You Can Search Me - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel You Can Search Me Part 4 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"What, Cos Cob!" I answered. "It's aces. Charlie Osgood says Cos Cob is a great Sat.u.r.day night town because it's pay-day at the gas works. From there we jump to Green's Farms for the Monday night show."
"Is that place really on the map?" Bunch asked.
"Sure it is," I said. "Charlie says it's a good Monday night town because two through freights lay over there till daylight. Tuesday night we have to double back to Greenwich, and that's where Charlie gave us the b.u.m deal. This gag of chasing us back over the same route is rotten, because somebody may be sitting up for us with a rock. But Charlie says Greenwich has developed into a great show town since five new families' moved there last summer. Wednesday we get into Stamford for a run--two performances. Friday we are booked at South Norwalk and Sat.u.r.day we play matinee and night at Saugatuck Junction. Charlie says Saugatuck is a cinch money-maker because it's a Junction. When I asked him what there is about a Junction that makes it a safe play Charlie excused himself and went to lunch. After Saugatuck we are not booked, because Charlie says something may fall down in New York and he may want to yank us right in. And, say, if Signor Petroskinski, the Illusionist and Worker of Mystical Magic, ever gets a crack at a Broadway audience it'll be a case of us matching John D. Rockefeller to see who has the most money."
"No, we better not bring Skinski into New York," Bunch advised.
"I'm afraid of the critics."
"What critics?" I inquired. "There are only four people in New York city who can write criticisms--the rest of the bunch are slush-dealers, and a knock from any one of them is a boost."
"I mean Mr. Stale," Bunch put in. "If he were to roast our Skinski it might hurt our business."
"It would--among the Swedes and Hungarians," I cross-countered.
"I'm wise to Mr. Stale, _nee_ Cohenheimer, the Human Harpoon! Say, Bunch! he's a joke. I caught him the day he first left the blacksmith shop, some ten years ago, with a boathook in each hand and a toasting fork between his teeth. That duck isn't a critic, he's only a Foofoo."
"What the devil is a Foofoo?" Bunch asked.
"A Foofoo is something that tried to happen and then lost the address," I explained. "Did you ever pipe Stale's cheery bits of humor as exemplified in one of his burning criticisms? Well, I'll put you wise, Bunch:
"I went to the Kookoo theatre last night, I and myself. _Voila!
tout bien_! I have seen lots of shows before, I have, but I have never, I solemnly declare, seen any show so utterly ba.n.a.l as this.
The libretto was written by some obscure person who never reads my criticisms for if he did he would know that I abhor Dutch dialect.
One reason I hate it so much is that some people can write it so well that they make more money than I do writing English undefiled--oh! the shame of it! _Voila! tout suite_! But to return to our muttons, as we say in Paris whenever I go there.
Tottie Coughdrop played the princ.i.p.al part but a merciful Providence gave me a cold in the head so I couldn't hear what she said! _Voila! tout fromage de Brie_! To my mind Tottie looked like one of yesterday's ham sandwiches, and a 'gent' sitting near me said she was all to the mustard, so you see great minds run in the same channel--oh! la, la, la! But to return to our muttons.
The show is said to have cost $25,000, but what care I? _Voila!
tout coalscuttle_! I'd roast it if it cost $50,000, otherwise how could I make good? _Voila! tout blatherskite_! But to return to our muttons. I went out after the first act and never did go back--great joke on the show, wasn't it? Oh! la, la, la! Still I insist that Tottie Coughdrop looked like a ham sandwich. _Voila!
tout fudge_!"
"So that's the kind of piffle that managers and actors have to go up against," laughed Bunch.
"They don't go up against it any more, Bunch," I said. "They are s.h.i.+fty young guys in the theatrical business nowadays, and they sidestep the hammer-throwers. Mr. Stale is a back number, and his harpoon can't stop a dollar bill from flutering into any man's box office."
"He thinks he can, all right," Bunch muttered.
"Well, there are two thinks and a half still due him," I said.
"Who ever gave that guy a license to splash ink all over a production and hold actors, authors and managers up to ridicule?
Did you ever hear of an actor or an author or a manager getting out a three-sheet which held a newspaper up to ridicule?"
"Not on your endowment policy," Bunch chimed in.
