Driftwood Spars eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 284 pages of information about Driftwood Spars.

Driftwood Spars eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 284 pages of information about Driftwood Spars.

On the arrival of General Miltiades Murger he sat at his feet as soon as, and whenever, possible; only to discover that he was not only uninterested in, but obviously contemptuous of, volunteers and volunteering.  When, at the Dearmans’ dinner-table, he endeavoured to talk with the General on the subject he was profoundly discouraged, and on his asking what was to happen when the white troops went home and the Indian troops went to the Border, or even to Europe, as soon as England’s inevitable and final war broke out, he was also profoundly snubbed.

When, after that dinner, General Miltiades Murger made love to Mrs. Dearman on the verandah, he also made an enemy, a bitter, cruel, and vindictive enemy of Mr. Ross-Ellison (or rather of Mir Ilderim Dost Mahommed Mir Hafiz Ullah Khan).

Nor did his subsequent victory at the Horse Show lessen the enmity, inasmuch as Mrs. Dearman (whom Ross-Ellison loved with the respectful platonic devotion of an English gentleman and the fierce intensity of a Pathan) took General Miltiades Murger at his own valuation, when that hero described himself and his career to her by the hour.  For the General had succumbed at a glance, and confided to his Brigade-Major that Mrs. Dearman was a dooced fine woman and the Brigade-Major might say that he said so, damme.

As the General’s infatuation increased he told everybody else also—­everybody except Colonel Dearman—­who, of course, knew it already.

He even told Jobler, his soldier-servant, promoted butler, as that sympathetic and admiring functionary endeavoured to induce him to go to bed without his uniform.

At last he told Mrs. Dearman herself, as he saw her in the rosy light that emanated from the fine old Madeira that fittingly capped a noble luncheon given by him in her honour.

He also told her that he loved her as a father—­and she besought him not to be absurd.  Later he loved her as an uncle, later still as a cousin, later yet as a brother, and then as a man.

She had laughed deprecatingly at the paternal affection, doubtfully at the avuncular, nervously at the cousinly, angrily at the brotherly,—­and not at all at the manly.

In fact—­as the declaration of manly love had been accompanied by an endeavour to salute what the General had called her damask-cheek—­she had slapped the General’s own cheek a resounding blow....

“Called you ‘Mrs. Darlingwoman,’ did he!” roared Mr. Dearman upon being informed of the episode.  “Wished to salute your damask cheek, did he!  The boozy old villain!  Damask cheek! Damned cheek!  Where’s my dog-whip?” ... but Mrs. Dearman had soothed and restrained her lord for the time being, and prevented him from insulting and assaulting the “aged roue”—­who was years younger, in point of fact, than the clean-living Mr. Dearman himself.

But he had shut his door to the unrepentant and unashamed General, had cut him in the Club, had returned a rudely curt answer to an invitation to dinner, and had generally shown the offender that he trod on dangerous ground when poaching on the preserves of Mr. Dearman.  Whereat the General fumed.

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Driftwood Spars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.