Selingman, with a little bow of triumph to Julia, passed down the passage and into the library. He threw his hat upon the sofa and held out both his hands to Maraton. Julia, who had followed him, sank into a chair before her typewriter.
“I have made you famous, my friend,” he declared. “You may quote these words in after life as representing the full sublimity of my conceit, but it is true. Have you read my ‘Appreciation’ in the Oracle?”
“I have,” Maraton admitted, smiling.
“The real thing,” Selingman continued, “crisp and crackling with genius. As they read it, the photographers took down their cameras, the editors whispered to their journalists to be off to Russell Square, the ladies began to pen their cards of invitation.”
“That’s all very well,” Maraton remarked, a little grimly, “but where do I come in? I have no time for the journalists, I refuse to be photographed, and I am not likely to accept the invitations. It takes my two secretaries half their time to wade through my correspondence and to decide which of it is to be pitched into the waste-paper basket. I am not a dealer in quack remedies, or an actor. I don’t want advertisement.”
“Pooh, my friend!—pooh!” Selingman retorted, drawing out his worn leather case and thrusting one of the long black cigars into his mouth. “Everything that is spontaneous in life is good for you—even advertisement. But listen to my news. It is great news, believe me. . . . A match, please.”
Maraton struck a vesta and handed it to him. Selingman transferred the flame to a piece of paper from the waste-paper basket and puffed contentedly at his cigar.
“I light not cigars with a flavour like this, with a wax vesta,” he explained. “Where was I? Oh, I know—the news! This morning I have received a message. Maxendorf has left for England.” Maraton smiled.
“Is that all?” he said. “I could have told you that myself. The fact is announced in all the morning papers.”
“He will be at the Ritz Hotel to-night,” Selingman continued, unruffled. “When he arrives, I shall be there. We speak together for an hour and then I come for you.”
“I shall be glad to meet Maxendorf,” Maraton agreed quietly. “He is a great man. But don’t you think for his first few days in England it would be better to leave him alone, so far as I am concerned?”
“Later I will remind you of those words,” Selingman declared. “For a genius you see no further than the end of your nose. They tell me that when you landed, there were prophets in the East End who rose up and shouted—’Maraton is come! Maraton is here!’ No more—just the simple announcement—as though that fact alone were changing life. Very well. I will be your prophet and you shall be the people. I will say to you, as they cried to the Children of Israel groaning under their toil—Maxendorf has come! Maxendorf is here!”