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"What time was this?" interrupted Mr. Freeman.
"About half-past four, I fancy, sir. Mr. Pym spoke rather thick--I saw he had been taking a gla.s.s. He bade me make him a big potful of strong tea--which I did at once, having the kettle on the fire. He drank it, and went out."
"Go on, Mrs. Richenough."
"An hour afterwards, or so, his captain called, wanting to know where he was. Of course, sirs, I could not say; except that he had had a big jorum of tea, and was gone out."
Captain Tanerton spoke up to confirm this. "I wanted Pym," he said.
"This must have been between half-past five and six o'clock."
"About nine o'clock; or a bit earlier, it might be--I know it was dark and I had finished my supper--Mr. Pym came back," resumed the landlady.
"He seemed in an ill-humour, and he had been having more to drink.
'Light my lamp, Mother Richenough,' says he roughly, 'and shut the shutters: I've got a letter to write.' I lighted the lamp, and he got out some paper of his that was left in the table-drawer, and the ink, and sat down. After closing the shutters I went to the front-door, and there I saw Captain Tanerton. He asked me----"
"What did he ask you?" cried Mr. Freeman's lawyer, for she had come to a dead standstill.
"Well, the captain asked me whether any young lady had been there. He had asked the same question afore, sir: Mr. Pym's cousin, or sister, I b'lieve he meant. I told him No, and he went into the parlour to Mr.
Pym."
"What then?"
"Well, gentlemen, I went back to my kitchen, and shut myself in by my bit o' fire; and, being all lonely like, I a'most dozed off. Not quite; they made so much noise in the parlour, quarrelling."
"Quarrelling?" cried the lawyer.
"Yes, sir; and were roaring out at one another like wolves. Mr. ----"
"Stay a moment, ma'am. How long was it after you admitted Captain Tanerton that you heard this quarrelling?"
"Not above three or four minutes, sir. I'm sure of that. 'Mr. Pym's catching it from his captain, and he is just in the right mood to take it unkindly,' I thought to myself. However, it was no business of mine.
The sounds soon ceased, and I was just dozing off again, when Mr. Saxby came home. He went into the parlour to see Mr. Pym, and found him lying dead on the floor."
A silent pause.
"You are sure, ma'am, it was Captain Tanerton who was quarrelling with him?" cried the lawyer, who asked more questions than all the rest put together.
"Of course I am sure," returned Mrs. Richenough. "Why, sir, how could it be anybody else? Hadn't I just let in Captain Tanerton to him? n.o.body was there but their two selves."
Naturally the room turned to Jack. He answered the mute appeal very quietly.
"It was not myself that quarrelled with Pym. No angry word of any kind pa.s.sed between us. Pym had been drinking; Mrs. Richenough is right in that. He was not in a state to be reproved or reasoned with, and I came away at once. I did not stay to sit down."
"You hear this, Mrs. Richenough?"
"Yes, sir, I do; and I am sure the gentleman don't speak or look like one who could do such a deed. But, then, I heard the quarrelling."
An argument indisputable to her own mind. Sir Dace looked up and put a question for the first time. He had listened in silence. His dark face had a wearied look on it, and he spoke hardly above a whisper.
"Did you know the voice to be that of Captain Tanerton, Mistress Landlady? Did you recognize it for his!"
"I knew the voice couldn't be anybody else's, sir. n.o.body but the captain was with Mr. Pym."
"I asked you whether you _recognized_ it?" returned Sir Dace, knitting his brow. "Did you know by its tone that it was Captain Tanerton's?"
"Well, no, sir, I did not, if you put it in that way. Captain Tanerton was nearly a stranger to me, and the two shut doors and the pa.s.sage was between me and him. I had only heard him speak once or twice before, and then in a pleasant, ordinary voice. In this quarrel his voice was raised to a high, rough pitch; and in course I could not know it for his."
"In point of fact, then, it comes to this: You did _not_ recognize the voice for Captain Tanerton's."
"No, sir; not, I say, if you put it in that light."
"Let me put it in this light," was Sir Dace Fontaine's testy rejoinder: "Had three or four people been with Mr. Pym in his parlour, you could not have told whose voice it was quarrelling with him? You would not have known?"
"That is so, sir. But, you see, I knew it was his captain that was with him."
Sir Dace folded his arms and leaned back in his chair, his cross-questioning over. Mrs. Richenough was done with for the present, and Captain Tanerton entered upon his version of the night's events.
"I wished particularly to see Mr. Pym, and went to Ship Street in search of him, as I have already said. He was not there. Later, I went down again----"
"I beg your pardon, Captain Tanerton," interrupted the lawyer; "what time do you make it--that second visit?"
"It must have been nearly nine o'clock. Mr. Pym was at home, and I went into his parlour. He sat at the table writing, or preparing to write. I asked him the question I had come to ask, and he answered me. Scarcely anything more pa.s.sed between us. He was three-parts tipsy. I had intended to tell him that he was no longer chief mate of my ship--had been superseded; but, seeing his condition, I did not. I can say positively that I was not more than two minutes in the room."
"And you and he did not quarrel?"
"We did not. Neither were our voices raised. It is very probable, in his then condition, that he would have attempted to quarrel had he known he was discharged; but he did not know it. We were perfectly civil to each other; and when I wished him good-night, he came into the pa.s.sage and shut the front-door after me."
"You left no one with him?"
"No one; so far as I saw. I can answer for it that no one was in the parlour with us: whether any one was in the back room I cannot say. I do not think so."
"After that, Captain Tanerton?"
"After that I went straight to my hotel in the Minories, and ordered tea. While taking it, Mr. Ferrar came in and told me Edward Pym was dead. I could not at first believe it. I went back to Ship Street and found it too true. In as short a time as I could manage it, I went to carry the news to Sir Dace Fontaine, taking young Saxby with me."
Jack had spoken throughout in the ready, unembarra.s.sed manner of one who tells a true tale. But never in all my life had I seen him so quiet and subdued. He was like one who has some great care upon him. The other hearers, not knowing Jack as I knew him, would not notice this; though I cannot answer for it that one of them did not James Freeman. He never took his eyes off Jack all the while; peered at him as if he were a curiosity. It was not an open stare; more of a surrept.i.tious one, taken stealthily from under his eyebrows.
Some testimony as to Pym's movements that afternoon was obtained from Mrs. Ball, the lawyer having already been to Woburn Place to get it.
She said that young Pym came to her house between five and six o'clock nearer six than five, she thought, and seemed very much put out and disappointed to find Miss Verena Fontaine had left for her own home.
He spoke of the ship's having sprung a leak and put back again, but he believed she would get out again on the morrow. Mrs. Ball did not notice that he had been drinking; but one of her servants met him in the street after he left the house, heard him swearing to himself, and saw him turn into a public-house. If he remained in it until the time he next appeared in Ship Street, his state then was not to be wondered at.
This was about all that had been gathered at present. A great deal of talking took place, but no opinion was expressed by anybody. Time enough for that when the jury met on the morrow. As we were turning out of the back-room, the meeting over, Mr. Freeman put his hand upon Jack, to detain him. Jack, in his turn, detained me.
"Captain Tanerton," he said, in a grave whisper, "do you remember making a remark to me not long ago, in this, my private room--that if we persisted in sending Pym out with you in the ship, there would be murder committed?"
"I believe I do," said Jack, quietly. "They were foolish words, and meant nothing."
"I do not like to remember them," pursued Mr. Freeman. "As things have turned out, it would have been better that you had not used them."
"Perhaps so," answered Jack. "They have done no harm, that I know of."