"Is this the fool?" he roared. "Young man, I have no wish to be hard on a congenital idiot who is not responsible for his actions, but I must insist on an explanation. I understand that you are in charge of the correspondence in this office. Well, during the last week you have three times sent unstamped letters to my fiancee, Miss Vera Delane, Woodlands, Southbourne, Hants. What"s the matter with you? Do you think she likes paying twopence a time, or what is it?"
Owen"s mind leaped back at the words. They recalled something to him.
Then he remembered.
He was conscious of a not unpleasant thrill. He had not known that he was superst.i.tious, but for some reason he had not been able to get those absurd words of Mr Dorman"s mother out of his mind. And here was another prediction of hers, equally improbable, fulfilled to the letter.
"Great Scott!" he cried. "Are you going to be married?"
Mr Prosser and the manager started simultaneously.
"Mrs Dorman said you would be," said Owen. "Don"t you remember?"
Mr Prosser looked keenly at him.
"Why, I"ve seen you before," he said. "You"re the young turnip-headed scallywag at the farm."
"That"s right," said Owen.
"I"ve been wanting to meet you again. I thought the whole thing over, and it struck me," said Mr Prosser, handsomely, "that I may have seemed a little abrupt at our last meeting."
"No, no."
"The fact is, I was in the middle of an infernally difficult pa.s.sage of my book that morning, and when you began--"
"It was my fault entirely. I quite understand."
Mr Prosser produced a card-case.
"We must see more of each other," he said. "Come and have a bit of dinner some night. Come tonight."
"I"m very sorry. I have to go to the theatre tonight."
"Then come and have a bit of supper afterwards. Excellent. Meet me at the Savoy at eleven-fifteen. I"m glad I didn"t hit you with that loaf.
Abruptness has been my failing through life. My father was just the same. Eleven-fifteen at the Savoy, then."
The manager, who had been listening with some restlessness to the conversation, now intervened. He was a man with a sense of fitness of things, and he objected to having his private room made the scene of what appeared to be a reunion of old college chums. He hinted as much.
"Ha! Prrumph!" he observed, disapprovingly. "Er--Mr Bentley, that is all. You may return to your work--ah"mmm! Kindly be more careful another time in stamping the letters."
"Yes, by Jove," said Mr Prosser, suddenly reminded of his wrongs, "that"s right. Exercise a little ordinary care, you ivory-skulled young son of a gun. Do you think Miss Delane is _made_ of twopences? Keep an eye on him," he urged the manager. "These young fellows nowadays want someone standing over them with a knout all the time. Be more careful another time, young man. Eleven-fifteen, remember. Make a note of it, or you"ll go forgetting _that_."
The seat Audrey had bought for him at the Piccadilly Theatre proved to be in the centre of the sixth row of stalls--practically a death-trap.
Whatever his sufferings might be, escape was impossible. He was securely wedged in.
The cheaper parts of the house were spa.r.s.ely occupied, but the stalls were full. Owen, disapproving of the whole business, refused to buy a programme, and settled himself in his seat prepared for the worst. He had a vivid recollection of _White Roses_, the novel, and he did not antic.i.p.ate any keen enjoyment from it in its dramatized form. He had long ceased to be a member of that large public for which Miss Edith Butler catered. The sentimental adventures of governesses in ducal houses--the heroine of _White Roses_ was a governess--no longer contented his soul.
There is always a curiously dream-like atmosphere about a play founded on a book. One seems to have seen it all before. During the whole of the first act Owen attributed to this his feeling of familiarity with what was going on on the stage. At the beginning of the second act he found himself antic.i.p.ating events. But it was not till the third act that the truth sank in.
The third was the only act in which, in his dramatization, he had taken any real liberties with the text of the novel. But in this act he had introduced a character who did not appear in the novel--a creature of his own imagination. And now, with bulging eyes, he observed this creature emerge from the wings, and heard him utter lines which he now clearly remembered having written.
Audrey had been right! Serpent Edith Butler had stolen his play.
His mind, during the remainder of the play, was active. By the time the final curtain fell and he pa.s.sed out into the open air he had perceived some of the difficulties of the case. To prove oneself the author of an original play is hard, but not impossible. Friends to whom one had sketched the plot may come forward as witnesses. One may have preserved rough notes. But a dramatization of a novel is another matter. All dramatizations of any given novel must necessarily be very much alike.
He started to walk along Piccadilly, and had reached Hyde Park Corner before he recollected that he had an engagement to take supper with Mr Prosser at the Savoy Hotel. He hailed a cab.
"You"re late," boomed the author of sociological treatises, as he appeared. "You"re infernally late. I suppose, in your woollen-headed way, you forgot all about it. Come along. We"ll just have time for an olive and a gla.s.s of something before they turn the lights out."
Owen was still thinking deeply as he began his supper. Surely there was some way by which he could prove his claims. What had he done with the original ma.n.u.script? He remembered now. He had burnt it. It had seemed mere useless litter then. Probably, he felt bitterly, the woman Butler had counted on this.
Mr Prosser concluded an animated conversation with a waiter on the subject of the wines of France, leaned forward, and, having helped himself briskly to anchovies, began to talk. He talked loudly and rapidly. Owen, his thoughts far away, hardly listened.
Presently the waiter returned with the selected brand. He filled Owen"s gla.s.s, and Owen drank, and felt better. Finding his gla.s.s magically full once more, he emptied it again. And then suddenly he found himself looking across the table at his Host, and feeling a sense of absolute conviction that this was the one man of all others whom he would have selected as a confidant. How kindly, though somewhat misty, his face was! How soothing, if a little indistinct, his voice!
"Prosser," he said, "you are a man of the world, and I should like your advice. What would you do in a case like this? I go to a theatre to see a play, and what do I find?"
He paused, and eyed his host impressively.
"What"s that tune they"re playing?" said Mr Prosser. "You hear it everywhere. One of these Viennese things, I suppose."
Owen was annoyed. He began to doubt whether, after all, Mr Prosser"s virtues as a confidant were not more apparent than real.
"I find, by Jove," he continued, "that I wrote the thing myself."
"It"s not a patch on _The Merry Widow_," said Mr Prosser.
Owen thumped the table.
"I tell you I find I wrote the thing myself."
"What thing?"
"This play I"m telling you about. This _White Roses_ thing."
He found that he had at last got his host"s ear. Mr Prosser seemed genuinely interested.
"What do you mean?"
Owen plunged on with his story. He started from its dim beginning, from the days when he had bought the novel on his journey from Bath to Cheltenham. He described his methods of work, his registering of the package, his suspense, his growing resignation. He sketched the progress of his life. He spoke of Audrey and gave a crisp character-sketch of Mr Sheppherd. He took his hearer right up to the moment when the truth had come home to him.
Towards the end of his narrative the lights went out, and he finished his story in the hotel courtyard. In the cool air he felt revived. The outlines of Mr Prosser became sharp and distinct again.
The sociologist listened admirably. He appeared absorbed, and did not interrupt once.
"What makes you so certain that this was your version?" he asked, as they pa.s.sed into the Strand.