Mr Millington put his hand to his forehead. “Let me think a moment,” he said in the quavering voice of old age. “Let me think for a moment, and something will come back to me. At my time of life it’s a good way to go back.”
Smeaton waited in silence for some little time, and then it seemed the old man had struck some chord of memory.
Suddenly he sat upright in his easy-chair, and his eyes sparkled. “It is coming back by degrees,” he said in his thin, husky voice; “it is coming back.”
There was another pause, in which it seemed he was trying to arrange his ideas clearly. Then he spoke slowly but distinctly.
“I remember I had a lot of trouble over the job. The order was first given to some stationers in the City, but the gentleman was so fussy and confused in his instructions that they sent him down straight to me. I thought I understood what he wanted, but I had to engrave it three times before he was satisfied. That’s why I happen to remember it so well.”
“Now, do you remember, or did you ever know, the name of this fussy person who was so hard to please?”
“I ought to remember it,” said Millington plaintively. “It was not an uncommon name either; I should recall it in a moment if I heard it. But it has escaped me.”
Smeaton’s face clouded. “That’s unfortunate, but it may come back to you presently. Proper names are the hardest things to remember as we get on in life.”
Millington struggled for a little time longer with the ebbing tide of reminiscence, but to no purpose.
Smeaton went on another tack.