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Nevill, I fear. Have you spoken to Madge?" "No; I never had a chance." "Do you consider yourself a suitable husband for her?" "Why not?" Nevill asked; he was cool and composed now. "If you are good enough to be her father, am I not worthy to be her husband?" "Don't say that," Stephen Foster answered. "You are insolent--you forget to whom you are speaking. Whatever our relations have been and are, whatever sort of man I am at my desk or my ledgers, I am another person at home. Sneer if you like, it is true. I love my daughter--the child of my dead wife. She does not know what I do in town--you are aware of that--and God forbid that she ever does learn. I want to keep her in ignorance--to guard her young life and secure her future happiness. And _you_ want to marry her!" "I do," replied Nevill, trying to speak pleasantly. "How will you explain the deception--the fact that you have been coming here under a false name?" "I will get around that all right. It was your suggestion, you remember, not mine, that I should take the name of Royle. Look here, Foster, I know there is some reason in what you say--I respect your motives. But you misunderstand and misjudge me. I love the girl with all my heart, with a true, pure and lasting affection. I might choose a wife in higher places, but Madge has enslaved me with her sweet face and charming disposition. As for our relations--you know what poverty drove me to. Given a secure income, and I should never have stooped to dishonor. The need of money stifled the best that was in my nature. It is not too late to reform, though. I don't mean now, but when I come into my uncle's fortune, which is a sure thing. Then, I promise you, I will be as straight as you could wish your daughter's husband to be. Believe me, I am sincere. No man could offer Madge a deeper affection." There was no doubt that Victor Nevill spoke the truth, for once in his life; he loved Madge with a passion that dominated him, and he knew his own unworthiness. Stephen Foster paced the floor with a haggard face, with knitted brows. "It is impossible," he said to himself. "I would rather see her married to some poor but honest clerk." He lighted a cigar and bit it savagely. "What if I refuse?" he added aloud. A dangerous light flashed in Nevill's eyes. "I won't give her up," he replied; and in the words there was a hidden menace which Stephen Foster understood. "Give her up?" he echoed. "You have
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