P. C. Wren: Adventure Novels & Tales From the Foreign Legion. P. C. Wren

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P. C. Wren: Adventure Novels & Tales From the Foreign Legion - P. C. Wren

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      THE WAGES OF VIRTUE

       Table of Contents

       Prologue

       Chapter I. Soap and Sir Montague Merline

       Chapter II. A Barrack-Room of the Legion

       Chapter III. Carmelita Et Cie

       Chapter IV. The Canteen of the Legion

       Chapter V. The Trivial Round

       Chapter VI. Le Cafard and Other Things

       Chapter VII. The Sheep in Wolf's Clothing

       Chapter VIII. The Temptation of Sir Montague Merline

       Chapter IX. The Café and the Canteen

       Chapter X. The Wages of Sin

       Chapter XI. Greater Love...

       Epilogue

      To

       THE CHARMINGEST WOMAN

       "Vivandière du régiment,

       C'est Catin qu'on me nomme;

       Je vends, je donne, je bois gaiment,

       Mon vin et mon rogomme;

       J'ai le pied leste et l'oeil mutin,

       Tintin, tintin, tintin, r'lin tintin,

       Soldats, voilà Catin!

       "Je fus chère à tous nos héros;

       Hélas! combien j'en pleure,

       Ainsi soldats et généraux

       Me comblaient à tout heure

       D'amour, de gloire et de butin,

       Tintin, tintin, tintin, r'lin tintin

       D'amour, de gloire et de butin,

       Soldats, voilà Catin!"

      BÉRANGER.

      Prologue

       Table of Contents

      Lord Huntingten emerged from his little green tent, and strolled over to where Captain Strong, of the Queen's African Rifles, sat in the "drawing-room." The drawing-room was the space under a cedar fir and was furnished with four Roorkee chairs of green canvas and white wood, and a waterproof ground-sheet.

      "I do wish the Merlines would roll up," he said. "I want my dinner."

      "Not dinner time yet," remarked Captain Strong. "Hungry?"

      "No," answered Lord Huntingten almost snappishly. Captain Strong smiled. How old Reggie Huntingten always gave himself away! It was the safe return of Lady Merline that he wanted.

      Captain Strong, although a soldier, the conditions of whose life were almost those of perpetual Active Service, was a student--and particularly a student of human nature. Throughout a life of great activity he found, and made, much opportunity for sitting in the stalls of the Theatre of Life and enjoying the Human Comedy. This East African shooting-trip with Lord Huntingten, Sir Montague, and Lady Merline, was affording him great entertainment, inasmuch as Huntingten had fallen in love with Lady Merline and did not know it. Lady Merline was falling in love with Huntingten and knew it only too well, and Merline loved them both. That there would be no sort or kind of "dénouement," in the vulgar sense, Captain Strong was well and gladly aware--for Huntingten was as honourable a man as ever lived, and Lady Merline just as admirable. No saner, wiser, nor better woman had Strong ever met, nor any as well balanced. Had there been any possibility of "developments," trouble, and the usual fiasco of scandal and the Divorce Court, he would have taken an early opportunity of leaving the party and rejoining his company at Mombasa. For Lord Huntingten was his school, Sandhurst and lifelong friend, while Merline was his brother-in-arms and comrade of many an unrecorded, nameless expedition, foray, skirmish, fight and adventure.

      "Merline shouldn't keep her out after dusk like this," continued Lord Huntingten. "After all, Africa's Africa and a woman's a woman."

      "And Merline's Merline," added Strong with a faint hint of reproof. Lord Huntingten grunted, arose, and strode up and down. A fine upstanding figure of a man in the exceedingly becoming garb of khaki cord riding-breeches, well-cut high boots, brown flannel shirt and broad-brimmed felt hat. Although his hands were small, the arms exposed by the rolled-up shirtsleeves were those of a navvy, or a blacksmith. The face, though tanned and wrinkled, was finely cut and undeniably handsome, with its high-bridged nose, piercing blue eyes, fair silky moustache and prominent chin. If, as we are sometimes informed, impassivity and immobility of countenance are essential to aspirants for such praise as is contained in the term "aristocratic," Lord Huntingten was not what he himself would have described

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