The night-watchman sat brooding darkly
over life and its troubles. A shooting corn
on the little toe of his left foot, and a touch of
liver, due, he was convinced, to the unlawful cellar
work of the landlord of the Queen’s Head, had
induced in him a vein of profound depression.
A discarded boot stood by his side, and his gray-stockinged
foot protruded over the edge of the jetty until a
passing waterman gave it a playful rap with his oar.
A subsequent inquiry as to the price of pigs’
trotters fell on ears rendered deaf by suffering.
“I might ’ave expected
it,” said the watchman, at last. “I
done that man-if you can call him a man-a
kindness once, and this is my reward for it.
Do a man a kindness, and years arterwards ’e
comes along and hits you over your tenderest corn
with a oar.”
He took up his boot, and, inserting
his foot with loving care, stooped down and fastened
the laces.
Do a man a kindness, he continued,
assuming a safer posture, and ’e tries to borrow
money off of you; do a woman a kindness and she thinks
you want tr marry ’er; do an animal a kindness
and it tries to bite you-same as a horse
bit a sailorman I knew once, when ’e sat on its
head to ’elp it get up. He sat too far
for’ard, pore chap.
Kindness never gets any thanks.
I remember a man whose pal broke ’is leg while
they was working together unloading a barge; and he
went off to break the news to ’is pal’s
wife. A kind-’earted man ’e was as
ever you see, and, knowing ’ow she would take
on when she ’eard the news, he told her fust
of all that ’er husband was killed. She
took on like a mad thing, and at last, when she couldn’t
do anything more and ’ad quieted down a bit,
he told ’er that it was on’y a case of
a broken leg, thinking that ’er joy would be
so great that she wouldn’t think anything of
that. He ’ad to tell her three times afore
she understood ’im, and then, instead of being
thankful to ’im for ’is thoughtfulness,
she chased him ’arf over Wapping with a chopper,
screaming with temper.
I remember Ginger Dick and Peter Russet
trying to do old Sam Small a kindness one time when
they was ’aving a rest ashore arter a v’y’ge.
They ’ad took a room together as usual, and for
the fust two or three days they was like brothers.
That couldn’t last, o’ course, and Sam
was so annoyed one evening at Ginger’s suspiciousness
by biting a ’arf-dollar Sam owed ’im and
finding it was a bad ’un, that ’e went
off to spend the evening all alone by himself.
He felt a bit dull at fust, but arter
he had ’ad two or three ’arf-pints ’e
began to take a brighter view of things. He found
a very nice, cosey little public-’ouse he hadn’t
been in before, and, arter getting two and threepence
and a pint for the ’arf-dollar with Ginger’s
tooth-marks on, he began to think that the world wasn’t
’arf as bad a place as people tried to make
out.
There was on’y one other man
in the little bar Sam was in-a tall, dark
chap, with black side-whiskers and spectacles, wot
kept peeping round the partition and looking very
’ard at everybody that came in.
“I’m just keeping my eye
on ’em, cap’n,” he ses to Sam,
in a low voice.
“Ho!” ses Sam.
“They don’t know me in
this disguise,” ses the dark man, “but
I see as ’ow you spotted me at once. Anybody
’ud have a ’ard time of it to deceive
you; and then they wouldn’t gain nothing by it.”
“Nobody ever ’as yet,” ses
Sam, smiling at ’im.
“And nobody ever will,”
ses the dark man, shaking his ’cad; “if
they was all as fly as you, I might as well put the
shutters up. How did you twig I was a detective
officer, cap’n?”
Sam, wot was taking a drink, got some
beer up ’is nose with surprise.
“That’s my secret,”
he ses, arter the tec ’ad patted ’im
on the back and brought ’im round.
“You’re a marvel, that’s
wot you are,” ses the tec, shaking his ’ead.
“Have one with me.”
Sam said he didn’t mind if ’e
did, and arter drinking each other’s healths
very perlite ‘e ordered a couple o’ twopenny
smokes, and by way of showing off paid for ’em
with ’arf a quid.
“That’s right, ain’t
it?” ses the barmaid, as he stood staring
very ’ard at the change. “I ain’t
sure about that ’arf-crown, now I come to look
at it; but it’s the one you gave me.”
