found this with the utmost leniency, basking in the
consciousness that it made his own more conspicuous.
She was altogether in the grand style, if you understood
Mr. Stanhope, but nothing would induce her to do herself
justice before Calcutta; she seemed to have taken
the measure of the place and to be as indifferent!
Try to ring in anything worth doing and she was off
with the bit between her teeth, and you simply had
to put up with it. The second lead had a great
deal more ambition, and a very good little woman in
her way, too, but of course not half the talent.
He was obliged to confess that Miss Howe wasn’t
game for risks, especially after doing her Rosalind
the night the circus opened to a twenty-five rupee
house. It was monstrous. She seemed to think
that nothing mattered so much as that everybody should
be paid on the first of the month. There was one
other grievance, which Llewellyn mentioned only in
confidence with a lowered voice. That was Bradley.
Hilda wasn’t lifting a finger to keep Bradley.
Result was, Bradley was crooking his elbow a great
deal too often lately and going off every way.
He, Llewellyn, had put it to her if that was the way
to treat a man the
Daily Telegraph had spoken
about as it had spoken about Hamilton Bradley.
Where was she—where was he—going
to find another? No, he didn’t say marry
Bradley; there were difficulties, and after all that
might be the very way to lose him. But a woman
had an influence, and that influence could never be
more fittingly exercised than in the cause of dramatic
art, based on Mr. Stanhope’s combinations.
Mr. Stanhope expressed himself more vaguely, but it
came to that.
Perhaps if you pursued Llewellyn, pushed him, as it
were, along the track of what he had to put up with,
you would have come upon the further fact that as
a woman of business Miss Howe had no parallel for
procrastination. Next season was imminent in his
arrangements, as Christmas numbers are imminent to
publishers at midsummer, and here she was shying at
a contract as if they had months for consideration.
It wasn’t, either, as if she complained of anything
in the terms—that would be easy enough
fixed—but she said herself that it was a
bigger salary than he, Llewellyn, would ever be able
to pay unless she went round with the hat. Nor
had she any objection to the tour—a fascinating
one—including the Pacific Slope and Honolulu.
It stumped him, Llewellyn, to know what she did object
to and why she couldn’t bark it out at once,
seeing she must understand perfectly well it was no
use his going to Bradley without first settling with
her.