and I could falter only a few words in reply.
"You here? How did you come?" He seemed surprised. "Did you not know I would come? I wrote to Mr. Mazumdar (my father) that I would be here to-day."
My father was not in the habit of communicating all his affairs to me. I therefore replied, "No, I had not heard of it. You have perhaps come here in connection with a case."
He remained silent for a while, then said:
"I have come here expressly to see you. I had no other object in coming."
This was a great surprise to me, he had come expressly to see me! On the impulse of the moment I cried out:
"That is really extraordinary; you did not seem so eager to see me in Calcutta."
He smiled and fixed his clear, full gaze upon me.
"I see I made one of my many mistakes in acting as I did, but did you not understand me? Did you not feel why it was I came so seldom?"
"How could I understand?"
He adjusted his eyeglasses, he was evi-