Pore Sam, with a tec standing alongside
of ’im, said it was quite right, and put it
into ’is pocket in a hurry and began to talk
to the tec as fast as he could about a murder he ’ad
been reading about in the paper that morning.
They went and sat down by a comfortable little fire
that was burning in the bar, and the tec told ‘im
about a lot o’ murder cases he ’ad been
on himself.
“I’m down ’ere now
on special work,” he ses, “looking
arter sailormen.”
“Wot ha’ they been doing?” ses
Sam.
“When I say looking arter, I
mean protecting ’em,” ses the tec.
“Over and over agin some pore feller, arter
working ’ard for months at sea, comes ’ome
with a few pounds in ’is pocket and gets robbed
of the lot. There’s a couple o’ chaps
down ’ere I’m told off to look arter special,
but it’s no good unless I can catch ’em
red-’anded.”
“Red-’anded?” ses Sam.
“With their hands in the chap’s pockets,
I mean,” ses the tec.
Sam gave a shiver. “Somebody
had their ’ands in my pockets once,” he
ses. “Four pun ten and some coppers
they got.”
“Wot was they like?” ses the tee,
starting.
Sam shook his ’ead. “They
seemed to me to be all hands, that’s all I know
about ’em,” he ses. “Arter
they ’ad finished they leaned me up agin the
dock wall an’ went off.”
“It sounds like ’em,”
ses the tec, thoughtfully. “It was
Long Pete and Fair Alf, for a quid; that’s the
two I’m arter.”
He put his finger in ’is weskit-pocket.
“That’s who I am,” he ses,
’anding Sam a card; “Detective-Sergeant
Cubbins. If you ever get into any trouble at
any time, you come to me.”
Sam said ’e would, and arter
they had ’ad another drink together the tec
shifted ’is seat alongside of ’im and talked
in his ear.
“If I can nab them two chaps
I shall get promotion,” he ses; “and
it’s a fi’-pun note to anybody that
helps me. I wish I could persuade you to.”
“’Ow’s it to be done?” ses
Sam, looking at ’im.
“I want a respectable-looking
seafaring man,” ses the tec, speaking very
slow; “that’s you. He goes up Tower
Hill to-morrow night at nine o’clock, walking
very slow and very unsteady on ’is pins, and
giving my two beauties the idea that ’e is three
sheets in the wind. They come up and rob ’im,
and I catch them red-’anded. I get promotion,
and you get a fiver.”
“But ’ow do you know they’ll
be there?” ses Sam, staring at ’im.
Mr. Cubbins winked at ’im and tapped ’is
nose.
“We ‘ave to know
a good deal in our line o’ business,” he
ses.
“Still,” ses Sam, “I don’t
see -”
“Narks,” says the tec;
“coppers’ narks. You’ve ’eard
of them, cap’n? Now, look ’ere.
Have you got any money?”
“I got a matter o’ twelve
quid or so,” ses Sam, in a of hand way.
“The very thing,” says
the tec. “Well, to-morrow night you put
that in your pocket, and be walking up Tower Hill
just as the clock strikes nine. I promise you
you’ll be robbed afore two minutes past, and
by two and a ’arf past I shall ’ave
my hands on both of ’em. Have all the money
in one pocket, so as they can get it neat and quick,
in case they get interrupted. Better still,
’ave it in a purse; that makes it easier
to bring it ’ome to ’em.”
“Wouldn’t it be enough
if they stole the purse?” ses Sam.
“I should feel safer that way, too.”
Mr. Cubbins shook his ’ead,
very slow and solemn. “That wouldn’t
do at all,” he ses. “The more
money they steal, the longer they’ll get; you
know that, cap’n, without me telling you.
If you could put fifty quid in it would be so much
the better. And, what-ever you do, don’t
make a noise. I don’t want a lot o’
clumsy policemen interfering in my business.”
“Still, s’pose you didn’t
catch ’em,” ses Sam, “where
should I be?”
“You needn’t be afraid
o’ that,” ses the tec, with a laugh.
“Here, I’ll tell you wot I’ll do,
and that’ll show you the trust I put in you.”
He drew a big di’mond ring off
of ’is finger and handed it to Sam.
“Put that on your finger,”
he ses, “and keep it there till I give you
your money back and the fi’-pun note reward.
