Part 3 (2/2)

”I came in here,” I said, ”to my own house and find my two best friends, that I thought, waiting for me. A few hours ago I should have thought such a scene as this utterly impossible. I will ask you both to remember that it has not been provoked by me in any way, and that directly I came in you turned on me in the most atrocious and ill-bred way. Of your idea of the value of friends.h.i.+p I say nothing at all--it is obvious I must say nothing about that. Now you have forced the pace I will say this. To marry that young lady--I don't like to speak her name even--is about as difficult as to dive in a cork jacket or keep a smelt in a net. But I mean to try. I mean to use every ounce of weight I've got. I shall almost certainly fail, but now you know.”

”Since you have said that,” Pat broke in, ”handicaps be d.a.m.ned! I'm a starter for the same stakes, and it's h.e.l.l for leather I'll ride, and it's meself that says it, Tom.”

Arthur Winstanley spoke last.

”I'm a fellow of a good many ambitions,” he said quietly, ”though I've never bothered you chaps with them. Now they are all consolidated into one.”

Then we all stood and looked at each other, the cards on the table, and in the faces of the other two at least there was uneasiness and shame.

Just at that moment a funny thing happened. Preston had brought in an ice pail full of bottles of soda water. The heat of the night, or something, caused one of the corks to break its confining wire and go off with a startling report, while a fountain of foam drenched the sandwiches.

”Me kingdom for a drink!” said Pat. ”Oh, the sweet, blessed, gurgling sound!” and striding to the table he mixed a gargantuan peg.

Arthur and I met behind Pat's back and he held out his hand to me, biting his lower lip.

”We've behaved abominably, old soul,” he said.

The big guardsman turned round and raised his gla.s.s on high.

”Here's to the sweetest and most lovely lady in the world, bedad!” he shouted, accentuating his Irish brogue. ”May the best man win her, fair fight, and no favors, and may the Queen of Heaven and all the saints watch over the little darlint and guide her choice aright!”

So all our midnight madness pa.s.sed like a fleeting cloud. An extraordinary accession of high spirits came to us as we pledged the dark-haired maiden from Brazil. And it was Pat, dear old Pat, who welded us together in a league of chivalry against which nothing was ever to prevail.

”Tom,” he said, ”Arthur--we are all like brothers, we always have been.

Let there be no change in that, now or ever. I have something to propose.”

”Go on, Pat,” said Arthur.

”Sure then, since we all love the same lady, that ought to bind us more together than anything else has ever done. But since we cannot all marry her, let us agree, in the first place, that no outsider ever shall.”

”Hurrah!” said Arthur--I could see that he was fearfully excited--throwing his gla.s.s into the fireplace with a crash.

”I am with you, Pat!” I cried. ”It's to be one of us three, and we are in league against all the other men in London. And now the question is--”

”Hear my plan. This very night we'll draw lots as to which of us shall have the first chance. The man who wins shall have the entire support of the other two in every possible way. If she accepts him, then the fates have spoken. If she doesn't, then the next man in the draw shall have his chance, and the rejected suitor and the poor third man shall help _him_ to the utmost of their ability. Is that clear?”

He stopped and looked down at us from his great height with a smiling and anxious face.

Dear old Pat, I shall always love to think that the proposal came from him, straight, clean and true, as he always was.

”So be it,” Arthur echoed solemnly. ”The league shall begin this very night. Do either of you chaps know any Spanish, by the way?”

We shook our heads.

”Well, I do,” he continued, ”and we'll form ourselves into a Santa Hermandad--'The Holy Brotherhood'--it was the name of an old Spanish Society of chivalry ever so many years ago.”

”Santa Hermandad!” Pat shouted, ”and now to shake hands on it. I think we'll not be needing to take an oath.”

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