Page:Embarrassments (New York, The Macmillan Company, 1897).djvu/214

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EMBARRASSMENTS

like his letters: they're not the style of thing they want."

My blankness could only deepen. "Then what style of thing do they want?"

"Something more chatty."

"More?" I cried, aghast.

"More gossipy, more personal. They want 'journalism'. They want tremendous trash."

"Why, that's just what his letters have been!" I broke out.

This was strong, and I caught myself up, but the girl offered me the pardon of a beautiful wan smile. "So Ray himself declares. He says he has stooped so low."

"Very well—he must stoop lower. He must keep the place."

"He can't!" poor Maud wailed. "He says he has tried all he knows, has been abject, has gone on all fours, and that if they don't like that———"

"He accepts his dismissal?" I interposed in dismay.

She gave a tragic shrug. "What other course is open to him? He wrote to them that such work as he has done is the very worst he can do for the money."