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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. REAPPEARANCE OF MR. CARMYLE—AND GINGER </h2>
<p>1</p>
<p>When Sally left Detroit on the following Saturday, accompanied by
Fillmore, who was returning to the metropolis for a few days in order to
secure offices and generally make his presence felt along Broadway, her
spirits had completely recovered. She felt guiltily that she had been
fanciful, even morbid. Naturally men wanted to get on in the world. It was
their job. She told herself that she was bound up with Gerald's success,
and that the last thing of which she ought to complain was the energy he
put into efforts of which she as well as he would reap the reward.</p>
<p>To this happier frame of mind the excitement of the last few days had
contributed. Detroit, that city of amiable audiences, had liked "The
Primrose Way." The theatre, in fulfilment of Teddy's prophecy, had been
allowed to open on the Tuesday, and a full house, hungry for entertainment
after its enforced abstinence, had welcomed the play wholeheartedly. The
papers, not always in agreement with the applause of a first-night
audience, had on this occasion endorsed the verdict, with agreeable
unanimity hailing Gerald as the coming author and Elsa Doland as the
coming star. There had even been a brief mention of Fillmore as the coming
manager. But there is always some trifle that jars in our greatest
moments, and Fillmore's triumph had been almost spoilt by the fact that
the only notice taken of Gladys Winch was by the critic who printed her
name—spelt Wunch—in the list of those whom the cast "also
included."</p>
<p>"One of the greatest character actresses on the stage," said Fillmore
bitterly, talking over this outrage with Sally on the morning after the
production.</p>
<p>From this blow, however, his buoyant nature had soon enabled him to rally.
Life contained so much that was bright that it would have been churlish to
concentrate the attention on the one dark spot. Business had been
excellent all through the week. Elsa Doland had got better at every
performance. The receipt of a long and agitated telegram from Mr.
Cracknell, pleading to be allowed to buy the piece back, the passage of
time having apparently softened Miss Hobson, was a pleasant incident. And,
best of all, the great Ike Schumann, who owned half the theatres in New
York and had been in Detroit superintending one of his musical
productions, had looked in one evening and stamped "The Primrose Way" with
the seal of his approval. As Fillmore sat opposite Sally on the train, he
radiated contentment and importance.</p>
<p>"Yes, do," said Sally, breaking a long silence.</p>
<p>Fillmore awoke from happy dreams.</p>
<p>"Eh?"</p>
<p>"I said 'Yes, do.' I think you owe it to your position."</p>
<p>"Do what?"</p>
<p>"Buy a fur coat. Wasn't that what you were meditating about?"</p>
<p>"Don't be a chump," said Fillmore, blushing nevertheless. It was true that
once or twice during the past week he had toyed negligently, as Mr.
Bunbury would have said, with the notion, and why not? A fellow must keep
warm.</p>
<p>"With an astrakhan collar," insisted Sally.</p>
<p>"As a matter of fact," said Fillmore loftily, his great soul ill-attuned
to this badinage, "what I was really thinking about at the moment was
something Ike said."</p>
<p>"Ike?"</p>
<p>"Ike Schumann. He's on the train. I met him just now."</p>
<p>"We call him Ike!"</p>
<p>"Of course I call him Ike," said Fillmore heatedly. "Everyone calls him
Ike."</p>
<p>"He wears a fur coat," Sally murmured.</p>
<p>Fillmore registered annoyance.</p>
<p>"I wish you wouldn't keep on harping on that damned coat. And, anyway, why
shouldn't I have a fur coat?"</p>
<p>"Fill...! How can you be so brutal as to suggest that I ever said you
shouldn't? Why, I'm one of the strongest supporters of the fur coat. With
big cuffs. And you must roll up Fifth Avenue in your car, and I'll point
and say 'That's my brother!' 'Your brother? No!' 'He is, really.' 'You're
joking. Why, that's the great Fillmore Nicholas.' 'I know. But he really
is my brother. And I was with him when he bought that coat.'"</p>
<p>"Do leave off about the coat!"</p>
<p>"'And it isn't only the coat,' I shall say. 'It's what's underneath.
