“Lie down and go to sleep,” said I, not being able to comfort or advise. “You’re the best man in the regiment, and, next to Ortheris, the biggest fool. Lie down and wait till we’re attacked. What force will they turn out? Guns, think you?”
“Try that wid your lorrds an’ ladies, twistin’ an’ turnin’ the talk, tho’ you mint ut well. Ye cud say nothin’ to help me, an’ yet ye niver knew what cause I had to be what I am.”
“Begin at the beginning and go on to the end,” I said, royally. “But rake up the fire a bit first.”
I passed Ortheris’s bayonet for a poker.
“That shows how little we know what we do,” said Mulvaney, putting it aside. “Fire takes all the heart out av the steel, an’ the next time, may be, that our little man is fighting for his life his bradawl ’ll break, an’ so you’ll ha’ killed him, manin’ no more than to kape yourself warm. ’Tis a recruity’s thrick that. Pass the clanin’-rod, sorr.”
I snuggled down abased; and after an interval the voice of Mulvaney began.
“Did I iver tell you how Dinah Shadd came to be wife av mine?”
I dissembled a burning anxiety that I had felt for some months—ever since Dinah Shadd, the strong, the patient, and the infinitely tender, had of her own good love and free will washed a shirt for me, moving in a barren land where washing was not.
“I can’t remember,” I said, casually. “Was it before or after you made love to Annie Bragin, and got no satisfaction?”
The story of Annie Bragin is written in another place. It is one of the many less respectable episodes in Mulvaney’s checkered career.