"
"Just of a very little one, Jim; fortunately not more. So I can
look on complacently; but even I have suffered. Why, for weeks not
a day has passed without young Richards dropping in for a chat,
and when he came in yesterday he could talk about nothing but Miss
Hannay, until I shut him up by telling him it was extremely bad
form to talk to one lady about another. The boy colored up till I
almost laughed in his face; in fact, I believe I did laugh."
"That I will warrant you did, Norah."
"I could not help it, especially when he assured me he was perfectly
serious about Miss Hannay."
"You did not encourage him, I hope, Norah."
"No; I told him the Colonel set his face against married subalterns,
and that he would injure himself seriously in his profession if
he were to think of such a thing, and as I knew he had nothing but
his pay, that would be fatal to him."
Captain Doolan went off into a burst of laughter.
"And he took it all in, Norah? He did not see that you were humbugging
him altogether?"
"Not a bit of it. They are very amusing, these boys, Jim. I was
really quite sorry for Richards, but I told him he would get over
it in time, for as far as I could learn you had been just as bad
thirty-three times before I finally took pity on you, and that I
only did it then because you were wearing away with your troubles.
I advised him to put the best face he could on it, for that Miss
Hannay would be the last person to be pleased, if he were to be
going about with a face as long as if he had just come from his
aunt's funeral.
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