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My Buried Treasure
by
“There’s a postmaster in my State thinks he carried it.” The senator smiled grimly. “He has consumption, and wants us to give him a consulship in the tropics. I’ll tell him I’ve seen Porto Banos, and that it’s just the place for him.”
The senator’s pleasantry was not well received. But Miss Cairns alone had the temerity to speak of what the others were thinking.
“What would become of Mr. Marshall?” she asked. The senator smiled tolerantly.
“I don’t know that I was thinking of Mr. Marshall,” he said. “I can’t recall anything he has done for this administration. You see, Miss Cairns,” he explained, in the tone of one addressing a small child, “Marshall has been abroad now for forty years, at the expense of the taxpayers. Some of us think men who have lived that long on their fellow-countrymen had better come home and get to work.”
Livingstone nodded solemnly in assent. He did not wish a post abroad at the expense of the taxpayers. He was willing to pay for it. And then, with “ex-Minister” on his visiting cards, and a sense of duty well performed, for the rest of his life he could join the other expatriates in Paris.
Just before dinner, the cruiser RALEIGH having discovered the whereabouts of the SERAPIS by wireless, entered the harbor, and Admiral Hardy came to the yacht to call upon the senator, in whose behalf he had been scouring the Caribbean Seas. Having paid his respects to that personage, the admiral fell boisterously upon Marshall.
The two old gentlemen were friends of many years. They had met, officially and unofficially, in many strange parts of the world. To each the chance reunion was a piece of tremendous good fortune. And throughout dinner the guests of Livingstone, already bored with each other, found in them and their talk of former days new and delightful entertainment. So much so that when, Marshall having assured them that the local quarantine regulations did not extend to a yacht, the men departed for Las Bocas, the women insisted that he and admiral remain behind.
It was for Marshall a wondrous evening. To foregather with his old friend whom he had known since Hardy was a mad midshipman, to sit at the feet of his own charming countrywomen, to listen to their soft, modulated laughter, to note how quickly they saw that to him the evening was a great event, and with what tact each contributed to make it the more memorable; all served to wipe out the months of bitter loneliness, the stigma of failure, the sense of undeserved neglect. In the moonlight, on the cool quarter-deck, they sat, in a half-circle, each of the two friends telling tales out of school, tales of which the other was the hero or the victim, “inside” stories of great occasions, ceremonies, bombardments, unrecorded “shirt-sleeve” diplomacy.
Hardy had helped to open the Suez Canal. Marshall had assisted the Queen of Madagascar to escape from the French invaders. On the Barbary Coast Hardy had chased pirates. In Edinburgh Marshall had played chess with Carlyle. He had seen Paris in mourning in the days of the siege, Paris in terror in the days of the Commune; he had known Garibaldi, Gambetta, the younger Dumas, the creator of Pickwick.
“Do you remember that time in Tangier,” the admiral urged, “when I was a midshipman, and got into the bashaw’s harem?”
“Do you remember how I got you out?” Marshall replied grimly.
“And,” demanded Hardy, “do you remember when Adelina Patti paid a visit to the KEARSARGE at Marseilles in ’65–George Dewey was our second officer–and you were bowing and backing away from her, and you backed into an open hatch, and she said ‘my French isn’t up to it’ what was it she said?”
“I didn’t hear it,” said Marshall; “I was too far down the hatch.”
“Do you mean the old KEARSARGE?” asked Mrs. Cairns. “Were you in the service then, Mr. Marshall?”