Part 22 (1/2)
Mr. Walkingshaw drank off his gla.s.s of champagne.
”Well, if you're game--” said he.
”I'm game for anything, my dear fellow, so long as I've you by my side,”
laughed Charlie. ”When you're tired, I'll promise to take you away.
Shall we call it arranged?”
”I'll risk it,” said Heriot stoutly.
CHAPTER II
Round came the big man in the purple domino and the long false nose, hopping blithely to the cras.h.i.+ng waltz, his arm encircling the waist of a little lady attired to represent a hot cross-bun. Then he was lost in the crowd, and the Colonel's eyes, in which for a moment a spark of wonder had burned, grew old and tired again. As he stood there alone, with youth and recklessness gamboling before him, he realized somberly that for him this revel was ended. How he would have enjoyed it once!
But never, never again. His straight, soldierly back bent with weariness; he jerked back his shoulders, but they slipped forward, forward, and he let them stay. How little the fair faces interested him; how stupidly riotous these young fellows were!
Round came the false nose again, and this time the empurpled figure unclasped one hand of the hot cross-bun and waved a genial greeting as they stampeded by. And again a gleam, almost of fear, lit the Colonel's weary eyes. It was horrible, grotesque, inhuman, to see the friend of his youth, a man older than himself, the honored head of a respectable firm, the father of five grown-up children, going on like this. The Colonel had thought it would be funny, but as hour succeeded hour, and the ringleader of the frolic gradually became a wearied spectator, this superhuman display of high-spirited energy grew long past a joke.
Charlie had never been austere, but there were limits to all things.
Good Gad, there were limits! If the man had got drunk or grown vicious, he might have excused him. But to see him interminably bounding round that floor behind six inches of pasteboard nose! He began to move away.
He could stand the spectacle no longer.
Again the false nose hopped by, and this time disengaged himself hurriedly from his partner and hastened after the retiring Colonel.
”You're not going, Charlie?” he cried.
His friend turned and stared at him piteously.
”For Heaven's sake, take off that nose, Heriot!”
The W.S. removed it with a laugh.
”Put it on yourself, Charlie, and have a turn with my partner,” he urged. ”She dances really magnificently, you know.”
Colonel Munro laid his hand beseechingly upon his arm.
”Come home, Heriot! You'll be devilish sorry for this to-morrow, as it is; and if you dance any more, by Gad, you may kill yourself! My dear fellow, think of your age.”
Heriot received this objection with a cheerful laugh.
”You're not going yourself, surely?” he inquired.
”I am.”
Mr. Walkingshaw looked at him anxiously.
”I say, you do look tired, Charlie. How's that?”