[A Dash from Diamond City by George Manville Fenn]@TWC D-Link bookA Dash from Diamond City CHAPTER SEVEN 5/15
I know the way!" "Of course!" snarled Anson.
"Mr Ingleborough's doing, I suppose.
Then I have been watched." "Yes, my doing," said the person named.
"As soon as I suspected you of illicit dealing I kept an eye upon you and told Mr Norton here what I thought." "Cowardly, sneaking cur!" cried Anson, grinding his teeth. "No, sir," cried the director sternly: "faithful servant of the company." "Where are your proofs that I am not ?" cried Anson fiercely. "Not found yet," said the officer; "but with all your cunning I daresay we shall trace them." "Go on," said Anson.
"I'm ready for you." The next minute the whole party were straggling through the camp-like town towards the outskirts, to gather together at the very ordinary shed-like house of mud wall and fluted corrugated-iron roofing, where the wife of one of the men at the mine stared in wonder at the party, and then looked in awe at her lodger, her eyes very wide open and startled as she grasped what the visit meant. "Oh, Mr Anson, what have you been a-doing of ?" she cried, and burst into tears. West looked at the poor woman with a feeling of pity, and then felt disposed to kick Anson for his brutality, for the clerk's gesture was that of an ill-tempered cur: he literally snapped at her. "Out of the way, you idiot!" he cried, "and let this police-constable and his party come by." West saw the directors exchange glances before following the superintendent into the little house, leaving the two clerks to the last, the police-constables remaining watchfully at the door. "Master Anson is regularly cutting the ground from under him, Ingle," said West softly. "Yes: the fool! I take it to be a tacit confession.
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