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"You are most kind," said Harvey, who had been mentally calculating the three one-dollar bills in his pocket.
And that is how they came to be in the theatre that night.
The curtain was up when Butler returned. He had had a drink.
"Did you send a note back to your wife?" he asked as he sat down.
"What for?"
"To tell her we are here," hissed the other.
"No, I didn't," said Harvey, calmly. "I want to surprise her."
Butler said something under his breath and was so mad during the remainder of the act that everybody on the stage seemed to be dressed in red.
Miss Duluth did not have to make a change of costume between the second and third acts. It was then that she received visitors in her dressing-room. She had a sandwich and a gla.s.s of milk at that time, but was perfectly willing to send across the alley for bottled beer if her callers cared to take anything so commonplace as that.
She was sitting in her room, quite alone, with her feet c.o.c.ked upon a trunk, nibbling a sandwich and thinking of the supper Fairfax was to give later on in the evening, when the manager of the company came tapping at her door. People had got in the habit of walking in upon her so unexpectedly that she issued an order for every one to knock and then made the injunction secure by slipping the bolt. Rebecca went to the door.
"Mr. Fairfax is here, mademoiselle," she announced a moment later.
"Mr. Ripton has brought him back and he wants to come in." Except for the word "mademoiselle" Rebecca spoke perfect English.
Nellie took one foot down and then, thinking quickly, put it up again.
It wouldn't hurt Fairfax, she argued, to encounter a little opposition.
"Tell Ripton I'm expecting some one else," she said, at random. "If Mr. Fairfax wants to wait in the wings, I'll see him there."
But she had not the slightest inkling of what was in store for her in the shape of visitors.
At that very moment Harvey and his friend were at the stage door, the former engaged in an attempt at familiarity with the smileless attendant.
"h.e.l.lo, Bob; how goes it?" said he, strutting up to the door.
Bob's bulk blocked the pa.s.sage.
"Who d'you want to see?" he demanded, gruffly.
"Who d'you suppose?" asked Harvey, gaily.
"Don't get fresh," snapped the door man, making as if to slam the iron door in his face. Suddenly he recognised the applicant. "Oh, it's you, is it?"
"You must be going blind, Bobby," said Harvey, in a fine effort at geniality. "I'm taking a friend in to show him how it's done. My friend, Mr. Butler, Bob."
Mr. Butler stepped on Harvey's toes and said something under his breath.
"Is Miss Duluth expecting you, Mr.--er--Mr.--Is she?" asked old Bob.
"No. I'm going to surprise her."
Bob looked over his shoulder hastily.
"If I was you," he said, "I'd send my card in. She's--she's nervous and a shock might upset her."
"She hasn't got a nerve in her body," said Harvey. "Come on, Butler.
Mind you don't fall over the braces or get hit by the scenery."
They climbed a couple of steps and were in the midst of a small, bustling army of scene s.h.i.+fters and property men. Old Bob scratched his head and muttered something about "surprises."
Three times Harvey tried to lead the way across the stage. Each time they were turned back by perspiring, evil-minded stage hands who rushed at them with towering, toppling canvases. Once Harvey nearly sat down when an un.o.bserving hand jerked a strip of carpet from under his feet. A grand staircase almost crushed Mr. Butler on its way into place, and some one who seemed to be in authority shouted to him as he dodged:--
"Don't knock that pe-des-tal over, you pie face!"
At last they got safely over, and Harvey boldly walked up to the star's dressing-room.
"We're all right now," he said to Butler, with a perceptible quaver in his voice. "Just you wait while I go in and tell her I am here."
Butler squeezed himself into a narrow place, where he seemed safe from death, mopped his brow, and looked like a lost soul.
Two men, sitting off to the left, saw Harvey try the locked door and then pound rather imperatively.
"Good Lord!" exclaimed one of them, staring.
"It's--it's--er--What's-His-Name, Nellie's husband! Well, of all the infernal----"
"That?" gasped Fairfax.
"What in thunder is he doing here this time o' night! Great Scott, he'll spoil everything," groaned Ripton, the manager.
Harvey pounded again with no response. Nellie was sitting inside, mentally picturing the eagerness that caused Fairfax to come a-pounding like that. She had decided not to answer.
Ripton called a stage hand.
"Tell him that Nellie isn't seeing anybody to-night," he whispered.
"Do it quick. Get him out of here."
"Shall I throw him out, sir?" demanded the man, with a wry face. "Poor little chap!"
"Just tell him that Nellie will see him for a few minutes after the play." Then, as the man moved away:--"They've got no business having husbands, Mr. Fairfax. d.a.m.ned nuisances."
Fairfax had his hand to his lips. He was thinking of Nellie's "perfect devil."
"I fancy he doesn't cut much of a figure in her life," said he, in a tone of relief.
In the meantime the stage hand had accosted Harvey, who had been joined by the anxious Mr. Butler.
"Miss Duluth ain't seeing any one to-night, sir," he said. "She gave strict orders. No one, sir."
Harvey's blue eyes were like delft saucers. "She'll see me," he said.
"I'm her husband, you know."