“Sherry wine,” returned Mr. Riderhood, in the same sharp tone, “if you’re capable of it.”
The man put his hand in his pocket, took out half a sovereign, and begged the favour of Miss Pleasant that she would fetch a bottle. “With the cork undrawn,” he added, emphatically, looking at her father.
“I’ll take my Alfred David,” muttered Mr. Riderhood, slowly relaxing into a dark smile, “that you know a move. Do I know you? N—n—no, I don’t know you.”
The man replied, “No, you don’t know me.” And so they stood looking at one another surlily enough, until Pleasant came back.
“There’s small glasses on the shelf,” said Riderhood to his daughter. “Give me the one without a foot. I gets my living by the sweat of my brow, and it’s good enough for me.” This had a modest self-denying appearance; but it soon turned out that as, by reason of the impossibility of standing the glass upright while there was anything in it, it required to be emptied as soon as filled, Mr. Riderhood managed to drink in the proportion of three to one.
With his Fortunatus’s goblet ready in his hand, Mr. Riderhood sat down on one side of the table before the fire, and the strange man on the other: Pleasant occupying a stool between the latter and the fireside. The background, composed of handkerchiefs, coats, shirts, hats, and other old articles “On Leaving,” had a general dim resemblance to human listeners; especially where a shiny black sou’wester suit and hat hung, looking very like a clumsy mariner with his back to the company, who was so curious to overhear, that he paused for the purpose with his coat half pulled on, and his shoulders up to his ears in the uncompleted action.
The visitor first held the bottle against the light of the candle, and next examined the top of the cork. Satisfied that it had not been tampered with, he slowly took from his breast-pocket a rusty clasp-knife, and, with a corkscrew in the handle, opened the wine. That done, he looked at the cork, unscrewed it from the corkscrew, laid each separately on the table, and, with the end of the sailor’s knot of his neckerchief, dusted the inside of the neck of the bottle. All this with great deliberation.
At first Riderhood had sat with his footless glass extended at arm’s length for filling, while the very deliberate stranger seemed absorbed in his preparations. But, gradually his arm reverted home to him, and his glass was lowered and lowered until he rested it upside down upon the table. By the same degrees his attention became concentrated on the knife. And now, as the man held out the bottle to fill all round, Riderhood stood up, leaned over the table to look closer at the knife, and stared from it to him.
“What’s the matter?” asked the man.
“Why, I know that knife!” said Riderhood.
“Yes, I dare say you do.”
He motioned to him to hold up his glass, and filled it. Riderhood emptied it to the last drop and began again.
“That there knife—”
“Stop,” said the man, composedly. “I was going to drink to your daughter. Your health, Miss Riderhood.”
“That knife was the knife of a seaman named George Radfoot.”
“It was.”
“That seaman was well beknown to me.”
“He was.”
“What’s come to him?”
“Death has come to him. Death came to him in an ugly shape. He looked,” said the man, “very horrible after it.”
“Arter what?” said Riderhood, with a frowning stare.
“After he was killed.”
“Killed? Who killed him?”
Only answering with a shrug, the man filled the footless glass, and Riderhood emptied it: looking amazedly from his daughter to his visitor.
“You don’t mean to tell a honest man—” he was recommencing with his empty glass in his hand, when his eye became fascinated by the stranger’s outer coat. He leaned across the table to see it nearer, touched the sleeve, turned the cuff to look at the sleeve-lining (the man, in his perfect composure, offering not the least objection), and exclaimed, “It’s my belief as this here coat was George Radfoot’s too!”
“You are right. He wore it the last time you ever saw him, and the last time you ever will see him—in this world.”
“It’s my belief you mean to tell me to my face you killed him!” exclaimed Riderhood; but, nevertheless, allowing his glass to be filled again.
The man only answered with another shrug, and showed no symptom of confusion.
“Wish I may die if I know what to be up to with this chap!” said Riderhood, after staring at him, and tossing his last glassful down his throat. “Let’s know what to make of you. Say something plain.”
“I will,” returned the other, leaning forward across the table, and speaking in a low impressive voice. “What a liar you are!”
The honest witness rose, and made as though he would fling his glass in the man’s face. The man not wincing, and merely shaking his forefinger half knowingly, half menacingly, the piece of honesty thought better of it and sat down again, putting the glass down too.
“And when you went to that lawyer yonder in the Temple with that invented story,” said the stranger, in an exasperatingly comfortable sort of confidence, “you might have had your strong suspicions of a friend of your own, you know. I think you had, you know.”
“Me my suspicions? Of what friend?”
“Tell me again whose knife was this?” demanded the man.
“It was possessed by, and was the property of—him as I have made mention on,” said Riderhood, stupidly evading the actual mention of the name.
“Tell me again whose coat was this?”
“That there article of clothing likeways belonged to, and was wore by—him as I have made mention on,” was again the dull Old Bailey evasion.
“I suspect that you gave him the credit of the deed, and of keeping cleverly out of the way. But there was small cleverness in his keeping out of the way. The cleverness would have been, to have got back for one single instant to the light of the
