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.

“I will do so willingly; and I shall ask the colonel to allow my servant to accompany me.”

“That is already settled.  I told Colonel O’Brien that I owed much to him also, and he at once acceded to my request, saying that, although the wound is healing, the surgeon said that it would be a fortnight, yet, before he will be fit for service; and, moreover, that it was a custom when an officer went on leave that he should, if he wished it, take his soldier servant with him.”

“Thank you again, Baron.  Mike is a faithful fellow, and a shrewd one.  I am so accustomed now to his services that I should miss them, and his talk, very much.”

“Have you heard, Mike,” Desmond asked, when his servant came up to his room, after the baron and Philip de la Vallee had left, “that you are to go with me, to stay for a month, at Pointdexter?”

“I have, your honour.  Sure, I was sent for to the colonel’s quarters, and there I found a tall gentleman, whom I had never seen before, as far as I knew.

“‘This is Mike Callaghan, Mr. Kennedy’s servant,’ the colonel said, and the baron stepped forward, and shook hands with me, for all the world as if I had been a noble like himself; and he said: 

“’My brave fellow, I have to thank you for the aid you gave your master in rescuing my daughter, in which service you received the wound which still keeps your arm in a sling.  Here is a token that we are not ungrateful for the service.  If you will take my advice, you will hand it to an agent of mine here in Paris, who will keep it for you, and you may find it useful when the time comes for you to take your discharge.’

“So saying, he put a heavy purse into my hand, and said: 

“’You will find my agent’s name and address on a card inside the purse.  I shall go round to him, now, and tell him that you are coming, and that he is to use the money to your advantage, and to hand it over to you whenever you choose to ask for it.  Your master is coming down to stay for a month with me, and Colonel O’Brien has granted leave for you to accompany him.’

“I thanked him heartily, as you may believe, sir; though, as I said, I wanted no reward for obeying your orders, and for the share I took in that little skirmish.  After I came out, I looked into the purse, which was mighty heavy, expecting to find a handful of crowns; and it fairly staggered me when I found that it was full of gold pieces, and on counting them, found that there were a hundred louis.  Never did I dream that I should be so rich.  Why, your honour, when I lave the regiment, which will not be for many a long year, I hope, I shall be able to settle down comfortably, for the rest of my life, in a snug little shebeen, or on a bit of land with a cottage and some pigs, and maybe a cow or two; and it is all to your honour I owe it, for if you hadn’t given the word, it would never have entered my head to attack a gentleman’s house, merely because I heard a woman scream.”

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In the Irish Brigade from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.