Ten days later definite orders were received for the regiment to be ready for embarkation, as soon as the two transports which had been ordered round from Plymouth arrived. Soldiers are always fond of change; and although there were few more pleasant quarters than Cork, there was a general feeling of animation and excitement at the thought of service at the other side of the Atlantic. All officers and men on furlough were at once recalled. The friends of many of the officers came across from England, to be with them till they sailed upon what was then considered a long and perilous voyage. Balls and dinners were given to and by the regiment. Officers overhauled their kits and belongings, getting what new things were required, bargaining with brokers for their furniture, and making all preparations for a prolonged absence from England.
“Ah, Stapleton,” Ralph said, as the young ensign came into his quarters one day in high spirits, “there will be a sad change come over you before long. You almost wished you might die on your way round here from London. What will be your feelings when you have to face the waves of the Atlantic?”
“Don’t talk about it, Conway. The very thought makes me feel queer. However, I expect I shall get on better now than I did last time. What an ass I was, to be sure, on that voyage!”
“Well, I do think your four months with the regiment have done you a world of good, Stapleton. You certainly were a stuck-up sort of personage when you came on board in the Thames. I think it is an awful mistake for a fellow to be educated at home, instead of being sent to school; they are sure to have to suffer for it afterward.”
“Well, I have suffered for it to some extent,” Stapleton said. “The lessons I got at first were sharp ones; but they certainly did me good.”
“There is no doubt about that,” Ralph agreed; “and I think there is a good deal of credit due to you, Stapleton, for having taken things in the right way. I wonder where we shall be stationed in America, and whether we shall have any fighting? Upon the whole we have no very great reason to be proud of our feats of arms in America; but I hope we shall do better next time. You see, in the last struggle we knew nothing of their tactics, and were at a great disadvantage; but after fighting its way through the Peninsular, I don’t think there is any fear of the regiment not giving a good account of itself, if it is called upon to do so, out there.”
The next day an orderly came into the room just after mess-dinner had commenced. He whispered to the adjutant, who at once rose.
“Mr. President,” he said to the major who was at the head of the table, “I must ask you to excuse me leaving the table. The colonel wishes to see me immediately at his quarters.”
“What can be the matter now?” one of the officers said. “It must be something of importance or the colonel would never hare called Hallowes out in that way.”


