[Merton of the Movies by Harry Leon Wilson]@TWC D-Link book
Merton of the Movies

CHAPTER XVI
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The Montague girl would then ask Merton how he liked Sunny Cafeteria.

He knew this was a jesting term that would stand for sunny California, and never failed to laugh.
The girl kept rather closely by him during these periods of waiting.

She seemed to show little interest in other members of the company, and her association with them, Merton noted, was marked by a certain restraint.
With them she seemed no longer to be the girl of free ways and speech.
She might occasionally join a group of the men who indulged in athletic sports on the grass before the little farmhouse--for the actors of Mr.
Baird's company would all betray acrobatic tendencies in their idle moments--and he watched one day while the simple little country sister turned a series of hand-springs and cart-wheels that evoked sincere applause from the four New York villains who had been thus solacing their ennui.
But oftener she would sit with Merton on the back seat of one of the waiting automobiles.

She not only kept herself rather aloof from other members of the company, but she curiously seemed to bring it about that Merton himself would have little contact with them.

Especially did she seem to hover between him and the company's feminine members.


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