welcome; drawing his arm about
Berkeley's shoulder, and looking with pride upon his bright and gracious
youth.
More than an old man's preference would be thus won by the young one;
a considerable portion of their mother's fortune, so left that it could
not be dissipated, yet could be willed to which son the Viscount chose,
would go to his brother by this passionate partiality; but there was not
a tinge of jealousy in Cecil; whatever else his faults he had no
mean ones, and the boy was dear to him, by a quite unconscious, yet
unvarying, obedience to his dead mothers' wish.
"Royal hates me as game-birds hate a red dog. Why the deuce, I wonder?"
he thought, with a certain slight touch of pain, despite his idle
philosophies and devil-may-care indifference. "Well--I am good for
nothing, I suppose. Certainly I am not good for much, unless it's riding
and making love."
With which summary of his merits, "Beauty," who felt himself to be a
master in those two arts, but thought himself a bad fellow out of
them, sauntered away to join the Seraph and the rest of his guests; his
father's words pursuing him a little, despite his carelessness, for they
had borne an unwelcome measure of truth.
"Royal can hit hard," his thoughts continued. "'A pauper and a
Guardsman!' By Jove! It's true enough; but he made me so. They brought
me up as if I had a million coming to me, and turned me out among the
cracks to take my running with the best of them--and they give me just
about what pays my groom's book! Then they wonder that a fellow goes to
the Jews. Where the deuce else can he go?"
And Bertie, whom his gains the day before had not much benefited, since
his play-debts, his young brother's needs, and the Zu-Zu's insatiate
little hands were all stretched ready to devour them without leaving
a sovereign for more serious liabilities, went, for it was quite early
morning, to act the M. F. H. in his fathers' stead at the meet on the
great lawns before the house, for the Royallieu "lady-pack" were very
famous in the Shires, and hunted over the same country alternate days
with the Quorn. They moved off ere long to draw the Holt Wood, in as
open a morning and as strong a scenting wind as ever favored Melton
Pink.
A whimper and "gone away!" soon echoed from Beebyside, and the pack,
not letting the fox hang a second, dashed after him, making straight for
Scraptoft. One of the fastest things up-wind that hounds ever ran took
them straight th
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