"Do you see?" said the old lady, tendering him her opera glass.
"What?" he asked sullenly.
"A new planet. Use your telescope, Rix—and also amass a little common-sense. Yonder sits a future duchess, or a countess, if I care to start things for her. Which I shan't—in that direction."
"There are no poor duchesses or countesses, of course," he remarked with an unpleasant laugh.
Mrs. Sprowl looked at him, ironically.
"I understand the Earl of Dankmere, perfectly," she said—"also other people, including young, and sulky boys. So if you clearly understand my wishes, and the girl doesn't make a fool of herself over you or any other callow ineligible, her future will give me something agreeable to occupy me."
The blood stung his face as he stood up—a tall graceful figure among the others in the box—a clean-cut, wholesome boy to all appearances, with that easy and amiable presence which is not distinction but which sometimes is even more agreeable.
Lips compressed, the flush still hot on his face, he stood silent, tasting all the bitterness that his career had stored up for him—sick with contempt for a self that could accept and swallow such things. For he had been well schooled, but scarcely to that contemptible point.
"Of course," he said, pleasantly, "you understand that I shall do as I please."
Mrs. Sprowl laughed: