"No. Lucy's very much all right!" he said, and he went so far as
to smile. Even his Aunt Fanny admitted that when George smiled "in a
certain way" he was charming.
"Thanks about letting my name be Lucy," she said.
"How old are you?" George asked.
"I don't really know, myself."
"What do yon mean: you don't really know yourself?"
"I mean I only know what they tell me. I believe them, of course, but
believing isn't really knowing. You believe some certain day is your
birthday--at least, I suppose you do--but you don't really know it is because
you can't remember."
"Look here!" said George. "Do you always talk like
this?"
Miss Lucy Morgan laughed forgivingly, put her young head on one side, like a
bird, and responded cheerfully: "I'm willing to learn wisdom. What are you
studying in school?"
"College!"
"At the university! Yes. What are you studying there?"
George laughed. "Lot o' useless guff!"
"Then why don't you study some useful guff?"
"What do you mean: 'useful'?"
"Something you'd use later, in your business or profession?"
George waved his hand impatiently. "I don't expect to go into any
'business or profession.'"
"No?"
"Certainly not!" George was emphatic, being sincerely annoyed by a
suggestion which showed how utterly she failed to comprehend the kind of person
he was.
"Why not?" she asked mildly.
"Just look at 'em!" he said, almost with bitterness, and he made a
gesture presumably intended to indicate the business and professional men now
dancing within range of vision. "That's a fine career for a man, isn't it!
Lawyers, bankers, politicians! What do they get out of life, I'd like to know!
What do they ever know about real things? Where do they ever get?"
He was so earnest that she was surprised and impressed. Evidently he had
deep-seated ambitions, for he seemed to speak with actual emotion of these
despised things which were so far beneath his planning for the future. She had
a vague, momentary vision of Pitt, at twenty-one, prime minister of England;
and she spoke, involuntarily in a lowered voice, with deference:
"What do you want to be?" she asked.
George answered promptly.
"A yachtsman," he said.
CHAPTER
VI
HAVING thus, in a word, revealed his ambition for a career above courts,
marts, and polling booths, George breathed more deeply than usual, and, turning
his face from the lovely companion whom he had just made his confidant, gazed
out at the dancers with an expression in which there was both sternness and a
contempt for the squalid lives of the unyachted Midlanders before him. However,
among them, he marked his mother; and his sombre grandeur relaxed momentarily;
a more genial light came into his eyes.
Isabel was dancing with the queer-looking duck; and it was to be noted that
the lively gentleman's gait was more sedate than it had been with Miss Fanny
Minafer, but not less dexterous and authoritative. He was talking to Isabel as
gaily as he had talked to Miss Fanny, though with less laughter, and Isabel
listened and answered eagerly: her colour was high and her eyes had a look of
delight. She saw George and the beautiful Lucy on the stairway, and nodded to
them. George waved his hand vaguely: he had a momentary return of that
inexplicable uneasiness and resentment which had troubled him downstairs.
"How lovely your mother is!" Lucy said.
"I think she is," he agreed gently.
"She's the gracefulest woman in that ballroom. She dances like a girl
of sixteen."
"Most girls of sixteen," said George, "are bum dancers.
Anyhow, I wouldn't dance with one unless I had to."
"Well, you'd better dance with your mother! I never saw anybody
lovelier. How wonderfully they dance together!"
"Who?"
"Your mother and--and the queer-looking duck," said Lucy.
"I'm going to dance with him pretty soon."
"I don't care--so long as you don't give him one of the numbers that
belong to me."
"I'll try to remember," she said, and thoughtfully lifted to her
face the bouquet of violets and lilies, a gesture which George noted without
approval.
"Look here! Who sent you those flowers you keep makin' such a fuss
over?"
"He did."
"Who's 'he'?"
"The queer-looking duck."
George feared no such rival; he laughed loudly. "I s'pose he's some old
widower!" he said, the object thus described seeming ignominious enough to
a person of eighteen, without additional characterization. "Some old
widower!"
Lucy became serious at once. "Yes, he is a widower," she said.
"I ought to have told you before; he's my father."
George stopped laughing abruptly. "Well, that's a horse on me. If I'd
known he was your father, of course I wouldn't have made fun of him. I'm
sorry."
"Nobody could make fun of him," she said quietly.
"Why couldn't they?"
"It wouldn't make him funny: it would only make themselves silly."
Upon this, George had a gleam of intelligence. "Well, I'm not, going to
make myself silly any more, then; I don't want to take chances like that with
you. But I thought he was the Sharon girls' uncle. He came with them--"
"Yes," she said, "I'm always late to everything: I wouldn't
let them wait for me. We're visiting the Sharons."
