Page:Levenson - Butterfly Man.djvu/165

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
BUTTERFLY MAN
163

"A gentleman gave me this box for you, Mr. Gracey. A note's inside." He handed Ken an oblong package. Ken opened it. Within a purple velvet jewel box was a card, on the back of which was written in tiny script: "Thanks for a wonderful evening. Ernest Emerson." Ken opened the box. Beneath fine tissue paper lay a platinum wrist watch.

Ken called: "Frankie … come up!" The chubby-cheeked dancer, swathed in a heavy Turkish towel, appeared on the stair landing.

"Look what I got," Ken cried. He snapped the watch bracelet on his wrist.

"You are certainly luckier than I am," Frankie said.

"Do you know him?"

"We are the best of friends, almost sisters-in-sin, you might say."

Ken laughed.


While Ken dressed for the street, Howard appeared. "Let's go to Tony's for a Tom Collins," he suggested. "I want you to listen to a new lyric I wrote this afternoon."

"I'm tired," said Ken. "I'd rather go home."

"Stop acting like a baby. Check out of the Algonquin. Rutgers will call for your bags."

"We'll talk about that tomorrow," Ken replied.

Howard explained that he was planning a new show, an ultra-sophisticated European revue. He was writing a part in it for Ken, that of a debonair, worldly American who would possess a naive soul, "a timeless Casanova who can never grow up."

With breathless haste, Howard prattled on. He accompanied Ken downstairs where Ken saw Frankie waiting for