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<h2> CHAPTER XV. A NEW TRAIL </h2>
<p>One genial morning a few days later the sun shone in across the desk of
Baird while he talked to Merton Gill of the new piece. It was a sun of
fairest promise. Mr. Gill's late work was again lavishly commended, and
confidence was expressed that he would surpass himself in the drama
shortly to be produced.</p>
<p>Mr. Baird spoke in enthusiastic terms of this, declaring that if it did
not prove to be a knock-out—a clean-up picture—then he, Jeff
Baird, could safely be called a Chinaman. And during the time that would
elapse before shooting on the new piece could begin he specified a certain
study in which he wished his actor to engage.</p>
<p>"You've watched the Edgar Wayne pictures, haven't you?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I've seen a number of them."</p>
<p>"Like his work?—that honest country-boy-loving-his—mother-and-little-sister
stuff, wearing overalls and tousled hair in the first part, and coming out
in city clothes and eight dollar neckties at the last, with his hair
slicked back same as a seal?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, I like it. He's fine. He has a great appeal."</p>
<p>"Good! That's the kind of a part you're going to get in this new piece.
Lots of managers in my place would say 'No-he's a capable young chap and
has plenty of talent, but he lacks the experience to play an Edgar Wayne
part.' That's what a lot of these Wisenheimers would say. But me—not
so. I believe you can get away with this part, and I'm going to give you
your chance."</p>
<p>"I'm sure I don't know how to thank you, Mr. Baird, and I'll try to give
you the very best that is in me—"</p>
<p>"I'm sure of that, my boy; you needn't tell me. But now—what I want
you to do while you got this lay-off between pieces, chase out and watch
all the Edgar Wayne pictures you can find. There was one up on the
Boulevard last week I'd like you to watch half-a-dozen times. It may be at
another house down this way, or it may be out in one of the suburbs. I'll
have someone outside call up and find where it is to-day and they'll let
you know. It's called Happy Homestead or something snappy like that, and
it kind of suggests a layout for this new piece of mine, see what I mean?
It'll suggest things to you.</p>
<p>"Edgar and his mother and little sister live on this farm and Edgar mixes
in with a swell dame down at the summer hotel, and a villain tries to get
his old mother's farm and another villain takes his little sister off up
to the wicked city, and Edgar has more trouble than would patch Hell a
mile, see? But it all comes right in the end, and the city girl falls for
him when she sees him in his stepping-out clothes.</p>
<p>"It's a pretty little thing, but to my way of thinking it lacks strength;
not enough punch to it. So we're sort of building up on that general idea,
only we'll put in the pep that this piece lacked. If I don't miss my
guess, you'll be able to show Wayne a few things about serious acting—especially
after you've studied his methods a little bit in this piece."</p>
<p>"Well, if you think I can do it," began Merton, then broke off in answer
to a sudden thought. "Will my mother be the same actress that played it
before, the one that mopped all the time?"</p>
<p>"Yes, the same actress, but a different sort of mother. She—she's
more enterprising; she's a sort of chemist, in a way; puts up preserves
and jellies for the hotel. She never touches a mop in the whole piece and
dresses neat from start to finish."</p>
<p>"And does the cross-eyed man play in it? Sometimes, in scenes with him,
I'd get the idea I wasn't really doing my best."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes, I know." Baird waved a sympathetic hand. "Poor old Jack. He's
trying hard to do something worth while, but he's played in those cheap
comedy things so long it's sort of hard for him to get out of it and play
serious stuff, if you know what I mean."</p>
<p>"I know what you mean," said Merton.</p>
<p>"And he's been with me so long I kind of hate to discharge him. You see,
on account of those eyes of his, it would be hard for him to get a job as
a serious actor, so I did think I'd give him another part in this piece if
you didn't object, just to sort of work him into the worth-while things.
He's so eager for the chance. It was quite pathetic how grateful he looked
when I told him I'd try him once more in one of the better and finer
things. And a promise is a promise."</p>
<p>"Still, Merton, you're the man I must suit in this cast; if you say the
word I'll tell Jack he must go, though I know what a blow it will be to
him—"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, Mr. Baird," Merton interrupted fervently, "I wouldn't think of
such a thing. Let the poor fellow have a chance to learn something better
than the buffoonery he's been doing. I'll do everything I can to help him.
