"Hang it," he said, "unless I have seen you in a dream, I am ready to swear that we meet today for the first time."
"Look at me closely, my friend," he said. "Will you really swear that you never saw me before?"
The Canadian, more and more surprised at this pressing, leant over to the singular speaker, and, taking up the lantern, made a careful inspection of him, which Don Pelagio permitted with the best possible grace. At the expiration of a moment, the adventurer deposited the lantern on the table again, and scratched his head with an embarrassed air.
"It is strange," he said. "I now fancy that you may be in the right. Certain of your features, to which I did not at first pay attention, are familiar to me, though it is perfectly impossible for me to recollect how or when chance brought us together, if, as you insist on assuring me, we have already met."
"I do not say that we were positively acquainted, but we have met, and remained together for two hours."
"Listen to me. I do not doubt your word, for I do not see what motive you could have in trying to make a fool of me. You appear to me too sober-minded a man for such jokes. Explain yourself frankly, for that will be the only way to settle the matter."
"I see that I must do so. I should have liked to avoid it, because I shall now appear to be compelling you to carry out a promise, by asking of you what I wished to obtain solely from your honour and good heart."
"My worthy father, you are becoming most mysterious, and I really do not know how all this will end."
"One word will give you the clue."
"Say it, then, at once, for deuce take me if I am not as curious as an old woman at this moment."