"Th-thanks. When do you go?"

"I'm trying to get Miss Boltwood to start soon now. The season is

opening in the East. She does like your fine sturdy West, as I do, but

still, when we think of the exciting new shows opening, and the dances,

and the touch with the great world---- Oh, it does make one eager to get

back."

"That's so," risked Milt.

"We, uh---- Daggett---- In fact, I'm going to call you Milt, as Claire

does. You don't know what a pleasure it has been to have encountered

you. There's a fine keen courage about you Western chaps that makes a

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cautious old fogy like me envious. I shall remember meeting you with a

great deal of pleasure."

"Th-thanks. Been pleasure meet you."

"And I know Claire will, too."

Milt felt that he was being dealt with foully. He wanted to object to

Saxton's acting as agent for Claire as incompetent, irrelevant,

immaterial, and no foundation laid. But he could not see just where he

was being led, and with Saxton glowing at him as warmly and greasily as

the mutton chops, Milt could only smile wanly, and reflectively feel

the table leg to see if it was loose enough to jerk out in case of need.

Saxton was being optimistic: "In fact, Claire and I both hope that some day when you've finished your

engineering course, we'll see you in the East. I wonder---- As I say, my

dear fellow, I've taken the greatest fancy to you, and I do hope you

won't think I'm too intimate if I say that I imagine that even in your

charming friendship with Miss Boltwood, you've probably never learned

what important people the Boltwoods are. I thought I'd tell you so that

you could realize the privilege both you and I have in knowing them.

Henry B. is--while not a man of any enormous wealth--regarded as one of

the keenest intellects in New York wholesale circles. But beyond that,

he is a scholar, and a man of the broadest interests. Of course the

Boltwoods are too modest to speak of it, but he was chiefly instrumental

in the establishment of the famous Brooklyn Symphony Orchestra. And his

ancestors clear through--his father was a federal judge, and his

mother's brother was a general in the Civil War, and afterwards an

ambassador. So you can guess something of the position Claire holds in

that fine, quiet, solid old Brooklyn set. Henry Ward Beecher himself was

complimented at being asked to dine with the Boltwoods of his day,

and----"

No, the table leg wouldn't come loose, so it was only verbally that the

suddenly recovered Milt attacked: "Certainly is nice to have one of those old families. It's something

like---- As you say, you and I have gotten pretty well acquainted along

the line, so I guess I can say it to you---- My father and his folks

came from that same kind of family. Father's dad was a judge, back in

Maine, and in the war, grand-dad was quite friendly with Grant."