Part 14 (2/2)
”Sounded like 'dem it' to me.”
”Maybe it did.”
”Heard about him in Paris?”
”No.”
”The old boy had transferred his regiment to a lonesome post in the North to cool his blood. The youngster took the next train to Paris. He was there incognito for two weeks before they found him and bundled him back.
Of course, every one knows that he is but a crazy lad who's had too much freedom.” The colonel emptied his gla.s.s. ”I feel dem sorry for Nora. She's the right sort. But a woman can't take a man by the scruff of his neck and chuck him.”
”But I can,” declared Abbott savagely.
”Tut, tut! He'd eat you alive. Besides, you will find him too clever to give you an opening. But he'll bear watching. He's capable of putting her on a train and running away with her. Between you and me, I don't blame him. What's the matter with sicking the Barone on him? He's the best man in Southern Italy with foils and broadswords. Sic 'em, Towser; sic 'em!”
The old fire-eater chuckled.
The subject was extremely distasteful to the artist. The colonel, a rough soldier, whose diplomacy had never risen above the heights of clubbing a recalcitrant Hill man into submission, baldly inferred that he understood the artist's interest in the rose of the Harrigan family. He would have liked to talk more in regard to the interloper, but it would have been sheer folly. The colonel, in his blundering way, would have brought up the subject again at tea-time and put everybody on edge. He had, unfortunately for his friends, a reputation other than that of a soldier: he posed as a peacemaker. He saw trouble where none existed, and the way he patched up imaginary quarrels would have strained the patience of Job. Still, every one loved him, though they lived in mortal fear of him. So Abbott came about quickly and sailed against the wind.
”By the way,” he said, ”I wish you would let me sketch that servant of yours. He's got a profile like a medallion. Where did you pick him up?”
”In the Hills. He's a Sikh, and a first-cla.s.s fighting man. Didn't know that you went for faces.”
”Not as a usual thing. Just want it for my own use. How does he keep his beard combed that way?”
”I've never bothered myself about the curl of his whiskers. Are my clothes laid out? Luggage attended to? Guns s.h.i.+pshape? That's enough for me. Some day you have got to go out there with me.”
”Never shot a gun in all my life. I don't know which end to hold at my shoulder.”
”Teach you quick enough. Every man's a born hunter. Rao will have tigers eating out of your hand. He's a marvel; saved my hide more than once.
Funny thing; you can't show 'em that you're grateful. Lose caste if you do. I rather miss it. Get the East in your blood and you'll never get it out. Fascinating! But my liver turned over once too many times. Ha! Some one coming up to buy a picture.”
The step outside was firm and unwearied by the climb. The door opened unceremoniously, and Courtlandt came in. He stared at the colonel and the colonel returned the stare.
”Caxley-Webster! Well, I say, this globe goes on shrinking every day!”
cried Courtlandt.
The two pumped hands energetically, sizing each other up critically. Then they sat down and shot questions, while Abbott looked on bewildered.
Elephants and tigers and chittahs and wild boar and quail-running and strange guttural names; weltering nights in the jungles, freezing mornings in the Hills; stupendous card games; and what had become of so-and-so, who always drank his whisky neat; and what's-his-name, who invented cures for snake bites!
Abbott deliberately pushed over an oak bench. ”Am I host here or not?”
”Abby, old man, how are you?” said Courtlandt, smiling warmly and holding out his hand. ”My apologies; but the colonel and I never expected to see each other again. And I find him talking with you up here under this roof.
It's marvelous.”
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