In the Irish Brigade eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about In the Irish Brigade.

In the Irish Brigade eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about In the Irish Brigade.

On the ride from Versailles, Desmond had warned Mike to say no word as to the events of the night.

“I do not know what course the young lady’s father may take,” he said, “and until I do, the matter had better be kept a secret, altogether.”

“I will keep a quiet tongue in my head, and no one shall hear anything, from me, as to how I got this slice on my shoulder.  I will just say that it was a bit of a scrimmage I got into, with two or three of the street rascals; and the thing is so common that no one is likely to ask any further questions about it.”

After the parade was over, O’Neil and O’Sullivan came up to Desmond’s quarters.

“Now, Master Kennedy, we have come to receive your confession.  We gave you credit for being a quiet, decent boy, and now it seems that you and that man of yours have been engaged in some disreputable riot, out all night, and coming in on two strange horses, which, for aught we know, have been carried off by force of arms.”

Desmond laughed.

“As to the horses, you are not so far wrong as one might expect, O’Neil.  We rode them this morning from Versailles.”

“From Versailles!” O’Neil repeated.  “And what, in the name of all the saints, took you to Versailles!  I am afraid, Desmond, that you are falling into very evil courses.

“Well, tell us all about it.  I shall be glad to be able to believe that there is some redeeming feature in this strange business.”

Desmond laughed, and then said, more seriously, “Well, I have had an adventure.  Other people were concerned in it, as well as myself.  I have made up my mind to tell you both, because I know that I can depend upon your promises to keep it an absolute secret.”

“This sounds mysterious indeed,” O’Sullivan said.  “However, you have our promises.  O’Neil and I will be as silent as the grave.”

“Well, then, you know how you were chaffing me, the other day, about finding Mademoiselle Pointdexter?”

“You don’t mean to say that you have found her, Kennedy?” O’Neil exclaimed incredulously.

“That is what I mean to say, though found is hardly the word, since I was not looking for her, or even thinking of her, at the time.  Still, in point of fact, I accidentally came across the place where she was hidden away, and after a sharp skirmish, in which Callaghan and I each had to kill two men, we carried her off, and delivered her safely to her father this morning.”

The two young officers looked hard at Desmond, to discover if he was speaking seriously, for his tone was so quiet, and matter of fact, that they could scarce credit that he had passed through such an exciting adventure; and the three were so accustomed to hoax each other, that it struck them both as simply an invention on the part of their comrade, so absolutely improbable did it seem to them.

“Sure you are trying to hoax us, Kennedy,” O’Sullivan said.

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In the Irish Brigade from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.