He pressed on toward his final
goal. "What is your attitude toward fairies?" he asked, and Miss
Cox would have heard in his tone a faint memory of his voice when he
engaged a new office-boy.
Her attitude toward fairies was perfectly satisfactory, and he showed
so much appreciation that she went on and told him her great secret
in full. She had once had something published and been paid money for
it--fifteen dollars--and probably never in her life had she spoken of
any sum with so much respect. It had been, well, a sort of a review of
a new illustrated edition of Hans Andersen's Tales, treating them as
if they were modern stories, commenting on them from the point of
view of morals and probability--making fun of people who couldn't give
themselves up to the charm of a story unless it tallied with their own
horrid little experiences of life. She told it, she said, very badly,
but perhaps he could get the idea.
He got it perfectly. "Good," he said. "I'll give you a job. I'm a
newspaper editor."
"Oh," she exclaimed, "you're not Mr. Munsey, are you, or Mr. Reid, or
Mr. Ochs?"
Her knowledge of newspaper owners seemed to come to a sudden end.
"No," he answered, smiling, "nor even Mr. Hearst. I did not say I
owned a newspaper. I edit it. I need some one just like you for my
book page, only you'd have to come to New York and work hard, and
there wouldn't be very much salary.
Pages:
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40