'
'Phew! Hours before I shall be up.'
'I suppose so.'
'Well, you needn't dwell on it, Roger.'
Indignantly. 'I didn't.' He starts up. 'Good-night, father.'
'Good-night. Damn. Come back. My fault. Didn't I say I wanted to have
a chat with you?'
'I thought we had had it.'
Gloomingly, 'No such luck.'
There is another pause. A frightened ember in the fire makes an appeal
to some one to say something. Mr. Torrance rises. It is now he who is
casting eyes at the door. He sits again, ashamed of himself.
'I like your uniform, Roger,' he says pleasantly.
Roger wriggles. 'Haven't you made fun of me enough?'
Sharply, 'I'm not making fun of you. Don't you see I'm trying to tell
you that I'm proud of you?'
Roger is at last aware of it, with a sinking. He appeals, 'Good lord,
father, _you_ are not going to begin now.'
The father restrains himself.
'Do you remember, Roger, my saying that I didn't want you to smoke till
you were twenty?'
'Oh, it's that, is it?' Shutting his mouth tight, 'I never promised.'
Almost with a shout, 'It's not that.' Then kindly, 'Have a cigar, my boy?'
'Me?'
A rather shaky hand, passes him a cigar case.
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