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Page 59
"Oh, hell!" said Kenny moodily. "I've talked with him. I've even
answered his questions with politeness. A man who wants to know if you
must have a north light to paint by will think it a rule of the guild
to double-handle teacups."
CHAPTER XVII
KENNY DISAPPEARS
That night Whitaker brought him news of Brian. He was healthy and
happy and wrote no word of coming in. There, Whitaker felt himself,
Brian was over-reticent.
"And the postmark?" Kenny staring in disgust at a hole in his sock
transferred his glance to Whitaker.
"That," said Whitaker, "I'm not at liberty to give. I've told you so
before."
Kenny drew himself up to his full height.
"John--" he thundered.
The door opened and Mac Brett, the young sculptor on the floor above
who harbored H. B., came in, somewhat mystified at the warmth of
Whitaker's greeting.
"Come on down to the grill to dinner," he suggested. "Garry's down
there and Jan. It's drizzling and a lot of men are staying in."
Kenny, moodily painting the skin beneath the hole in his sock black,
flung down the brush and found his coat.
"Once," said Mac in a panic of laughter, "he painted hairs on the bald
parts of Frieda Fuller's pony-skin coat. Thick, plutocraticky sort of
hairs. I shan't forget 'em. And they melted and smudged her neck.
Remember, Kenny? You ridged 'em beautifully--"
Kenny did not answer. He strode toward the door. Mac and Whitaker
exchanged comprehending glances of dismay and followed him down to the
grill.
It was a pleasant refuge from the autumn storm--that grill. The dark
old wood framed light and color, sketches and a line of paintings.
Mac's sculptured ragamuffin looked wistfully down from his niche near
the open rafters upon a Round Table institutionally fraternal. He
seemed always seeking warmth and food. Kenny's old peasant in wrinkled
apple-faced cheer smiled broadly from the wall, listening to the click
of billiard balls with his painted eyes upon the doorway.
The hum and clatter at the Round Table stopped as Kenny entered. It
was followed by an immediate scraping of chairs, pushed back, and a
hearty chorus of greeting but Kenny knew, intuitively, that the talk
had been of him.
He ate but little and went back to the studio to play dummy bridge with
Mac and Whitaker. A loud thump on the studio door and a Morse dot and
dash announcement of identity on the bell just as he had pieced a pack
of cards together, filled him with intense resentment.
"Max Kreiling!" he said with a sniff. And a little later: "Caesare!"
He thought perhaps, feeling as he did in a mood for murder, he wouldn't
let them in, abuse the door panel and the bell as they would. Whitaker
did it for him.
"They'll come in and play music on my piano," he insisted sulkily, "and
sing notes into my air and I repeat I'm in no mood for music."
But Kreiling, big, blond and Teutonic, was already striding in with
Caesare at his heels. They filled the air with joyous greetings,
thumped upon the intervening wall for Garry and unloaded their pockets
and an institutional leather bag.
"Cheese," rumbled Kreiling, "jam, coffee and mince pies."
Caesare unsheathed his fiddle and played a preposterous rag-time
interpretation of the Valkyrie's battle-cry. It evoked an instant
response from the telephone.
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