Part 64 (1/2)
”You know Kingston, Jamaica, very well?”
”I was there four years--two as the secretary to the cabinet of his Grace the Duke of Manchester, two as civil secretary to the admiral on the station.”
”You saw the prisoner?”
”Yes, three times.”
I drew an immense breath; I thought for a moment that they had delivered themselves into my hands. The thing must prove of itself that I had been in Jamaica, not in Rio Medio, through those two years. My heart began to thump like a great solemn drum, like Paul's bell when the king died--solemn, insistent, dominating everything. The little man was giving an account of the ”'bawminable” state of confusion into which the island's trade was thrown by the misdeeds of a pirate called Nikola el Demonio.
”I a.s.sure you, my luds,” he squeaked, turning suddenly to the judges, ”the island was wrought up into a pitch of... ah... almost disloyalty.
The... ah... planters were clamouring for... ah... separation. And, to be sure, I trust you'll hang the prisoner, for if you don't...”
Lord Stowell s.h.i.+vered, and said suddenly with haste, ”Mr. Oldham, address yourself to Sir Robert.”
I was almost happy; the cloven hoof had peeped so d.a.m.ningly out. The little man bowed briskly to the old judge, asked for a chair, sat himself down, and arranged his coat-tails.
”As I was saying,” he prattled on, ”the trouble and the worry that this man caused to His Grace, myself, and Admiral Rowley were inconceivable.
You have no idea, you... ah... can't conceive. And no wonder, for, as it turned out, the island was simply honeycombed by his spies and agents.
You have no idea; people who seemed most respectable, people we ourselves had dealings with...”
He rattled on at immense length, the barrister taking huge pinches of yellow snuff, and smiling genially with the air of a horse-trainer watching a pony go faultlessly through difficult tricks. Every now and then he flicked his whip.
”Mr. Oldham, you saw the prisoner three times. If it does not overtax your memory pray tell us.” And the little creature pranced off in a new direction.
”Tax my memory! Gad, I like that. You remember a man who has had your blood as near as could be, don't you?”
I had been looking at him eagerly, but my interest faded away now. It was going to be the old confusing of my ident.i.ty with Nikola's. And yet I seemed to know the little beggar's falsetto; it was a voice one does not forget.
”Remember!” he squeaked. ”Gad, gentlemen of the jury, he came as near as possible------You have no idea what a ferocious devil it is.”
I was wondering why on earth Nichols should have wanted to kill such a little thing. Because it was obvious that it must have been Nichols.
”As near as possible murdered myself and Admiral Rowley and a Mr.
Topnambo, a most enlightened and loyal... ah... inhabitant of the island, on the steps of a public inn.”
I had it then. It was the little man David Mac-donald had rolled down the steps with, that night at the Ferry Inn on the Spanish Town road.
”He was lying in wait for us with a gang of a.s.sa.s.sins. I was stabbed on the upper lip. I lost so much blood... had to be invalided... cannot think of horrible episode without shuddering.”
He had seen me then, and when Ramon (”a Spaniard who was afterwards proved to be a spy of El Demonio's--of the prisoner's. He was hung since”) had driven me from the place of execution after the hanging of the seven pirates; and he had come into Ramon's store at the moment when Carlos (”a piratical devil if ever there was one,” the little man protested) had drawn me into the back room, where Don Balthasar and O'Brien and Seraphina sat waiting. The men who were employed to watch Ramon's had never seen me leave again, and afterwards a secret tunnel was discovered leading down to the quay.
”This, apparently, was the way by which the prisoner used to arrive and quit the island secretly,” he finished his evidence in chief, and the beetle-browed, portly barrister sat down. I was not so stupid but what I could see a little, even then, how the most innocent events of my past were going to rise up and crush me; but I was certain I could twist him into admitting the goodness of my tale which hadn't yet been told. He knew I had been in Jamaica, and, put what construction he liked on it, he would have to admit it. I called out:
”Thank G.o.d, my turn's come at last!”
The faces of the Attorney-General, the King's Advocate, Sir Robert Gifford, Mr. Lawes, Mr. Jervis, of all the seven counsel that were arrayed to crush me, lengthened into simultaneous grins, varying at the jury-box. But I didn't care; I grinned, too. I was going to show them.
It was as if I flew at the throat of that little man. It seemed to me that I must be able to crush a creature whose malice was as obvious and as nugatory as the green and red rings that he exhibited in his hair every few minutes. He wanted to show the jury that he had rings; that he was a mincing swell; that I hadn't and that I was a b.l.o.o.d.y pirate. I said: