I leaned there and stared at
the performance, feeling just like a king--proud, you understand, but
with a sort of noble melancholy. I knew all the time that I was
drunk; but that didn't seem to matter. The bagmen had told me--"
I nodded again.
"That's one of the extraordinary things about the Mont-Bazillac," I
corroborated. "It's all over in about an hour, and there's not (as
the saying goes) a headache in a hogshead."
"I wouldn't quite say that," said Dick reflectively. "But you're
partly right. All of a sudden the moon stopped whizzing, the river
lay down in its bed, and my head became clear as a bell. 'The
trouble will be,' I told myself, 'to find the hotel again.' But I
had no trouble at all. My brain picked up bearing after bearing.
I worked back up the street like a prize Baden-Powell scout, found
the portico, remembered the stairway to the left, leading to the
lounge, went up it, and recognising the familiar furniture, dropped
into an armchair with a happy sigh. My only worry, as I picked up a
copy of the _Gil Blas_ and began to study it, was about Jinks.
But, you see, there wasn't much call to go searching after him when
my own experience told me it would be all right.
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