“Looking back—no. You are my father’s brother, Ian Belward?”
“Your uncle Ian.”
There was a kind of quizzical loftiness in Ian Belward’s manner.
“Well, Uncle Ian, my father asked me to say that he hoped you would get as much out of life as he had, and that you would leave it as honest.”
“Thank you. That is very like Robert. He loved making little speeches. It is a pity we did not pull together; but I was hasty, and he was rash. He had a foolish career, and you are the result. My mother has told me the story—his and yours.”
He sat down, ran his fingers through his grey-brown hair, and looking into a mirror, adjusted the bow of his tie, and flipped the flying ends. The kind of man was new to Gaston: self-indulgent, intelligent, heavily nourished, nonchalant, with a coarse kind of handsomeness. He felt that here was a man of the world, equipped mentally cap-a-pie, as keen as cruel. Reading that in the light of the past, he was ready.
“And yet his rashness will hurt you longer than your haste hurt him.”
The artist took the hint bravely.
“That you will have the estate, and I the title, eh? Well, that looks likely just now; but I doubt it all the same. You’ll mess the thing one way or another.”
He turned from the contemplation of himself, and eyed Gaston lazily. Suddenly he started.