It was hard upon a young fellow who had just assumed an important and responsible position to have to be distracted by the sex problem. Lanny learned how it interferes with business, and all the other serious things of life; he said a plague upon it — for the first time in his life, but not for the last. Here he was, the next morning, comfortably fixed by the window in his bedroom, with the code material and a long message from Connecticut, badly delayed by congestion of the cables. But instead of looking up the word “mar-ketless,” he was sitting lost in thought, and presently interrupting his father's reading of the mail. “Robbie, don't you think one of us ought to see Beauty for a few minutes?”
“Anything special?” asked the other, absentmindedly.
“Harry told her last night that she'd have to make up her mind, or he's going back to the States without her. She says it's an ultimatum.”
“Well, there's a lot of ultimatums being served right now. One more hardly counts.”
“Don't joke, Robbie. She's terribly upset.”
“What's she doing?”
“Just sitting staring in front of her.”
“Has she got a looking glass?”
Lanny saw that his father was determined to keep out of it; so he looked up the word “marketless.” But before he started on the word “lightening,” he interrupted again. “Robbie, does it often happen that a woman thinks she is in love with two men and can't decide which?”
“Yes,” said the father, “it happens to both men and women.” He put down the letter he was reading and added: “It happened to me, when I had to decide whether I was going to get married or not.” It was the first time Robbie had ever spoken of that event to his son, and the boy waited to see if he'd say more. “I had to make up my mind, and I did. And now Beauty has to do it. It won't hurt her to sit staring in front of her. She's owed it to herself for a long while to do some serious thinking.”