"A-ba-ne-a, if you please, your honor," suggested the witness, with the politest of bows.
"I beg your pardon, Mr. Ebenier," said the justice, with a smile. "You placed the bag and the money in the locker--did you?"
"I did, your honor; in the captain"s locker: but I didn"t comprehend what was in the bag at the particular moment when it was in my possession."
"Exactly so."
"I was not precisely informed in regard to the nature of the contents of the bag, which was agglomerated in a ma.s.s, and exceedingly heavy for the bulk of the parcel, appearing to consist only of a portion of tow cloth."
"Just so, Mr. Ebenier; we are fortunate in being able to understand you."
"I beg your honor"s pardon, but the initial E in my surname should be p.r.o.nounced like long a."
"Excuse me, monsieur," laughed the justice; "but my French is rather rusty. Will you do me the favor to indicate in what manner the bag and its contents came into your possession."
"With pleasure, your honor. Yesterday afternoon, just previous to Captain Fairfield"s going on sh.o.r.e----"
"Who?" asked Squire Saunders, who was not familiar with Levi"s new t.i.tle.
"Captain Fairfield, your honor."
"You mean Levi?"
"No, your honor; far be it from me to commit the gross disrespect of calling the captain of the yacht in which I sail by his Christian name.
Captain Levi Fairfield, your honor."
"Go on, then. I know whom you mean."
"Yesterday afternoon, just as Captain Fairfield was going on sh.o.r.e--I disremember the precise time, but it was about five o"clock, post meridian."
"That is sufficiently accurate, Mr. Ebenier. Do me the favor to proceed."
"I beg your honor"s pardon, but these interruptions have a tendency to prevent me from following accurately and succinctly the thread of my narrative."
The magistrate bowed, and laughed, as all in the room were doing except Dock and Mr. Fairfield. The witness commenced his story again, repeating everything he had said before; and the squire did not deem it prudent to interrupt him again.
"I was located in a standing position near the entrance to the main cabin; and your honor is aware that, in first-cla.s.s yachts, the descent commences in the standing-room, which in New York yachts is more frequently called the c.o.c.kpit. At a distance of not more than a quarter of a marine league from our yacht lay a fishing schooner, which I was informed by those who probably possessed an accurate knowledge of the intended movements of the schooner, though I really could not now state to your honor the names of the parties from whom I received this intimation----"
"Not material," interposed the squire.
"The information I received may prove to be material, your honor. I was credibly informed that the vessel intended to sail for the Grand Banks or the coast of Labrador, I cannot now swear which, or, indeed, if it was either of these localities. Possibly it was either, possibly it was neither, or possibly it was both. I wish it particularly understood that, under the solemnity of an oath, I do not state positively where the vessel was going. Suffice it to say that she was going on a fishing voyage; but whether for cod, haddock, mackerel, or halibut, or either, or all, or a portion of these piscatorial inhabitants of the mighty deep, I am entirely unable to say."
The court, counsel, and witnesses, with the exceptions before noted, roared with laughter; and the cabin steward smiled complacently, as though he was conscious of having made a point.
"I can only observe, under oath, that I was informed that the vessel intended to depart in search of some of the numerous ichthyological specimens that roam in finny herds through the boundless depths of the sea--as soon as the tide turned."
"Excuse me, Mr. Ebenier, but what has all this to do with the money and the bag?" asked the justice, choking down his laughter.
"I trust I shall be able to demonstrate, to the entire satisfaction of your honor, that there is an intimate connection between these circ.u.mstances and the suspicious articles discovered in the state-room of Captain Fairfield."
"Go on, then. It is almost dinner time."
"A doray--an exceedingly anomalous craft to a resident of New York, where I have had the honor to reside for several seasons--a doray----"
"You mean a dory--don"t you?"
"I am really unable to p.r.o.nounce the word according to any authorized orthography, as it was never my good fortune to see the word in print.
I am not informed whether or not the acute accent is placed over the final e."
"There is no e in the word. D-o-r-y."
"Ah, excuse me! It is not a French word, then, and it is quite proper to call it a dory."
"Precisely so; and now, having settled this important point, that it is a dory, and not a doray, will you inform the court where you got the bag and the money?" said Squire Saunders, beginning to be a little impatient.
But he might as well have attempted to make water run up hill as to induce Mr. C. Augustus Ebenier to relate his story in any other than his own way.
"A dory from the fishing vessel, about to depart on her voyage, paid a visit of courtesy to the Starry Flag. The party which came in the dory consisted of three persons, all of them fishermen, and all of them young men. All, or a portion of them, were evidently personal friends of the four worthy young men who collectively const.i.tute the crew of the yacht, of which I have the honor to be cabin steward. The persons who came on board were not cabin visitors; I am not even aware that they paid their respects to our excellent captain; but I feel compelled to add that, while on board, they behaved with the utmost propriety. I was located----"
"Avast there!" exclaimed the justice. "The court is adjourned till after dinner. I hope the distinguished gentleman will be able to spin out his yarn before bed time."
CHAPTER XI.
THE RESULT OF THE EXAMINATION.
The dignity of the court had been effectually swamped by the grandiloquence of Mr. C. Augustus Ebenier, though it was evident that he was a very important witness. Of course no one was invited to dine at the miser"s, and the court and witnesses went home to dinner. As a compromise, Constable Cooke was asked to dine with his prisoner at Mr.
Watson"s. At the appointed hour in the afternoon the court again a.s.sembled in the house of the miser.
"Mr. Ebenier," said Squire Saunders, "you had proceeded in your narrative, when the court adjourned, to the point where four of the crew of the fishing vessel, about to depart in search of ichthyological specimens, came on board of the yacht, which has the honor to have your valuable services as steward."
"I beg your honor"s pardon; I had the honor, not the yacht," interposed Mr. Ebenier, bowing.
"Well, I should say that the honors were divided," replied the justice; and his remark was regarded as a judicial joke. "If you could commence where you left off; and go on, I should be under very great obligations to you."
"I will make a persistent effort to do so, your honor," added the obliging Mr. C. Augustus Ebenier. "As I had the honor to hear your honor remark, the three young men from the fishing vessel, about to depart, as aforesaid, were on board of our yacht, as aforesaid, and as I was standing near the cabin door, as aforesaid,--now my narrative progresses, your honor,--one of the young men from the fishing schooner aforesaid, as Captain Fairfield was about to go over the side into his boat, rushed up to me with the bag in his hand."
"You mean the shot-bag containing the gold--do you?" asked the squire, now deeply interested in the substance of the story.
"I do, your honor; perhaps I should have said the bag aforesaid, which I thought I had described with sufficient minuteness. The bag had originally contained shot, if the words printed on it can be relied upon----"
"In the name of the Const.i.tution of the United States, don"t repeat the description of the bag!" protested the squire. "One of the young men rushed up to you with the bag in his hand."
"The bag aforesaid, then, your honor. I affirm that he _rushed_ up to me, meaning that he walked briskly and rapidly towards me. He placed the bag--the bag aforesaid, your honor--in my hand, extended for the purpose of receiving it when I understood that he wished to commit it to my keeping."
"Precisely so; what did he say?"