[The Just and the Unjust by Vaughan Kester]@TWC D-Link bookThe Just and the Unjust CHAPTER ELEVEN 4/5
He would slip out to Idle Hour that afternoon or evening; he couldn't leave Mount Hope without seeing her. The coroner drummed on his desk; he wondered what had taken Moxlow from the room in such haste.
The prosecuting attorney's brisk step sounded in the hall again, and he reentered the room and resumed his chair. "Just one or two more questions, North, and then I guess we'll have to let you go," he said.
"You have been on very friendly terms with the murdered man for some time, have you not ?" "He was very kind to me on numerous occasions." "In a business way, perhaps ?" "Largely in a business way, yes." "It--pardon me--usually had to do with raising money, had it not ?" North laughed. "It had." "You were familiar with certain little peculiarities of his, were you not, his mistrust of banks for instance ?" "Yes, he had very little confidence in banks, judging from what he said of them." "Did he ever tell you that he had large sums of money hidden away about the store ?" "Never." "But always when you had business dealings with him he gave you the ready money, very rarely a check ?" "Never in all my experience a check, always the cash." "Yet the sums involved were usually considerable ?" "In one or two instances they reached a thousand dollars, if you call that considerable." "And he always had the money on hand ?" "Well, I can't quite say that; it always involved a preliminary discussion of the transaction; I had to see him and tell him what I wanted and then go again after the money.
It was as if he wished me to think he did not keep any large sum about him at the store." "Did he ever, in talking with you, express any apprehension of robbery or violence ?" "No, never." "You had spoken to him about those bonds before ?" "Yes, Monday I saw him and asked him if he would take them off my hand." "And he gave you to understand that if you would wait a day or two he would buy the bonds." North nodded. "Hadn't you learned prior to going to the store that McBride had just received three thousand dollars in cash from Atkinson ?" "Yes, I knew that,--Langham told me." "So that it is reasonable to suppose that McBride had at least four thousand dollars in his safe Thursday afternoon." "I suppose it is, but I saw only the thousand he paid me for the bonds." "That came from the safe ?" "Yes." "I guess that's all for the present, North." "Do you mean you shall want to see me again ?" asked North, rising. "Yes, you won't leave town to-day; the inquest is to be held this afternoon, you will probably be wanted then, so hold yourself in readiness." "I hope you will arrange to get through with me as soon as possible, Moxlow!" "We won't put you to any unnecessary inconvenience if we can help it," returned Moxlow, with a queer cold smile. "Thank you," said North and quitted the room. He sauntered out into the street; he was disposed to consider Mr.Moxlow as something of a fool, as a rank amateur in the present crisis.
He turned into the Square and halted for an instant before the dingy store that had been the scene of the recent tragedy.
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