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Mr. Ketchmaid looked up from his pipe and eyed him darkly; the shoemaker smiled serenely.
"Another small bottle o' lemonade, landlord," he said, slowly.
"Go and get your lemonade somewhere else," said the bursting Mr.
Ketchmaid.
"I prefer to 'ave it here," rejoined the shoemaker, "and you've got to serve me, Ketchmaid. A licensed publican is compelled to serve people whether he likes to or not, else he loses of 'is license."
"Not when they're the worse for licker he ain't," said the landlord.
"Certainly not," said the shoemaker; "that's why I'm sticking to lemonade, Ketchmaid."
The indignant Mr. Ketchmaid, removing the wire from the cork, discharged the missile at the ceiling. The shoemaker took the gla.s.s from him and looked round with offensive slyness.
"Here's the 'ealth of Henry Wiggett what lost 'is leg to save Mr.
Ketchmaid's life," he said, unctuously. "Also the 'ealth of Sam Jones, who let hisself be speared through the chest for the same n.o.ble purpose.
Likewise the health of Captain Peters, who nursed Mr. Ketchmaid like 'is own son when he got knocked up doing the work of five men as was drowned; likewise the health o' d.i.c.k Lee, who helped Mr. Ketchmaid capture a Chinese junk full of pirates and killed the whole seventeen of 'em by-'Ow did you say you killed'em, Ketchmaid?"
The landlord, who was busy with the taps, affected not to hear.
"Killed the whole seventeen of 'em by first telling 'em yarns till they fell asleep and then choking 'em with Henry Wiggett's wooden leg,"
resumed the shoemaker.
"Kee-hee," said a hapless listener, explosively. "Kee-hee-kee--"
He checked himself suddenly, and a.s.sumed an air of great solemnity as the landlord looked his way.
"You'd better go 'ome, Jem Summers," said the fuming Mr. Ketchmaid.
"You're the worse for liker."
"I'm not," said Mr. Summers, stoutly.
"Out you go," said Mr. Ketchmaid, briefly. "You know my rules. I keep a respectable house, and them as can't drink in moderation are best outside."
"You should stick to lemonade, Jem," said Mr. Clark. "You can say what you like then."
Mr. Summers looked round for support, and then, seeing no pity in the landlord's eye, departed, wondering inwardly how he was to spend the remainder of the evening. The company in the bar gazed at each other soberly and exchanged whispers.
"Understand, Ned Clark," said the indignant Mr. Ketchmaid, "I don't want your money in this public-house. Take it somewhere else."
"Thank'ee, but I prefer to come here," said the shoemaker, ostentatiously sipping his lemonade. "I like to listen to your tales of the sea. In a quiet way I get a lot of amus.e.m.e.nt out of 'em."
"Do you disbelieve my word?" demanded Mr. Ketchmaid, hotly.
"Why, o' course I do," replied the shoemaker; "we all do. You'd see how silly they are yourself if you only stopped to think. You and your sharks!-no shark would want to eat you unless it was blind."
Mr. Ketchmaid allowed this gross reflection on his personal appearance to pa.s.s unnoticed, and for the first time of many evenings sat listening in torment as the shoemaker began the narration of a series of events which he claimed had happened to a seafaring nephew. Many of these bore a striking resemblance to Mr. Ketch-maid's own experiences, the only difference being that the nephew had no eye at all for the probabilities.
In this fell work Mr. Clark was ably a.s.sisted by the offended Mr.
Summers. Side by side they sat and quaffed lemonade, and burlesqued the landlord's autobiography, the only consolation afforded to Mr. Ketchmaid consisting in the reflection that they were losing a harmless pleasure in good liquor. Once, and once only, they succ.u.mbed to the superior attractions of alcohol, and Mr. Ketchmaid, returning from a visit to his brewer at the large seaport of Burnsea, heard from the ostler the details of a carouse with which he had been utterly unable to cope.
The couple returned to lemonade the following night, and remained faithful to that beverage until an event transpired which rendered further self-denial a mere foolishness.
