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"Oh, but that's potty. That's merely potty. Of course you are going to bring it out as a book."
The author had not thought of doing so.
"Anyhow, it is just the thing for a magazine."
Even a magazine had not entered his mind.
"What are you going to do with it, then?" demanded Miss Dobbs, with growing incredulity.
This was a question Mr. Harper was unable to answer.
"You are going to do nothing with it?" gasped Miss Dobbs.
"No."
"But it's 'some' story, I a.s.sure you it is. If you send it to the _Rotunda_ or the _Covent Garden_ it may mean big money."
Quite absurdly the financial aspect had not presented itself.
"Well, you're potty," said Miss Dobbs, with despondency. "Don't you know that Bert Hobson, who writes those stories for the _Rotunda_, makes his thousands a year?"
Mr. Harper, who had never heard of Bert Hobson or of the _Rotunda_, seemed greatly surprised.
"Why, you are as green as green," said Miss Dobbs reproachfully. "It's such a nugget of thrills, you ought to see that it gets published. You ought really."
But in spite of her conviction it was some time before he felt able to take her advice. Such unpractical reluctance on the part of genius gave her pain. It seemed to lower its value. He must be a genius to have written a book, but it was a great pity that he should confirm the world's estimate of genius by behaving like one.
Why had he taken so much trouble if he was not going to get a nice fat check out of it?
He had written it because he felt he must.
It's a very sloppy reason, was the unexpressed opinion of Miss Dobbs.
After such a hopeless admission on the part of the young man with the queer eyes, Miss Dobbs felt so hurt that she did not appear in the shop for three weeks. And when at last she came again, she learned that the story of _d.i.c.k Smith_ and the brigantine _Excelsior_ was still in its drawer and had yet to be seen by anyone.
"You beat Banagher," said Miss Dobbs. And then she suddenly exclaimed, "Look here, Mr. Harper, give me that story and I'll send it myself to the _Rotunda_."
Very gently and politely, but quite firmly, Mr. Harper declined to do so. But in order to appease Miss Dobbs, who was inclined to make this refusal a personal matter, he solemnly promised that he would send it to the _Rotunda_ himself, or some other magazine.
Henry Harper took a sudden resolve that night to send the story to the home of its only true begetter, _Brown's Magazine_. Why he chose that periodical in preference to the _Rotunda_ was more than he could say.
It may have been a feeling of reverence for the dilapidated Volume CXLI with part of the July number missing. Some high instinct may have been at work since the G.o.ds must have some kind of machinery to help them in these matters. At least the material fact was beyond dispute. He packed the story that evening in neat brown paper, and before taking down the shutters of the shop the next morning, went out and posted it, although sure in his own mind that he was guilty of a foolish proceeding.
Still, there was a lady in the case. But when in the course of the following day Miss Dobbs looked in again, by some odd perversity she was inclined to share this view to the full. She had never heard of _Brown's Magazine_. The _Rotunda_ and the _Covent Garden_ were her stand-bys. She never read anything else. But she dared say that Brown's money would be as good as other people's, although _Brown's Magazine_ certainly would not have the circulation of the _Rotunda_.
Several weeks pa.s.sed. Miss Dobbs looked in now and again to ask if Mr.
Harper had "had any luck." To this inquiry one invariable answer was given, and after a time Miss Dobbs seemed to lose something of her faith. Her interest in the story of d.i.c.k Smith and in Mr. Harper himself began to wane. She had said from the first that _Brown's_ was a mistake. It should have been the _Rotunda_ or nothing. Miss Dobbs was a firm believer in beginning at the top; in her opinion it was easier to come down than it was to go up.
When the fourth week of silence on the part of _Brown's Magazine_ had been entered upon, she suggested that Mr. Harper should stir them up a bit. With surprising inconsequence he asked for one more week of grace. For his own part, he could not help thinking it was a good sign. Miss Dobbs did not share his view. _Brown's_ had either mislaid the ma.n.u.script, they had not received it, or they had destroyed it; and in a state verging upon sarcasm she withdrew from the shop with the final and crus.h.i.+ng remark, "that Mr. Harper was a rum one, and she doubted very much whether he would ever make good."
However, Miss Dobbs, in spite of her knowledge of the world, had to admit, a week later, that Mr. Harper knew more about _Brown's Magazine_ than she did. For when she looked in on the morning of Sat.u.r.day to inquire for news of the ill-fated _d.i.c.k Smith_ she was met triumphantly with a letter which had come by the last post the previous evening.
With quite a thrill she took the letter out of its neatly embossed envelope and made an attempt to read the following:
12B, Pall Mall, September 2.
