Queen Hecuba complains of her unwed daughters, but none more so than Cassandra. "All that beauty," snipes his aunt, looking most unqueenly now, "and how much good will it do us sitting gaunt and ghastly in your father's halls?" Good enough, Aeneas thinks fiercely, and is appalled to find he's spoken aloud.
no subject
Good enough, Aeneas thinks fiercely, and is appalled to find he's spoken aloud.