[Snake and Sword by Percival Christopher Wren]@TWC D-Link book
Snake and Sword

CHAPTER VIII
2/25

"_Good ?_ Not'arf.

I wouldn't go an' hinsult the bloke for the price of a pot.No.

'Erbert 'Awker would not.

(Chuck us yore button-stick, young 'Enery Bone.) _Good ?_ 'E's a 'Oly Terror--and I don't know as there's a man in the Queen's Greys as could put 'im to sleep--not unless it's Matthewson," and here Trooper Herbert Hawker jerked his head in the direction of Trooper Damocles de Warrenne (_alias_ D.Matthewson) who, seated on his truckle-bed, was engaged in breathing hard, and rubbing harder, upon a brass helmet from which he had unscrewed a black horse-hair plume.
Dam, arrayed in hob-nailed boots, turned-up overalls "authorized for grooming," and a "grey-back" shirt, looked indefinably a gentleman.
Trooper Herbert Hawker, in unlaced gymnasium shoes, "leathers," and a brown sweater (warranted not to show the dirt), looked quite definably what he was, a Commercial Road ruffian; and his foreheadless face, greasy cow-lick "quiff" (or fringe), and truculent expression, inspired more disgust than confidence in the beholder.
His reference to Dam as the only likely champion of the Heavy Cavalry against the Hussar was a tribute to the tremendous thrashing he had received from "Trooper D.Matthewson" when the same had become necessary after a long course of unresented petty annoyance.

Hawker was that very rare creature, a boaster, who made good, a bully of great courage and determination, and a loud talker, who was a very active doer; and the battle had been a terrible one.
The weary old joke of having a heavy valise pulled down on to one's upturned face from the shelf above, by means of a string, as one sleeps, Dam had taken in good part.


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