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"Yes; I saw you, and Luke Vine came and told me as well."
"It was very kind of him," said Madelaine, with a touch of sarcasm in her voice.
"Kind and unkind, my dear. You see he has no business--nothing to do but to think of other people. But he means well, my dear, and he likes you."
"I have often thought so."
"Yes; and you were right. He warned me that I was not to let your intimacy grow closer with his nephew."
"Indeed, papa!"
"Yes, my dear. He said that I was a--well, I will not tell you what, for not stopping it directly, for that Harry was rapidly drifting into a bad course--that it was a hopeless case."
"That is not the way to redeem him, father."
"No, my clear, it is not. But you were going to say something to me?"
"Yes," said Madelaine, hesitating. Then putting down her work she rose and went to her father's side, knelt down, and resting her arms upon his knees, looked straight up in his face.
"Well, Maddy?"
"I wanted to speak to you about Harry." There was a slight twitching about the merchant's brows, but his face was calm directly, and he said coolly--
"What about Harry Vine?" Madelaine hesitated for a few moments, and then spoke out firmly and bravely.
"I have been thinking about his position, father, and of how sad it is for him to be wasting his days as he is down here."
"Very sad, Maddy. He is, as Luke Vine says, going wrong. Well?"
"I have been thinking, papa, that you might take him into your office and give him a chance of redeeming the past."
"Nice suggestion, my dear. What would old Crampton say?"
"Mr Crampton could only say that you had done a very kind act for the son of your old friend."
"Humph! Well?"
"You could easily arrange to take him, papa, and with your firm hand over him it would do an immense deal of good."
"Not to me."
There was a pause, and Van Heldre gazed into his child's unblenching eyes.
"So we are coming at facts," he said at last. "Harry asked you to interfere on his behalf?"
Madelaine shook her head and smiled.
"Is this your own idea?"
"Entirely."
"Then what was the meaning of the walk on the beach to-day?"
"Harry sought for it, and said that we had been playfellows from children, that he loved me very dearly, and he asked me to be his wife."
"The--"
Van Heldre checked himself.
"And what did you say?"
"That it was impossible."
"Then you do not care for him?"
Madelaine was silent.
"Then you do not care for him?"
"I'm afraid I care for him very much indeed," said Madelaine firmly.
"Let me thoroughly understand you, my darling. You love George Vine's son--your old friend's brother?"
"Yes, father," said Madelaine, in a voice little above a whisper.
"And he has asked you to be his wife?"
"Yes."
"Tell me what answer you gave him."
"That I would never marry a man so wanting in self-respect."
"Hah!"
"He said that our parents were rich, that there was no need for him to toil as he had done, but that if I consented it would give him an impetus to work."
"And you declined conditionally?"
"I declined absolutely, father."
"And yet you love him?"
"I'm afraid I love him very dearly."
"You are a strange girl, Madelaine."
"Yes, father."