My Orderly
Let me first state that this Orderly of mine (No. 1) is a strong, stout, apparently unsentimental fellow. For the rest, an honester or braver man never breathed. After some hardships and dangers encountered during the day, we were sitting round a large fire of sandal-wood, a luxury you can’t afford in England. Lying upon the ground at night, half starved by day, we can often enjoy a fire that our queen might envy; for this wood, when burning, gives out a delicious odor.
And now My Orderly (No. 1) speaks.
“I had a mate in Californey. I won’t tell his surname, sir. Many bad characters were there, and for self-defense, Harry and I kept much to ourselves. So I got to know him well, and to love him well, too, for he was a man in every way. We were very fortunate, and made a pile, when one day Harry said to me:
“‘Tom, old man, I’ll go home and marry Peggy.’
“This brought me up standing, for I didn’t see how I could part with him. I took the pipe out of my mouth, and looked at him without speaking. I think he saw how it was, for he said, immediately: