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

CHAPTER XVII
13/50

Her last request was that a photograph of me should be placed in her casket before it went to its final resting place." He paused, his emotion threatening to overcome him.

Presently he brushed a hand across his eyes and continued, "I discovered later that they had picked out the most wretched of all my photographs--an atrocious thing I had supposed was destroyed.

Can you imagine it ?" Apparently it was but the entrance of his daughter that saved him from an affecting collapse.

His daughter removed the record of John McCullough's ravings, sniffed at it, and put a fox-trot in its place.
"He's got to learn to dance," she explained, laying hands upon the guest.
"Dancing--dancing!" murmured Mr.Montague, as if the very word recalled bitter memories.
With brimming eyes he sat beating time to the fox-trot measure while Merton Gill proved to all observers that his mastery of this dance would, if ever at all achieved, be only after long and discouraging effort.
"You forget all about your feet," remarked the girl as they paused, swaying to the rhythm.

"Remember the feet--they're important in a dance.
Now!--" But it was hard to remember his feet or, when he did recall them, to relate their movements even distantly to the music.


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