登陆注册
15290000000112

第112章

THE TRAGIC COMEDIAN

Penetrating the Holden lot he was relieved to find that he created no immediate sensation. People did not halt to point derisive fingers at him; he had half feared they would. As he approached the office building he was almost certain he saw Baird turn in ahead of him. Yet when he entered the outer room of the Buckeye offices a young woman looked up from her typewriter to tell him that Mr. Baird was not in.

She was a serious-eyed young woman of a sincere manner; she spoke with certainty of tone. Mr. Baird was not only out, but he would not be in for several days. His physician had ordered him to a sanitarium.

The young woman resumed her typing; she did not again, glance up.

The caller seemed to consider waiting on a chance that she had been misinformed. He was now sure he had seen Baird enter the building, and the door of his private office was closed. The caller idled outside the railing, absently regarding stills of past Buckeye atrocities that had been hung upon the walls of the office by someone with primitive tastes in decoration. He was debating a direct challenge of the young woman's veracity.

What would she say if told that the caller meant to wait right there until Mr. Baird should convalesce? He managed some appraising side-glances at her as she bent over her machine. She seemed to believe he had already gone.

Then he did go. No good talking that way to a girl. If it had been a man. now--"You tell Mr. Baird that Mr. Gill's got to see him as soon as possible about something important," he directed from the open door.

The young woman raised her serious eyes to his and nodded. She resumed her work. The door closed. Upon its closing the door of Baird's private office opened noiselessly to a crack that sufficed for the speaking voice at very moderate pitch to issue.

"Get Miss Montague on the 'phone," directed the voice. The door closed noiselessly. Beyond it Mr. Baird was presently speaking in low, sweet tones.

"'Lo, Sister! Listen; that squirrel just boiled in here, and Iducked him. I told the girl I wasn't to be in unless he was laughing all over, and he wasn't doing the least little thing that was anywheres near laughing. See what I mean? It's up to you now. You started it; you got to finish it. I've irised out. Get me?"On the steps outside the rebuffed Merton Gill glanced at his own natty wrist-watch, bought with some of the later wages of his shame.

It was the luncheon hour; mechanically he made his way to the cafeteria. He had ceased to rehearse the speech a doughtier Baird would now have been hearing.

Instead he roughly drafted one that Sarah Nevada Montague could not long evade. Even on her dying bed she would be compelled to listen.

The practising orator with bent head mumbled as he walked. He still mumbled as he indicated a choice of foods at the cafeteria counter;he continued to be thus absorbed as he found a table near the centre of the room.

He arranged his assortment of viands. "You led me on, that's what you did," he continued to the absent culprit. "Led me on to make a laughing-stock of myself, that's what you did. Made a fool of me, that's what you did.""All the same, I can't help thinking he's a harm to the industry,"came the crisp tones of Henshaw from an adjoining table. The rehearsing orator glanced up to discover that the director and the sunny-faced brown and gray man he called Governor were smoking above the plates of their finished luncheon.

"I wouldn't worry too much," suggested the cheerful governor.

"But see what he does: he takes the good old reliable, sure-fire stuff and makes fun of it. I admit it's funny to start with, but what'll happen to us if the picture public ever finds that out?

What'll we do then for drama--after they've learned to laugh at the old stuff?""Tush, tush, my boy!" The Governor waved a half--consumed cigarette until its ash fell. "Never fear. Do you think a thousand Jeff Bairds could make the picture public laugh at the old stuff when it's played straight? They laughed last night, yes; but not so much at the really fine burlesque; they guffawed at the slap-stick stuff that went with it. Baird's shrewd. He knows if he played straight burlesque he'd never make a dollar, so notice how he'll give a bit of straight that is genuine art, then a bit of slap-stick that any one can get. The slap-stick is what carries the show. Real burlesque is criticism, my boy; sometimes the very high-browest sort. It demands sophistication, a pretty high intelligence in the man that gets it.

"All right. Now take your picture public. Twenty million people every day; not the same ones every day, but with same average cranial index, which is low for all but about seven out of every hundred. That's natural because there aren't twenty million people in the world with taste or real intelligence--probably not five million. Well, you take this twenty million bunch that we sell to every day, and suppose they saw that lovely thing last night--don't you know they'd all be back to-night to see a real mopping mother with a real son falsely accused of crime--sure they'd be back, their heads bloody but unbowed. Don't worry; that reliable field marshal, old General Hokum, leads an unbeatable army."Merton Gill had listened to the beginning of this harangue, but now he savagely devoured food. He thought this so--called Governor was too much like Baird.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 腹黑席少:宠妻成瘾

