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His examination of the man's eyes had evidently satisfied him that our acquaintance had really been smoking opium.
We paused immediately outside the house for which we had been bound, and as I had the key I opened the door and the three of us stepped into a little dark room. Harley closed the door and we stumbled upstairs to a low first-floor apartment facing the street. There was nothing in its appointments, as revealed in the light of an oil lamp burning on the solitary table, to distinguish it from a thousand other such apartments which may be leased for a few shillings a week in the neighbourhood.
That adjoining might have told a different story, for it more closely resembled an actor's dressing-room than a seaman's lodging; but the door of this sanctum was kept scrupulously locked.
"Sit down, old son," said my friend heartily, pushing forward an old arm-chair. "Fetch out the grog, Jim; there's about enough for three."
I walked to a cupboard, as the fireman sank limply down in the chair, and took out a bottle and three gla.s.ses. When the man, who, as I could now see quite plainly, was suffering from the after effects of opium, had eagerly gulped the stiff drink which I handed to him, he looked around with dim, glazed eyes, and:
"You've saved my life, mates," he declared. "I've 'ad a 'orrible nightmare, I 'ave--a nightmare. See?"
He fixed his eyes on me for a moment, then raised himself from his seat, peering narrowly at me across the table.
"I seed you before, mate. Gaw, blimey! if you ain't the bloke wot I giv'd the pigtail to! And wot laid out that blasted c.h.i.n.k as was scraggin' me! Shake, mate!"
I shook hands with him, Harley eyeing me closely the while, in a manner which told me that his quick brain had already supplied the link connecting our doped acquaintance with my strange experience during his absence. At the same time it occurred to me that my fireman friend did not know that Ah Fu was dead, or he would never have broached the subject so openly.
"That's so," I said, and wondered if he required further information.
"It's all right, mate. I don't want to 'ear no more about blinking pigtails--not all my life I don't," and he sat back heavily in his chair and stared at Harley.
"Where have you been?" inquired Harley, as if no interruption had occurred, and then began to reload his pipe: "at Malay Jack's or at Number Fourteen?"
"Neither of 'em!" cried the fireman, some evidence of animation appearing in his face; "I been at Kwen Lung's."
"In Pennyfields?"
"That's 'im, the old bloke with the big joss. I allers goes to see Ma Lorenzo when I'm in Port o' London. I've seen 'er for the last time, mates."
He banged a big and dirty hand upon the table.
"Last night I see murder done, an' only that I know they wouldn't believe me, I'd walk across to Limehouse P'lice Station presently and put the splits on 'em, I would."
Harley, who was seated behind the speaker, glanced at me significantly.
"Sure you wasn't dreamin'?" he inquired facetiously.
"Dreamin'!" cried the man. "Dreams don't leave no blood be'ind, do they?"
"Blood!" I exclaimed.
"That's wot I said--blood! When I woke up this mornin' there was blood all on that grinnin' joss--the blood wot 'ad dripped from 'er shoulders when she fell."
"Eh!" said Harley. "Blood on whose shoulders? Wot the 'ell are you talkin' about, old son?"
"Ere"--the fireman turned in his chair and grasped Harley by the arm--"listen to me, and I'll tell you somethink, I will. I'm goin' in the Seahawk in the mornin' see? But if you want to know somethink, I'll tell yer. Drunk or sober I bars the blasted p'lice, but if you like to tell 'em I'll put you on somethink worth tellin'. Sure the bottle's empty, mates?"
I caught Harley's glance and divided the remainder of the whisky evenly between the three gla.s.ses.
"Good 'ealth," said the fireman, and disposed of his share at a draught.
"That's bucked me up wonderful."
He lay back in his chair and from a little tobacco-box began to fill a short clay pipe.
"Look 'ere, mates, I'm soberin' up, like, after the smoke, an' I can see, I can see plain, as n.o.body'll ever believe me. n.o.body ever does, worse luck, but 'ere goes. Pa.s.s the matches."
