“That’s simply out of the—”
Patsy, who had found her tongue at last, laid a coaxing hand on Travis’s arm. “No, it isn’t. I wired Miriam yesterday—to see if she was really as sick as you thought. She was sick; but she’s ever so much better and her nerves are not going to be nearly as troublesome as she feared. She’s quite willing to come back and take her old place, and she’ll be well enough next week.” Patsy’s voice had become vibrant with feeling. “Now don’t ye be hard-hearted and think I’m ungrateful. We’ve all been playing in a bigger comedy than Willie Shakespeare ever wrote; and, sure, we’ve got to be playing it out to the end as it was meant to be.”
“And you mean to give up your career, your big chance of success?” Travis still looked incredulous. “Don’t you realize you’ll be famous—famous and rich!” he emphasized the last word unduly.
It set Patsy’s eyes to blazing. “Aye, I’d no longer be like Granny Donoghue’s lean pig, hungry for scrapings. Well, I’d rather be hungry for scrapings than starving for love. I knew one woman who threw away love to be famous and rich, and I watched her die. Thank God she’s kept my feet from that road! Sure, I wouldn’t be rich—” She choked suddenly and looked helplessly at the tinker.
“Neither would I.” And he spoke with a solemn conviction.
In the end Travis gave in. He took his disappointment and his loss like the true gentleman he was, and sent them away with his blessing, mixed with an honest twinge of self-pity. It was not, however, until Patsy turned to wave him a last farewell and smile a last grateful smile from under the white chiffon, corn-flower sunbonnet that he remembered that convention had been slighted.
“Wait a minute,” he said, running after them. “If I am not mistaken I have not had the pleasure of meeting your—future husband; perhaps you’ll introduce us—”
For once in her life Patsy looked fairly aghast, and Travis repeated, patiently, “His name, Irish Patsy—I want to know his name.”