[The Wrong Box by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne]@TWC D-Link bookThe Wrong Box CHAPTER VI 30/31
If he should take this opinion, and will either come here himself or let me see him in his sick-room--' 'Quite impossible,' cried Morris. 'Well, then, you see,' said Mr Judkin, 'how my hands are tied.
The whole affair must go at once into the hands of the police.' Morris mechanically folded the cheque and restored it to his pocket--book. 'Good--morning,' said he, and scrambled somehow out of the bank. 'I don't know what they suspect,' he reflected; 'I can't make them out, their whole behaviour is thoroughly unbusinesslike.
But it doesn't matter; all's up with everything.
The money has been paid; the police are on the scent; in two hours that idiot Pitman will be nabbed--and the whole story of the dead body in the evening papers.' If he could have heard what passed in the bank after his departure he would have been less alarmed, perhaps more mortified. 'That was a curious affair, Mr Bell,' said Mr Judkin. 'Yes, sir,' said Mr Bell, 'but I think we have given him a fright.' 'O, we shall hear no more of Mr Morris Finsbury,' returned the other; 'it was a first attempt, and the house have dealt with us so long that I was anxious to deal gently.
But I suppose, Mr Bell, there can be no mistake about yesterday? It was old Mr Finsbury himself ?' 'There could be no possible doubt of that,' said Mr Bell with a chuckle. 'He explained to me the principles of banking.' 'Well, well,' said Mr Judkin.
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