I think it is very pathetic, his wanting to do the better things; it's
fine of him. And maybe some day he could save up enough to have a good
surgeon fix his eyes right. It might be done, you know."</p>
<p>"Now that's nice of you, my boy. It's kind and generous. Not every actor
of your talent would want Jack working in the same scene with him. And
perhaps, as you say, some day he can save up enough from his wages to have
his eyes fixed. I'll mention it to him. And this reminds me, speaking of
the cast, there's another member who might bother some of these fussy
actors. She's the girl who will take the part of your city sweetheart. As
a matter of fact, she isn't exactly the type I'd have picked for the part,
because she's rather a large, hearty girl, if you know what I mean. I
could have found a lot who were better lookers; but the poor thing has a
bedridden father and mother and a little crippled brother and a little
sister that isn't well, and she's working hard to send them all to school—I
mean the children, not her parents; so I saw the chance to do her a good
turn, and I hope you'll feel that you can work harmoniously with her. I
know I'm too darned human to be in this business—" Baird looked
aside to conceal his emotion.</p>
<p>"I'm sure, Mr. Baird, I'll get along fine with the young lady, and I think
it's fine of you to give these people jobs when you could get better folks
in their places."</p>
<p>"Well, well, we'll say no more about that," replied Baird gruffly, as one
who had again hidden his too-impressionable heart. "Now ask in the outer
office where that Wayne film is to-day and catch it as often as you feel
you're getting any of the Edgar Wayne stuff. We'll call you up when work
begins."</p>
<p>He saw the Edgar Wayne film, a touching story in which the timid,
diffident country boy triumphed over difficulties and won the love of a
pure New York society girl, meantime protecting his mother from the
insulting sneers of the idle rich and being made to suffer intensely by
the apparent moral wreck of his dear little sister whom a rich scoundrel
lured to the great city with false promises that he would make a fine lady
of her. Never before had he studied the acting method of Wayne with a
definite aim in view. Now he watched until he himself became the awkward
country boy. He was primed with the Wayne manner, the appealing
ingenuousness, the simple embarrassments; the manly regard for the old
mother, when word came that Baird was ready for him in the new piece.</p>
<p>This drama was strikingly like the Wayne piece he had watched, at least in
its beginning. Baird, in his striving for the better things, seemed at
first to have copied his model almost too faithfully. Not only was Merton
to be the awkward country boy in the little hillside farmhouse, but his
mother and sister were like the other mother and sister.</p>
<p>Still, he began to observe differences. The little sister—played by
the Montague girl—was a simple farm maiden as in the other piece,
but the mother was more energetic. She had silvery hair and wore a neat
black dress, with a white lace collar and a cameo brooch at her neck, and
she embraced her son tearfully at frequent intervals, as had the other
mother; but she carried on in her kitchen an active business in canning
fruits and putting up jellies, which, sold to the rich people at the
hotel, would swell the little fund that must be saved to pay the mortgage.
Also, in the present piece, the country boy was to become a great
inventor, and this was different. Merton felt that this was a good touch;
it gave him dignity.</p>
<p>He appeared ready for work on the morning designated. He was now able to
make up himself, and he dressed in the country-boy costume that had been
provided. It was perhaps not so attractive a costume as Edgar Wayne had
worn, consisting of loose-fitting overalls that came well above his waist
and were fastened by straps that went over the shoulders; but, as Baird
remarked, the contrast would be greater when he dressed in rich city
clothes at the last. His hair, too, was no longer the slicked-back hair of
Parmalee, but tousled in country disorder.</p>
<p>For much of the action of the new piece they would require an outside
location, but there were some interiors to be shot on the lot. He forgot
the ill-fitting overalls when shown his attic laboratory where, as an
ambitious young inventor, sustained by the unfaltering trust of mother and
sister, he would perfect certain mechanical devices that would bring him
fame, fortune, and the love of a pure New York society girl. It was a
humble little room containing a work-bench that held his tools and a table
littered with drawings over which he bent until late hours of the night.</p>
<p>At this table, simple, unaffected, deeply earnest, he was shown as the
dreaming young inventor, perplexed at moments, then, with brightening
eyes, making some needful change in the drawings. He felt in these scenes
that he was revealing a world of personality. And he must struggle to give
a sincere interpretation in later scenes that would require more action.
