Au recrire,
I. N.
After he had read her letter for the third time he was horribly shocked and regarded himself as a traitor, because he found that he was only pretending to be enjoyably excited over it.... It seemed so detached from himself. "Flair"-"au recrire." Now, what did those mean? And Istra was always so discontented. "What 'd she do if she had to be on the job like Nelly?... Oh, Istra is wonderful. But-gee!-I dunno-"
And when he who has valorously loved says "But-gee!-I dunno-" love flees in panic.
He walked home thoughtfully.
After dinner he said abruptly to Nelly, "I had a letter from Paris to-day."
"Honestly? Who is she?"
"G-g-g-g-"
"Oh, it's always a she."
"Why-uh-it is from a girl. I started to tell you about her one day. She's an artist, and once we took a long tramp in the country. I met her-she was staying at the same place as I was in London. But-oh, gee! I dunno; she's so blame literary. She is a fine person-Do you think you'd like a girl like that?"
"Maybe I would."
"If she was a man?"
"Oh, yes-s! Artists are so romantic."
"But they ain't on the job more 'n half the time," he said, jealously.
"Yes, that's so."
His hand stole secretly, craftily skirting a cushion, to touch hers-which she withdrew, laughing:
"Hump-a! You go hold your artist's hand!"
"Oh, Miss Nelly! When I told you about her myself!"
"Oh yes, of course."
She was contrite, and they played Five Hundred animatedly all evening.
CHAPTER XVI. HE BECOMES MILDLY RELIGIOUS AND HIGHLY LITERARY
The hero of the one-act play at Hammerstein's Victoria vaudeville theater on that December evening was, it appeared, a wealthy young mine-owner in disguise. He was working for the "fake mine promoter" because he loved the promoter's daughter with a love that passed all understanding except that of the girls in the gallery. When the postal authorities were about to arrest the promoter our young hero saved him by giving him a real mine, and the ensuing kiss of the daughter ended the suspense in which Mr. Wrenn and Nelly, Mrs. Arty and Tom had watched the play from the sixth row of the balcony.
Sighing happily, Nelly cried to the group: "Wasn't that grand? I got so excited! Wasn't that young miner a dear?"
"Awfully nice," said Mr. Wrenn. "And, gee! wasn't that great, that office scene-with that safe and the rest of the stuff-just like you was in a real office. But, say, they wouldn't have a copying-press in an office like that; those fake mine promoters send out such swell letters; they'd use carbon copies and not muss the letters all up."
"By gosh, that's right!" and Tom nodded his chin toward his right shoulder in approval. Nelly cried, "That's so; they would"; while Mrs. Arty, not knowing what a copying-press was, appeared highly commendatory, and said nothing at all.
During the moving pictures that followed, Mr. Wrenn felt proudly that he was taken seriously, though he had known them but little over a month. He followed up his conversational advantage by leading the chorus in wondering, "which one of them two actors the heroine was married to?" and "how much a week they get for acting in that thing?" It was Tom who invited them to Miggleton's for coffee and fried oysters. Mr. Wrenn was silent for a while. But as they were stamping through the rivulets of wheel-tracks that crisscrossed on a slushy street-crossing Mr. Wrenn regained his advantage by crying, "Say, don't you think that play 'd have been better if the promoter 'd had an awful grouch on the young miner and 'd had to crawfish when the miner saved him?"
"Why, yes; it would!" Nelly glowed at him.
"Wouldn't wonder if it would," agreed Tom, kicking the December slush off his feet and patting Mr. Wrenn's back.
"Well, look here," said Mr. Wrenn, as they left Broadway, with its crowds betokening the approach of Christmas, and stamped to the quieter side of Forty-second, "why wouldn't this make a slick play: say there's an awfully rich old guy; say he's a railway president or something, d' you see? Well, he's got a secretary there in the office-on the stage, see? The scene is his office. Well, this guy's-the rich old guy's-daughter comes in and says she's married to a poor man and she won't tell his name, but she wants some money from her dad. You see, her dad's been planning for her to marry a marquise or some kind of a lord, and he's sore as can be, and he won't listen to her, and he just cusses her out something fierce, see? Course he doesn't really cuss, but he's awful sore; and she tells him didn't he marry her mother when he was a poor young man; but he won't listen. Then the secretary butts in-my idea is he's been kind of keeping in the background, see-and he's the daughter's husband all the while, see? and he tells the old codger how he's got some of his-some of the old fellow's-papers that give it away how he done something that was crooked-some kind of deal-rebates and stuff, see how I mean?-and the secretary's going to spring this stuff on the newspapers if the old man don't come through and forgive them; so of course the president has to forgive them, see?"
"You mean the secretary was the daughter's husband all along, and he heard what the president said right there?" Nelly panted, stopping outside Miggleton's, in the light from the oyster-filled window.
"Yes; and he heard it all."
"Why, I think that's just a fine idea," declared Nelly, as they entered the restaurant. Though her little manner of dignity and even restraint was evident as ever, she seemed keenly joyous over his genius.
"Say, that's a corking idea for a play, Wrenn," exclaimed Tom, at their table, gallantly removing the ladies' wraps.
"It surely is," agreed Mrs. Arty.
"Why don't you write it?" asked Nelly.
"Aw-I couldn't write it!"
"Why, sure you could, Bill," insisted Tom. "Straight; you ought to write it. (Hey, waiter! Four fries and coffee!) You ought to write it. Why, it's a wonder; it 'd make a dev- 'Scuse me, ladies. It'd make a howling hit. You might make a lot of money out of it."
The renewed warmth of their wet feet on the red-tile floor, the scent of fried oysters, the din of "Any Little Girl" on the piano, these added color to this moment of Mr. Wrenn's great resolve. The four stared at one another excitedly. Mr. Wrenn's eyelids fluttered. Tom brought his hand down on the table with a soft flat "plob" and declared: "Say, there might be a lot of money in it. Why, I've heard that Harry Smith-writes the words for these musical comedies-makes a mint of money."
"Mr. Poppins ought to help you in it-he's seen such a lot of plays," Mrs. Arty anxiously advised.
"That's a good idea," said Mr. Wrenn. It had, apparently, been ordained that he was to write it. They were now settling important details. So when Nelly cried, "I think it's just a fine idea; I knew you had lots of imagination," Tom interrupted her with:
"No; you write it, Bill. I'll help you all I can, of course.... Tell you what you ought to do: get hold of Teddem-he's had a lot of stage experience; he'd help you about seeing the managers. That 'd be the hard part-you can write it, all right, but you'd have to get next to the guys on the inside, and Teddem-Say, you cer_tain_ly ought to write this thing, Bill. Might make a lot of money."
"Oh, a lot!" breathed Nelly.
"Heard about a fellow," continued Tom-" fellow named Gene Wolf, I think it was-that was so broke he was sleeping in Bryant Park, and he made a hundred thousand dollars on his first play-or, no; tell you how it was: he sold it outright for ten thousand-something like that, anyway. I got that right from a fellow that's met him."