<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
<p>The poor young man hesitated and procrastinated: it cost him
such an effort to broach the subject of terms, to speak of money
to a person who spoke only of feelings and, as it were, of the
aristocracy. Yet he was unwilling to take leave, treating
his engagement as settled, without some more conventional glance
in that direction than he could find an opening for in the manner
of the large affable lady who sat there drawing a pair of soiled
gants de Suède through a fat jewelled hand and, at once
pressing and gliding, repeated over and over everything but the
thing he would have liked to hear. He would have liked to
hear the figure of his salary; but just as he was nervously about
to sound that note the little boy came back—the little boy
Mrs. Moreen had sent out of the room to fetch her fan. He
came back without the fan, only with the casual observation that
he couldn’t find it. As he dropped this cynical
confession he looked straight and hard at the candidate for the
honour of taking his education in hand. This personage
reflected somewhat grimly that the thing he should have to teach
his little charge would be to appear to address himself to his
mother when he spoke to her—especially not to make her such
an improper answer as that.</p>
<p>When Mrs. Moreen bethought herself of this pretext for getting
rid of their companion Pemberton supposed it was precisely to
approach the delicate subject of his remuneration. But it
had been only to say some things about her son that it was better
a boy of eleven shouldn’t catch. They were
extravagantly to his advantage save when she lowered her voice to
sigh, tapping her left side familiarly, “And all
overclouded by <i>this</i>, you know; all at the mercy of a
weakness—!” Pemberton gathered that the
weakness was in the region of the heart. He had known the
poor child was not robust: this was the basis on which he had
been invited to treat, through an English lady, an Oxford
acquaintance, then at Nice, who happened to know both his needs
and those of the amiable American family looking out for
something really superior in the way of a resident tutor.</p>
<p>The young man’s impression of his prospective pupil, who
had come into the room as if to see for himself the moment
Pemberton was admitted, was not quite the soft solicitation the
visitor had taken for granted. Morgan Moreen was somehow
sickly without being “delicate,” and that he looked
intelligent—it is true Pemberton wouldn’t have
enjoyed his being stupid—only added to the suggestion that,
as with his big mouth and big ears he really couldn’t be
called pretty, he might too utterly fail to please.
Pemberton was modest, was even timid; and the chance that his
small scholar might prove cleverer than himself had quite
figured, to his anxiety, among the dangers of an untried
experiment. He reflected, however, that these were risks
one had to run when one accepted a position, as it was called, in
a private family; when as yet one’s university honours had,
pecuniarily speaking, remained barren. At any rate when
Mrs. Moreen got up as to intimate that, since it was understood
he would enter upon his duties within the week she would let him
off now, he succeeded, in spite of the presence of the child, in
squeezing out a phrase about the rate of payment. It was
not the fault of the conscious smile which seemed a reference to
the lady’s expensive identity, it was not the fault of this
demonstration, which had, in a sort, both vagueness and point, if
the allusion didn’t sound rather vulgar. This was
exactly because she became still more gracious to reply:
“Oh I can assure you that all that will be quite
regular.”</p>
<p>Pemberton only wondered, while he took up his hat, what
“all that” was to amount to—people had such
different ideas. Mrs. Moreen’s words, however, seemed
to commit the family to a pledge definite enough to elicit from
the child a strange little comment in the shape of the mocking
foreign ejaculation “Oh la-la!”</p>
<p>Pemberton, in some confusion, glanced at him as he walked
slowly to the window with his back turned, his hands in his
pockets and the air in his elderly shoulders of a boy who
didn’t play. The young man wondered if he should be
able to teach him to play, though his mother had said it would
never do and that this was why school was impossible. Mrs.
Moreen exhibited no discomfiture; she only continued blandly:
“Mr. Moreen will be delighted to meet your wishes. As
I told you, he has been called to London for a week. As
soon as he comes back you shall have it out with him.”</p>
<p>This was so frank and friendly that the young man could only
reply, laughing as his hostess laughed: “Oh I don’t
imagine we shall have much of a battle.”</p>
<p>“They’ll give you anything you like,” the
boy remarked unexpectedly, returning from the window.
“We don’t mind what anything costs—we live
awfully well.”</p>
<p>“My darling, you’re too quaint!” his mother
exclaimed, putting out to caress him a practised but ineffectual
hand. He slipped out of it, but looked with intelligent
innocent eyes at Pemberton, who had already had time to notice
that from one moment to the other his small satiric face seemed
to change its time of life. At this moment it was
infantine, yet it appeared also to be under the influence of
curious intuitions and knowledges. Pemberton rather
disliked precocity and was disappointed to find gleams of it in a
disciple not yet in his teens. Nevertheless he divined on
the spot that Morgan wouldn’t prove a bore. He would
prove on the contrary a source of agitation. This idea held
the young man, in spite of a certain repulsion.</p>
<p>“You pompous little person! We’re not
extravagant!” Mrs. Moreen gaily protested, making
another unsuccessful attempt to draw the boy to her side.
“You must know what to expect,” she went on to
Pemberton.</p>
<p>“The less you expect the better!” her companion
interposed. “But we <i>are</i> people of
fashion.”</p>
<p>“Only so far as <i>you</i> make us so!” Mrs.
Moreen tenderly mocked. “Well then, on
Friday—don’t tell me you’re
superstitious—and mind you don’t fail us. Then
you’ll see us all. I’m so sorry the girls are
out. I guess you’ll like the girls. And, you
know, I’ve another son, quite different from this
one.”</p>
<p>“He tries to imitate me,” Morgan said to their
friend.</p>
<p>“He tries? Why he’s twenty years old!”
cried Mrs. Moreen.</p>
<p>“You’re very witty,” Pemberton remarked to
the child—a proposition his mother echoed with enthusiasm,
declaring Morgan’s sallies to be the delight of the
house.</p>
<p>The boy paid no heed to this; he only enquired abruptly of the
visitor, who was surprised afterwards that he hadn’t struck
him as offensively forward: “Do you <i>want</i> very much
to come?”</p>
<p>“Can you doubt it after such a description of what I
shall hear?” Pemberton replied. Yet he didn’t
want to come at all; he was coming because he had to go
somewhere, thanks to the collapse of his fortune at the end of a
year abroad spent on the system of putting his scant patrimony
into a single full wave of experience. He had had his full
wave but couldn’t pay the score at his inn. Moreover
he had caught in the boy’s eyes the glimpse of a far-off
appeal.</p>
<p>“Well, I’ll do the best I can for you,” said
Morgan; with which he turned away again. He passed out of
one of the long windows; Pemberton saw him go and lean on the
parapet of the terrace. He remained there while the young
man took leave of his mother, who, on Pemberton’s looking
as if he expected a farewell from him, interposed with:
“Leave him, leave him; he’s so strange!”
Pemberton supposed her to fear something he might say.
“He’s a genius—you’ll love him,”
she added. “He’s much the most interesting
person in the family.” And before he could invent
some civility to oppose to this she wound up with: “But
we’re all good, you know!”</p>
<p>“He’s a genius—you’ll love him!”
were words that recurred to our aspirant before the Friday,
suggesting among many things that geniuses were not invariably
loveable. However, it was all the better if there was an
element that would make tutorship absorbing: he had perhaps taken
too much for granted it would only disgust him. As he left
the villa after his interview he looked up at the balcony and saw
the child leaning over it. “We shall have great
larks!” he called up.</p>
<p>Morgan hung fire a moment and then gaily returned: “By
the time you come back I shall have thought of something
witty!”</p>
<p>This made Pemberton say to himself “After all he’s
rather nice.”</p>
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