He would show Baird that he had not watched Edgar Wayne without profit.</p>
<p>Another interior was of the neat living room of the humble home. Here were
scenes of happy family life with the little sister and the fond old
mother. The Montague girl was a charming picture in her simple print dress
and sunbonnet beneath which hung her braid of golden hair. The mother was
a sweet old dear, dressed as Baird had promised. She early confided to
Merton that she was glad her part was not to be a mopping part. In that
case she would have had to wear knee-pads, whereas now she was merely, she
said, to be a tired business woman.</p>
<p>Still another interior was of her kitchen where she busily carried on her
fruit-canning activities. Pots boiled on the stove and glass jars were
filled with her product. One of the pots, Merton noticed, the largest, had
a tightly closed top from which a slender tube of copper went across one
corner of the little room to where it coiled in a bucket filled with
water, whence it discharged its contents into bottles.</p>
<p>This, it seemed, was his mother's improved grape juice, a cooling drink to
tempt the jaded palates of the city folks up at the big hotel.</p>
<p>The laboratory of the young inventor was abundantly filmed while the
earnest country boy dreamed hopefully above his drawings or tinkered at
metal devices on the work-bench. The kitchen in which his mother toiled
was repeatedly shot, including close-ups of the old mother's ingenious
contrivances—especially of the closed boiler with its coil of copper
tubing—by which she was helping to save the humble home.</p>
<p>And a scene in the neat living room with its old-fashioned furniture made
it all too clear that every effort would be required to save the little
home. The cruel money-lender, a lawyer with mean-looking whiskers,
confronted the three shrinking inmates to warn them that he must have his
money by a certain day or out they would go into the streets. The old
mother wept at this, and the earnest boy took her in his arms. The little
sister, terrified by the man's rough words, also flew to this shelter, and
thus he defied the intruder, calm, fearless, dignified. The money would be
paid and the intruder would now please remember that, until the day named,
this little home was their very own.</p>
<p>The scoundrel left with a final menacing wave of his gnarled hand; left
the group facing ruin unless the invention could be perfected, unless
Mother could sell an extraordinary quantity of fruit or improved grape
juice to the city folks, or, indeed, unless the little sister could do
something wonderful.</p>
<p>She, it now seemed, was confident she also could help. She stood apart
from them and prettily promised to do something wonderful. She asked them
to remember that she was no longer a mere girl, but a woman with a woman's
determination. They both patted the little thing encouragingly on the
back.</p>
<p>The interiors possible on the Holden lot having been finished, they
motored each day to a remote edge of the city where outside locations had
been found for the humble farmhouse and the grand hotel. The farmhouse was
excellently chosen, Merton thought, being the neat, unpretentious abode of
honest, hard-working people; but the hotel, some distance off, was not so
grand, he thought, as Baird's new play seemed to demand. It was plainly a
hotel, a wooden structure with balconies; but it seemed hardly to afford
those attractions that would draw wealthier element from New York. He
forebore to warn Baird of this, however, fearing to discourage a manager
who was honestly striving for the serious in photodrama.</p>
<p>His first exterior scene saw him, with the help of Mother and little
sister, loading the one poor motor car which the family possessed with
Mother's products. These were then driven to the hotel. The Montague girl
drove the car, and scenes of it in motion were shot from a car that
preceded them.</p>
<p>They arrived before the hotel; Merton was directed to take from the car an
iron weight attached to a rope and running to a connection forward on the
hood. He was to throw the weight to the ground, plainly with the notion
that he would thus prevent the car from running away. The simple device
was, in fact, similar to that used, at Gashwiler's strict orders, on the
delivery wagon back in Simsbury, for Gashwiler had believed that Dexter
would run away if untethered. But of course it was absurd, Merton saw, to
anchor a motor car in such a manner, and he was somewhat taken aback when
Baird directed this action.</p>
<p>"It's all right," Baird assured him. "You're a simple country boy, and
don't know any better, so do it plumb serious. You'll be smart enough
before the show's over. Go ahead, get out, grab the weight, throw it down,
and don't look at it again, as if you did this every time. That's it.
You're not being funny; just a simple country boy like Wayne was at
first." He performed the action, still with some slight misgiving.
Followed scenes of brother and sister offering Mother's wares to the city
folks idling on the porch of the hotel. Each bearing a basket they were
caught submitting the jellies and jams. The brother was laughed at, even
sneered at, by the supercilious rich, the handsomely gowned women and the
dissipated looking men. No one appeared to wish his jellies.</p>
<p>The little sister had better luck. The women turned from her, but the men
gathered about her and quickly bought out the stock. She went to the car
for more and the men followed her. To Merton, who watched these scenes,
the dramatist's intention was plain. These men did not really care for
jellies and jams, they were attracted solely by the wild-rose beauty of
the little country girl. And they were plainly the sort of men whose
attentions could mean no good to such as she.</p>
<p>Left on the porch, he was now directed to approach a distinguished looking
old gentleman, probably a banker and a power in Wall Street, who read his
morning papers. Timidly he stood before this person, thrusting forward his
basket. The old gentleman glanced up in annoyance and brutally rebuffed
the country boy with an angry flourish of the paper he read.</p>
<p>"You're hurt by this treatment," called Baird, "and almost discouraged.
