mplating his bride in a drawing-room on the express from Miami. He was thinking that this was too good to be true. His brain had
She was so altogether perfect that Archie had frequently found himself compelled to take the marriage-certificate out of his
old thing,-I mean, darling," sa
ha
erstand why you should have
opened. She squ
ful thing in the world, prec
aped my notice.
onder-child! Nobody could
hought crossed his mind. It was a though
if your father
urse h
n the old lad," said Archie dubiously
s a darl
l row with a blighter of a manager there just before I left for Miami.
happy pair should separate for half an hour or so, Archie hanging around in the offing while Lucille saw her father and told him the whole story, or those chapters of it which she had omitted from h
lmost equal parts the more admirable characteristics of Apollo, Sir Galahad, and Marcus Aurelius. True, he had gathered in the course of the conversation that dear Archie had no occupation and no private means; but Mr. Brewster felt that a great-souled man like Archie didn't
perceived Archie, he
!" said Archie,
, this is father
rd!" sai
ut understanding why that the big introduction scene had stubbed its toe on some unlooked-for obstacle, waited anxiousl
nd a quarter minutes, Mr. Brewster swal
L
, fa
his t
ouded over with perple
ru
atching with a frozen fascination the rapid shimmying of his new relative's Adam's-apple. "Go away! I want to have a few
u, father.
oo
-f-f-a-m, but p
rchie, helpfully,
ter, "run away! I wa
e THIS before
ry, father, dea
o! I'm tickl
withdrawn, Mr. Brews
hen!"
and what not. Rum coincidence and so forth! How would it be to bury the jolly old hatchet-start a new life-forgi
ly unsoftened by this manly
o you mean by mar
e ref
f once, and all that. I was most frightfully in love, and Lu seemed to think it wouldn't
ink you've done prett
cerned, everything's topping! I've
'topping.' You haven't a cent to your name, and you've managed to fool a rich man's daugh
ter had not struck Arc
t it like that before! I can see that, from your poi
ose to support L
llar. He felt embarrassed, His father-in-law w
ave me!" He turned the matter over for a moment. "I had a so
ng at
I should kind of look round, you know, and nose about and buzz to and
y daughter was to live whi
THINK we rather expected YOU to
expected to
anything out-that WAS what you might call the general sche
wster e
out of my hotel-MY hotel-calling it all the names
thout thinking. Dashed tap had gone DRIP-DRIP-DRIP all nig
as no one has ever knocked it since it was built, and you s
. Slipped the old bean, somehow.
e to fling my arms round you and kiss you,
osing about and b
otel is a pretty poor hotel, eh? Well, you'll have plenty of opportunity of judging, because you're coming to live here. I'll let
y! You mea
out me. And, if you want your shoes shined, you can pay for it yourself in the basement. If you leave them outside your door, I'll
ed a propit
to ask if you would stagger along and
ill
ie, ingratiatingly. "You don't