DEAR SIR,
Your story has now been read twice, and the conclusion very reluctantly come to by the writer is that it would be impossible to use it in _Brown's Magazine_ in its present form. It bears many marks of inexperience, but at the same time it has such a strikingly original quality that the writer would be very glad to have a talk with you about it. In the meantime the MS is being returned to you.
Yours very truly, EDWARD AMBROSE.
"I don't call that writing," said Miss Dobbs, who had been utterly defeated by the hand of the editor of _Brown's Magazine_. "It is just a fly walking across the paper without having wiped its feet. Read it to me, Mr. Harper."
Mr. Harper, who had spent nearly an hour the previous evening in making out the letter, and now knew it by heart, enforced her respect by reading it aloud as if it had been nothing out of the common.
"Marks of inexperience!" was her comment. "Like his impudence. I wonder who he thinks he is. You take my advice, Mr. Harper, and send it to the _Covent Garden_. See what they've got to say about it."
However, before taking that course, Henry Harper felt it would be the part of wisdom to get in touch with the real live editor who had expressed a wish to see him. Besides, there had been something in the letter signed "Edward Ambrose" which had set a chord vibrating in his heart.
IX
In order to pay a visit to 12B, Pall Mall, Henry Harper had to ask for leave. This was readily granted by his master, who was even more impressed by the letter from the editor of _Brown's Magazine_ than was its recipient.
As became one who had a practical acquaintance with editors and publishers, Mr. Rudge knew that for more than a century _Brown's Magazine_ had been a Mecca of the man of letters. Great names were enshrined in its history. These began with Byron and Scott, and flowed through the Victorian epoch to the most gifted and representative minds of the present. Mr. Ambrose himself was a critic of some celebrity; moreover, _Brown's Magazine_ was still half a crown a month as it always had been, so that even its subscribers had a sense of exclusiveness.
Henry Harper was so shy that when the hour came for him to set forth to 12B, Pall Mall, his one desire was to take the advice of Miss Dobbs and not pay his visit at all. But Mr. Rudge was adamant. Henry must go to Pall Mall if only for the sake of the firm. Just as the young man was about to set out, his master emphasized the immense importance of the matter by appearing on the scene, clothes brush in hand, in order to give a final touch to his toilet. No discredit must be done to 249, Charing Cross Road. An unprecedented honor had been conferred upon it.
The reception of Mr. Harper in Pall Mall was of a kind to impress a sensitive young man of high aspiration and very limited opportunity.
To begin with, Pall Mall is Pall Mall, and No. 12B in every chaste external was entirely worthy of its local habitation. After a much bemedaled commissionaire of incredibly distinguished aspect had ushered the young man into the front office, he was received by a grave and reverend signior in a frock coat whom Mr. Harper instinctively felt was the editor himself. Such, however, was not the case. The grave and reverend one was a trusted member of the staff, whose duty it was to usher contributors into the Presence, and in the meantime, if delay arose, to arrange for their well-being.
Before Mr. Harper could be received, he spent some terrible minutes in a tiny waiting-room, in which he felt he was being asphyxiated. During that time it was borne in upon him that he would not be equal to the ordeal ahead. Every minute he grew more nervous. He could never face it, he was sure. Far better to have taken the advice of the wise Miss Dobbs, and have been content with the _Covent Garden_.
Before the fateful moment came he was in a state of despair. Why he should have been was impossible to say. What was Pall Mall in comparison with the forecastle or the futtock shrouds of the _Margaret Carey_? What were the commissionaire and the frock-coated gentleman in comparison with Mr. Thompson and the Old Man? Yet he came within an ace of flying out of that waiting-room into the street.
The cicerone reappeared, led the young man up a flight of stairs, opened a door, and announced, "Mr. Harper."
Seated at a writing table in a bay of the large, airy, well-appointed room, was a gravely genial man, whose face had that subtle look of power which springs from the play of mind.
He rose at once and offered a welcome of such unstudied cordiality that Henry Harper forgot that he had ever been afraid of him. The editor of _Brown's Magazine_ placed a chair for the young man and asked him to sit down. He then returned to his writing table, leaned back in his own chair, and half turned to face his visitor.
"Your story interested me enormously." The editor studied very closely the young man opposite without appearing to do so; and then he said, in a slightly changed tone, as if a theory previously formed had been confirmed, "I am sure you have had experience of the sea."
The Sailor knew already that he was going to like Mr. Ambrose immensely. In a subtle way he was reminded of Klond.y.k.e, and more remotely of Mr. Horrobin, but yet he felt that Mr. Ambrose was not really like them at all.