2012年6月11日星期一

He was actually insolent

"As like as not," chimed in Philip, glibly. "Have you got the bonds with you?" he asked, after a pause. "Did you bring them back?" "No. Rogers, the constable, said I could not take them till I had proved them to be my property. He is a stupid old countryman, and knows nothing about law. He was evidently prejudiced in favor of the Gilberts." "Well, what did you do with Harry?" "He ought to have been taken to the lockup, but the constable didn't want to do it, and I agreed that he might stay in the house, under guard of the constable, of course, for I apprehended the boy might make an effort to run away." "Did he seem much frightened?" asked Philip, curiously. "No; he seemed very indignant at being suspected. Of course, it was all put on. He was actually insolent, and defied me to take the bonds. I suppose he thought he could put me off the scent by his bravado." "What are you going to do to-morrow?" asked Philip. "I shall have him taken before a magistrate, and shall formally charge him with the theft." "What did Uncle Obed say?" inquired Philip, suddenly. "It really is of very little consequence what that old man said," returned Colonel Ross, stiffly. "Of course, he sided with the Gilberts, and he actually had the effrontery to say that the bonds had been in the house for several days." "He couldn't have given the bonds to Harry, could he?" "Of course not. The man is a pauper, or about the same as one. Every day I expect he will come to me to ask pecuniary assistance." "Will you give him any money if he does?" "Yes; enough to get him back to Illinois. He ought never to have left there." Philip went to bed in a state of wonderment, but at the same time in a state of satisfaction. Suspicion had been diverted from him, the real culprit, and the boy whom he hated more than any other was likely to suffer for his misdeeds. If he had had a conscience, this thought ought to have made him uncomfortable, but it did not. He thought, rather, that under cover of this charge made against another, he and Congreve would be free to use the proceeds of the stolen bonds, and he began even to plan in what way he would spend his portion. Meanwhile, a very different scene took place in the cottage of the Gilberts, after the Colonel had taken his leave.

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