"There was Moses, and Solomon, and Caesar, and Socrates, and now….!" murmured Pierre in assumed abstraction.
A red spot burned on Halby's high cheekbone for a minute, but he persistently kept his temper.
"I'm expected elsewhere," he said at last. "I'm only one man, yet I wish
I could go to-day—even alone. But—"
"But you have a heart," said Pierre. "How wonderful—a heart! And there's the half a lung, and the boneset and camomile tea, and the blister, and the girl with an eye like a spot of rainbow, and the sacred law in a Remington rifle! Well, well! And to do it in the early morning—to wait in the shelter of the trees till some go to look after the horses, then enter the house, arrest those inside, and lay low for the rest."
Halby looked over at Pierre astonished. Here was raillery and good advice all in a piece.
"It isn't wise to go alone, for if there's trouble and I should go down, who's to tell the truth? Two could do it; but one—no, it isn't wise, though it would look smart enough."
"Who said to go alone?" asked Pierre, scrawling on the table with a burnt match.
"I have no men."
Pierre looked up at the wall.
"Throng has a good Snider there," he said. "Bosh! Throng can't go."