Belturbet made no coherent reply; he was engaged in feeling his pulse. The duke fixed his attention with some interest on a black swan that was swimming with haughty, stiff-necked aloofness amid the crowd of lesser waterfowl that dotted the ornamental water. For all its pride of bearing, something was evidently ruffling and enraging it; in its way it seemed as angry and amazed as the sparrow had been.
At the same moment a human figure came along the pathway. Belturbet looked up apprehensively.
“Kedzon,” he whispered briefly.
“An Angel-Kedzon, if I am not mistaken,” said the duke. “Look, he is talking affably to a human being. That settles it.”
A shabbily dressed lounger had accosted the man who had been Viceroy in the splendid East, and who still reflected in his mien some of the cold dignity of the Himalayan snow-peaks.