You look back over your shoulder to where sister is doing a good business
with her stuff, and you see the old mother back in her kitchen, working
her fingers to the bone—we'll have a flash of that, see?—and
you try again. Take out that bottle in the corner of the basket, uncork
it, and try again. The old man looks up-he's smelled something. You hold
the bottle toward him and you're saying so-and-so, so-and-so, so-and-so,
'Oh, Mister, if you knew how hard my poor old mother works to make this
stuff! Won't you please take a little taste of her improved grape juice
and see if you don't want to buy a few shillings' worth'—so-and-so,
so-and-so, so-and-so—see what I mean? That's it, look pleading.
Think how the little home depends on it."</p>
<p>The old gentleman, first so rude, consented to taste the improved grape
juice. He put the bottle to his lips and tilted it. A camera was brought
up to record closely the look of pleased astonishment that enlivened his
face. He arose to his feet, tilted the bottle again, this time drinking
abundantly. He smacked his lips with relish, glanced furtively at the
group of women in the background, caught the country boy by a sleeve and
drew him farther along the porch.</p>
<p>"He's telling you what fine stuff this grape juice is," explained Baird;
"saying that your mother must be a wonderful old lady, and he'll drop over
to meet her; and in the meantime he wants you to bring him all this grape
juice she has. He'll take it; she can name her own price. He hands you a
ten dollar bill for the bottle he has and for another in the basket—that's
it, give it to him. The rest of the bottles are jams or something. You
want him to take them, but he pushes them back. He's saying he wants the
improved grape juice or nothing. He shows a big wad of bills to show he
can pay for it. You look glad now—the little home may be saved after
all."</p>
<p>The scene was shot. Merton felt that he carried it acceptably. He had
shown the diffident pleading of the country boy that his mother's product
should be at least tasted, his frank rejoicing when the old gentleman
approved of it. He was not so well satisfied with the work of the Montague
girl as his innocent little sister. In her sale of Mother's jellies to the
city men, in her acceptance of their attentions, she appeared to be just
the least bit bold. It seemed almost as if she wished to attract their
notice. He hesitated to admit it, for he profoundly esteemed the girl, but
there were even moments when, in technical language, she actually seemed
to "vamp" these creatures who thronged about her to profess for her jams
and jellies an interest he was sure they did not feel.</p>
<p>He wondered if Baird had made it plain to her that she was a very innocent
little country girl who should be unpleasantly affected by these advances.
The scene he watched shot where the little sister climbed back into the
motor car, leered at by the four New York club-men, he thought especially
distasteful. Surely the skirt of her print dress was already short enough.
She needed not to lift it under this evil regard as she put her foot up to
the step.</p>
<p>It was on the porch of the hotel, too, that he was to have his first scene
with the New York society girl whose hand he won. She proved to be the
daughter of the old gentleman who liked the improved grape juice. As Baird
had intimated, she was a large girl; not only tall and stoutly built, but
somewhat heavy of face. Baird's heart must have been touched indeed when
he consented to employ her, but Merton remembered her bedridden father and
mother, the little crippled brother, the little sister who was also in
poor health, and resolved to make their scenes together as easy for her as
he could.</p>
<p>At their first encounter she appeared in a mannish coat and riding
breeches, though she looked every inch a woman in this attire.</p>
<p>"She sees you, and it's a case of love at first sight on her part,"
explained Baird. "And you love her, too, only you're a bashful country boy
and can't show it the way she can. Try out a little first scene now."</p>
<p>Merton stood, his basket on his arm, as the girl approached him. "Look
down," called Baird, and Merton lowered his gaze under the ardent regard
of the social butterfly. She tossed away her cigarette and came nearer.
Then she mischievously pinched his cheek as the New York men had pinched
his little sister's. Having done this, she placed her hand beneath his
chin and raised his face to hers.</p>
<p>"Now look up at her," called Baird. "But she frightens you. Remember your
country raising. You never saw a society girl before. That's it—look
frightened while she's admiring you in that bold way. Now turn a little
and look down again. Pinch his cheek once more, Lulu. Now, Merton, look up
and smile, but kind of scared—you're still afraid of her—and
offer her a bottle of Ma's preserves. Step back a little as you do it,
because you're kind of afraid of what she might do next. That's fine. Good
work, both of you."</p>
<p>He was glad for the girl's sake that Baird had approved the work of both.
