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"Who knows what he's going to do? What are you going to do? Fly back to your little Robinson Crusoe Durdlebury of a Pacific Island? I don't think so."
Oliver stuck his pipe on the mantelpiece and his hands on his hips and made a stride towards Doggie.
"d.a.m.n you, Doggie! d.a.m.n you to little bits! How the Hades did you guess what I've scarcely told myself, much less another human being?"
"You yourself said it was a good old war and it has taught us a lot of things."
"It has," said Oliver. "But I never expected to hear Huaheine called Durdlebury by you, Doggie. Oh, Lord! I must have another drink.
Where's your gla.s.s? Say when?"
They parted for the night the best of friends.
Doggie, in spite of the silk pyjamas and the soft bed and the blazing fire in his room--he stripped back the light-excluding curtains forgetful of Defence of the Realm Acts, and opened all the windows wide, to the horror of Peddle in the morning--slept like an unperturbed dormouse. When Peddle woke him, he lay drowsily while the old butler filled his bath and fiddled about with drawers. At last aroused, he cried out:
"What the d.i.c.kens are you doing?"
Peddle turned with an injured air. "I am matching your ties and socks for your bottle-green suit, sir."
Doggie leaped out of bed. "You dear old idiot, I can't go about the streets in bottle-green suits. I've got to wear my uniform." He looked around the room. "Where the devil is it?"
Peddle's injured air deepened almost into resentment.
"Where the devil----!" Never had Mr. Marmaduke, or his father, the Canon, used such language. He drew himself up.
"I have given orders, sir, for the uniform suit you wore yesterday to be sent to the cleaners."
"Oh, h.e.l.l!" said Doggie. And Peddle, unaccustomed to the vernacular of the British Army, paled with horror. "Oh, h.e.l.l!" said Doggie. "Look here, Peddle, just you get on a bicycle, or a motor-car, or an express train at once and retrieve that uniform. Don't you understand? I'm a private soldier. I've got to wear uniform all the time, and I'll have to stay in this beastly bed until you get it for me."
Peddle fled. The picture that he left on Doggie's mind was that of the faithful steward with dismayed, uplifted hands, retiring from the room in one of the great scenes of Hogarth's "Rake's Progress." The similitude made him laugh--for Doggie always had a saving sense of humour--but he was very angry with Peddle, while he stamped around the room in his silk pyjamas. What the deuce was he going to do? Even if he committed the military crime (and there was a far more serious crime already against him) of appearing in public in mufti, did that old a.s.s think he was going to swagger about Durdlebury in bottle-green suits, as though he were ashamed of the King's uniform? He dipped his shaving-brush into the hot water. Then he threw it, anyhow, across the room. Instead of shaving, he would be gloating over the idea of cutting that old fool, Peddle's, throat, and therefore would slash his own face to bits.
Things, however, were not done at lightning speed in the Deanery of Durdlebury. The first steps had not even been taken to send the uniform to the cleaners, and soon Peddle reappeared carrying it over his arm and the heavy pair of munition boots in his hand.
"These too, sir?" he asked, exhibiting the latter resignedly and casting a sad glance at the neat pair of brown shoes exquisitely polished and beautifully treed which he had put out for his master's wear.
"These too," said Doggie. "And where's my grey flannel shirt?"
This time Peddle triumphed. "I've given that away, sir, to the gardener's boy."
"Well, you can just go and buy me half a dozen more like it," said Doggie.
He dismissed the old man, dressed and went downstairs. The Dean had breakfasted at seven. Peggy and Oliver were not yet down for the nine o'clock meal. Doggie strolled about the garden and sauntered round to the stable-yard. There he encountered Chipmunk in his shirt-sleeves, sitting on a packing case and polishing Oliver's leggings. He raised an ugly, clean-shaven mug and scowled beneath his bushy eyebrows at the new-comer.
"Morning, mate!" said Doggie pleasantly.
"Morning," said Chipmunk, resuming his work.
Doggie turned over a stable bucket and sat down on it and lit a cigarette.
"Glad to be back?"
Chipmunk poised the cloth on which he had poured some brown dressing.
"Not if I has to be worried with private soljers," he replied. "I came 'ere to get away from 'em."
"What's wrong with private soldiers? They're good enough for you, aren't they?" asked Doggie with a laugh.
"Naow," snarled Chipmunk. "Especially when they ought to be orficers.
Go to 'ell!"
Doggie, who had suffered much in the army, but had never before been taunted with being a dilettante gentleman private, still less been consigned to h.e.l.l on that account, leapt to his feet shaken by one of his rare sudden gusts of anger.
"If you don't say I'm as good a private soldier as any in your rotten, mangy regiment, I'll knock your blinking head off!"
An insult to a soldier's regiment can only be wiped out in blood.
Chipmunk threw cloth and legging to the winds and, springing from his seat like a monkey, went for Doggie.
"You just try."
Doggie tried, and had not Chipmunk's head been very firmly secured to his shoulders, he would have succeeded. Chipmunk went down as if he had been bombed. It was his unguarded and unscientific rush that did it. Doggie regarded his prostrate figure in gratified surprise.
"What's all this about?" cried a sharp, imperious voice.
Doggie instinctively stood at attention and saluted, and Chipmunk, picking himself up in a dazed sort of way, did likewise.
"You two men shake hands and make friends at once," Oliver commanded.
"Yes, sir," said Doggie. He extended his hand, and Chipmunk, with the nautical shamble, which in moments of stress defied a couple of years'
military discipline, advanced and shook it. Oliver strode hurriedly away.
"I'm sorry I said that about the regiment, mate. I didn't mean it,"
said Doggie.
Chipmunk looked uncertainly into Doggie's eyes for what Doggie felt to be a very long time. Chipmunk's dull brain was slowly realizing the situation. The man opposite to him was his master's cousin. When he had last seen him, he had no t.i.tle to be called a man at all. His vocabulary volcanically rich, but otherwise limited, had not been able to express him in adequate terms of contempt and derision. Now behold him masquerading as a private. Wounded. But any fool could get wounded. Behold him further coming down from the social heights whereon his master dwelt, to take a rise out of him, Chipmunk. In self-defence he had taken the obvious course. He had told him to go to h.e.l.l. Then the important things had happened. Not the effeminate gentleman but some one very much like the common Tommy of his acquaintance had responded. And he had further responded with the familiar vigour but unwonted science of the rank and file. He had also stood at attention and saluted and obeyed like any common Tommy, when the Major appeared. The last fact appealed to him, perhaps, as much as the one more invested in violence.
"'Ere," said he at last, jerking his head and rubbing his jaw, "how the 'ell did you do it?"
"We'll get some gloves and I'll show you," said Doggie.
So peace and firm friendship were made. Doggie went into the house and in the dining-room found Oliver in convulsive laughter.
"Oh, my holy aunt! You'll be the death of me, Doggie. 'Yes, sir!'" He mimicked him. "The perfect Tommy. After doing in old Chipmunk.
Chipmunk with the strength of a gorilla and the courage of a lion. I just happened round to see him go down. How the blazes did you manage it, Doggie?"
"That's what Chipmunk's just asked me," Doggie replied. "I belong to a regiment where boxing is taught. Really a good regiment," he grinned.
"There's a sergeant-instructor, a chap called Ballinghall----"
"Not Joe Ballinghall, the well-known amateur heavy-weight?"
"That's him right enough," said Doggie.