It’s worth seventy quid if it’s worth
a farthing, and was given to me by a lady of title
for getting back ’er jewellery for ’er.
Put it on, and wotever you do, don’t lose it!”
He sat and watched while Sam forced it on is finger.
“You don’t need to flash
it about too much,” he ses, looking at ’im
rather anxious. “There’s men I know
as ’ud cut your finger off to get that.”
Sam shoved his ’and in his pocket,
but he kept taking it out every now and then and ’olding
his finger up to the light to look at the di’mond.
Mr. Cubbins got up to go at last, saying that he ’ad
got a call to make at the police-station, and they
went out together.
“Nine o’clock sharp,”
he ses, as they shook hands, “on Tower Hill.”
“I’ll be there,” ses Sam.
“And, wotever you do, no noise,
no calling out,” ses the tec, “and
don’t mention a word of this to a living soul.”
Sam shook ’ands with ’im
agin, and then, hiding his ’and in his pocket,
went off ’ome, and, finding Ginger and Peter
Russet wasn’t back, went off to bed.
He ’eard ’em coming upstairs
in the dark in about an hour’s time, and, putting
the ’and with the ring on it on the counterpane,
shut ’is eyes and pretended to be fast asleep.
Ginger lit the candle, and they was both beginning
to undress when Peter made a noise and pointed to Sam’s
’and.
“Wot’s up?” ses
Ginger, taking the candle and going over to Sam’s
bed. “Who’ve you been robbing, you
fat pirate?”
Sam kept ’is eyes shut and ’eard
’em whispering; then he felt ’em take
’is hand up and look at it. “Where
did you get it, Sam?” ses Peter.
“He’s asleep,” ses
Ginger, “sound asleep. I b’lieve
if I was to put ’is finger in the candle he
wouldn’t wake up.”
“You try it,” ses
Sam, sitting up in bed very sharp and snatching his
’and away. “Wot d’ye mean coming
’ome at all hours and waking me up?” “Where
did you get that ring?” ses Ginger.
“Friend o’ mine,” ses Sam,
very short.
“Who was it?” ses Peter.
“It’s a secret,” ses Sam.
“You wouldn’t ’ave
a secret from your old pal Ginger, Sam, would you?”
ses Ginger.
“Old wot?” ses Sam. “Wot
did you call me this arternoon?”
“I called you a lot o’
things I’m sorry for,” ses Ginger,
who was bursting with curiosity, “and I beg
your pardin, Sam.”
“Shake ’ands on it,” ses Peter,
who was nearly as curious as Ginger.
They shook hands, but Sam said he
couldn’t tell ’em about the ring; and
several times Ginger was on the point of calling ’im
the names he ’ad called ’im in the arternoon,
on’y Peter trod on ’is foot and stopped
him. They wouldn’t let ’im go to
sleep for talking, and at last, when ’e was
pretty near tired out, he told ’em all about
it.
“Going-to ’ave
your-pocket picked?” ses Ginger,
staring at ’im, when ’e had finished.
“I shall be watched over,” ses Sam.
“He’s gorn stark, staring
mad,” ses Ginger. “Wot a good
job it is he’s got me and you to look arter
’im, Peter.”
“Wot d’ye mean?” ses Sam.
“Mean?” ses
Ginger. “Why, it’s a put-up job to
rob you, o’ course. I should ha’
thought even your fat ‘ead could ha’ seen
that’:”
“When I want your advice I’ll
ask you for it,” ses Sam, losing ’is
temper. “Wot about the di’mond ring-eh?”
“You stick to it,” ses
Ginger, “and keep out o’ Mr. Cubbins’s
way. That’s my advice to you. ’Sides,
p’r’aps it ain’t a real one.”
Sam told ’im agin he didn’t
want none of ’is advice, and, as Ginger wouldn’t
leave off talking, he pretended to go to sleep.
Ginger woke ’im up three times to tell ’im
wot a fool ’e was, but ’e got so fierce
that he gave it up at last and told ’im to go
’is own way.
Sam wouldn’t speak to either
of ’em next morning, and arter breakfast he
went off on ’is own. He came back while
Peter and Ginger was out, and they wasted best part
o’ the day trying to find ’im.