"About time I knew that! You forget my being so fresh about your
father, will you? Of course he's a distinguished looking man, in a way."
Lucy was still serious. "'In a way?'" she repeated. "You
mean, not in your way, don't you?"
George was perplexed. "How do you mean: not in my way?"
"People pretty often say 'in a way' and 'rather distinguished looking,'
or 'rather' so-and-so, or 'rather' anything, to show that they're superior.
don't they? In New York last month I overheard a climber sort of woman speaking
of me as 'little Miss Morgan,' but she didn't mean my height; she meant that
she was important. Her husband spoke of a friend of mine as 'little Mr.
Pembroke' and 'little Mr. Pembroke' is six-feet-three. This husband and wife
were really so terribly unimportant that the only way they knew to pretend to
be important was calling people 'little' Miss or Mister so-and-so. It's a kind
of snob slang, I think. Of course people don't always say 'rather' or 'in a
way' to be superior."
"I should say not! I use both of 'em a great deal myself," said
George. "One thing I don't see though: What's the use of a man being
six-feet-three? Men that size can't handle themselves as well as a man about
five-feet-eleven and a half can. Those long, gangling men, they're nearly
always too kind of wormy to be any good in athletics, and they're so awkward
they keep falling over chairs or--"
"Mr. Pembroke is in the army," said Lucy primly. "He's
extraordinarily graceful."
"In the army? Oh, I suppose he's some old friend of your
father's."
"They got on very well," she said, "after I introduced
them."
George was a straightforward soul, at least. "See here!" he said.
"Are you engaged to anybody?"
"No."
Not wholly mollified, he shrugged his shoulders. "You seem to know a good
many people! Do you live in New York?"
"No. We don't live anywhere."
"What you mean: you don't live anywhere?"
"We've lived all over," she answered. "Papa used to live here
in this town, but that was before I was born."
"What do you keep moving around so for? Is he a promoter?"
"No. He's an inventor."
"What's he invented?"
"Just lately," said Lucy, "he's been working on a new kind of
horseless carriage."
"Well, I'm sorry for him," George said, in no unkindly spirit.
"Those things are never going to amount to anything. People aren't going
to spend their lives lying on their backs in the road and letting grease drip
in their faces. Horseless carriages are pretty much a failure, and your father
better not waste his time on 'em."
"Papa'd be so grateful," she returned, "if he could have your
advice."
Instantly George's face became flushed. "I don't know that I've done
anything to be insulted for!" he said. "I don't see that what I said
was particularly fresh."
"No, indeed!"
"Then what do you--"
She laughed gaily. "I don't! And I don't mind your being such a lofty
person at all. I think it's ever so interesting--but papa's a great man!"
"Is he?" George decided to be good-natured, "Well, let us
hope so. I hope so, I'm sure."
Looking at him keenly, she saw that the magnificent youth was incredibly
sincere in this bit of graciousness. He spoke as a tolerant, elderly statesman
might speak of a promising young politician; and with her eyes still upon him,
Lucy shook her head in gentle wonder. "I'm just beginning to
understand," she said.
"Understand what?"
"What it means to be a real Amberson in this town. Papa told me
something about it before we came, but I see he didn't say half enough!"
George superbly took this all for tribute. "Did your father say he knew
the family before he left here?"
"Yes. I believe he was particularly a friend of your Uncle George; and
he didn't say so, but I imagine he must have known your mother very well, too.
He wasn't an inventor then; he was a young lawyer. The town was smaller in
those days, and I believe he was quite well known."
"I dare say. I've no doubt the family are all very glad to see him
back, especially if they used to have him at the house a good deal, as he told
you."
"I don't think he meant to boast of it," she said. "He spoke
of it quite calmly."
George stared at her for a moment in perplexity, then perceiving that her
intention was satirical, "Girls really ought to go to a man's
college," he said -"just a month or two, anyhow. It'd take some of
the freshness out of 'em!"
"I can't believe it," she retorted, as her partner for the next
dance arrived. "It would only make them a little politer on the
surface--they'd be really just as awful as ever, after you got to know them a
few minutes."
"What do you mean: 'after you got to know them a--"
She was departing to the dance. "Janie and Mary Sharon told me all
about what sort of a little boy you were," she said, over her shoulder.
"You must think it out!"
She took wing away on the breeze of the waltz, and George, having stared
gloomily after her for a few moments, postponed filling an engagement, and
strolled round the fluctuating outskirts of the dance to where his uncle,
George Amberson, stood smilingly watching, under one of the rose-vine arches at
the entrance to the room.
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