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"What!"
He smiled:
"Oh, the place suits, Mrs. Sprowl; I haven't any complaint; and the work and wages are easy; and it's comfortable below-stairs. But--I'm just tired."
"What are you talking about?"
"I'm talking _about_ my employers, and I'm talking _like_ the social upper-servant that I am--or was. I'm merely giving a respectable warning; that is the airy purport of my discourse, Mrs. Sprowl."
"Do you know what you're saying?"
"Yes, I think so," he said, wearily.
"Well, then, what the devil _are_ you saying?"
"Merely that I've dropped out of service to engage in trade."
"You can't!" she yelled, sitting up in bed so suddenly that her unquiet tooth took the opportunity to a.s.sert itself.
She clapped a pudgy hand to her cheek, squinting furiously at Quarren:
"You _can't_ drop out," she shouted. "Don't you ever want to amount to anything?"
"Yes, I do. That's why I'm doing it."
"Don't act like a fool! Haven't you any ambition?"
"That also is why," he said pleasantly. "I am ambitious to be out of livery and see what my own kind will do to me."
"Well, you'll see!" she threatened--"you'll see what we'll do to you----"
"_You're_ not my kind. I always supposed you were, but you all knew better from the day I took service with you----"
"Ricky!"
"It is perfectly true, Mrs. Sprowl. My admittance included a livery and the perennial prerogative of amusing people. But I had no money, no family affiliations with the very amiable people who found me useful.
Only, in common with them, I had the inherent taste for idleness and the genius for making it endurable to you all. So you welcomed me very warmly; and you have been very kind to me.... But, somewhere or other--in some forgotten corner of me--an odd and old-fas.h.i.+oned idea awoke the other day.... I think perhaps it awoke when you reminded me that to serve you was one thing and to marry among you something very different."
"Ricky! Do you want to drive me to the yelling verge of distraction? I didn't say or intimate or dream any such thing! You know perfectly well you're not only with us but _of_ us. n.o.body ever imagined otherwise. But you can't marry any girl you pick out. Sometimes she won't; sometimes her family won't. It's the same everywhere. You have no money. Of course I intend that you shall eventually marry money--What the devil are you laughing at?"
"I beg your pardon----"
"I said that you would marry well. Was that funny? I also said, once--and I repeat it now, that I have my own plans for one or two girls--Strelsa Leeds included. I merely asked you to respect my wishes in that single matter; and bang! you go off and blow up and maroon yourself and sulk until n.o.body knows what's the matter with you. Don't be a fool. Everybody likes you; every girl _can't_ love you--but I'll bet many of 'em do.... Pick one out and come to me--if that's your trouble. Go ahead and pick out what you fancy; and ten to one it will be all right, and between you and me we'll land the little lady!"
"You're tremendously kind----"
"I know I am. I'm always doing kindnesses--and n.o.body likes me, and they'd bite my head off, every one of 'em--if they weren't afraid it would disagree with them," she added grimly.
Quarren rose and came over to the bedside.
"Good-bye, Mrs. Sprowl," he said. "And--I like you--somehow--I really do."
"The devil you do," said the old lady.
"It's a curious fact," he insisted, smiling.
"Get out with you, Ricky! And I want you to come----"
"No--please."
"What?"
"No."
"Why?"
"I want to see some real people again. I've forgotten what they resemble."
"That's a d.a.m.ned insolent remark!" she gasped.
"Not meant to be. _You_ are real enough, Heaven knows. But," and his smile faded--"I've taken a month off to think it out. And, do you know, thinking being an unaccustomed luxury, I've enjoyed it. Imagine my delight and surprise, Mrs. Sprowl, when I discovered that my leisurely reflections resulted in the discovery that I had a mind--a real one--capable of reason and conclusions. And so when I actually came to a conclusion my joy knew no bounds----"
"Ricky! Stop those mental athletics! Do you hear? I've a toothache and a backache and I can't stand 'em!"
Quarren was laughing now; and presently a grim concession to humour relaxed the old lady's lips till her fat face creased.
"All right," she said; "go and play with the ragged boy around the corner, my son. Then when you're ready come home and get your face washed."
"May I come occasionally to chat with you?"
"As though you'd do that if you didn't have to!" she exclaimed incredulously.
"I think you know better."
"No, I don't!" she snapped. "I know men and women; that's all I know.
And as you're one of the two species I don't expect anything celestial from you.... And you'd better go, now."
She turned over on her pillow with a grunt: Quarren laughed, lifted one of her pudgy and heavily ringed hands from the coverlet, and, still smiling, touched the largest diamond with his lips.
"I think," he said, "that you are one of the very few I really like in your funny unreal world.... You're so humanly bad."
"What!" she shouted, floundering to a sitting posture.
But, looking back at her from the door, he found her grinning.
CHAPTER VII