Original Short Stories — Volume 05 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 145 pages of information about Original Short Stories — Volume 05.

Original Short Stories — Volume 05 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 145 pages of information about Original Short Stories — Volume 05.

But he suddenly perceived the officers and darted towards them, jostling the drinkers in his path.  As soon as he reached their table he fixed his gleaming and delighted eyes upon them and the corners of his mouth expanded to his ears, showing his dazzling white teeth like a crescent moon in a black sky.  The two men looked in astonishment at this ebony giant, unable to understand his delight.

With a voice that made all the guests laugh, he said: 

“Good-day, my lieutenant.”

One of the officers was commander of a battalion, the other was a colonel.  The former said: 

“I do not know you, sir.  I am at a loss to know what you want of me.”

“Me like you much, Lieutenant Vedie, siege of Bezi, much grapes, find me.”

The officer, utterly bewildered, looked at the man intently, trying to refresh his memory.  Then he cried abruptly: 

“Timbuctoo?”

The negro, radiant, slapped his thigh as he uttered a tremendous laugh and roared: 

“Yes, yes, my lieutenant; you remember Timbuctoo, ya.  How do you do?”

The commandant held out his hand, laughing heartily as he did so.  Then Timbuctoo became serious.  He seized the officer’s hand and, before the other could prevent it, he kissed it, according to negro and Arab custom.  The officer embarrassed, said in a severe tone: 

“Come now, Timbuctoo, we are not in Africa.  Sit down there and tell me how it is I find you here.”

Timbuctoo swelled himself out and, his words falling over one another, replied hurriedly: 

“Make much money, much, big restaurant, good food; Prussians, me, much steal, much, French cooking; Timbuctoo cook to the emperor; two thousand francs mine.  Ha, ha, ha, ha!”

And he laughed, doubling himself up, roaring, with wild delight in his glances.

When the officer, who understood his strange manner of expressing himself, had questioned him he said: 

“Well, au revoir, Timbuctoo.  I will see you again.”

The negro rose, this time shaking the hand that was extended to him and, smiling still, cried: 

“Good-day, good-day, my lieutenant!”

He went off so happy that he gesticulated as he walked, and people thought he was crazy.

“Who is that brute?” asked the colonel.

“A fine fellow and a brave soldier.  I will tell you what I know about him.  It is funny enough.

“You know that at the commencement of the war of 1870 I was shut up in Bezieres, that this negro calls Bezi.  We were not besieged, but blockaded.  The Prussian lines surrounded us on all sides, outside the reach of cannon, not firing on us, but slowly starving us out.

“I was then lieutenant.  Our garrison consisted of soldier of all descriptions, fragments of slaughtered regiments, some that had run away, freebooters separated from the main army, etc.  We had all kinds, in fact even eleven Turcos [Algerian soldiers in the service of France], who arrived one evening no one knew whence or how.  They appeared at the gates of the city, exhausted, in rags, starving and dirty.  They were handed over to me.

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Original Short Stories — Volume 05 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.