Part 22 (2/2)
”I suppose not; but, when you cease to be a popular hero, I think I can trust to your good judgment and business ability to manage things. Throw up the job! I should say not! I couldn't get along without you. And, besides, if you left me, your sister would go, too.”
”That need not necessarily follow.”
”She would go; and I tell you I could not get along without her, either.”
Mr. Wattles always spoke of Miss March with an awkward, embarra.s.sed air that puzzled Al.
”But, of course,” he continued, hastily, ”you do not mean what you said. Remember, you promised me----”
”I never went back on my word yet,” interrupted Al, ”and I shall not now. But I wish these public demonstrations would cease. They seem to me ridiculous, and they annoy me a good deal more than you seem to think.”
”Well, you are the queerest press agent I ever struck,” said the manager. ”However, I guess you won't be much bothered--after to-night.”
”Eh?” cried Al. ”After to-night? What do you mean by that? What is to be done to-night?”
”Oh, nothing in particular. I ought not to have mentioned it.”
”Yes, you ought. Come, out with it!”
”Well, I suppose I may as well. The fact is, the citizens of this place have decided to----”
”Not another speech-making affair at the theater?” interrupted the boy, in horrified accents.
”Well,” blurted out Mr. Wattles, ”that's just it.”
”I shan't be here. You know I've got to go ahead to the next town this afternoon.”
”Oh, no, you haven't,” smiled the old gentleman. ”The fact is, the sale is so big that I have felt justified in canceling the next two towns, and we are to stay here the remainder of the week. There's no getting out of it, my boy; the thing has got to come off, and this time you will have to make a speech.”
At first Al would not hear of this, and declared that he would start for home. But he at last allowed his companion's eloquence to overcome his objections, and agreed to remain.
How he dreaded the ordeal no one but he ever knew, but he made up his mind that, as he put it to himself, he would ”see the thing through.” He prepared a brief speech, which he memorized, and which he hoped to be able to deliver without breaking down.
Evening came only too soon, and Al, arrayed in a new dress suit, awaited the inevitable call for his appearance. Everything had been ”cut and dried,” and he knew that there was no escape.
At the end of the first act of the play there arose a shout, ”Allston! Allston!”
”Go on, my boy,” said Mr. Wattles, who, with his protege stood upon the stage, just behind the curtain. ”What are you trembling for? This ought to be the proudest moment of your life.”
With these words he fairly pushed the boy before the audience.
Then arose a whirlwind of applause. When it had subsided, Al tried to begin his speech. But to his utter consternation, he found that he had forgotten every word of it.
But he was not, after all, obliged to deliver it. As he stood, trying to remember at least one word of the carefully prepared effort, a man suddenly advanced from the rear of one of the proscenium boxes, leveled a pistol at the boy's head and fired.
The bullet whistled past Al's ear, but did not graze it. The next moment the would-be a.s.sa.s.sin was struggling in the hands of the other occupants of the box. He managed to free himself; then came another report, and the next moment Jack Farley lay dead on the floor of the box, a suicide.
How he had escaped from the doom with which he had been threatened on the previous night, how he had succeeded in entering the theater without attracting attention, will never be known.
Al's speech was forgotten in the excitement, and he was not obliged to make it, after all.
In a few weeks Al ceased to be a popular idol, but he was daily learning new ”points” and becoming more and more valuable to his employer; he was already recognized as one of the brightest advance agents on the road.
One morning, about two months after the tragedy that we have just recorded, his sister came to him and said: ”Al, I have a favor to ask of you. Will you grant it?”
”I promise in advance,” was the prompt reply.
”Then congratulate me.”
”On what?”
”I am going to be married.”
”Married!” gasped the boy. ”To whom?”
”To Mr. Wattles.”
”You're joking.”
”Indeed, I am not!”
”Why, he is forty years your senior.”
”He is a good, true man, and I love him; that's enough for me.”
”Then it is enough for me, too, sister,” was Al's quick reply, ”and I do heartily congratulate you.”
We need add but a few words. The marriage proved a most happy one, and Mrs. Wattles--whose real name we should give, if we were permitted--is now one of the most popular actresses and most estimable ladies on the American stage.
Al is now no longer an advance agent, but a manager. He is rapidly making a fortune; and, what is better, has earned a reputation for integrity and uprightness second to that of none in his business.
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