He had been afraid she was overdoing the New York society manner in the
boldness of her advances to him, but of course Baird would know.</p>
<p>His conscience hurt him a little when the Montague girl added her praise
to Baird's for his own work. "Kid, you certainly stepped neat and looked
nice in that love scene," she warmly told him. He would have liked to
praise her own work, but could not bring himself to. Perhaps she would
grow more shrinking and modest as the drama progressed.</p>
<p>A part of the play now developed as he had foreseen it would, in that the
city men at the hotel pursued the little sister to her own door-step with
attentions that she should have found unwelcome. But even now she behaved
in a way he could not approve. She seemed determined to meet the city men
halfway. "I'm to be the sunlight arc of this hovel," she announced when
the city men came, one at a time, to shower gifts upon the little wild
rose.</p>
<p>Later it became apparent that she must in the end pay dearly for her
too-ready acceptance of these favours. One after another the four city
men, whose very appearance would have been sufficient warning to most
girls, endeavoured to lure her up to the great city where they promised to
make a lady of her. It was a situation notoriously involving danger to the
simple country girl, yet not even her mother frowned upon it.</p>
<p>The mother, indeed, frankly urged the child to let all of these kind
gentlemen make a lady of her. The brother should have warned her in this
extremity; but the brother was not permitted any share in these scenes.
Only Merton Gill, in his proper person, seemed to feel the little girl was
all too cordially inviting trouble.</p>
<p>He became confused, ultimately, by reason of the scenes not being taken
consecutively. It appeared that the little sister actually left her humble
home at the insistence of one of the villains, yet she did not,
apparently, creep back months later broken in body and soul. As nearly as
he could gather, she was back the next day. And it almost seemed as if
later, at brief intervals, she allowed herself to start for the great city
with each of the other three scoundrels who were bent upon her
destruction. But always she appeared to return safely and to bring large
sums of money with which to delight the old mother.</p>
<p>It was puzzling to Merton. He decided at last—he did not like to ask
the Montague girl—that Baird had tried the same scene four times,
and would choose the best of these for his drama.</p>
<p>Brother and sister made further trips to the hotel with their offerings,
only the sister now took jams and jellies exclusively, which she sold to
the male guests, while the brother took only the improved grape juice
which the rich old New Yorker bought and generously paid for.</p>
<p>There were other scenes at the hotel between the country boy and the
heavy-faced New York society girl, in which the latter was an ardent
wooer. Once she was made to snatch a kiss from him as he stood by her, his
basket on his arm. He struggled in her embrace, then turned to flee.</p>
<p>She was shown looking after him, laughing, carelessly slapping one leg
with her riding crop.</p>
<p>"You're still timid," Baird told him. "You can hardly believe you have won
her love."</p>
<p>In some following scenes at the little farmhouse it became impossible for
him longer to doubt this, for the girl frankly told her love as she
lingered with him at the gate.</p>
<p>"She's one of these new women," said Baird. "She's living her own life.
You listen—it's wonderful that this great love should have come to
you. Let us see the great joy dawning in your eyes."</p>
<p>He endeavoured to show this. The New York girl became more ardent. She put
an arm about him, drew him to her. Slowly, almost in the manner of Harold
Parmalee, as it seemed to him, she bent down and imprinted a long kiss
upon his lips. He had been somewhat difficult to rehearse in this scene,
but Baird made it all plain. He was still the bashful country boy, though
now he would be awakened by love.</p>
<p>The girl drew him from the gate to her waiting automobile. Here she
overcame a last reluctance and induced him to enter. She followed and
drove rapidly off.</p>
<p>It was only now that Baird let him into the very heart of the drama.</p>
<p>"You see," he told Merton, "you've watched these city folks; you've wanted
city life and fine clothes for yourself; so, in a moment of weakness,
you've gone up to town with this girl to have a look at the place, and it
sort of took hold of you. In fact, you hit up quite a pace for awhile; but
at last you go stale on it—" "The blight of Broadway," suggested
Merton, wondering if there could be a cabaret scene.</p>
<p>"Exactly," said Baird. "And you get to thinking of the poor old mother and
little sister back here at home, working away to pay off the mortgage, and
you decide to come back. You get back on a stormy night; lots of snow and
wind; you're pretty weak. We'll show you sort of fainting as you reach the
door. You have no overcoat nor hat, and your city suit is practically
ruined. You got a great chance for some good acting here, especially after
you get inside to face the folks. It'll be the strongest thing you've
done, so far."</p>
<p>It was indeed an opportunity for strong acting. He could see that. He
stayed late with Baird and his staff one night and a scene of the
prodigal's return to the door of the little home was shot in a blinding
snow-storm. Baird warmly congratulated the mechanics who contrived the
storm, and was enthusiastic over the acting of the hero. Through the
wintry blast he staggered, half falling, to reach the door where he
collapsed. The light caught the agony on his pale face. He lay a moment,
half-fainting, then reached up a feeble hand to the knob of the door.</p>
<p>It was one of the annoyances incident to screen art that he could not go
in at that moment to finish his great scene. But this must be done back on
the lot, and the scene could not be secured until the next day.</p>
<p>Once more he became the pitiful victim of a great city, crawling back to
the home shelter on a wintry night. It was Christmas eve, he now learned.
