The Luck of the Mounted | Page 4

Ralph S. Kendall
. . . I uster tike an' 'ang 'is
kydge hup in that little gallery in th' ridin school of a mornin'--when
Inspector Chappell, th' ridin' master wos breakin' in a bunch o'
rookies--'toppin' orf,' wot? . . ."
"Tchkk!" clucked McCullough wearily. "What is the use of arguin' with
an old sweat like him? . . . Hardy'll be happy enough in Hell, so long as
he can have his bloomin' old blackguard of a parrot along with him. If
he can't there will be a pretty fuss."
"Bear up, Hardy!" comforted George. "When you've got that 'quiff' of
yours all fussed up, and those new 'square-pushin'' dress-pants on
you're some 'hot dog.' . . . Now, if I thought you could 'talk pretty' and
behave yourself I'd--"
The old soldier grinned diabolically. "Sorjint?" he broke in mincingly
"c'n I fall out an' tork t' me sister?--garn, Reddy! wipe orf yer chin! . . .
though if I did 'appen t' 'ave a sister she might s'y th' sime fing abaht me,
now, as she might s'y abaht you--to a lydy-fren' o' 'er's, p'raps. . . ."
"Say what?" demanded George incautiously.
Hardy chuckled again, "'Ere comes one o' them Mounted Pleecemen,
me dear,--orl comb an' spurs,--mark time in front there. . . !" And he
emitted an imitation of a barnyard cackle.
McCullough shot a glance at Redmond's face. "Can th' grief" he
remarked unsympathetically, "you're fly enough usually . . . but you
fairly asked for it that time."
Hardy spat into a cuspidor with long-range accuracy. He beamed with
cheerful malevolence awhile upon his tormentors; then, uplifting a
cracked falsetto in an unmusical wail, to the tune of "London Bridge is
Falling Down," assured them that--
"_Old soweljers never die, never die, never die, Old soweljers
never--_"

With infinite mockery Redmond's boyish voice struck in--
"_Young soldiers wish they would, wish they--_"
"'Ere!" remonstrated Hardy darkly, "chack it, Reddy! . . . You know
wot 'appens t' them as starts in, a-guyin' old soweljers?--eh?--Well, I
tell yer now!--worse'n wot 'appened t' them fresh kids in th' Bible wot
mocked th' old blowke abaht 'is bald 'ead."
"Isch ga bibble! I don't care!" bawled the abandoned George; "can't be
much worse than doing 'straight duty' round Barracks, here!--same
thing, day in, day out--go and look at the 'duty detail'
board--Regimental Number--Constable Redmond, 'prisoner's
escort'--punching gangs of prisoners around all day long, on little rotten
jobs about Barracks--and 'night guard' catching you every third night
and--"
"Oyez! oyez! oyez! you good men of this--"
"Oh, yes! you can come the funny man all right, Mac--you've got a
'staff' job. Straight duty don't affect you. Why don't they shove me out
on detachment again, and give me another chance to do real police
work? . . . I tell you I'm fed up--properly. . . . I wish I was out of the
blooming Force--I'm not 'wedded' to it, like you."
"'Ear, 'ear!" chimed in Hardy, with a sort of miserable heartiness.
McSporran's contribution was merely a dour Scotch grin. In the
moment's silence that followed a tremendous bawling squall of wind
rocked the building to its very foundations. The back-draught of it
sucked open the door, and, borne upon its wings, the roaring,
full-chorused burst of a popular barrack-room chantey floated up the
stairs from the canteen below--
"_Old King Cole was a merry old soul, And a merry old soul was he--
He called for his pipe, and he called for his glass, And he called for his
old M.P._"
Outside the blizzard still moaned and howled; every now and then,

between lulls, screeching gusts of sleet beat upon the windows. The
parrot, clinging upside down to the roof of its cage, winked rapidly
with Sphinx-like eyes and inclined its head sideways in an intent
listening attitude.
"Eyah! but th' Force's a bloomin' good home to some of you, all th'
same," growled McCullough. "Listen to that 'norther'? . . . How'd you
like to be chucked out into th' cold, cold world right now?--You, Hardy!
that's never done nothin' but 'soldier' all your life--you, Reddy! with
your 'collidge edukashun'?"
George, unmoved, listened respectfully awhile, lying on his stomach
with his chin cupped in his hands. "Must have been a great bunch of
fellows when you first took on the Force, Dave?" he queried presently.
From sheer force of habit the old policeman glanced at his interlocutor
suspiciously. But that young gentleman's face appearing open and
serene, merely expressing naive interest, he grunted an affirmative
"Uh-huh!" and backed his conviction with a cheerful oath.
"Ah, they sure was. But where are they all now?" he rambled on in
garrulous reminiscence, "some of 'em rich--some of 'em broke--an'
many of 'em back on th' old Force again, an' glad to
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