"Well, isn't a newspaper just as much of a public inst.i.tution as a theatre? Suppose a manager were to call in a rubberneck, hand him a tool box and send him to a newspaper office to look for a splashy production on a busy night. Suppose, further, that after the paper went to press Mr. Rubberneck opened up his tool box and began to pound on the leading man in the print shop for having a bunch of bad grammar in his editorial column, and after that, suppose our friend with the glistening eyes jumped on one of the sub-editors because the woman's page was out of alignment, or made a rave because the jokes in the funny column were all to the ancient, what would happen to Mr. Rubberneck, eh, what? Sixteen editors, fourteen reporters and twenty-three linotype men would take a running kick at old b.u.t.tinski, and there wouldn't be enough of him left to give the coroner an excuse to look solemn."
"I thought Stale used to write books," Bunch put in.
"He thought so, too, but the public pa.s.sed him the ice pitcher," I said. "He started in to be a successful author and then he bit his tongue."
"He'll get after you good and hard if he hears you talking this way," Bunch admonished.
"Say! Bunch! he's been after me for five years and he hasn't caught up with me yet. Every time he's had a chance he's tossed a few sneers in my direction, so I made up my mind the other day I'd coax him down to the foundry and throw the anvil at him. If ever I do cut loose on that Birmingham gent he'll think he has swallowed one of his own harpoons. He's a case of Perpetual Grouch because it gets the dough for him on pay-day.
"If somebody ever steals his hammer he'll be doing hotfoots for the handout thing and he'll eat about once a week.
"It's a brave and glorious spectacle, isn't it, Bunch, to watch this mouldy writer, with a big newspaper behind him and columns of s.p.a.ce at his command, throwing his hooks into actors and actresses who haven't a chance on earth to get back."
"I'd hate to have to make my living by trying to drag the bread and b.u.t.ter away from other people," Bunch b.u.t.ted in.
"Yes, and the nickel-plated nerve that goes with it," I went on.
"Every time this Stale guy goes to a theatre he makes it appear that he was forced into a den of thieves and everybody he can point out with his fountain pen is either a criminal or a dirty deuce.
What has he ever done that finished one, two, nine?"
"He's been fourflus.h.i.+ng around for years about the pitiful condition of the 'drammer,' but did he ever write a play that saw the light of day? Nix.
"I'll bet eight dollars if he ever does get a play produced there'll be n.o.body left in the theatre but the ushers and the spot light after the first act."
"Lots of people think he is very clever," Bunch suggested,
"So is a trained goat," I came back. "If you stood a crowd of handcuffed actors and authors and managers up in a corner and made faces at them and called them names and blew spitb.a.l.l.s in their eyes you could get a laugh from the low foreheads, couldn't you, Bunch?"
"Surest thing you know, John."
"Well, that's Grouchy Stale's line of endeavor. Say, Bunch, if it were not for the knocks contained therein one of that guy's essays would read like the maiden effort of a lovesick jellyfish.
"Did you ever pipe the pure and lofty and highly enn.o.bling sentiments, the spiritually beautiful inspiration which characterizes that book of his--that deft little dip into degeneracy--something about a frozen wedding! Oh, slus.h.!.+ Percy, pa.s.s the cigarettes!"
"There must be a certain cla.s.s of people who read that kind of criticism," Bunch said.
"That windy stuff Stale hands out is supposed to be criticism, Bunch, but it isn't--it's typewritten egotism."
"Yes, but it's useless for you to go after him, John; he'll only hand you another javelin."
"Well, the next time that dub throws the gaff into me I'll know he has a reason for it. Hereafter, every time he bats an eye in my direction it's me for a swift get-back, I'll tell you those!"
"You should bear the ills of the flesh with Christian fort.i.tude,"
grinned Bunch.
"Nix," I said. "I'm tired holding up something fat for a mutt like that to paddle with a slapstick!"
CHAPTER IV.
JOHN HENRY GETS A SHOCK.
A few minutes later we went into the general restaurant and found Signor Petroskinski waiting for us.
His right name was Jeff Mulligan, but Petroskinski sounded more foreign, and he fell for it.
I introduced Skinski to Bunch, and in five minutes all the business details were settled.