    腹黑席少:宠妻成瘾

    一场父辈安排的相亲,席沐宸和苏若璃被捆绑在了一起,说好的三年之约,他却在三个月在她的肚子里种下了包子,无奈之下她只能为了小包子成婚。婚后,使劲儿的变着花样,训练忠犬腹黑老公,开启了花式虐狗的姿态,某日,“席先生,你家少爷踢我。”某男眼神微暗,点了点头,瓜熟蒂落之后,某人对着白花花的小屁股来了几个响。“媳妇,这小子就是欠揍型的,要不要在使点力。”看着那才出生不到几秒钟的小包子,那清晰的巴掌印,苏若璃狠狠的疼了一把,这生儿子敢情疼的不是他。夜晚,苏若璃将席先生锁在了门外,某女抱着白嫩嫩的小包子,正要香一口,笑的一脸荡漾的席先生,夺了小包子的香香。“媳妇,你该喂的是我...”
  • 英雄天下会

    英雄天下会

    统率天下名将,杀尽野怪精灵,万里江山任纵横,由我冲突驰骋。资深地产公司市场总监萧暮云,由朋友介绍进入一款热推的游戏英雄天下中,本来想闲云野鹤、打打酱油的小玩怡情,却被迫加入一方游戏势力而深陷其中,当为势力征战天下而东挡西杀,屡破强敌之际,曾经同生共死的兄弟却终究反目成仇,拔刀相向,是该论大义还是要重私情?在现实中,萧暮云也遭遇了坦率直言与媚上迎合的选择,经历了上司的责难与同事的背叛,曲还是全?走还是留?究竟路在何方?
  • 洛丽玛丝的记忆

    洛丽玛丝的记忆

    不是你给我一句对不起,就能换来我一句没关系。更何况你连一句对不起都没有。
  • 倾倾子衿,悠悠我心

    倾倾子衿,悠悠我心

    高长恭倒在冰冷的地面上的时候,突然想起许多年以前,那个倒在血泊里的女孩望着他露出的那一丝笑容,那是他终其一生也想要守护的笑容。“倾倾”子衿,悠悠我心。望着白纸上的字,少年指着说,“你写错了,应该是青草的青。”女孩小脸一红,用有些霸道的且傲娇的语气说,“我就喜欢用倾国倾城的倾,不行吗,从今天开始,我的名字就改为倾倾。”“好的,倾倾。”
  • 所以:我跟男神结婚了

    所以:我跟男神结婚了

    一觉醒来,杨顺伊发现自己车祸失忆了!明明昨天还是一个刚刚过完十八岁生日的逗逼少女,怎么摇身一变成为了新锐电影明星?过去的八年到底发生了什么?怎么就让一个自卑胆怯的平凡少女变成了娱乐圈的话题女王?从小暗恋的长腿男神,怎么就成为了自己的正牌老公?霸占屏幕的全民男神是自己的倾慕者?微博上每天数以万计的黑粉每天恶意揣测自己!生活完全曝光在镁光灯之下,吃个饭都要上头条?我的天呀?谁来告诉她,这失忆的八年,到底发生了什么?
  • 花开有时落

    花开有时落

    少年盼花开,花期无人哓。花开有时落,人在心亦在。如绯闻女孩里剪不乱、理还乱的人物关系,如何以笙箫默般的长跑爱情,如盛开的宠溺与柔情似水,这里有你想要的青春和爱情,有你的生活和梦想。
  • 魔法简史之奇迹法神传

    魔法简史之奇迹法神传

    揭开泰伦历史的重重帷幕,探寻那些泥垢中不为人知的秘密。在那个人族魔法没落的时代,兽人筹备数百年的千年复仇为何落败?平民的怒吼由何而起?贵族评议会又因何解散?奇迹法神哈扎卡拉卡为何号为“奇迹”?这是一场毅力与家世的碰撞。这是一次奇遇与天赋的盛宴。让我们透过《魔法简史》丛书来探寻这个记载模糊,不为人知的末法时代。“你总是如此幸运。”雷克如此对哈扎尔说。
  • 黑子的篮球之赤色弥漫蓝天

    黑子的篮球之赤色弥漫蓝天

    赤司少主是帝光闪闪发光的天才少主,却抛弃名门千金,爱上了透明少年黑子哲也。他们之间有嫌隙,可两人都深爱着彼此。当霸道遇上倔强又会发生什么?原以为他们终于修成正果,可一场灾难,再次将他们分开……
  • 冥雷元素

    冥雷元素

    一个平凡的孩子,带着自己的梦想,踏上一条追寻更强力量的试练之路。在险境中寻求生机。在困境中寻求突破。在迷境中寻求道路。
  • 大唐平叛传(上)

    大唐平叛传(上)

    是一部历史题材长篇小说。本书以唐玄宗天宝年安禄山叛乱为背景,叙述了平叛战争中惊心动魄、可歌可泣的故事。书中除了以大手笔描写了千军万马拼力厮杀的恢弘场面,百十位出场的人物更是描写得活灵活现,显示出作者在历史、天文、地理、哲学、艺术及宗教等方面丰富的知识底蕴。