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absence, he was first irritated, then coldly amused. His coolness

dampened, while it comforted, Bailey.

A bearer of sensational tidings likes to spread a certain amount of

dismay and terror; but, on the other hand, it was a relief to him to

find that his father appeared to consider trivial a crisis which, to

Bailey, had seemed a disaster without parallel in the annals of

American social life.

"She said she was going to marry him!"

Old Bannister opened the nut-cracker mouth that always had the

appearance of crushing something. His pale eyes glowed for an instant.

"Did she?" he said.

"She seemed very...ah...determined."

"Did she!"

Silence falling like a cloud at this point, Bailey rightly conjectured

that the audience was at an end and left the room. His father bit the

end off a cigar and began to smoke.

Smoking, he reviewed the situation, and his fighting spirit rose to

grapple with it. He was not sorry that this had happened. His was a

patriarchal mind, and he welcomed opportunities of exercising his

authority over his children. It had always been his policy to rule them

masterfully, and he had often resented the fact that his daughter, by

the nature of things, was to a great extent outside his immediate rule.

During office hours business took him away from her. The sun never set

on his empire over Bailey, but it needed a definite crisis like the

present one to enable him to jerk at the reins which guided Ruth, and

he was glad of the chance to make his power felt.

The fact that this affair brought him into immediate contact with Mrs.

Porter added to his enjoyment. Of all the people, men or women, with

whom his business or social life had brought him into conflict, she

alone had fought him squarely and retired with the honours of war. When

his patriarchal mind had led him to bully his late wife, it was Mrs.

Porter who had fought her cause. It was Mrs. Porter who openly

expressed her contempt for his money and certain methods of making it.

She was the only person in his immediate sphere over whom he had no

financial hold.

He was a man who liked to be surrounded by dependents, and Mrs. Porter

stoutly declined to be a dependent. She moved about the world, blunt

and self-sufficing, and he hated her as he hated no one else. The

thought that she had now come to grips with him and that he could best

her in open fight was pleasant to him. All his life, except in his

conflicts with her, he had won. He meant to win now.

Bailey's apprehensions amused him. He had a thorough contempt for all

actors, authors, musicians, and artists, whom he classed together in

one group as men who did not count, save in so far as they gave mild

entertainment to the men who, like himself, did count. The idea of

anybody taking them seriously seemed too fantastic to be considered.

Of affection for his children he had little. Bailey was useful in the

office, and Ruth ornamental at home. They satisfied him. He had never

troubled to study their characters. It had never occurred to him to

wonder if they were fond of him. They formed a necessary part of his

household, and beyond that he was not interested in them. If he had

ever thought about Ruth's nature, he had dismissed her as a feminine

counterpart of Bailey, than whom no other son and heir in New York

behaved so exactly as a son and heir should.

That Ruth, even under the influence of Lora Delane Porter, should have

been capable of her present insubordination, was surprising, but the

thing was too trivial to be a source of anxiety. The mischief could be

checked at once before it amounted to anything.

Bailey had not been gone too long before Ruth appeared. She stood in

the doorway looking at him for a moment. Her face was pale and her eyes

bright. She was breathing quickly.

"Are you busy, father? I...I want to tell you something."

John Bannister smiled. He had a wintry smile, a sort of muscular

affection of the mouth, to which his eyes contributed nothing. He had

made up his mind to be perfectly calm and pleasant with Ruth. He had

read in novels and seen on the stage situations of this kind, where the

father had stormed and blustered. The foolishness of such a policy

amused him. A strong man had no need to behave like that.

"I think I have heard it already," he said. "I have just been seeing

Bailey."

"What did Bailey tell you, father?"

"That you fancied yourself in love with some actor or artist or other

whose name I have forgotten."

"It is not fancy. I do love him."

"Yes?"

There was a pause.

"Are you very angry, father?"

"Why should I be? Let's talk it over quietly. There's no need to make a

tragedy of it."

"I'm glad you feel like that, father."

John Bannister lit another cigar.

"Tell me all about it," he said.

Ruth found herself surprisingly near tears. She had come into the room

with every nerve in her body braced for a supreme struggle. Her

father's unexpected gentleness weakened her, exactly as he had

foreseen. The plan of action which he had determined upon was that of

the wrestler who yields instead of resisting, in order to throw an

antagonist off his balance.

"How did it begin?" he asked.

"Well," said Ruth, "it began when Aunt Lora took me to his studio."

"Yes, I heard that it was she who set the whole thing going. She is a

friend of this fellow-what is his name?"

"Kirk Winfield. Yes, she seemed to know him quite well."

"And then?"

In spite of her anxiety, Ruth smiled.

"Well, that's all," she said. "I just fell in love with him."

Mr. Bannister nodded.

"You just fell in love with him," he repeated. "Pretty quick work,

wasn't it?"

"I suppose it was."

"You just took one look at him and saw he was the affinity, eh?"

"I suppose so."

"And what did he do? Was he equally sudden?"

Ruth laughed. She was feeling quite happy now.

"He would have liked to be, poor dear, but he felt he had to be

cautious and prepare the way before telling me. If it hadn't been for

Bailey, he might be doing it still. Apparently, Bailey went to him and

said I had said I was going to marry him, and Kirk came flying round,

and...well, then it was all right."

Mr. Bannister drew thoughtfully at his cigar. He was silent for a few

moments.

"Well, my dear," he said at last. "I think you had better consider the

engagement broken off."

Ruth looked at him quickly. He still smiled, but his eyes were cold and

hard. She realized suddenly that she had been played with, that all his

kindliness and amiability had been merely a substitute for the storm

which she had expected. After all, it was to be war between them, and

she braced herself for it!

"Father!" she cried.

Mr. Bannister continued to puff serenely at his cigar.

"We needn't get worked up about it," he said. "Let's keep right on

talking it over quietly."

"Very well," said Ruth. "But, after what you have just said, what is

there to talk over?"

"You might be interested to hear my reasons for saying it."

"And I will argue my side."

Mr. Bannister waved his hand gently.

"You don't have to argue. You just listen."

Ruth bit her lip.

"Well?"

"In the first place," said her father, "about this young man. What is

he? Bailey says he is an artist. Well, what has he ever done? Why don't

I know his name? I buy a good many pictures, but I don't remember ever

signing a cheque for one of his. I read the magazines now and then, but