wn on the Big Horn without a
parting "blow out," in which his health was drunk a dozen times an hour.
Oh, that he had that money now instead of certain unpaid bills in that
ravished secret drawer! It was humiliation inexpressible to have to send
those men away empty-handed, and in his dejection and misery, poor boy,
he wandered to his sideboard instead of going to luncheon at the mess,
and all he had had to eat or drink that day, by the time Mrs. Ray and
Maidie came late in the afternoon, was some crackers and cheese and he
didn't know how many nips of that priceless Blue Grass Bourbon.
The bright, brave young eyes were glassy and his dark cheek heavily
flushed when at four o'clock he hastened out to assist his mother from
her carriage, and the color fled from her beautiful face; her heart
seemed to stand still and her hand trembled violently as she noted it
all, but took his arm without a word, and, with Maidie silently
following, went up the steps and into the little army home, where the
door closed behind them, and the knot of lookers-on, officers awaiting
the call for afternoon stables, glanced significantly at each other,
then went on their way.
CHAPTER VIII.
Vinton's flotilla came steaming into Honolulu harbor just as the smoke
of the Doric was fading away on the westward horizon.
Cheers and acclamations, a banquet tendered to the entire force in the
beautiful grounds about the Palace, and a welcome such as even San
Francisco had not given awaited them. Three days were spent in coaling
for the long voyage to Manila, and during that time officers and men
were enabled to spend hours in sea-bathing and sight-seeing.
Vinton, eager to push ahead, fumed with impatience over the slow and
primitive methods by which his ships were coaled, but the junior
officers found many a cause for rejoicing over their enforced detention.
Dinners, dances, and surf-rides were the order of every evening. Riding
parties to the Pali and picnics at Pearl Harbor and the plantations
along the railway filled up every hour of the long, soft, sensuous days.
The soldiers explored every nook and corner of the town and, for a
wonder, got back to ship without serious diminution in their number, and
with a high opinion of the police, who seemed bent on protecting the
blue-coats from the States and making the best of their exuberance of
spirits.
Only one row of any consequence occurred within the forty-eight hours of
their arriva
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