irst story I made out to ye was
not altogether the truth. I had in me mind a mental reservation. I
just slipped out of Army life and hid meself in the forests--all along
of a little girlie." His lower lip trembled as he added: "She died,
sir--and I was just broke over it."
"Oh!" exclaimed Shafto. "Well, such things have happened before."
"It was like this, sir," now turning and fixing a pair of tragic dark
eyes on his companion, "I was engaged to be married--same as yourself.
She was the daughter of a sergeant in the arsenal in Madras; her father
and mine were old friends, and when mine was killed in Afghanistan, me
mother just dwindled away and broke her heart. Sergeant Fairon and his
wife was real good to me and took me home; she mothered me and he
'belted' me, and they helped to start me for the Lawrence Asylum
Orphanage. I was about eight years of age then, and this little girl
was two. After a good spell I come back to St. George's Fort, a
grown-up man and a corporal. Polly, she was grown up, too--and the
prettiest girl you could see in a thousand miles; we fell in love with
one another, and Sergeant Fairon had a sort of wish for me, being, they
said, the very spit of me own father, and though I knew in me heart
Polly was a million times too good for me and I was not fit to wipe her
shoes, still, I made bold to ask him for her and he said 'Yes.' I knew
I'd get permission to marry, for my name was never in the defaulters'
book, and Polly was fair as a lily--not one of your yellow 'Cranies'
the Colonel was so dead set agin. Well, I was just too happy to be
lucky, saving up me pay and Mrs. Fairon buying a few bits of house
linen for us, and Polly making her trousseau, when the regiment was
shifted all of a sudden from Madras to Mandalay and our plans were
knocked on the head."
"Yes, that was bad luck," said Shafto sympathetically.
"Still and all, I was full of hope, expecting my stripes and hearing
every mail from Polly, when one day the letter corporal handed me an
envelope with a deep black edge; it was from Sergeant Fairon telling me
Polly was dead; taken off in three hours with cholera. He enclosed
half a letter she was writing to me when she was called. Well, sir, I
would not believe it! No; I held out agin it for days; but of course I
had to give in. At first the grief was just a little scratch; but
every day the pain went deeper and deeper, as if some one was turning a
knife in my heart.
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