Adoree was at home; her voice answered cheerily, and her interruptions of amazement and delight caused Lorelei’s message to spin itself out unduly. Without waiting for an invitation Adoree cried:
“Let me come and help. Please! We’ll use both the poodles for mops, and I’ll be there in ten minutes. ... You’re a perfect dear to say yes for I know you want to do it all yourself.”
“Come now—quickly. I’m scared—” Lorelei begged, in tearful tones.
“I’ll drive right up in my chariot of flame; I was going out, and it’s waiting while I kalsomine my face. Are you sure everything is good and dirty? Goody! We’ll make the prop footman work for once in his life—no, we’ll do it ourselves. Good-by.”
In a surprisingly short time the Palace Garden star came flying up the stairs, scorning such delays as elevators. She flung herself upon her friend with a hug and a smack, crying, “Hurrah! Madame Sans Gene has come to do the scrubbing.”
Yet she hardly seemed dressed for house-cleaning. A tremendous floppy hat crowned her flaxen head; she was tightly incased, like a chrysalis in its cocoon, in a delicate creation of pink; her gloves were long and tight, and her high-heeled boots were longer and tighter. Nevertheless she promptly proceeded with a reckless discard of her finery—a process she had begun on her way up-stairs, like a country boy on his approach to a swimming-hole.
She paused in the center of the one passably sized room, and her piquant face was flushed with animation.
“How perfectly corking!” she exclaimed. “How beautiful!”
“Do you think so?” Lorelei asked, doubtfully.
“It’s just dandy—so cozy and secluded and—shady. Why, it’s a darling place! Not a sound, is there? Gee, what a place to sleep!” She sped from one to the other of the three rooms uttering shrieks of rapture. Even the bath-room, which was much like any other, although as cramped as a Chinese lady’s foot, excited a burst of enthusiasm.
At last she ceased her inspection, quite out of breath, and declared: “I’m enchanted. I tell you there’s nothing like these inside apartments, after all, you’re so safe from burglars. But the rent! My dear, you stole this place. And to think it’s all yours—why, I’m going to live and die here.”