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Eleanore Cuyler
by
He looked down at the fire, and said, slowly, “It is not as if I were trying my hand at an entirely different kind of work. No, I don’t think I did wrong in dramatizing it. The papers all said, when the book first came out, that it would make a good play; and then so many men wrote to me for permission to dramatize it that I thought I might as well try to do it myself. No, I think it is in line with my other work. I don’t think I am straying after strange gods.”
“You should not,” she said, softly. “The old ones have been so kind to you. But you took me too seriously,” she added.
“I am afraid sometimes,” he answered, “that you do not know how seriously I do take you.”
“Yes, I do,” she said, quickly. “And when I am serious, that is all very well; but to-night I only want to laugh. I am very happy, it is such good news. And after the New York managers refusing it, too. They will have to take it now, now that it is a London success.”
“Well, it isn’t a London success yet,” he said, dryly. “The books went well over there because the kind of Western things I wrote about met their ideas of this country–cowboys and prairies and Indian maidens and all that. And so I rather hope the play will suit them for the same reason.”
“And you will go out a great deal, I hope,” she said. “Oh, you will have to! You will find so many people to like, almost friends already. They were talking about you even when I was there, and I used to shine in reflected glory because I knew you.”
“Yes, I can fancy it,” he said. “But I should like to see something of them if I have time. Lowes wants me to stay with them, and I suppose I will. He would feel hurt if I didn’t. He has a most absurd idea of what I did for him on the ranche when he had the fever that time, and ever since he went back to enjoy his ill-gotten gains and his title and all that, he has kept writing to me to come out. Yes, I suppose I will stay with them. They are in town now.”
Miss Cuyler’s face was still lit with pleasure at his good fortune, but her smile was less spontaneous than it had been. “That will be very nice. I quite envy you,” she said. “I suppose you know about his sister?”
“The Honorable Evelyn?” he asked. “Yes; he used to have a photograph of her, and I saw some others the other day in a shop-window on Broadway.”
“She is a very nice girl,” Miss Cuyler said, thoughtfully. “I wonder how you two will get along?” and then she added, as if with sudden compunction, “but I am sure you will like her very much. She is very clever, besides.”
“I don’t know how a professional beauty will wear if one sees her every day at breakfast,” he said. “One always associates them with functions and varnishing days and lawn-parties. You will write to me, will you not?” he added.
“That sounds,” she said, “as though you meant to be gone such a very long time.”
He turned one of the ornaments on the mantel with his fingers, and looked at it curiously. “It depends,” he said, slowly–“it depends on so many things. No,” he went on, looking at her; “it does not depend on many things; just on one.”
Miss Cuyler looked up at him questioningly, and then down again very quickly, and reached meaninglessly for the book beside her. She saw something in his face and in the rigidity of his position that made her breathe more rapidly. She had not been afraid of this from him, because she had always taken the attitude towards him of a very dear friend and of one who was older, not in years, but in experience of the world, for she had lived abroad while he had gone from the university to the West, which he had made his own, in books. They were both very young.