Tucked away inside that mass of fur, dodging about behind that dollar
cigar, is one to whom we point with pride... '"</p>
<p>Fillmore looked coldly at his watch.</p>
<p>"I've got to go and see Ike Schumann."</p>
<p>"We are in hourly consultation with Ike."</p>
<p>"He wants to see me about the show. He suggests putting it into Chicago
before opening in New York."</p>
<p>"Oh no," cried Sally, dismayed.</p>
<p>"Why not?"</p>
<p>Sally recovered herself. Identifying Gerald so closely with his play, she
had supposed for a moment that if the piece opened in Chicago it would
mean a further prolonged separation from him. But of course there would be
no need, she realized, for him to stay with the company after the first
day or two.</p>
<p>"You're thinking that we ought to have a New York reputation before
tackling Chicago. There's a lot to be said for that. Still, it works both
ways. A Chicago run would help us in New York. Well, I'll have to think it
over," said Fillmore, importantly, "I'll have to think it over."</p>
<p>He mused with drawn brows.</p>
<p>"All wrong," said Sally.</p>
<p>"Eh?"</p>
<p>"Not a bit like it. The lips should be compressed and the forefinger of
the right hand laid in a careworn way against the right temple. You've a
lot to learn. Fill."</p>
<p>"Oh, stop it!"</p>
<p>"Fillmore Nicholas," said Sally, "if you knew what pain it gives me to
josh my only brother, you'd be sorry for me. But you know it's for your
good. Now run along and put Ike out of his misery. I know he's waiting for
you with his watch out. 'You do think he'll come, Miss Nicholas?' were his
last words to me as he stepped on the train, and oh, Fill, the yearning in
his voice. 'Why, of course he will, Mr. Schumann,' I said. 'For all his
exalted position, my brother is kindliness itself. Of course he'll come.'
'If I could only think so!' he said with a gulp. 'If I could only think
so. But you know what these managers are. A thousand calls on their time.
They get brooding on their fur coats and forget everything else.' 'Have no
fear, Mr. Schumann,' I said. 'Fillmore Nicholas is a man of his word.'"</p>
<p>She would have been willing, for she was a girl who never believed in
sparing herself where it was a question of entertaining her nearest and
dearest, to continue the dialogue, but Fillmore was already moving down
the car, his rigid back a silent protest against sisterly levity. Sally
watched him disappear, then picked up a magazine and began to read.</p>
<p>She had just finished tracking a story of gripping interest through a
jungle of advertisements, only to find that it was in two parts, of which
the one she was reading was the first, when a voice spoke.</p>
<p>"How do you do, Miss Nicholas?"</p>
<p>Into the seat before her, recently released from the weight of the coming
manager, Bruce Carmyle of all people in the world insinuated himself with
that well-bred air of deferential restraint which never left him.</p>
<p>2</p>
<p>Sally was considerably startled. Everybody travels nowadays, of course,
and there is nothing really remarkable in finding a man in America whom
you had supposed to be in Europe: but nevertheless she was conscious of a
dream-like sensation, as though the clock had been turned back and a
chapter of her life reopened which she had thought closed for ever.</p>
<p>"Mr. Carmyle!" she cried.</p>
<p>If Sally had been constantly in Bruce Carmyle's thoughts since they had
parted on the Paris express, Mr. Carmyle had been very little in Sally's—so
little, indeed, that she had had to search her memory for a moment before
she identified him.</p>
<p>"We're always meeting on trains, aren't we?" she went on, her composure
returning. "I never expected to see you in America."</p>
<p>"I came over."</p>
<p>Sally was tempted to reply that she gathered that, but a sudden
embarrassment curbed her tongue. She had just remembered that at their
last meeting she had been abominably rude to this man. She was never rude
to anyone, without subsequent remorse. She contented herself with a tame
"Yes."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mr. Carmyle, "it is a good many years since I have taken a
real holiday. My doctor seemed to think I was a trifle run down. It seemed
