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pray, Master Bottles! Good Master Bottles, do stop them. One is a great Afric chief, red as a fire, and the other is Satan, Satan himself! Oh, pray, good Master Bottles, stop them!"

      My fine highwayman was puffed out like a poisoned frog. I had no thought that he could be so grand.

      "What is this disturbance?" he demanded in a bass voice.

      "O good Master Bottles," clamoured the people. "Satan wishes to kill the Red Giant, who has Satan barred in the best room in the inn. And they make frightful destruction of chairs and tables. Bid them cease, O good Master Bottles!"

      From overhead we could hear the sound of blows upon wood mingled with threatening talk.

      "Stand aside," said the highwayman in a great gruff voice which made me marvel at him. He unhesitatingly dumped the swooning form of the landlady into another pair of arms, shook off the pretty maid, and moved sublimely upon the foot of the stairs amid exclamations of joy, wonder, admiration, even reverence.

      But the voice of an unseen person hailed suddenly from the head of the stairs.

      "And if ye have not said enough masses for your heathen soul," remarked the voice, "you would be better mustering the neighbours this instant to go to church for you and bid them do the best they can in a short time. You will never be coming downstairs if you once come up."

      Bottles hesitated; the company shuddered out: "'Tis the Red Giant."

      "And I would be having one more word with you," continued the unseen person. "I have him here, and here I keep him. 'Tis not me that wants the little black rogue, what with his hammering on the door and his calling me out of my name. 'Tis no work that I like, and I would lever go in and put my heel in his face. But I was told to catch a little black man, and I have him, and him I will keep. 'Tis not me that wished to come here and catch little black men for anybody; but here I am in this foreign country, catching little black men, and I will have no interference."

      But here I gave a great call of recognition.

      "Paddy!"

      I saw the whole thing. This wild-headed Paddy, whom I had told to catch me a little black man, had followed after me toward Bath and somehow managed to barricade in a room the very first man he saw who was small and black. At first I wished to laugh; an instant later I was furious.

      "Paddy," I thundered; "come down out of that now! What would you be doing? Come down out of that now!"

      The reply was sulky, but unmistakably from Paddy. Most of it was mumbled.

      "Sure I've gone and caught as little and as black a man as is in the whole world, and was keeping the scoundrel here safe, and along he comes and tells me to come down out of that now with no more gratitude than if he had given me a gold goose. And yet I fought a duel for him and managed everything so finely that he came away well enough to box me on the ear, which was mere hilarity and means nothing between friends."

      Jem Bottles was still halted on the stair. He and all the others had listened to Paddy's speeches in a blank amazement which had much superstition in it.

      "Shall I go up, sir?" he asked, not eagerly.

      "No," said I. "Leave me to deal with it. I fear a great mistake. Give me ten minutes, and I promise to empty the inn of all uproar."

      A murmur of admiration arose, and as the sound leaped about my ears I moved casually and indifferently up against Paddy. It was a grand scene.

      "Paddy," I whispered as soon as I had reached a place on the stairs safe from the ears of the people below. "Paddy, you have made a great blunder. You have the wrong man."

      "'Tis unlikely," replied Paddy with scorn. "You wait until you see him, and if he is not little and black, then – "

      "Yes, yes," said I hastily, "but it was not any little black man at all which I wanted. It was a particular little black man."

      "But," said the ruffian brightly, "it would be possible this one will serve your end. He's little and he's black."

      At this moment the voice of the captive came intoning through the door of a chamber.

      "When I am free I will first cut out your liver and have it grilled, and feed it to you as you are dying."

      Paddy had stepped forward and placed his lips within about six inches of one of the panels.

      "Come now, be easy!" he said. "You know well that if you should do as you say, I would beat your head that it would have the looks of a pudding fallen from a high window, and that's the truth."

      "Open the door, rascal," called the captive, "and we shall see."

      "I will be opening no doors," retorted Paddy indignantly. "Remain quiet, you little black devil, or, by the mass, I'll – "

      "I'll slice your heart into pieces of paper," thundered Paddy's prisoner, kicking and pounding.

      By this time I was ready to interfere. "Paddy," said I, catching him by the shoulder, "you have the wrong man. Leave it to me; mind you, leave it to me."

      "He's that small and black you'd think – " he began dejectedly, but I cut him short.

      Jem Bottles, unable to endure the suspense, had come up from below. He was still bristling and blustering, as if all the maids were remarking him.

      "And why does this fine gentleman kick and pound on the door?" he demanded in a gruff voice loud enough to be heard in all appreciative parts of the inn. "I'll have him out and slit his nose."

      The thunder on the door ceased, and the captive observed:

      "Ha! another scoundrel! If my ears do not play me false, there are now three waiting for me to kick them to the hangman."

      Restraining Paddy and Bottles, who each wished to reply in heroic verse to this sally, I stepped to the door.

      "Sir," said I civilly, "I fear a great blunder has been done. I – "

      "Why," said the captive with a sneer, "'tis the Irishman! 'Tis the king of the Irelands. Open the door, pig."

      My elation knew no bounds.

      "Paddy," cried I, "you have the right little black man." But there was no time for celebration. I must first answer my enemy. "You will remember that I kicked you once," said I, "and if you have a memory as long as my finger be careful I do not kick you again, else even people as far away as the French will think you are a meteor. But I would not be bandying words at long range. Paddy, unbar the door."

      "If I can," muttered Paddy, fumbling with a lot of machinery so ingenious that it would require a great lack of knowledge to thoroughly understand it. In the mean time we could hear Forister move away from the door, and by the sound of a leisurely scrape of a chair on the floor I judge he had taken his seat somewhere near the centre of the room. Bottles was handling his pistol and regarding me.

      "Yes," said I, "if he fires, do you pepper him fairly. Otherwise await my orders. Paddy, you slug, unbar the door."

      "If I am able," said Paddy, still muttering and fumbling with his contrivances. He had no sooner mouthed the words than the door flew open as if by magic, and we discovered a room bright with the light of a fire and candles. Forister was seated negligently at a table in the centre of the room. His legs were crossed, but his naked sword lay on the table at his hand. He had the first word, because I was amazed, almost stunned, by the precipitous opening of the door.

      "Ho! ho!" he observed frigidly, "'tis indeed the king of the Irelands, accompanied by the red-headed duke who has entertained me for some time, and a third party with a thief's face who handles a loaded pistol with such abandon as leads me to suppose that he once may have been a highwayman. A very pretty band."

      "Use your tongue for a garter, Forister," said I. "I want my papers."

      CHAPTER V

      "Your 'papers'?" said Forister. "Damn you and your papers. What would I know of your papers?"

      "I mean," said I fiercely, "the papers that you stole out of my chamber in the inn at Bristol."

      The man actually sank back in his chair and laughed me up to the roof.

      "'Papers'!"

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