He lighted his pipe, and looking about him in a sort of vaguely aggressive way:
"Last night," he resumed, "after I was chucked out of the Dock Gates, I made up my mind to go and smoke a pipe with old Ma Lorenzo. Round I goes to Pennyfields, and she don't seem glad to see me. There's n.o.body there only me. Not like the old days when you 'ad to book your seat in advance."
He laughed gruffly.
"She didn't want to let me in at first, said they was watched, that if a c.h.i.n.k 'ad an old pipe wot 'ad b'longed to 'is grandfather it was good enough to get 'im fined fifty quid. Anyway, me bein' an old friend she spread a mat for me and filled me a pipe. I asked after old Kwen Lung, but, of course, 'e was out gamblin', as usual; so after old Ma Lorenzo 'ad made me comfortable an' gone out I 'ad the place to myself, and presently I dozed off and forgot all about b.l.o.o.d.y ship's bunkers an'
n.i.g.g.e.r-drivin' Scotchmen."
He paused and looked about him defiantly.
"I dunno 'ow long I slept," he continued, "but some time in the night I kind of 'alf woke up."
At that he twisted violently in his chair and glared across at Harley:
"You been a pal to me," he said; "but tell me I was dreamin' again and I'll smash yer b.l.o.o.d.y face!"
He glared for a while, then addressing his narrative more particularly to me, he resumed:
"It was a scream wot woke me--a woman's scream. I didn't sit up; I couldn't. I never felt like it before. It was the same as bein' buried alive, I should think. I could see an' I could 'ear, but I couldn't move one muscle in my body. Foller me? An' wot did I see, mates, an' wot did I 'ear? I'm goin' to tell yer. I see old Kwen Lung's daughter------"
"I didn't know 'e 'ad one," murmured Harley.
"Then you don't know much!" shouted the fireman. "I knew years ago, but 'e kept 'er stowed away somewhere up above, an' last night was the first time I ever see 'er. It was 'er shriek wot 'ad reached me, reached me through the smoke. I don't take much stock in c.h.i.n.k gals in general, but this one's mother was no c.h.i.n.k, I'll swear. She was just as pretty as a bloomin' ivory doll, an' as little an' as white, and that old swine Kwen Lung 'ad tore the dress off of 'er shoulders with a b.l.o.o.d.y great whip!"
Harley was leaning forward in his seat now, intent upon the man's story, and although I could not get rid of the idea that our friend was relating the events of a particularly unpleasant opium dream, nevertheless I was fascinated by the strange story and by the strange manner of its telling.
"I saw the blood drip from 'er bare shoulders, mates," the man continued huskily, and with his big dirty hands he strove to ill.u.s.trate his words.
"An' that old yellow devil lashed an' lashed until the poor gal was past screamin'. She just sunk down on the floor all of a 'cap, moanin' and moanin'--Gawd! I can 'ear 'er moanin' now!"
"Meanwhile, 'ere's me with murder in me 'eart lyin' there watchin', an' I can't speak, no! I can't even curse the yellow rat, an' I can't move--not a 'and, not a foot! Just as she fell there right up against the joss an' 'er blood trickled down on 'is gilded feet, old Ma Lorenzo comes staggerin' in. I remember all this as clear as print, mates, remember it plain, but wot 'appened next ain't so good an' clear.
Somethink seemed to bust in me 'ead. Only just before I went off, the winder--there's only one in the room--was smashed to smithereens an'
somebody come in through it."
"Are you sure?" said Harley eagerly. "Are you sure?"
That he was intensely absorbed in the story he revealed by a piece of bad artistry, very rare in him. He temporarily forgot his dialect. Our marine friend, however, was too much taken up with his own story to notice the slip, and:
"Dead sure!" he shouted.
He suddenly twisted around in his chair.
"Tell me I was dreamin', mate," he invited, "and if you ain't dreamin'
in 'arf a tick it won't be because I 'aven't put yer to sleep!"