"And I remember thinking how fit you looked," said I. "It was the bath, of course, and the sleep on top of it. But I wonder they let you sleep so long."
"How could they know what I"d been up to?" said Teddy. "I mightn"t have had any sleep for a week; it was their business to let me be. But to think of the rain coming on and saving me-for even Raffles couldn"t have done it without the rain. That was the great slice of luck-while I was lying right there! And that"s why I like to lie there still-for luck rather than remembrance!"
The drinks came; we smoked and sipped. I regretted to find that Teddy was no longer faithful to the only old cigarette. But his loyalty to Raffles won my heart as he had never won it in his youth.
"Give us away to your heart"s content," said he; "but give the dear old devil his due at last."
"But who exactly do you mean by "us"?"
"My father not so much, perhaps, because he"s dead and gone; but self and wife as much as ever you like."
"Are you sure Mrs. Garland won"t mind?"
"Mind! It was for her he did it all; didn"t you know that?"
I didn"t know Teddy knew it, and I began to think him a finer fellow than I had supposed.
"Am I to say all I know about that too?" I asked.
"Rather! Camilla and I will both be delighted-so long as you change our names-for we both loved him!" said Teddy Garland.
I wonder if they both forgive me for taking him entirely at his word?