[The Adventures of Jimmie Dale by Frank L. Packard]@TWC D-Link bookThe Adventures of Jimmie Dale CHAPTER VII 27/72
"And I--what should I say? That you had stolen the stones from your employer and offered them as a bribe to silence me, and that I had refused.
The very act of handing you over to the police would prove the truth of what I said and rob you of even a chance of leniency--FOR THAT OTHER THING.
Is it not so--eh? And why did I not hand you over at once three nights ago? Believe me, my young friend, I should have a very good reason ready, a dozen, if necessary, if it came to that.
But we are borrowing trouble, are we not? We shall not come to that--eh ?" For a moment it seemed to Jimmie Dale, as he watched, that Burton would hurl himself upon the other.
White to the lips, the muscles of his face twitching, Burton clenched his fists and leaned over the table--and then, with sudden revulsion of emotion, he drew back once more, and once more came that choked sob: "You'll pay for this, Isaac--your turn will come for this! "I have been threatened very often," snapped the other contemptuously. "Bah, what are threats! I laugh at them--as I always will." Then, with a quick change of front, his voice a sudden snarl: "Well, we have talked enough.
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