“We’ll be on Tower Hill
just afore nine and keep ‘im out o’ mischief,
any way,” ses Peter.
Ginger nodded. “And be
called names for our pains,” he ses.
“I’ve a good mind to let ’im be
robbed.”
“It ’ud serve ’im
right,” ses Peter, “on’y then
he’d want to borrer off of us. Look here!
Why not-why not rob ’im ourselves?”
“Wot?” ses Ginger, starting.
“Walk up behind ’im and
rob ’im,” ses Peter. “He’ll
think it’s them two chaps he spoke about, and
when ’e comes ’ome complaining to us we’ll
tell ’im it serves ’im right. Arter
we’ve ’ad a game with ’im for a day
or two we’ll give ’im ’is money
back.”
“But he’d reckernize us,” ses
Ginger.
“We must disguise ourselves,”
ses Peter, in a whisper. “There’s
a barber’s shop in Cable Street, where I’ve
seen beards in the winder. You hook ’em
on over your ears. Get one o’ them each,
pull our caps over our eyes and turn our collars up,
and there you are.”
Ginger made a lot of objections, not
because he didn’t think it was a good idea,
but because he didn’t like Peter thinking of
it instead of ’im; but he gave way at last,
and, arter he ’ad got the beard, he stood for
a long time in front o’ the glass thinking wot
a difference it would ha’ made to his looks
if he had ’ad black ‘air instead o’
red.
Waiting for the evening made the day
seem very long to ’em; but it came at last,
and, with the beards in their pockets, they slipped
out and went for a walk round. They ’ad
’arf a pint each at a public-’ouse at the
top of the Minories, just to steady themselves, and
then they came out and hooked on their beards; and
wot with them, and pulling their caps down and turning
their coat-collars up, there wasn’t much of their
faces to be seen by anybody.
It was just five minutes to nine when
they got to Tower Hill, and they walked down the middle
of the road, keeping a bright lookout for old Sam.
A little way down they saw a couple o’ chaps
leaning up agin a closed gate in the dock wall lighting
their pipes, and Peter and Ginger both nudged each
other with their elbows at the same time. They
’ad just got to the bottom of the Hill when
Sam turned the corner.
Peter wouldn’t believe at fust
that the old man wasn’t really the worse for
liquor, ‘e was so lifelike. Many a drunken
man would ha’ been proud to ha’ done it
’arf so well, and it made ’im pleased to
think that Sam was a pal of ’is. Him and
Ginger turned and crept up behind the old man on tiptoe,
and then all of a sudden he tilted Sam’s cap
over ’is eyes and flung his arms round ’im,
while Ginger felt in ’is coat-pockets and took
out a leather purse chock full o’ money.
It was all done and over in a moment,
and then, to Ginger’s great surprise, Sam suddenly
lifted ’is foot and gave ’im a fearful
kick on the shin of ’is leg, and at the same
time let drive with all his might in ’is face.
Ginger went down as if he ’ad been shot, and
as Peter went to ’elp him up he got a bang over
the ’cad that put ‘im alongside o’
Ginger, arter which Sam turned and trotted off down
the Hill like a dancing-bear.
For ’arf a minute Ginger didn’t
know where ’e was, and afore he found out the
two men they’d seen in the gateway came up, and
one of ’em put his knee in Ginger’s back
and ’eld him, while the other caught hold of
his ’and and dragged the purse out of it.
Arter which they both made off up the Hill as ’ard
as they could go, while Peter Russet in a faint voice
called “Police!” arter them.
He got up presently and helped Ginger
up, and they both stood there pitying themselves,
and ’elping each other to think of names to call
Sam.
“Well, the money’s gorn,
and it’s ’is own silly fault,” ses
Ginger. “But wotever ’appens, he
mustn’t know that we had a ’and in it,
mind that.”
“He can starve for all I care,”
ses Peter, feeling his ’ead. “I
won’t lend ’im a ha’penny-not
a single, blessed ha’penny.”
“Who’d ha’ thought
‘e could ha’ hit like that?” says
Ginger. “That’s wot gets over me.
I never ’ad such a bang in my life-never.
I’m going to ‘ave a little drop
o’ brandy-my ’ead is fair swimming.”