a good opportunity to visit America. Everybody," said Mr. Carmyle
oracularly, endeavouring, as he had often done since his ship had left
England, to persuade himself that his object in making the trip had not
been merely to renew his acquaintance with Sally, "everybody ought to
visit America at least once. It is part of one's education."</p>
<p>"And what are your impressions of our glorious country?" said Sally
rallying.</p>
<p>Mr. Carmyle seemed glad of the opportunity of lecturing on an impersonal
subject. He, too, though his face had shown no trace of it, had been
embarrassed in the opening stages of the conversation. The sound of his
voice restored him.</p>
<p>"I have been visiting Chicago," he said after a brief travelogue.</p>
<p>"Oh!"</p>
<p>"A wonderful city."</p>
<p>"I've never seen it. I've come from Detroit."</p>
<p>"Yes, I heard you were in Detroit."</p>
<p>Sally's eyes opened.</p>
<p>"You heard I was in Detroit? Good gracious! How?"</p>
<p>"I—ah—called at your New York address and made inquiries,"
said Mr. Carmyle a little awkwardly.</p>
<p>"But how did you know where I lived?"</p>
<p>"My cousin—er—Lancelot told me."</p>
<p>Sally was silent for a moment. She had much the same feeling that comes to
the man in the detective story who realizes that he is being shadowed.
Even if this almost complete stranger had not actually come to America in
direct pursuit of her, there was no disguising the fact that he evidently
found her an object of considerable interest. It was a compliment, but
Sally was not at all sure that she liked it. Bruce Carmyle meant nothing
to her, and it was rather disturbing to find that she was apparently of
great importance to him. She seized on the mention of Ginger as a lever
for diverting the conversation from its present too intimate course.</p>
<p>"How is Mr. Kemp?" she asked.</p>
<p>Mr. Carmyle's dark face seemed to become a trifle darker.</p>
<p>"We have had no news of him," he said shortly.</p>
<p>"No news? How do you mean? You speak as though he had disappeared."</p>
<p>"He has disappeared!"</p>
<p>"Good heavens! When?"</p>
<p>"Shortly after I saw you last."</p>
<p>"Disappeared!"</p>
<p>Mr. Carmyle frowned. Sally, watching him, found her antipathy stirring
again. There was something about this man which she had disliked
instinctively from the first, a sort of hardness.</p>
<p>"But where has he gone to?"</p>
<p>"I don't know." Mr. Carmyle frowned again. The subject of Ginger was
plainly a sore one. "And I don't want to know," he went on heatedly, a
dull flush rising in the cheeks which Sally was sure he had to shave twice
a day. "I don't care to know. The Family have washed their hands of him.
For the future he may look after himself as best he can. I believe he is
off his head."</p>
<p>Sally's rebellious temper was well ablaze now, but she fought it down. She
would dearly have loved to give battle to Mr. Carmyle—it was odd,
she felt, how she seemed to have constituted herself Ginger's champion and
protector—but she perceived that, if she wished, as she did, to hear
more of her red-headed friend, he must be humoured and conciliated.</p>
<p>"But what happened? What was all the trouble about?"</p>
<p>Mr. Carmyle's eyebrows met.</p>
<p>"He—insulted his uncle. His uncle Donald. He insulted him—grossly.
The one man in the world he should have made a point of—er—"</p>
<p>"Keeping in with?"</p>
<p>"Yes. His future depended upon him."</p>
<p>"But what did he do?" cried Sally, trying hard to keep a thoroughly
reprehensible joy out of her voice.</p>
<p>"I have heard no details. My uncle is reticent as to what actually took
place. He invited Lancelot to dinner to discuss his plans, and it appears
that Lancelot—defied him. Defied him! He was rude and insulting. My
uncle refuses to have anything more to do with him. Apparently the young
fool managed to win some money at the tables at Roville, and this seems to
have turned his head completely. My uncle insists that he is mad. I agree
with him. Since the night of that dinner nothing has been heard of
Lancelot."</p>
<p>Mr. Carmyle broke off to brood once more, and before Sally could speak the
impressive bulk of Fillmore loomed up in the aisle beside them.