He pushed open the door of the little home and staggered in to face his
old mother and the little sister. They sprang forward at his entrance; the
sister ran to support him to the homely old sofa. He was weak, emaciated,
his face an agony of repentance, as he mutely pled forgiveness for his
flight.</p>
<p>His old mother had risen, had seemed about to embrace him fondly when he
knelt at her feet, but then had drawn herself sternly up and pointed
commandingly to the door. The prodigal, anguished anew at this repulse,
fell weakly back upon the couch with a cry of despair. The little sister
placed a pillow under his head and ran to plead with the mother. A long
time she remained obdurate, but at last relented. Then she, too, came to
fall upon her knees before the wreck who had returned to her.</p>
<p>Not many rehearsals were required for this scene, difficult though it was.
Merton Gill had seized his opportunity. His study of agony expressions in
the film course was here rewarded. The scene closed with the departure of
the little sister. Resolutely, showing the light of some fierce
determination, she put on hat and wraps, spoke words of promise to the
stricken mother and son, and darted out into the night. The snow whirled
in as she opened the door.</p>
<p>"Good work," said Baird to Merton. "If you don't hear from that little bit
you can call me a Swede."</p>
<p>Some later scenes were shot in the same little home, which seemed to bring
the drama to a close. While the returned prodigal lay on the couch, nursed
by the forgiving mother, the sister returned in company with the New York
society girl who seemed aghast at the wreck of him she had once wooed.
Slowly she approached the couch of the sufferer, tenderly she reached down
to enfold him. In some manner, which Merton could not divine, the lovers
had been reunited.</p>
<p>The New York girl was followed by her father—it would seem they had
both come from the hotel—and the father, after giving an order for
more of Mother's grape juice, examined the son's patents. Two of them he
exclaimed with delight over, and at once paid the boy a huge roll of bills
for a tenth interest in them.</p>
<p>Now came the grasping man who held the mortgage and who had counted upon
driving the family into the streets this stormy Christmas eve. He was
overwhelmed with confusion when his money was paid from an ample hoard,
and slunk, shame-faced, out into the night. It could be seen that
Christmas day would dawn bright and happy for the little group.</p>
<p>To Merton's eye there was but one discord in this finale. He had known
that the cross-eyed man was playing the part of hotel clerk at the
neighbouring resort, but he had watched few scenes in which the poor
fellow acted; and he surely had not known that this man was the little
sister's future husband. It was with real dismay that he averted his gaze
from the embrace that occurred between these two, as the clerk entered the
now happy home.</p>
<p>One other detail had puzzled him. This was the bundle to which he had
clung as he blindly plunged through the storm. He had still fiercely
clutched it after entering the little room, clasping it to his breast even
as he sank at his mother's feet in physical exhaustion and mental anguish,
to implore her forgiveness. Later the bundle was placed beside him as he
lay, pale and wan, on the couch.</p>
<p>He supposed this bundle to contain one of his patents; a question to Baird
when the scene was over proved him to be correct. "Sure," said Baird,
"that's one of your patents." Yet he still wished the little sister had
not been made to marry the cross-eyed hotel clerk.</p>
<p>And another detail lingered in his memory to bother him. The actress
playing his mother was wont to smoke cigarettes when not engaged in
acting. He had long known it. But he now seemed to recall, in that
touching last scene of reconciliation, that she had smoked one while the
camera actually turned. He hoped this was not so. It would mean a mistake.
And Baird would be justly annoyed by the old mother's carelessness.</p>
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