“Innocent, hell!” retorted Sophie Timmons, that henna blonde with the henna laugh; the daughter of a hardware manufacturer who was a piece of hardware herself. “He plays around with these peasant children — don't you suppose they watch the animals and talk about it?. If you heard them you would pass out.”
“Oh, my God!” lamented Beauty. “I wish there was no such thing as sex in the world!”
“Well, there's plenty of it on this 'Coast of Pleasure,' and your little one will soon be ready for his share. You'd better wake, up.”
“His father is the one who ought to tell him, Sophie.”
“All right then, send a cablegram, 'Robbie come at once and tell Lanny the facts of life.'” They both laughed, but it didn't solve the problem. “Couldn't the tutor do it?” suggested the baroness finally.
“I haven't the faintest notion what his ideas are.”
“Well, at the worst I should think they'd be better than Livens',” responded the other, dryly.
The Baroness de la Tourette of course told the story all over the place, and Baron Livens-Mazursky found himself cut off from a number of calling lists; he suddenly decided to spend the rest of the winter at Gapri, a place which was not so puritanical as Cannes. Lanny's mother repeated her warnings to the boy, with such solemnity that he began to acquire the psychology of a wild deer in the forest; he looked before he ventured into any dark places, and if he saw anyone, male or female, getting close to him he moved.
IV
But even the wild deer in the forest enjoys life, and Lanny couldn't be kept from wanting to talk to people and find out about them. Soon afterward came the Adventure of the Gigolo, which was the last straw, so Beauty declared. The story of Lanny's gigolo spread among the smart crowd up and down the Riviera, and every now and then someone would ask: “Well, Lanny, how's your gigolo getting along?” He knew they were making fun, but it didn't worry him, for his mind was firmly made up that his gigolo was really a very kind man, much more so than some of the persons who tried to win money from his mother at bridge.