If Rodney had done an unthinkable thing; if he had kept copies of his letters to Rose, along with her answers, in a chronological file the way Miss Beach kept his business correspondence, he would have made the discovery that the stiffness of them had gradually worn away and that they were now a good deal more than mere pro forma bulletins. There had crept into them, so subtly and so gently that between one of them and the next no striking difference was to be observed, a friendliness, quite cool, but wonderfully firm. She was frankly jubilant over the success of her costumes in Come On In and she enclosed with her letter a complete set of newspaper reviews of the piece. They reached him a day or two before Jimmy Wallace telephoned, and this fact perhaps had something to do with the gruff good humor with which he told Jimmy to go as far as he liked in his newspaper paragraph.
It was a week later that she wrote:
“I met James Randolph coming up Broadway yesterday afternoon, about five o’clock. I had a spare half-hour and he said he had nothing else but spare half-hours; that was what he’d come to New York for. So we turned into the Knickerbocker and had tea. He’s changed, somehow, since I saw him last; as brilliant as ever, but rather—lurid. Do you suppose things are going badly between him and Eleanor? I’d hate to think that, but I shouldn’t be surprised. He spoke of calling me up again, but this morning, instead, I got a note from him saying he was going back to Chicago. He told me he hadn’t seen you forever. Why don’t you drop in on him?”
* * * * *
It was quite true that Rodney had seen very little of the Randolphs since Rose went away. His liking for James had always been an affair of the intelligence. The doctor’s mind, with its powers of dissecting and coordinating the phenomena of every-day life, its luminous flashes, its readiness to go all the way through to the most startling conclusions, had always so stimulated and attracted his own, that he’d never stopped to ask whether or not he liked the rest of the man that lay below the intelligence.
When it came to confronting his friends, in the knowledge that they knew that Rose had left him for the Globe chorus, he found that James Randolph was one he didn’t care to face. He knew too damned much. He’d be too infernally curious; too full of surmises, eager for experiments.
The Rodney of a year before, intact, unscarred, without, he’d have said, a joint in his harness, could afford to enjoy with no more than a deprecatory grin, the doctor’s outrageous and remorseless way of pinning out on his mental dissecting board, anything that came his way. The Rodney who came back from Dubuque couldn’t grin. He knew too much of the intimate agony that produced those interesting lesions and abnormalities. Even in the security, if it could have been had, that his own situation wouldn’t be scientifically dissected and discussed, he’d still have wanted to keep away from James Randolph.