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"School Detachment. D'you mean an O. T. C?" Bill sank laughing into his chair by the window, spreading his legs out over the floor.
"Ain't that rich?" said Handsome, laughing shrilly again.
"Got any papers on ye? Ye must have some sort of papers."
Andrews searched his pockets. He flushed.
"I ought to have a school pa.s.s."
"You sure ought. Gee, this guy's simple," said Bill, leaning far back in the chair and blowing smoke through his nose.
"Look at his dawg-tag, Handsome."
The man strode over to Andrews and jerked open the top of his tunic.
Andrews pulled his body away.
"I haven't got any on. I forgot to put any on this morning."
"No tag, no insignia."
"Yes, I have, infantry."
"No papers.... I bet he's been out a h.e.l.l of a time," said Handsome meditatively.
"Better put the cuffs on him," said Bill in the middle of a yawn.
"Let's wait a while. When's the loot coming?"
"Not till night."
"Sure?"
"Yes. Ain't no train."
"How about a side car?"
"No, I know he ain't comin'," snarled Bill.
"What d'you say we have a little liquor, Bill? Bet this bloke's got money. You'll set us up to a gla.s.s o' cognac, won't you, School Detachment?"
Andrews sat very stiff in his chair, staring at them.
"Yes," he said, "order up what you like."
"Keep an eye on him, Handsome. You never can tell what this quiet kind's likely to pull off on you."
Bill Huggis strode out of the room with heavy steps. In a moment he came back swinging a bottle of cognac in his hand.
"Tole the Madame you'd pay, Skinny," said the man as he pa.s.sed Andrews's chair. Andrews nodded.
The two M. P.'s drew up to the table beside which Andrews sat. Andrews could not keep his eyes off them. Bill Huggis hummed as he pulled the cork out of the bottle.
"It's the smile that makes you happy, It's the smile that makes you sad."
Handsome watched him, grinning.
Suddenly they both burst out laughing.
"An' the d.a.m.n fool thinks he's in a school battalion," said Handsome in his shrill voice.
"It'll be another kind of a battalion you'll be in, Skinny," cried Bill Huggis. He stifled his laughter with a long drink from the bottle.
He smacked his lips.
"Not so G.o.ddam bad," he said. Then he started humming again:
"It's the smile that makes you happy, It's the smile that makes you sad."
"Have some, Skinny?" said Handsome, pushing the bottle towards Andrews.
"No, thanks," said Andrews.
"Ye won't be gettin' good cognac where yer goin', Skinny, not by a d.a.m.n sight," growled Bill Huggis in the middle of a laugh.
"All right, I'll take a swig." An idea had suddenly come into Andrews's head.
"Gee, the b.a.s.t.a.r.d kin drink cognac," cried Handsome.
"Got enough money to buy us another bottle?"
Andrews nodded. He wiped his mouth absently with his handkerchief; he had drunk the raw cognac without tasting it.
"Get another bottle, Handsome," said Bill Huggis carelessly. A purplish flush had appeared in the lower part of his cheeks. When the other man came back, he burst out laughing.
"The last cognac this Skinny guy from the school detachment'll get for many a day. Better drink up strong, Skinny.... They don't have that stuff down on the farm.... School Detachment; I'll be G.o.dd.a.m.ned!" He leaned back in his chair, shaking with laughter.
Handsome's face was crimson. Only the zigzag scar over his eye remained white. He was swearing in a low voice as he worked the cork out of the bottle.
Andrews could not keep his eyes off the men's faces. They went from one to the other, in spite of him. Now and then, for an instant, he caught a glimpse of the yellow and brown squares of the wall paper and the bar with a few empty bottles behind it. He tried to count the bottles; "one, two, three..." but he was staring in the l.u.s.treless grey eyes of Bill Huggis, who lay back in his chair, blowing smoke out of his nose, now and then reaching for the cognac bottle, all the while humming faintly, under his breath:
"It's the smile that makes you happy, It's the smile that makes you sad."
Handsome sat with his elbows on the table, and his chin in his beefy hands. His face was flushed crimson, but the skin was softly moulded, like a woman's.
The light in the room was beginning to grow grey.
Handsome and Bill Huggis stood up. A young officer, with clearly-marked features and a campaign hat worn a little on one side, came in, stood with his feet wide apart in the middle of the floor.
Andrews went up to him.