Explanations seemed to Fillmore to be in order. He cast a questioning
glance at the mysterious stranger, who, in addition to being in
conversation with his sister, had collared his seat.</p>
<p>"Oh, hullo, Fill," said Sally. "Fillmore, this is Mr. Carmyle. We met
abroad. My brother Fillmore, Mr. Carmyle."</p>
<p>Proper introduction having been thus effected, Fillmore approved of Mr.
Carmyle. His air of being someone in particular appealed to him.</p>
<p>"Strange you meeting again like this," he said affably.</p>
<p>The porter, who had been making up berths along the car, was now hovering
expectantly in the offing.</p>
<p>"You two had better go into the smoking room," suggested Sally. "I'm going
to bed."</p>
<p>She wanted to be alone, to think. Mr. Carmyle's tale of a roused and
revolting Ginger had stirred her.</p>
<p>The two men went off to the smoking-room, and Sally found an empty seat
and sat down to wait for her berth to be made up. She was aglow with a
curious exhilaration. So Ginger had taken her advice! Excellent Ginger!
She felt proud of him. She also had that feeling of complacency, amounting
almost to sinful pride, which comes to those who give advice and find it
acted upon. She had the emotions of a creator. After all, had she not
created this new Ginger? It was she who had stirred him up. It was she who
had unleashed him. She had changed him from a meek dependent of the Family
to a ravening creature, who went about the place insulting uncles.</p>
<p>It was a feat, there was no denying it. It was something attempted,
something done: and by all the rules laid down by the poet it should,
therefore, have earned a night's repose. Yet, Sally, jolted by the train,
which towards the small hours seemed to be trying out some new
buck-and-wing steps of its own invention, slept ill, and presently, as she
lay awake, there came to her bedside the Spectre of Doubt, gaunt and
questioning. Had she, after all, wrought so well? Had she been wise in
tampering with this young man's life?</p>
<p>"What about it?" said the Spectre of Doubt.</p>
<p>3</p>
<p>Daylight brought no comforting answer to the question. Breakfast failed to
manufacture an easy mind. Sally got off the train, at the Grand Central
station in a state of remorseful concern. She declined the offer of Mr.
Carmyle to drive her to the boarding-house, and started to walk there,
hoping that the crisp morning air would effect a cure.</p>
<p>She wondered now how she could ever have looked with approval on her rash
act. She wondered what demon of interference and meddling had possessed
her, to make her blunder into people's lives, upsetting them. She wondered
that she was allowed to go around loose. She was nothing more nor less
than a menace to society. Here was an estimable young man, obviously the
sort of young man who would always have to be assisted through life by his
relatives, and she had deliberately egged him on to wreck his prospects.
She blushed hotly as she remembered that mad wireless she had sent him
from the boat.</p>
<p>Miserable Ginger! She pictured him, his little stock of money gone,
wandering foot-sore about London, seeking in vain for work; forcing
himself to call on Uncle Donald; being thrown down the front steps by
haughty footmen; sleeping on the Embankment; gazing into the dark waters
of the Thames with the stare of hopelessness; climbing to the parapet
and...</p>
<p>"Ugh!" said Sally.</p>
<p>She had arrived at the door of the boarding-house, and Mrs. Meecher was
regarding her with welcoming eyes, little knowing that to all practical
intents and purposes she had slain in his prime a red-headed young man of
amiable manners and—when not ill-advised by meddling, muddling
females—of excellent behaviour.</p>
<p>Mrs. Meecher was friendly and garrulous. Variety, the journal which, next
to the dog Toto, was the thing she loved best in the world, had informed
her on the Friday morning that Mr. Foster's play had got over big in
Detroit, and that Miss Doland had made every kind of hit. It was not often
that the old alumni of the boarding-house forced their way after this
fashion into the Hall of Fame, and, according to Mrs. Meecher, the
establishment was ringing with the news. That blue ribbon round Toto's
neck was worn in honour of the triumph. There was also, though you could
not see it, a chicken dinner in Toto's interior, by way of further
celebration.</p>
<p>And was it true that Mr. Fillmore had bought the piece? A great man, was
Mrs. Meecher's verdict. Mr. Faucitt had always said so...</p>
<p>"Oh, how is Mr. Faucitt?" Sally asked, reproaching herself for having
allowed the pressure of other matters to drive all thoughts of her late
patient from her mind.</p>
<p>"He's gone," said Mrs. Meecher with such relish that to Sally, in her
morbid condition, the words had only one meaning. She turned white and
clutched at the banisters.</p>
<p>"Gone!"</p>
<p>"To England," added Mrs. Meecher. Sally was vastly relieved.</p>
<p>"Oh, I thought you meant..."</p>
<p>"Oh no, not that." Mrs. Meecher sighed, for she had been a little
disappointed in the old gentleman, who started out as such a promising
invalid, only to fall away into the dullness of robust health once more.
