Beth Norvell | Page 7

Randall Parrish
been advanced to a small speaking part, but
the remainder of his waking hours, while he was attired in
working-clothes, was diligently devoted to the strenuous labor of his
muscles. The novelty of the life had long since vanished, the so eagerly
expected experience had already become amply sufficient; again and
again, flinging his wearied body upon a cot in some strange room, he
had called himself an unmitigated ass, and sworn loudly that he would
certainly quit in the morning. Yet the girl held him. He did not
completely realize how or why, yet some peculiar, indefinite
fascination appeared to bind his destinies to her; he ever desired to see
her once again, to be near her, to feel the charm of her work, to listen to
the sound of her voice, to experience the thrill of her presence. So
strong and compelling became this influence over him that day after
day he held on, actually afraid to sever that slight bond of professional
companionship.
This was most assuredly through no fault of hers. It was at Shelbyville
that she first spoke to him, first gave him the earliest intimation that she
even so much as recognized his presence in the company. The house
that particular night was crowded to the doors, and she, completing a
piece of work which left her cheeks flushed, her slender form trembling
from intense emotion, while the prolonged applause thundered after her
from the front, stepped quickly into the gloomy shadows of the wings,
and thus came face to face with Winston. His eyes were glowing with
unconcealed appreciation of her art. Perhaps the quick reaction had
partially unstrung her nerves, for she spoke with feverish haste at sight
of his uprolled sleeves and coarse woollen shirt.

"How does it occur that you are always standing directly in my passage
whenever I step from the stage?" she questioned impetuously. "Is there
no other place where you can wait to do your work except in my exit?"
For a brief moment the surprised man stood hesitating, hat in hand.
"I certainly regret having thus unintentionally offended you, Miss
Norvell," he explained at last, slowly. "Yet, surely, the occasion should
bring you pleasure rather than annoyance."
"Indeed! Why, pray?"
"Because I so greatly enjoy your work. I stood here merely that I might
observe the details more carefully."
She glanced directly at him with suddenly aroused interest.
"You enjoy my work?" she exclaimed, slightly smiling. "How
extremely droll! Yet without doubt you do, precisely as those others,
out yonder, without the slightest conception of what it all means.
Probably you are equally interested in the delicate art of Mr. T.
Macready Lane?"
Winston permitted his cool gray eyes to brighten, his firmly set lips
slightly to relax.
"Lane is the merest buffoon," he replied quietly. "You are an artist.
There is no comparison possible, Miss Norvell. The play itself is utterly
unworthy of your talent, yet you succeed in dignifying it in a way I can
never cease to admire."
She stood staring straight at him, her lips parted, apparently so
thoroughly startled by these unexpected words as to be left speechless.
"Why," she managed to articulate at last, her cheeks flushing, "I
supposed you like the others we have had with us--just--just a common
stage hand. You speak with refinement, with meaning."
"Have you not lived sufficiently long in the West to discover that men

of education are occasionally to be found in rough clothing?"
"Oh, yes," doubtfully, her eyes still on his face, "miners, stockmen,
engineers, but scarcely in your present employment."
"Miss Norvell," and Winston straightened up, "possibly I may be
employed here for a reason similar to that which has induced you to
travel with a troupe of barn-stormers."
She shrugged her shoulders, her lips smiling, the seductive dimple
showing in her cheeks.
"And what was that?"
"The ambition of an amateur to attain a foothold upon the professional
stage."
"Who told you so?"
"Mr. Samuel Albrecht was guilty of the suggestion.
"It was extremely nice of him to discuss my motives thus freely with a
stranger. But he told you only a very small portion of the truth. In my
case it was rather the imperative necessity of an amateur to earn her
own living--a deliberate choice between the professional stage and
starvation."
"Without ambition?"
She hesitated slightly, yet there was a depth of respect slumbering
within those gray eyes gazing so directly into her darker ones, together
with a strength she felt.
"Without very much at first, I fear," she confessed, as though admitting
it rather to herself alone, "yet I acknowledge it has since grown upon
me, until I have determined to succeed."
His eyes brightened, the admiration in them unconcealed, his lips
speaking impulsively.

"And what is more, Miss Norvell,
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