The Skipper's Wooing, and The Brown Man's Servant Part 29
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CHAP II.
At first the noise mingled with his dreams, and helped to form them. He was down a mine, and grimy workers with strong picks were knocking diamonds from the walls, diamonds so large that he became despondent at the comparative smallness of his own. Then he awoke suddenly and sat up with a start, rubbing his eyes. The din was infernal to a man who liked to do a quiet business in an un.o.btrusive way. It was a knocking which he usually a.s.sociated with the police, and it came from his side door. With a sense of evil strong upon him, the Jew sprang from his bed, and, slipping the catch, noiselessly opened the window and thrust his head out. In the light of a lamp which projected from the brick wall at the other end of the alley he saw a figure below.
"Hulloa!" said the Jew harshly.
His voice was drowned in the noise.
"What do you want?" he yelled. "Hulloa, there! What do you want, I say?"
The knocking ceased, and the figure, stepping back a little, looked up at the window.
"Come down and open the door," said a voice which the p.a.w.nbroker recognized as the sailor's.
"Go away," he said, in a low, stern voice. "Do you want to rouse the neighborhood?"
"Come down and let me in," said the other. "It's for your own good.
You're a dead man if you don't."
Impressed by his manner the Jew, after bidding him shortly not to make any more noise, lit his candle, and, dressing hurriedly, took the light in his hand and went grumbling downstairs into the shop.
"Now, what do you want?" he said through the door.
"Let me in and I'll tell you," said the other, "or I'll bawl it through the keyhole, if you like."
The Jew, placing the candle on the counter, drew back the heavy bolts and cautiously opened the door. The seaman stepped in, and, as the other closed the door, vaulted on to the counter and sat there with his legs dangling.
"That's right," he said, nodding approvingly in the direction of the Jew's right hand. "I hope you know how to use it."
"What do you want?" demanded the other irritably, putting his hand behind him. "What time o' night do you call this for turning respectable men out of their beds?"
"I didn't come for the pleasure o' seeing your pretty face again, you can bet," said the seaman carelessly. "It's good nature what's brought me here. What have you done with that diamond?"
"That's my business," said the other. "What do you want?"
"I told you I sailed in five days," said the seaman. "Well, I got another s.h.i.+p this evening instead, and I sail at 6 a.m. Things are getting just a bit too thick for me, an' I thought out o' pure good nature I'd step round and put you on your guard."
"Why didn't you do so at first?" said the Jew, eyeing him suspiciously.
"Well, I didn't want to spoil a bargain," said the seaman carelessly.
"Maybe, you wouldn't have bought the stone if I had told you. Mind that thing don't go off; I don't want to rob you. Point it the other way."
"There was four of us in that deal," he continued, after the other had complied with his request. "Me an' Jack Ball and Nosey Wheeler and a Burmese chap; the last I see o' Jack Ball he was quiet and peaceful, with a knife sticking in his chest. If I hadn't been a very careful man I'd have had one sticking in mine. If you ain't a very careful man, and do what I tell you, you'll have one sticking in yours."
"Speak a little more plainly," said the Jew. "Come into the parlor, I don't want the police to see a light in the shop."
"We stole it," said the seaman, as he followed the other into the little back parlor, "the four of us, from-"
"I don't want to know anything about that," interrupted the other hastily.
The sailor grinned approvingly, and continued: "Then me an' Jack being stronger than them, we took it from them two, but they got level with poor Jack. I s.h.i.+pped before the mast on a barque, and they came over by steamer an' waited for me."
"Well, you're not afraid of them?" said the Jew interrogatively.
"Besides, a word to the police-"
"Telling 'em all about the diamond," said the seaman. "Oh, yes. Well, you can do that now if you feel so inclined. They know all about that, bless you, and, if they were had, they'd blab about the diamond."
"Have they been d.o.g.g.i.ng you?" inquired the p.a.w.nbroker.
"d.o.g.g.i.ng me!" said the seaman. "d.o.g.g.i.ng's no word for it. Wherever I've been they've been my shadders. They want to hurt me, but they're careful about being hurt themselves. That's where I have the pull of them. They want the stone back first, and revenge afterwards, so I thought I'd put you on your guard, for they pretty well guess who's got the thing now.
You'll know Wheeler by his nose, which is broken."
"I'm not afraid of them," said the Jew, "but thank you for telling me.
Did they follow you here?"
"They're outside, I've no doubt," said the other; "but they come along like human cats-leastways, the Burmah chap does. You want eyes in the back of your head for them almost. The Burmese is an old man and soft as velvet, and Jack Ball just afore he died was going to tell me something about him. I don't know what it was; but, pore Jack, he was a superst.i.tious sort o' chap, and I know it was something horrible. He was as brave as a lion, was Jack, but he was afraid o' that little shrivelled-up Burmese. They'll follow me to the s.h.i.+p to-night. If they'll only come close enough, and there's n.o.body nigh, I'll do Jack a good turn."
"Stay here till the morning," said the Jew.
The seaman shook his head. "I don't want to miss my s.h.i.+p," said he; "but remember what I've told you, and mind, they're villains, both of them, and if you are not very careful, they'll have you, sooner or later.
Good-night!"
He b.u.t.toned up his coat, and leading the way to the door, followed by the Jew with the candle, opened it noiselessly, and peered carefully out right and left. The alley was empty.
"Take this," said the Jew, proffering his pistol.
"I've got one," said the seaman. "Good-night!"
He strode boldly up the alley, his footsteps sounding loudly in the silence of the night. The Jew watched him to the corner, and then, closing the door, secured it with extra care, and went back to his bedroom, where he lay meditating upon the warning which had just been given to him until he fell asleep.
Before going downstairs next morning he placed the revolver in his pocket, not necessarily for use, but as a demonstration of the lengths to which he was prepared to go. His manner with two or three inoffensive gentlemen of color was also somewhat strained. Especially was this the case with a worthy Lascar, who, knowing no English, gesticulated cheer-fully in front of him with a long dagger which he wanted to p.a.w.n.
The morning pa.s.sed without anything happening, and it was nearly dinner-time before anything occurred to justify the sailor's warning.
Then, happening to glance at the window, he saw between the articles which were hanging there a villainous face, the princ.i.p.al feature of which being strangely bent at once recalled the warning of the sailor.
As he looked the face disappeared, and a moment later its owner, after furtively looking in at the side door, entered quietly.
"Morning, boss," said he.
The p.a.w.nbroker nodded and waited.
"I want to have a little talk with you, boss," said the man, after waiting for him to speak.
"All right, go on," said the other.
The Skipper's Wooing, and The Brown Man's Servant Part 29
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The Skipper's Wooing, and The Brown Man's Servant Part 29 summary
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