The Store Boy. Alger Horatio Jr.

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lost, yet here, after some years, appeared a man who knew of it. As Mr. Barclay had been reticent about his business affairs, he had never told his wife about having deposited this sum with Squire Davenport, and of this fact the squire had meanly taken advantage.

      "What proof have you of this strange and improbable story?" asked the squire, after a nervous pause.

      "The best of proof," answered the tramp promptly. "The note was found and is now in existence."

      "Who holds it—that is, admitting for a moment the truth of your story?"

      "I do; it is in my pocket at this moment."

      At this moment Tom Davenport opened the door of the apartment, and stared in open-eyed amazement at his father's singular visitor.

      "Leave the room, Tom," said his father hastily. "This man is consulting me on business."

      "Is that your son, squire?" asked the tramp, with a familiar nod.

      "He's quite a young swell."

      "What business can my father have with such a cad?" thought Tom, disgusted.

      Tom was pleased, nevertheless, at being taken for "a young swell."

      CHAPTER VIII SQUIRE DAVENPORT'S FINANCIAL OPERATION

      Squire Davenport was a thoroughly respectable man in the estimation of the community. That such a man was capable of defrauding a poor widow, counting on her ignorance, would have plunged all his friends and acquaintances into the profoundest amazement.

      Yet this was precisely what the squire had done.

      Mr. Barclay, who had prospered beyond his wife's knowledge, found himself seven years before in possession of a thousand dollars in hard cash. Knowing that the squire had a better knowledge of suitable investments than he, he went to him one day and asked advice. Now, the squire was fond of money. When he saw the ample roll of bank notes which his neighbor took from his wallet, he felt a desire to possess them. They would not be his, to be sure, but merely to have them under his control seemed pleasant. So he said:

      "Friend Barclay, I should need time to consider that question. Are you in a hurry?"

      "I should like to get the money out of my possession. I might lose it or have it stolen. Besides, I don't want my wife to discover that I have it."

      "It might make her extravagant, perhaps," suggested the squire.

      "No, I am not afraid of that; but I want some day to surprise her by letting her see that I am a richer man than she thinks."

      "Very judicious! Then no one knows that you have the money?"

      "No one; I keep my business to myself."

      "You are a wise man. I'll tell you what I will do, friend Barclay. While I am not prepared to recommend any particular investment, I will take the money and give you my note for it, agreeing to pay six per cent. interest. Of course I shall invest it in some way, and I may gain or I may lose, but even if I do lose you will be safe, for you will have my note, and will receive interest semi-annually."

      The proposal struck Mr. Barclay quite favorably.

      "I suppose I can have the money when I want it again?" he inquired.

      "Oh, certainly! I may require a month's notice to realize on securities; but if I have the money in bank I won't even ask that."

      "Then take the money, squire, and give me the note."

      So, in less than five minutes, the money found its way into Squire Davenport's strong box, and Mr. Barclay left the squire's presence well satisfied with his note of hand in place of his roll of greenbacks.

      Nearly two years passed. Interest was paid punctually three times, and another payment was all but due when the unfortunate creditor died in Chicago. Then it was that a terrible temptation assailed Squire Davenport. No one knew of the trust his neighbor had reposed in him—not even his wife. Of course, if the note was found in his pocket, all would be known. But perhaps it would not be known. In that case, the thousand dollars and thirty dollars interest might be retained without anyone being the wiser.

      It is only fair to say that Squire Davenport's face flushed with shame as the unworthy thought came to him, but still he did not banish it. He thought the matter over, and the more he thought the more unwilling he was to give up this sum, which all at once had become dearer to him than all the rest of his possessions.

      "I'll wait to see whether the note is found," he said to himself. "Of course, if it is, I will pay it—" That is, he would pay it if he were obliged to do it.

      Poor Barclay was buried in Chicago—it would have been too expensive to bring on the body—and pretty soon it transpired that he had left no property, except the modest cottage in which his widow and son continued to live.

      Poor Mrs. Barclay! Everybody pitied her, and lamented her straitened circumstances. Squire Davenport kept silence, and thought, with guilty joy, "They haven't found the note; I can keep the money, and no one will be the wiser!"

      How a rich man could have been guilty of such consummate meaness I will not undertake to explain, but "the love of money is the root of evil," and Squire Davenport had love of money in no common measure.

      Five years passed. Mrs. Barclay was obliged to mortgage her house to obtain the means of living, and the very man who supplied her with the money was the very man whom her husband had blindly trusted. She little dreamed that it was her own money he was doling out to her.

      In fact, Squire Davenport himself had almost forgotten it. He had come to consider the thousand dollars and interest fully and absolutely his own, and had no apprehension that his mean fraud would ever be discovered. Like a thunderbolt, then, came to him the declaration of his unsavory visitor that the note was in existence, and was in the hands of a man who meant to use it. Smitten with sudden panic, he stared in the face of the tramp. But he was not going to give up without a struggle.

      "You are evidently trying to impose upon me," he said, mentally bracing up. "You wish to extort money from me."

      "So I do," said the tramp quietly.

      "Ha! you admit it?" exclaimed the squire.

      "Certainly; I wouldn't have taken the trouble to come here at great expense and inconvenience if I hadn't been expecting to make some money."

      "Then you have come to the wrong person; I repeat it, you've come to the wrong person!" said the squire, straightening his back and eying his companion sternly.

      "I begin to think I have," assented the visitor.

      "Ha! he weakens!" thought Squire Davenport. "My good man, I recommend you to turn over a new leaf, and seek to earn an honest living, instead of trying to levy blackmail on men of means."

      "An honest living!" repeated the tramp, with a laugh. "This advice comes well from you."

      Once more the squire felt uncomfortable and apprehensive.

      "I don't understand you," he said irritably. "However, as you yourself admit, you have come to the wrong person."

      "Just so," said the visitor, rising. "I now go to the right person."

      "What do you mean?" asked Squire Davenport, in alarm.

      "I

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