young man was visible.
He grinned at sight of Miss Hudson.
"How vas de shootink?" he inquired. "Does de bartridges vant more vet?
Ha! Ha! You _vas_ a bird!"
"Ya, Fritz. Two schooners and a hot dog. Hustle 'em up."
Fritz closed the slide which covered the opening and the partridge turned gayly toward Ralston.
"What do you think of that? Pretty good, eh?"
"I don't understand," he replied. "Where did he come from? What is in there?"
"I'll tell you. When 'Abe' Erlanger built this house there was a row of old tenements on the side street. Well, Jo Bimberger tore 'em down and built a rathskeller. While he was doing it one of the girls tipped off the boss carpenter to leave this place. Ain't it grand? Say, you get almost dead jumping around on the boards. It looks easy enough, but I tell you sometimes you're ready to scream."
"Just the thing," answered our friend. "Do the management object?"
"Not a bit. 'Abe' gets a rake-off from the saloon. It's good business."
The slide opened and two dripping gla.s.ses made their appearance. Ralston received them and handed one to Miss Hudson. Then Fritz pa.s.sed in a frankfurter about the size of a policeman's night stick.
Ralston drew half a dollar from his pocket and exchanged it for the sausage.
"That's all right, keep the change," he remarked.