“Rufus Coleman called.”
“Indeed,” said the professor.
“And I’ve come to you, father, before seeing him.” The professor was silent for a time. “Well, Marjory,” he said at last, “what do you want me to say?” He spoke very deliberately. “I am sure this is a singular situation. Here appears the man I formally forbid you to marry. I am sure I do not know what I am to say.”
“I wish to see him,” said the girl.
“You wish to see him?” enquired the professor. “You wish to see him? Marjory, I may as well tell you now that with all the books and plays I’ve read, I really don’t know how the obdurate father should conduct himself. He is always pictured as an exceedingly dense gentleman with white whiskers, who does all the unintelligent things in the plot. You and I are going to play no drama, are we, Marjory? I admit that I have white whiskers, and I am an obdurate father. I am, as you well may say, a very obdurate father. You are not to marry Rufus Coleman. You understand the rest of the matter. He is here; you want to see him. What will you say to him when you see him?”
“I will say that you refuse to let me marry him, father and—” She hesitated a moment before she lifted her eyes fully and formidably to her father’s face. “And that I shall marry him anyhow.”
The professor did not cavort when this statement came from his daughter. He nodded and then passed into a period of reflection. Finally he asked: “But when? That is the point. When?”
The girl made a sad gesture. “I don’t know. I don’t know. Perhaps when you come to know Rufus better—”
“Know him better. Know that rapscallion better? Why, I know him much better than he knows himself. I know him too well. Do you think I am talking offhand about this affair? Do you think I am talking without proper information?”
Marjory made no reply.
“Well,” said the professor, “you may see Coleman on condition that you inform him at once that I forbid your marriage to him. I don’t understand at all how to manage these situations. I don’t know what to do. I suppose I should go myself and — No, you can’t see him, Majory.”
Still the girl made no reply. Her head sank forward and she breathed a trifle heavily.
“Marjory,” cried the professor, “it is impossible that you should think so much of this man.” He arose and went to his daughter. “Marjory, many wise children have been guided by foolish fathers, but we both suspect that no foolish child has ever been guided by a wise father. Let us change it. I present myself to you as a wise father. Follow my wishes in this affair and you will be at least happier than if you marry this wretched Coleman.”
She answered: “He is waiting for me.”
The professor turned abruptly from her and dropped into his chair at the table. He resumed a grip on his pen. “Go,” he said, wearily. “Go. But if you have a remnant of sense, remember what I have said to you. Go.” He waved his hand in a dismissal that was slightly scornful. “I hoped you would have a minor conception of what you were doing. It seems a pity.” Drooping in tears, the girl slowly left the room.
Coleman had an idea that he had occupied the chair for several months. He gazed about at the pictures and the odds and ends of a drawing-room in an attempt to take an interest in them. The great garlanded paper shade over the piano lamp consoled his impatience in a mild degree because he knew that Marjory had made it. He noted the clusters of cloth violets which she had pinned upon the yellow paper and he dreamed over the fact. He was able to endow this shade with certain qualities of sentiment that caused his stare to become almost a part of an intimacy, a communion. He looked as if he could have unburdened his soul to this shade over the piano lamp.
Upon the appearance of Marjory he sprang up and came forward rapidly. “Dearest,” he murmured, stretching out both hands. She gave him one set of