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An Unfinished Story
by
“Exactly,” cut in the Austrian Minister, eagerly. “And then there is the prerogative of the author and of the playwright to drop a curtain whenever he wants to, or to put a stop to everything by ending the chapter. That isn’t fair. That is an advantage over nature. When some one accuses some one else of doing something dreadful at the play, down comes the curtain quick and keeps things at fever point, or the chapter ends with a lot of stars, and the next page begins with a description of a sunset two weeks later. To be true, we ought to be told what the man who is accused said in the reply, or what happened during those two weeks before the sunset. The author really has no right to choose only the critical moments, and to shut out the commonplace, every-day life by a sort of literary closure. That is, if he claims to tell the truth.”
Phillips raised his eyebrows and looked carefully around the table. “Does any one else feel called upon to testify?” he asked.
“It’s awful, isn’t it, Phillips,” laughed Trevelyan, comfortably, “to find that the photographer is the only artist, after all? I feel very guilty.”
“You ought to,” pronounced the general, gayly. He was very well satisfied with himself at having held his own against these clever people. “And I am sure Mr. Gordon will agree with me, too,” he went on, confidently, with a bow towards the younger man. “He has seen more of the world than any of us, and he will tell you, I am sure, that what happens only suggests the story; it is not complete in itself. That it always needs the author’s touch, just as the rough diamond–“
“Oh, thanks, thanks, general,” laughed Phillips. “My feelings are not hurt as badly as that.”
Gordon had been turning the stem of a wineglass slowly between his thumb and his finger while the others were talking, and looking down at it smiling. Now he raised his eyes as though he meant to speak, and then dropped them again. “I am afraid, Sir Henry,” he said, “that I don’t agree with you at all.”
Those who had said nothing felt a certain satisfaction that they had not committed themselves. The Austrian Minister tried to remember what it was he had said, and whether it was too late to retreat, and the general looked blankly at Gordon and said, “Indeed?”
“You shouldn’t have called on that last witness, Sir Henry,” said Phillips, smiling. “Your case was very good as it was.”
“I am quite sure,” said Gordon, seriously, “that the story Phillips will never write is a true story, but he will not write it because people would say it is impossible, just as you have all seen sunsets sometimes that you knew would be laughed at if any one tried to paint them. We all know such a story, something in our own lives, or in the lives of our friends. Not ghost stories, or stories of adventure, but of ambitions that come to nothing, of people who were rewarded or punished in this world instead of in the next, and love stories.”
Phillips looked at the young man keenly and smiled. “Especially love stories,” he said.
Gordon looked back at him as if he did not understand.
“Tell it, Gordon,” said Mr. Trevelyan.
“Yes,” said Gordon, nodding his head in assent, “I was thinking of a particular story. It is as complete, I think, and as dramatic as any of those we read. It is about a man I met in Africa. It is not a long story,” he said, looking around the table tentatively, “but it ends badly.”
There was a silence much more appreciated than a polite murmur of invitation would have been, and the simply smart people settled themselves rigidly to catch every word for future use. They realized that this would be a story which had not as yet appeared in the newspapers, and which would not make a part of Gordon’s book. Mrs. Trevelyan smiled encouragingly upon her former protege; she was sure he was going to do himself credit; but the American girl chose this chance, when all the other eyes were turned expectantly towards the explorer, to look at her lover.