Part 20 (1/2)

”You're quite excusable, I guess, father,” she said sweetly. ”What is it?”

”Why, your brother Jack just called you up from Meadow Brook, Sam, and wants to tell you something immediately,” stammered Mr. Stevens, plucking at a beard which in that moment seemed to have lost all its aggressiveness. ”He called twice before you arrived, and is on the 'phone now.”

Sam, as he walked to the telephone, had time to find that his heart was beating a tattoo against his ribs, that his breath was short and fluttery, and that stage fright had suddenly crept over him and claimed him for its own; so it was with no great patience or understanding that he heard Jack tell him in great glee about some tests which Princeman had had made in his own paper mills with the marsh pulp, and how Princeman was sorry he had not taken more stock, and could not the treasury stock be opened for further subscription? ”Tell him no,” said Sam shortly, and hung up the receiver; then he repented of his bluntness and spent five precious minutes in recalling his brother and apologizing for his bruskness, explaining that Princeman was probably trying to plan another attempt to pool the stock.

In the meantime Theophilus Stevens had stood surveying his daughter in contrition.

”I'm afraid I came in at a most inopportune moment,” he said by way of apology.

”Yes, I'm afraid you did,” she admitted with a smile. ”However, I don't think Sam will forget what he wanted to say,” and suddenly she reached up and put her arms around her father's neck and drew his face down and kissed him rapturously.

”I'm glad to see you feel the way you do about it,” said Mr. Stevens delightedly, petting her gently upon the shoulder with one hand and with the other smoothing back the hair from her forehead. She was the dearest to him of all his children, although he never confessed it, even to himself, and just now they were very, very close together indeed. ”I'm glad to hear you call him Sam, too. He's a fine young man and he is bound to be a howling success in everything he undertakes.” He smiled reminiscently. ”I rather thought there was something between you two,” he went on, still patting her shoulder, ”and when Dan Westlake told me that his girl thought a great deal of Sam and that he was going to buy enough stock in Sam's company to give Sam control, I turned right around and bought just as much stock as Westlake had, although just before the meeting I had refused to invest as much money as Sam wanted me to. Moreover, Westlake and myself, between us, stopped the move to pool the outside stock, just yet. He's a smart young man, that boy,” he continued admiringly. ”I didn't see, until I went into that meeting, why he was so crazy to have me buy enough stock to gain control-- What's the matter?”

He stopped in perplexity, for his daughter, looking aghast at him, had pushed back from his embrace and was regarding him with perfectly round eyes, while over her face, at first pale, there gradually crept a crimson flush.

”Well, of all things!” she gasped. ”Of all the cold-blooded, cruel, barter-and-sale proceedings! Why, father, how--how could you! How could he! I never in all my life--”

”Why, Jo, what do you mean? What's the trouble?”

”If you don't understand I can't make you,” she said helplessly.

”Well, I'll be--busted!” observed Mr. Stevens under his breath.

To his infinite relief Sam came in just then, and Mr. Stevens, wondering what he had done now, slipped hastily out of the room. Mr.

Turner, coming from the bright office into the dim room and innocent of any change in the atmosphere, approached confidently and eagerly to Miss Josephine with both hands extended, but she stepped back most indignantly.

”You need not finish what you were going to say!” she warned him. ”My father has just given me some information which changes the entire aspect of affairs. I am not a part of a business bargain! I refuse to be regarded as a commercial proposition! I heard something from Mr.

Princeman of what desperate efforts you were making to secure the command, whatever that may be, of the--of the stock--board--of shares in your new company, but I did not think you would go to such lengths as this!”

”Why, my dear girl,” began Sam, shocked.

”I am not your dear girl and I never shall be,” she told him, and angrily dabbed at some sudden tears. ”I never was. I was only a business possibility.”

”That's unjust,” he charged her. ”I don't see how you could accuse me of regarding you in any other way than as the dearest and the sweetest and the most beautiful girl in all the world, the wisest and the most sensible, the most faithful, the most charming, the most delightful, the most everything that is desirable.”

”Wait just a moment,” she told him, very coldly indeed; with almost extravagant coldness, in fact, as she beat out of her consciousness the enticing epithets he had bestowed upon her. ”Do you mean to say that never in your calculations did you consider that if you married me my father would vote his stock with yours--I believe that's the way he puts it--and give you command or whatever it is of your company?”

”Well,” considered Sam, brought to a standstill and put straight upon his honor, ”I can't deny that it did seem to me a very satisfactory thing that my father-in-law should own enough stock in the company--”

”That will do,” she interrupted him icily. ”That is precisely what I have charged. We will consider this subject as ended, Mr. Turner; as one never to be referred to again.”

”We'll do nothing of the sort,” returned Sam flat-footedly. ”I've been composing this speech for the last two weeks and I'm going to deliver it. I'm not going to have it wasted. I've unconsciously been rehearsing it every place I went. Even up in Flatbush, showing a man the superior advantages of that yellow-mud district, I found myself repeating sentence number twelve. It's been the first thing I thought of in the morning and the last thing I thought of at night. It's been with me all day, riding and walking and talking and eating and drinking and just breathing. Now I'm going to go through with it.

”I--I--confound it all! I've forgotten how I was going to say it now!

After all, though, it only amounted to this: I love you! I want you to know it and understand it. I love you and love you and love you! I never loved any woman before in my life. I never had time. I didn't know what it was like. If I had I'd have fought it off until I met you, because I could not afford it for anybody short of you. It takes my whole attention. It distracts my mind entirely from other things.

I can't think of anything else consecutively and connectedly. I--I'm sorry you take the att.i.tude you do about this thing, but--I'm not going to accept your viewpoint. You've got to look at this thing differently to understand it.