Of course it was necessary for Peggy to begin at the beginning, and in the course of twenty minutes or so, the good man began to understand. As the extent of his blunder gradually dawned upon him, he threw back his head and broke into a hearty guffaw whose enjoyment was contagious. Peggy joined him, and then there was an exultant note in her laughter. Observation had taught her that when a man is laughing, it is one of the hardest things in the world for him to say no.
“Now, suppose we start over again, and go kind of slow,” said Mr. Silas Robbins. “I’ve got as far as this, that you’re all high-school girls and want to give a show. It would take a reg’lar racehorse of a brain to keep up with that tongue of yourn.”
Peggy’s further explanations were characterized by the utmost deliberation, so that Mr. Robbins had time to ask any questions that occurred to him, and the outcome justified her expectation. Not only did she secure the use of the school building, but Mr. Silas Robbins agreed to purchase tickets for himself and family.
“And to think I took you for a perfessional,” said Mr. Robbins, smiling very broadly as he turned back to his waiting horses. “If there’s anything in your show funnier’n that, it’ll be wuth the price. Going to ask a quarter, be you? That’s right. Folks don’t appreciate a cheap ten-cent show, the way they do one they’ve got to pay a good price for.”
Peggy met a similarly cordial reception at the office of the Weekly Arena, the country paper, on which she was relying for free advertising. Mr. Smart, the editor, was a careworn little man, whose frayed and faded business suit suggested that too many subscriptions were paid in potatoes and cord wood, and too few in the coin of the realm. He agreed to her request with a readiness Peggy thought wonderfully kind, though it would have surprised her less, had she realized with what eagerness Mr. Smart was continually seeking items with a news value.
“I’ll make one or two references to it in this issue,” Mr. Smart promised, “to sort of pique curiosity, you know. And next week you might give me a little write-up of the thing. Outline the plot, without giving away the surprises, and put it on thick about its being funny. It is funny, ain’t it?”
“Oh, yes, very.”
“That’s the talk,” said Mr. Smart approvingly. “I don’t know how it is with city people. Sometimes it seems to me that they must like to have their feelings harrowed up, judging from the kind of plays they go to see. But here in the country, we like to get our money’s worth of laughing. And, by the way, I suppose you understand, Miss, that it’s customary for the Press to receive two complimentary tickets.”
Notwithstanding this cordial and valuable support, Peggy was to find that the lot of an actor-manager is not altogether free from thorns. Claire had obligingly agreed to accept the vacant rôle in the cast, but after one reading of the little play, a marked decrease in her enthusiasm was observable.
“Do you know I don’t like the part of Adelaide a bit,” she confided to Priscilla. “I’d like to play Hazel. I’m going to ask Amy if she’d mind changing with me.”