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Each of them treated him in quite a different way from that which she had used before. In her own style, each was lofty and _grande dame_.
It was no longer Harry, but Mr. Harper; and they shook hands with him without cordiality, but with quiet dignity, and said, "How do you do?"
Strange to say, Mr. Harper found this reception more to his liking than the less studied manner in which he was received as a rule. Now that he had not to meet persiflage and chaff, he was fairly cool and collected. The stately bow of Miss Press and the archly fas.h.i.+onable handshake of Miss Bonser were much less embarra.s.sing than their habitual mode of attack.
This afternoon, Mr. Harper was treated as a chance acquaintance might have been by three fas.h.i.+onable ladies who knew the world better than they knew him. There was a subtle note of distance. This afternoon, Miss Press talked books and theaters, and talked them very well, although, to be sure, rather better about the latter than the former.
Yet in Mr. Harper's judgment, her conversation was more improving than her usual mode of discourse. Had he not been in such a state of turmoil it would have been quite a pleasure to sit and listen, she talked so well about the things that were beginning to interest him intensely; also her manner of speaking was extremely refined.
Miss Bonser talked mainly about the Royal Academy of Arts. She knew a good deal about art, having studied it, although in what capacity she didn't state, before she went to the Maison Perry. Nevertheless, she had both fluency and point; she didn't like Leader so much as she liked Sargent; she spoke of values, composition, brushwork, draughtmans.h.i.+p, and it was really a pity that Mr. Harper was not easier in his mind, otherwise he could not have failed to be edified. As it was, Miss Press and Miss Bonser rose considerably in his estimation. He could have wished that they always hoisted themselves on these high subjects.
Both ladies, wearing white gloves and looking very _comme il faut_, went soon after five, as they had promised to go on to Lady Caradoc's.
Mr. Harper felt quite sorry. They had talked so well about the things that interested him that somehow their distinguished departure left a void. As they got up to go, Mr. Harper, remembering a hint he had received from Miss Press, touching the behavior of a gentleman in such circ.u.mstances, sprang to the door, and with less awkwardness than usual, contrived to open it for them to pa.s.s out.
The ordeal he dreaded was now upon him. He was with Cora alone.
However, much to his relief, there was no sign at present of "a bad breakdown."
For three weeks he had been living in a little private h.e.l.l of indecision. But now there was a chance of winning through. His duty was not yet absolutely clear, but he was not without hope that it would become so. In that time he had been thinking very hard and very deep.
And by some means, he had added a cubit to his stature since he stood last on that tea-stained hearthrug in the quasi-comfort of that overfurnished "boo-door." It was a new and enlarged Mr. Harper who now confronted a more composed and dignified Miss Dobbs.
"Well, Harry," said Miss Dobbs, "it is nice to see you here again."
He was touched by such a tone of magnanimity. Somehow, he felt that it was more than he deserved.
"How's the new story getting on?" There was not a sign of the breakdown at present. "Will it be as good as the old one?" This was a welcome return to her first phase of generous interest; to the Miss Dobbs of whom he had memories not wholly unpleasant.
"I think it is going to be better," he said gravely. "Much better.
Anyway, I intend it to be."
"That's right. I like to hear that. Nothing like ambition. I suppose you'll get another three hundred for this one?"
"Five," said the young man. "That's if the editor likes it."
"My!" said Miss Dobbs, with an involuntary flash of the wary eyes.
"And that's only for the serial."
"Yes."
"And, of course, you'll be able to bring it out as a book as well?"
"The editor has arranged for that already. For the present one, I mean."
"But you'll get paid for it extra, of course!"
"Oh yes."
"How much?" Miss Dobbs spoke carelessly, but her eyes were by no means careless.
"I'll get a s.h.i.+lling for every copy that's sold."
"And how many will they sell?"
"n.o.body knows that," he said, and from his tone it seemed that aspect of the matter was unimportant.
"No, I expect not." Her tone coincided readily with his. "But I suppose a man like Stevenson or Bert Hobson would sell by the hundred thousand?"
"No idea," said the young man.
"But you ought to have an idea, Harry. It's very important. What you want is somebody with a head for business to look after your affairs."
He was inclined to accept this view of the matter, but there would be time to think of that when he really was selling in thousands, which, of course, could not be until the book was published.
"When will it be published?"
"Next week."
"Next week! And you are going to get a sure five hundred, apart from the book, for the story you are writing now?"
"If Mr. Ambrose likes it."
"Of course he'll like it. You must make it so good that he can't help liking it."
"I'll try, anyway."
Miss Dobbs grew thoughtful. She was inclined to believe, having regard to all the circ.u.mstances, that she had a difficult hand to play.
Therefore, she began to arrange two or three of the leading cards in her mind. To be perfectly candid with herself, she could not help thinking, and her two friends had confirmed her in that view, that she had shown lack of judgment in the cards she had played already. For one thing, it was agreed that they might have a little underrated the size and the weight of the fish that had to be landed.
Miss Dobbs was a trifle uncertain as to what her next move should be.
There was much at stake, and one blunder in tactics might be fatal.
However, she was about to receive a.s.sistance of a kind she had felt it would no longer be wise to expect.
"Miss Dobbs ... Cora," said the young man, with an abruptness that startled her. "There's something ... something particular I want to say to you."
Cora was on guard at once. But she was able to make clear that whatever he might have to say to her, she was prepared to listen.
"I've been thinking a goodish bit," said Henry Harper, with a quaint stiffening of manner as the gruff words found a way out of him, "about that talk we had the last time I come here."
Miss Dobbs listened with eyes half shut. Her face was a mask.
"I don't pretend to know much about what's due to ladies," he said, after a pause so long and so trying that it seemed to hypnotize him.
"I've not mixed much in Society"--W. M. Thackeray, in whose works he was now taking so much interest, had a great belief in Society--"but I should like to do what's straight."
Silence still seemed the part of wisdom for Miss Dobbs.
"If I've done wrong, I'm sorry." There was another very awkward pause to navigate. "But I didn't see no harm in what I've done, and that's the truth."
A very slight sniff from Miss Dobbs ... a very slight sniff and nothing more.
"If I never speak again, Miss Cora, it's a solemn fact."
The sniff grew slightly more p.r.o.nounced.