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"Altogether," she concluded, "it has been a most interesting and unusual evening. Ah, there is Monsieur Gillier!"
Gillier came up and received congratulations. His expression was very strange. It seemed to combine something that was morose with a sort of exultation. Once he shot a half savage glance at Claude. He raved about Enid Mardon.
"We are going round to see her!" Mrs. s.h.i.+ffney said. "Come, Mr. Ramer!"
Quickly she wished Charmian and Claude good-night.
"All my congratulations!" she said. "And a thousand wishes for a triumph on the first night. By the way, will it really be on the twenty-eighth, do you think?"
"I believe so," said Claude.
"Can it be ready?"
"We mean to try."
"Ah, you are workers! And Mr. Crayford's a wonder. Good-night, dear Charmian! What a night for you!"
She b.u.t.toned her sable coat at the neck and went away with Ramer and Armand Gillier.
As she turned to the right in the corridor she murmured to Gillier:
"Why didn't you give it to Jacques? Oh, the pity of it!"
Claude and Charmian said scarcely anything as they drove to their hotel.
Charmian lay back in the taxi-cab with shut eyes, her temples throbbing.
But when they were in their sitting-room she came close to her husband, and said:
"Claude, I want to ask you something."
"What is it?"
"Have you had a quarrel with Adelaide s.h.i.+ffney?"
Claude hesitated.
"A quarrel?"
"Yes. Have you given her any reason--just lately--to dislike you personally, to hate you perhaps?"
"What should make you think so?"
"Please answer me!" Her voice had grown sharp.
"Perhaps I have. But please don't ask me anything more, Charmian. If you do, I cannot answer you."
"Now I understand!" she exclaimed, almost pa.s.sionately.
"What?"
"Why she turned down her thumb at the opera."
"But--"
"Claude, she did, she did! You know she did! There was not one real word for you from either her or Mr. Ramer, not one! We've had her verdict.
But what is it worth? Nothing! Less than nothing! You've told me why.
All her cleverness, all her discrimination has failed her, just because--oh, we women are contemptible sometimes! It's no use our pretending we aren't. Claude, I'm glad--I'm thankful you've made her hate you. And I know how!"
"Hus.h.!.+ Don't let us talk about it."
"Poor Adelaide! How mad she will be on the twenty-eighth when she hears how the public take it!"
Claude only said:
"If we are ready."
CHAPTER x.x.xV
Jacob Crayford was not the man to be beaten when he had set his heart on, put his hand to, any enterprise. On the day he had fixed upon for the production of Claude's opera the opera was ready to be produced. At the cost of heroic exertions the rough places had been made plain, every stage "effect" had been put right, all the "cuts" declared by Crayford to be essential had been made by Claude, the orchestra had mastered its work, the singers were "at home" in their parts. How it had all been accomplished in the short time Charmian did not understand. It seemed to her almost as if she had a.s.sisted at the accomplishment of the incredible, as if she had seen a miracle happen. She was obliged to believe in it after the final rehearsal, which was, so Crayford, Mr.
Mulworth, Meroni, and it was even rumored Jimber declared, the most perfect rehearsal they had ever been present at.
"Exactly three hours and a half!" Crayford had remarked when the curtain came down on the fourth act. "So we come ahead of the Metropolitan. I've just heard they've had a set back with Sennier's opera; can't produce for nearly a week after the date they'd settled. We needn't have been in such a devil of a hurry after all. But we've got the laugh on them now.
Sennier's first opera was a white man. No doubt about that. But the hoodoo seems out against this one. I tell you"--he had swung round to Claude, who had just come upon the stage--"I'd rather have this opera of yours than Sennier's, although he's known all over creation and you're nothing but a boom-boy up to now. I used to believe in names, but upon my word seems to me the public's changing. Give 'em the goods and they don't care where they come from."
His eyes twinkled as he added, clapping Claude on the shoulder:
"All very well for you now, my boy! But you'll wish it was the other way, p'raps, when you come round to the stage door with your next opera on offer!"
He was in grand spirits. He had "licked" the Metropolitan to a "frazzle"
over the date of production, and he was going to "lick them to a frazzle" with the production. Every reserved seat in the house was sold for Claude's first night. Crayford stepped on air.
In the afternoon of the day of production, when Charmian and Claude, shut up in their apartment at the St. Regis, and denied to all visitors, were trying to rest, and were pretending to be quite calm, a note was brought in from Mrs. s.h.i.+ffney. It was addressed to Charmian, and contained a folded slip of green paper, which fell to the ground as she opened the note. Claude picked it up.
"What is it?" said Charmian.
"A box ticket for the Metropolitan. It must be for Sennier's first night, I suppose."
"It is!" said Charmian, who had looked at the note.
In a moment she gave it to Claude without comment.
RITZ-CARLTON HOTEL.
_Feb. 28th_