It was about a week later, Mr. Ketchmaid had just resumed his seat after serving a customer, when the attention of all present was attracted by an odd and regular tapping on the brick-paved pa.s.sage outside. It stopped at the tap-room, and a murmur of voices escaped at the open door. Then the door was closed, and a loud, penetrating voice called on the name of Sol Ketchmaid.
"Good Heavens!" said the amazed landlord, half-rising from his seat and falling back again, "I ought to know that voice."
"Sol Ketchmaid," bellowed the voice again; "where are you, s.h.i.+pmate?"
"Hennery Wig-gett!" gasped the landlord, as a small man with ragged whiskers appeared at the wicket, "it can't be!"
The new-comer regarded him tenderly for a moment without a word, and then, kicking open the door with an unmistakable wooden leg, stumped into the bar, and grasping his outstretched hand shook it fervently.
"I met Cap'n Peters in Melbourne," said the stranger, as his friend pushed him into his own chair, and questioned him breathlessly. "He told me where you was."
"The sight o' you, Hennery Wiggett, is better to me than diamonds," said Mr. Ketchmaid, ecstatically. "How did you get here?"
"A friend of his, Cap'n Jones, of the barque Venus, gave me a pa.s.sage to London," said Mr. Wiggett, "and I've tramped down from there without a penny in my pocket."
"And Sol Ketchmaid's glad to see you, sir," said Mr. Smith, who, with the rest of the company, had been looking on in a state of great admiration. "He's never tired of telling us 'ow you saved him from the shark and 'ad your leg bit off in so doing."
"I'd 'ave my other bit off for 'im, too," said Mr. Wiggett, as the landlord patted him affectionately on the shoulder and thrust a gla.s.s of spirits into his hands. "Cheerful, I would. The kindest-'earted and the bravest man that ever breathed, is old Sol Ketchmaid."
He took the landlord's hand again, and, squeezing it affectionately, looked round the comfortable bar with much approval. They began to converse in the low tones of confidence, and names which had figured in many of the landlord's stories fell continuously on the listeners' ears.
"You never 'eard anything more o' pore Sam Jones, I s'pose?" said Mr.
Ketchmaid.
Mr. Wiggett put down his gla.s.s.
"I ran up agin a man in Rio Janeiro two years ago," he said, mournfully.
"Pore old Sam died in 'is arms with your name upon 'is honest black lips."
"Enough to kill any man," muttered the discomfited Mr. Clark, looking round defiantly upon his murmuring friends.
"Who is this putty-faced swab, Sol?" demanded Mr. Wiggett, turning a fierce glance in the shoemaker's direction.
"He's our cobbler," said the landlord, "but you don't want to take no notice of 'im. n.o.body else does. He's a man who as good as told me I'm a liar."
"Wot!" said Mr. Wiggett, rising and stumping across the bar; "take it back, mate. I've only got one leg, but n.o.body shall run down Sol while I can draw breath. The finest sailor-man that ever trod a deck is Sol, and the best-'earted."
"Hear, hear," said Mr. Smith; "own up as you're in the wrong, Ned."
"When I was laying in my bunk in the fo'c's'le being nursed back to life," continued Mr. Wig-gett, enthusiastically, "who was it that set by my side 'olding my 'and and telling me to live for his sake?-why, Sol Ketchmaid. Who was it that said that he'd stick to me for life?-why Sol Ketchmaid. Who was it said that so long as 'e 'ad a crust I should have first bite at it, and so long as 'e 'ad a bed I should 'ave first half of it?-why, Sol Ketchmaid!"
He paused to take breath, and a flattering murmur arose from his listeners, while the subject of his discourse looked at him as though his eloquence was in something of the nature of a surprise even to him.
"In my old age and on my beam-ends," continued Mr. Wiggett, "I remembered them words of old Sol, and I knew if I could only find 'im my troubles were over. I knew that I could creep into 'is little harbour and lay snug. I knew that what Sol said he meant. I lost my leg saving 'is life, and he is grateful."