"He's well enough. I never seen anybody better. You'd think," said Mrs.
Meecher, bearing up with difficulty under her grievance, "you'd think this
here new Spanish influenza was a sort of a tonic or somep'n, the way he
looks now. Of course," she added, trying to find justification for a
respected lodger, "he's had good news. His brother's dead."</p>
<p>"What!"</p>
<p>"Not, I don't mean, that that was good news, far from it, though, come to
think of it, all flesh is as grass and we all got to be prepared for
somep'n of the sort breaking loose...but it seems this here new brother of
his—I didn't know he'd a brother, and I don't suppose you knew he
had a brother. Men are secretive, ain't they!—this brother of his
has left him a parcel of money, and Mr. Faucitt he had to get on the
Wednesday boat quick as he could and go right over to the other side to
look after things. Wind up the estate, I believe they call it. Left in a
awful hurry, he did. Sent his love to you and said he'd write. Funny him
having a brother, now, wasn't it? Not," said Mrs. Meecher, at heart a
reasonable woman, "that folks don't have brothers. I got two myself, one
in Portland, Oregon, and the other goodness knows where he is. But what
I'm trying to say..."</p>
<p>Sally disengaged herself, and went up to her room. For a brief while the
excitement which comes of hearing good news about those of whom we are
fond acted as a stimulant, and she felt almost cheerful. Dear old Mr.
Faucitt. She was sorry for his brother, of course, though she had never
had the pleasure of his acquaintance and had only just heard that he had
ever existed; but it was nice to think that her old friend's remaining
years would be years of affluence.</p>
<p>Presently, however, she found her thoughts wandering back into their
melancholy groove. She threw herself wearily on the bed. She was tired
after her bad night.</p>
<p>But she could not sleep. Remorse kept her awake. Besides, she could hear
Mrs. Meecher prowling disturbingly about the house, apparently in search
of someone, her progress indicated by creaking boards and the strenuous
yapping of Toto.</p>
<p>Sally turned restlessly, and, having turned remained for a long instant
transfixed and rigid. She had seen something, and what she had seen was
enough to surprise any girl in the privacy of her bedroom. From underneath
the bed there peeped coyly forth an undeniably masculine shoe and six
inches of a grey trouser-leg.</p>
<p>Sally bounded to the floor. She was a girl of courage, and she meant to
probe this matter thoroughly.</p>
<p>"What are you doing under my bed?"</p>
<p>The question was a reasonable one, and evidently seemed to the intruder to
deserve an answer. There was a muffled sneeze, and he began to crawl out.</p>
<p>The shoe came first. Then the legs. Then a sturdy body in a dusty coat.
And finally there flashed on Sally's fascinated gaze a head of so nearly
the maximum redness that it could only belong to one person in the world.</p>
<p>"Ginger!"</p>
<p>Mr. Lancelot Kemp, on all fours, blinked up at her.</p>
<p>"Oh, hullo!" he said.</p>
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