Down there the man with the bandaged head was hanging on to the table and swearing feebly without intermission. Peyrol, after listening for a time with an air of interested recognition as one would to a tune heard many years ago, stopped it by a deep-voiced:

"That will do." After a short silence he added: "You look bien malade, hein? What you call sick," in a tone which if not tender was certainly not hostile. "We will remedy that."

"Who are you?" asked the prisoner, looking frightened and throwing his arm up quickly to guard his head against the coming blow. But Peyrol's uplifted hand fell only on his shoulder in a hearty slap which made him sit down suddenly on a locker in a partly collapsed attitude and unable to speak. But though very much dazed he was able to watch Peyrol open a cupboard and produce from there a small demijohn and two tin cups. He took heart to say plaintively: "My throat's like tinder," and then suspiciously: "Was it you who broke my head?"

"It was me," admitted Peyrol, sitting down on the opposite side of the table and leaning back to look at his prisoner comfortably.

"What the devil did you do that for?" inquired the other with a sort of faint fierceness which left Peyrol unmoved.

"Because you put your nose where you have no business. Understand? I see you there under the moon, penché, eating my tartane with your eyes. You never hear me, hein?"

"I believe you walked on air. Did you mean to kill me?"

"Yes, in preference to letting you go and make a story of it on board your cursed corvette."

"Well then, now's your chance to finish me. I am as weak as a kitten."

"How did you say that? Kitten? Ha, ha, ha!" laughed Peyrol. "You make a nice petit chat." He seized the demijohn by the neck and filled the mugs. "There," he went on, pushing one towards the prisoner – "it's good drink – that."