"Whatever you do," the man said, overenunciating as drunks do, "don't ever borrow any money from him. He'll never let you hear the end of it. Especially when things're going bad. He just keeps right on you anyway. Like you could help it that things're going bad." The man waggled a finger in Prine's face. "Don't borrow money from him, you hear me?"
Prine smiled. "You've got my word on it."
The man's head rotated as if it were on ball bearings. "And don't you forget it."
The recital was an ordeal.
Before each endless number, the girl would pronounce the name of the composer in very bad halting French—at least Prine assumed it was bad French; for all he knew it might be bad Italian—and then proceed to play the piece. Even Prine could tell she was making a lot of mistakes. He felt sorry for her again. But he also felt sorry for himself. This wasn't his sort of an evening. A couple of beers, a couple of sentimental songs on the player piano in some latrine of a saloon—that was the sort of recital he was used to.
Apparently, he wasn't radiating any of his boredom. He sat next to Cassie. She kept squeezing his hand. And smiling. And breaking his heart. He was stricken with her, positively stricken.
There was an intermission. Everybody raving how wonderful, how wonderful to the pianist's parents and then obviously loading up on liquor so they could get through the second half of the recital.
Cassie excused herself for a few minutes. Prine walked around the mansion. He couldn't see how anybody could live here. It was like visiting some vast institution, like the museum or library in Denver.
He nodded to people, but he was quick to steer clear of conversations. He didn't want to toss and turn all night, thinking of the stupid things he'd said. Better to say nothing at all.
He recognized the voice long before he saw it. He'd taken a westward turn somewhere near the back of the house. A servant passed by a closed door, shaking his head at the loud voice. The servant glanced at Prine, frowned, and hurried away.
The voice belonged to Richard Neville.
"The champagne is flat. The beef is tough. And the crepes are all but inedible. Dammit, Cassie, can't I put you in charge of anything? My God, when are you going to grow up?"
Prine had partaken of the champagne, the beef, and the crepes and found them to be pretty damned good. Of course, he was a sixty-dollar-a-month deputy. He was not one of the great gods stalking the earth.
Neville settled down finally. "Next time, please do a better job. That's all I ask. That you apply yourself. Apply yourself, Cassie." He sounded like the teacher all the kids hated. There was a prissy, prim side to his superiority.
"I did everything I could, Richard. I honestly did. Everything came from Denver. And everybody else seems to like it. They've been complimenting me on it all night."
He laughed harshly. "God, you're so naive sometimes, Cassie. What else would they say? That it's tripe? That they're insulted that a family of our standing would offer things like this? Of course not. Polite people don't hurt other people's feelings."
"You don't seem to mind hurting mine, Richard." She'd found a little bit of anger and dignity. Prine hoped she'd build on it.
"I'm doing this for your sake, Cassie. You never seem to take that into account. I'm doing this for your sake. If I didn't love you, I wouldn't spend so much time trying to turn you into a mature and responsible young woman. And while we're at it—"
"Don't say a word against Tom Prine," she snapped.
"I'm sure he's a nice young man," he said. "But my Lord, Cassie, a deputy? What kind of a job is that? You need someone with a future, someone like—"
"Like you, Richard?"
Her remark apparently hurt him. "Am I that bad, Cassie? I've raised you, don't forget. Dad didn't. Dad was always too busy. So I took the time and trouble to make sure that you were growing up the right way. And look at how you treat me now."
Another pose, guise. The deeply hurt saint. All I've done for you; all I've sacrificed for you.
And she went for it.
A rustle of evening gown; Cassie sighing. "I'm sorry, Richard. I never should've said that. And I really will do better next time. I promise."
Tell him he's a pompous shit, Prine thought. Don't take the blame. Tell him where to put it.
"Next time I'll let you know every store I'm buying from before I place the orders. Won't that be better, Richard?"
"That'll be much better, Cassie."
Easy to picture her, so slight, in her brother's arms. Playing guilty child to his stern pastor. "You'll grow up yet," he said, "and be a mature woman who finds herself a worthy husband. You wait and see."
Prine hurried back to the music room.
When the recital was over and the gushing begun, Cassie took Prine's arm and guided him out to one of the verandas.
The night was warm for autumn. The moon had that fierce ancient aspect that the Aztecs built so much of their religion on. Dark gods hidden in the pocked fierce silver face.
Her earlier cheerfulness was gone. Obviously, Richard berating her had taken its toll. She was still unhappy.
She leaned against the hip-high stone wall and said, "You know something stupid about me?"
"Hard to believe there's anything stupid about you."
He leaned against the wall next to her. She touched his arm again.
"I still read children's books."
"What wrong's with that?"
"Richard thinks I'm immature. Silly, actually. He thinks I'm silly. And that just proves it, I suppose."
"Richard isn't always right."
She laughed, but there was nothing gay about it. "He gives that impression, doesn't he? He's always been like that. My father was like that. But Richard is twice as bad. Three times. But you know something, if I ever had nerve enough to tell him that, he'd deny it. I don't think he's aware of it."
"Maybe," Prine said.
She leaned forward slightly so she could see his face. "You didn't like him, did you?"
"I was taking a tour of the house. I heard him arguing with you. Nobody should talk to you that way."
She covered her face with her hands, the way a small, embarrassed girl would. Then she surprised him by laughing. This time the sound was merry. Her hands came down.
"It must've sounded terrible."
"The worst part was that you didn't fight back. You started to. But then you stopped."
"He scares me, Tom. I could never stand up to him."
"Everything was fine tonight. I heard people say that over and over. And you weren't around, so they weren't just flattering you. Everything was fine for everybody but your brother."
She leaned back again. They were silent for a time. The sounds of the party floated out the veranda door. A lot of social gush from the women; a lot of political guff from the men. The women wondered who'd have the best Christmas party; the men wondered if now would be a good time for Richard Neville to announce for governor.
Cassie said, "I suppose it's because he had to be the man of the house. Richard, I mean. Father was gone a lot. Mom depended on him, and so did I. I suppose that gave him a certain arrogance. Here was this very wealthy young man—not much more than a boy, really—and he spoke with the authority of my father's estate."
"Doesn't matter," Prine said. "He still doesn't have any right to treat you that way."
One of the servants came to the edge of the veranda and asked if Cassie could come to the kitchen for a moment.
"I really need to do this, Tom. I'll be back as soon as I can."
"It's all right, I need to go anyway. I need to get up early tomorrow."
She kissed him. It was a quick, chaste kiss, but a kiss nonetheless. It made him feel ridiculously important.