"Lieutenant Ferrières, is it not?"

He advanced, holding out his hand.

"Captain de Saint-Avit. Delighted, my dear fellow."

At the same time Chatelain appeared on the threshold.

"Sergeant," said the newcomer, "I cannot congratulate you on the

little I have seen. There is not a camel saddle which is not in want

of buckles, and they are rusty enough to suggest that it rains at

Hassi-Inifel three hundred days in the year. Furthermore, where were

you this afternoon? Among the four Frenchmen who compose the post, I

found only on my arrival one convict, opposite a quart of eau-de-vie.

We will change all that, I hope. At ease."

"Captain," I said, and my voice was colorless, while Chatelain

remained frozen at attention, "I must tell you that the Sergeant was

with me, that it is I who am responsible for his absence from the

post, that he is an irreproachable non-commissioned officer from every

point of view, and that if we had been warned of your arrival--"

"Evidently," he said, with a coldly ironical smile. "Also, Lieutenant,

I have no intention of holding him responsible for the negligences

which attach to your office. He is not obliged to know that the

officer who abandons a post like Hassi-Inifel, if it is only for two

hours, risks not finding much left on his return. The Chaamba

brigands, my dear sir, love firearms, and for the sake of the sixty

muskets in your racks, I am sure they would not scruple to make an

officer, whose otherwise excellent record is well known to me, account

for his absence to a court-martial. Come with me, if you please. We

will finish the little inspection I began too rapidly a little while

ago."

He was already on the stairs. I followed in his footsteps. Chatelain

closed the order of march. I heard him murmuring, in a tone which you

can imagine: "Well, we are in for it now!"




readonlinefreebook.com Copyright 2016 - 2024