Peter ’ad one, too; but though
they went into the private bar, it wasn’t private
enough for them; and when the landlady asked Ginger
who’d been kissing ’im, he put ’is
glass down with a bang and walked straight off ’ome.
Sam ’adn’t turned up by
the time they got there, and pore Ginger took advantage
of it to put a little warm candle-grease on ’is
bad leg. Then he bathed ’is face very
careful and ’elped Peter bathe his ’ead.
They ’ad just finished when they heard Sam
coming upstairs, and Ginger sat down on ‘is
bed and began to whistle, while Peter took up a bit
o’ newspaper and stood by the candle reading
it.
“Lor’ lumme, Ginger!”
ses Sam, staring at ‘im. “What
ha’ you been a-doing to your face?”
“Me?” ses Ginger,
careless-like. “Oh, we ’ad a bit
of a scrap down Limehouse way with some Scotchies.
Peter got a crack over the ’ead at the same
time.”
“Ah, I’ve ’ad a
bit of a scrap, too,” ses Sam, smiling all
over, “but I didn’t get marked.”
“Oh!” ses Peter,
without looking up from ’is paper. “Was
it a little boy, then?” ses Ginger.
“No, it wasn’t a little
boy neither, Ginger,” ses Sam; “it
was a couple o’ men twice the size of you and
Peter here, and I licked ’em both. It
was the two men I spoke to you about last night.”
“Oh!” ses Peter agin, yawning.
“I did a bit o’ thinking
this morning,” ses Sam, nodding at ’em,
“and I don’t mind owning up that it was
owing to wot you said. You was right, Ginger,
arter all.”
“Fust thing I did arter breakfast,”
ses Sam, “I took that di’mond ring
to a pawnshop and found out it wasn’t a di’mond
ring. Then I did a bit more thinking, and I
went round to a shop I know and bought a couple o’
knuckle-dusters.”
“Couple o’ wot?” ses Ginger,
in a choking voice.
“Knuckle-dusters,” ses
Sam, “and I turned up to-night at Tower Hill
with one on each ’and just as the clock was
striking nine. I see ’em the moment I
turned the corner-two enormous big chaps,
a yard acrost the shoulders, coming down the middle
of the road-You’ve got a cold, Ginger!”
“No, I ain’t,” ses Ginger.
“I pretended to be drunk, same
as the tec told me,” ses Sam, “and
then I felt ’em turn round and creep up behind
me. One of ’em come up behind and put
’is knee in my back and caught me by the throat,
and the other gave me a punch in the chest, and while
I was gasping for breath took my purse away.
Then I started on ’em.”
“Lor’!” ses Ginger, very nasty.
“I fought like a lion,”
ses Sam. “Twice they ’ad me
down, and twice I got up agin and hammered ’em.
They both of ’em ’ad knives, but my blood
was up, and I didn’t take no more notice of ’em
than if they was made of paper. I knocked ’em
both out o’ their hands, and if I hit ’em
in the face once I did a dozen times. I surprised
myself.”
“You surprise me,” ses Ginger.
“All of a sudden,” ses
Sam, “they see they ’ad got to do with
a man wot didn’t know wot fear was, and they
turned round and ran off as hard as they could run.
You ought to ha’ been there, Ginger. You’d
’ave enjoyed it.”
Ginger Dick didn’t answer ’im.
Having to sit still and listen to all them lies without
being able to say anything nearly choked ’im.
He sat there gasping for breath.
“O’ course, you got your
purse back in the fight, Sam?” ses Peter.
“No, mate,” ses Sam.
“I ain’t going to tell you no lies-I
did not.”
“And ’ow are you going
to live, then, till you get a ship, Sam?” ses
Ginger, in a nasty voice. “You won’t
get nothing out o’ me, so you needn’t
think it.”
“Wot on earth’s the matter, Ginger?”
“Nor me,” ses Peter. “Not
a brass farthing.”
“There’s no call to be
nasty about it, mates,” ses Sam. “I
’ad the best fight I ever ’ad in my life,
and I must put up with the loss. A man can’t
’ave it all his own way.”
“’Ow much was it?” ses Peter.
“Ten brace-buttons, three French
ha’pennies, and a bit o’ tin,” ses
Sam. “Wot on earth’s the matter,
Ginger?”
Ginger didn’t answer him.