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e shining and her heart was beating like a drum. "Then you think that eventually--if I work hard--after years perhaps----" "You can't do it on your own, my dear, so leave yourself in my hands entirely, and don't whisper a word about it yet." "Ah!" It was like a dream coming true; she could scarcely believe in it. The stage manager became still more suave and flattering and familiar. If she "caught on," there was no knowing what he might not get for her--ten pounds a week--fifteen, twenty, twenty-five, even fifty perhaps. Glory's palpitation was becoming painful, and at the bottom of her heart there was a certain fear of this sudden tide of fortune, as if Providence had somehow made a mistake and would as suddenly find it out. To appease her conscience she began to think of home and how happy she might make everybody there if God was really going to be so good to her. They should want for nothing; they should never know a poor day again. Meantime the stage manager was painting another picture. A girl didn't go a-begging if he once took her up. There was S----. She was only an "auricomous" damsel, serving in a tobacconist's shop in the Haymarket when he first found her, and now where was she? "Of course, I've no interest of my own to serve, my dear--none whatever. And there'll be lots of people to tempt you away from me when your name is made." Glory uttered some vehement protest, and then was lost in her dreams again. "Well, well, we'll see," said the stage manager. He was looking at her with glittering eyes. "Do you know, my dear, you are a very fine-looking young woman?" Glory's head was down, her face was flushed, and she was turning her mother's pearl ring around her finger. He thought she was overwhelmed by his praises, and coming closer, he said: "Dare say you've got a good stage figure too, eh? Pooh! Only business, you know! But you mustn't be shy with me, my dear. And besides, if I am to do all this for you, you must do something for me sometimes." She hardly heard him. Her eyes were still glistening with the far-off look of one who gazes on a beautiful vision. "You are so good," she said. "I don't know what to say, or how to thank you." "This way," he whispered, and leaning over to her he lifted her face and kissed her. Then her poor dream of glory and grandeur and happiness was dispelled in a moment, and she awoke with a sense of outrage and shame. The man's praises were flatter
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