Above it was a 
large Panama hat with a gaudy ribbon. A red necktie was also visible, 
even at a considerable distance. Between the hat and the necktie a face 
several degrees darker in color than the tie came into view as the 
distance lessened. It was Mr. Montgomery Hicks, whose first name was 
usually pronounced "Mugumry" and thence degenerated into "Mug." 
Mug's inflamed and scowling face and bulging eyes usually conveyed 
the general impression that he was about to burst into profanity -- a 
conjecture which frequently proved correct. In this case he merely 
remarked in a sort of "newsboy" voice: 
"Mr. Raymond Owen, I believe?" 
The secretary's sallow face flushed a little as he stepped aside and let 
Harry and Pauline pass out of earshot.
"See here, Mug," complained Owen, "I haven't a cent for you. You will 
get me discharged if you come around here like this." 
"Well, I'll get you fired right now," growled Mug, "if you don't come 
across with the money." And he started toward the front steps. Owen 
led him out of sight of the house and finally got rid of him. For a 
blackmailer knows he can strike but once, and, having struck, he loses 
all power over his victim. So Hicks withheld the blow, collected a 
paltry thirty dollars, and consented to wait a little while for Marvin to 
die. 
Harry and Pauline passed on into the house. He had the straight 
backbone and well poised head of the West Pointer, but without the 
unnatural stiffness of the soldier's carriage; the shoulders of the 
"halfback," and the lean hips of a runner were his, and he had earned 
them in four years on his varsity football and track teams. The girl 
beside him, half a head shorter, tripped along with the easy action of a 
thoroughbred. Both bore the name of Marvin, yet there was no 
relationship. 
Harry's mother, long dead, had adopted this girl on Mr. Marvin's first 
trip to Egypt. Pauline was the daughter of an English father and a 
native mother. 
Mrs. Marvin first saw her as a blue-eyed baby, too young to understand 
that its parents had just been drowned in the Nile. As brother and sister 
they grew up together until college separated the two. After four years 
Pauline's dainty prettiness struck Harry with a distinct shock, the 
delightful sort of shock known as love at first sight. It was really 
Harry's first sight of her as a woman. Every sense and instinct in him 
shouted, "Get that girl," and nothing in him answered "No." 
Mr. Marvin looked unusually pale as those two very vital young 
persons stepped into the library. He read their thoughts and said 
quietly. 
"Harry, I've been placed in the hands of a receiver."
"Receiver?" echoed Harry, with amazement, for he knew that Marvin 
enterprises were financed magnificently. 
"Yes, Dr. Stevens is the receiver. He says I have exhausted my entire 
stock of nervous capital, that my account at the bank of physical 
endurance is overdrawn, nature has called her loans, and you might say 
that I am a nervous bankrupt." 
"So All you need is rest," cried Pauline, "and you will be as strong as 
ever." 
"Well, before I rest I want to assure myself about you children. Harry, 
you love Pauline, don't you? 
"You bet I do, father." 
"Pauline, you love Harry, don't you?" 
"Yes," answered Pauline slowly. 
"And you will marry right away?" 
"This very minute, if she would have me," said Harry. 
"And you, Pauline?" queried the old man. 
"Yes, father," for she loved him and felt toward him as if she were 
indeed his daughter. "Perhaps some time I'll marry Harry, but not for a 
year or two. I couldn't marry him now, it wouldn't be right." 
"Wouldn't be right?? Well, I'd like to know why not." 
Pauline was silent a moment. She hated to oppose this fine old man, but 
her will was as firm as his, and well he knew it. Harry spoke for her: 
"Oh, she wants to see life before she settles down -- wild life, sin and 
iniquity, battle, murder and sudden death and all that sort of stuff. I 
don't know what has gotten into women these days, anyway."
Then Polly, prettily, daintily, as she did all things, and with charming 
little blushes and hesitations, confessed her secret. In short, it was her 
ambition to be a writer, a writer of something worth while -- a great 
writer. To be a great writer one must know life, and to know life one 
must see it -- see the world. She ended by asking the two men if this 
were not so. 
They looked at each other and coughed with evident relief it the 
comparative harmlessness of her whim. 
"Yes, Polly," said old man Marvin,    
    
		
	
	
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