Archie opened his eyes.
"Quite right, old top!" he said. "It was the only thing to do."
"What the devil are you talking about?" demanded Bill coldly. He had been suspicious all along of Archie's statement that he could listen better with his eyes shut.
"Eh? Oh, sorry! Thinking of something else."
"You were asleep."
"No, no, positively and distinctly not. Frightfully interested and rapt and all that, only I didn't quite get what you said.
"I said that Mabel was a corker."
"Oh, absolutely in every respect."
"There!" Bill turned to Lucille triumphantly. "You hear that? And Archie has only seen her photograph. Wait till he sees her in the flesh."
"My dear old chap!" said Archie, shocked. "Ladies present! I mean to say, what!"
"I'm afraid that father will be the one you'll find it hard to convince."
"Yes," admitted her brother gloomily.
"Your Mabel sounds perfectly charming, but—well, you know what father is. It is a pity she sings in the chorus."
"She hasn't much of a voice," argued Bill in extenuation.
"All the same
"Archie, the conversation having reached a topic on which he considered himself one of the greatest living authorities—to wit, the unlovable disposition of his father-in-law—addressed the meeting as one who has a right to be heard.