Part 50 (1/2)
”Get out!” ordered the Inspector, and there was the glimmer of a friendly smile in his own eyes. ”And I'll expect you both to dine with me to-night. Six o'clock sharp. I'll hear that wonderful story in more detail. And take care of yourself, Beresford. You don't look strong yet. I'll make that week two or three if necessary.”
”Thank you, sir.”
”Hmp! Don't thank me. Earned it, didn't you? What are you hanging around for? Get out!”
Constable Beresford had his revenge. As he pa.s.sed the window, Inspector MacLean heard him singing. The words that drifted to the commissioned office! were familiar.
”Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, Mironton-ton-ton, mirontaine.”
MacLean smiled at the irrepressible youngster. Like most people, he responded to the charm of Winthrop Beresford. He could forgive him a touch of debonair impudence if necessary.
It happened that his heart was just now very warm toward both these young fellows. They had come through h.e.l.l and had upheld the best traditions of the Force. Between the lines of the story they had told he gathered that they had shaved the edge of disaster a dozen times.
But they had stuck to their guns like soldiers. They had fought it out week after week, hanging to their man with bulldog pluck. And when at last they were found almost starving in camp, they were dividing their last rabbit with the fellow they were bringing out to be hanged.
The Inspector walked to the window and looked down the street after them. His lips moved, but no sound came from them. The rhythmic motion of them might have suggested, if there had been anybody present to observe, that his mind was running on the old river song.
”Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, Mironton-ton-ton, mirontaine.”
CHAPTER XLI
SENSE AND NONSENSE
Beresford speaking, to an audience of one, who listened with soft dark eyes aglow and sparkling.
”He's the best scout ever came over the border, Jessie. Trusty as steel, stands the gaff without whining, backs his friends to the limit, and plays the game out till the last card's dealt and the last trick lost. Tom Morse is a man in fifty thousand.”
”I know another,” she murmured. ”Every word you've said is true for him too.”
”He's a wonder, that other.” admitted the soldier dryly. ”But we're talking about Tom now. I tell you that iron man dragged West and me out of the Barrens by the scruff of our necks. Wouldn't give up.
Wouldn't quit. The yellow in West came out half a dozen times. When the ten-day blizzard caught us, he lay down and yelped like a cur. I wouldn't have given a plugged six-pence for our chances. But Tom went out into it, during a little lull, and brought back with him a timber wolf. How he found it, how he killed it, Heaven alone knows. He was coated with ice from head to foot. That wolf kept us and the dogs alive for a week. Each day, when the howling of the blizzard died down a bit, Tom made West go down with him to the creek and get wood.
It must have been a terrible hour. They'd come back so done up, so frozen, they could hardly stagger in with their jags of pine for the fire. I never heard the man complain--not once. He stood up to it the way Tom Sayers used to.”
The girl felt a warm current of life p.r.i.c.kling swiftly through her. ”I love to hear you talk so generously of him.”
”Of my rival?” he said, smiling. ”How else can I talk? The scoundrel has been heaping on me those coals of fire we read about. I haven't told you half of it--how he nursed me like a woman and looked after me so that I wouldn't take cold, how he used to tuck me up in the sled with a hot stone at my feet and make short days' runs in order not to wear out my strength. By Jove, it was a deucedly unfair advantage he took of me.”
”Is he your rival?” she asked.
”Isn't he?”
”In business?”
”How demure Miss McRae is,” he commented. ”Observe those long eyelashes flutter down to the soft cheeks.”
”In what book did you read that?” she wanted to know.
”In that book of suffering known as experience,” he sighed, eyes dancing.