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IN LUCK AT LAST.
BY .WALTER BESAXT.
CHAPTER XI.
MR. JAMES MAKES ATONEMENT.
James arrived as usual in the morning at
nine o’clock, in order to taka down the
shutters. To his astonishment he found
Lala Roy and Iris waiting for him in the
back shop. And they had grave faces.
“James,” said Iris, “your master has
suffered a great shock, and is not himself
this morning. His safe has been broken
open by some one, and mod important
papers have been taken out"
“Papers, miss—papers! Out of the safe!"
“Yes. They are papers of no value what
ever to the thief, whoever ho may be. But
they are of the very greatest importance to
us. Your ma-ter seems to have lost his
memory for a while, and cannot help us in
finding out who has done this wicked thing.
You have been a faithful servant for so long
that I am sure you will do what you can for
us. Think for us. Try to remember if any
body besides yourself has had access to this
room when your master was out of it.”
James sat down. He felt that he must sit
down, though Lala Roy was looking at him
with eyes full of doubt and suspicion. The
whole enormity of his own guilt, though he
had not stolen anything, fell upon him. He
had got the key; he had given it to Mr.
Joseph; and he had received it back again.
In fact, at that very moment it was lying in
his pocket. The worst that he had feared
had happened. The safe was robbed.
He was struck with so horrible a dread
and so fearful a looking forward to judgment
and condemnation that his teeth chattered
and his eye gave way.
“You will think it over, James” said ris
“think it over, and tell us presently if you
can remember anything.”
“Think it over, Mr. James,” Lala Roy
repeated in his deepest tone, and with an
emphatic gesture of his right forefinger.
“Think it over carefully. Like a lamp that
is never extinguished are the eyes of the
faithful servant."
They left him, and James fell lack into
his chair with hollow cheek and beating
heart.
“He told me,” he murmured—“oh, the
villainl—he swore to me that he had taken
nothing from the safe. He said he only
looked in it, and read the contents. The
scoundrell He has stolen the papers! He
must have known they were there. And
then, to save himself, he put me on to the
job. For who would be suspected if not—
oh, Lord!—if not me!”
He grasped his paste-brush and attacked
his work with a feverish anxiiy to find re
lief in exertion; but his heart was not in it,
and presently a thought pierced his brain,
as an arrow pierceth ths heart, and - under
the pang and agony of it his face turned
ashy pale, and the big drops stood upon his
brow.
“For,” bethought, “suppose that the thing
gets abroad; suppose they were to advertise
a reward; suppose the man who made the
key were to see the advertisement or to hear
about it! And he knows my name, too, and
my business; and he’ll let out for a reward
—I know he will—who it was that ordered
that key of him.”
Already he saw himself examined before
a magistrate; already ho saw in imagina
tion that locksmith’s man who made the key
kissing the Testament, and giving his testi
mony in clear and distinct words, which
could not be shaken.
“Oh, Lord! oh, Lord!” he groaned. “No
one will believe me, even if I do confess the
truth; and as for him, I know him well; if
Igo to him, he’H only laugh at me. But I
must go to hina—l must!”
He was so goaded by his terror that he
left the shop unprotected—a thing be had
never thought to do—and ran as fast as he
could to Joe’s lodgings. But he had left
them; ho was no longer there; he had not
been there for six weeks; the landlady did
not know his address, or would not give it
Then James felt sick an I dizzy, and would
have sat down on the doorstep and cried but
for the look of the thing. Besides, he re
membered the unprotected shop. So he
turned away sadly and walked back, well
understanding now that he bad fallen like a
fool into a trap, artfully set to fasten sus
picion and guilt upon himself.'
When he returned he found the place full
of people. Mr. Emblem was sitting in his
customary place, and he was smiling. He
did not look in the least like a man who had
been robbed. He was smiling pleasantly
and cheerfully. Mr. Chalker was also pres
ent, a man with whom no one ever smiled,
and Lala Roy, solemn and dignified, and a
man —an unknown man—who sat in the
outer shop, and seemed to take no interest at
all in the proceedings. Were they come,
he asked himself, to arrest him on the spot!
Apparently they were not, for no one
took the least notice of him, and they were
oocupied with something else. How could
they think of anything else! Yet Mr.
Chalker, standing at the table, was making
a speech which had nothing to do with the
robbery.
“Here I am, you see, Mr. Emblem,” he
said; “I have told you already that I don’t
want to do anything to worry you. Let us
be friends all round. This gentleman, your
friend from India, will advise you, I am
sure, for your own good, not to be obsti
nate. Lord 1 what is the amount, after all,
to a substantial man like yourself! A sub
stantial man, I say.” He Spoke confidently,
but he glanced about the shop with doubt
ful eyes. “Granted that it was borrowed to
get your grandson out of a scrape—sup
posing he promised to pay it back and
hasn't done so; putting the case that it has
grown and developed itself as bills will do,
and can’t help doing, and can’t be stopped;
it isn’t the fault of the lawyers, but the
very nature of a bill to go on growing—it’s
likea baby for growing. Why,latter all, you
were your grandson’s security—you can’t es
cape that. And when I would no longer re
new, you gave of your own accord—come
now, you can’t deny that—a bill of sale on
goods and furniture. Now, Mr. Emblem,
didn’t you! Don’t let us have any bitter
ness or quarrelling. Let’s be friends, and
tell me I may send away the man.”
Mr. Emblem smiled pleasantly, but did not
reply.
“A bill of sale it was, dated January the
25th, 1883, just before that cursed act of
Parliament granted the five days’ notice.
Here is the bailiff’s man in possession. You
can pay the amount, which is, with costs
and sheriff’s poundage, three hundred and
fifty-one pounds thirteen shillings and four
pence, at once, or you may pay five days
hence. Otherwise the shop, and furniture,
and all, will be sold off in seven days."
“Oh,” James gasped, listening with be
wilderment, “we can’t be going to be sold
up! Emblem’s to be sold up!”
“Three hundred and fifty pounds!” said
Mr. Emblem. "My friend, let us rather
speak of thousands. This is truly a happy
day for all of us. Sit down, Mr. Chalker—
my dear friend, sit down. Rejoice with us.
A happy njorning.”_ _
THE HAVANN
"What the devil is the matter with him!”
asked the money lender.
“There was something, Mr. Chalker,” Mr.
Emblem went on cheerfully, “something
said about my grandson. Joe was always a
bad lot; lucky his father ami mother are out
of the way in Australia. You came to me
about that business, perhaps! Oh, on such a
joyful day as this I forgive everybody. Tell
Joe I do not to see him, but I have forgiven
aim.”
“Oh, he’s mad!” growled James; “he’s
gone stark staring mad!”
“You don’t seem quite yourself this morn
ing, Mr. Emblem,” said Mr. Chalker.
“Perhaps this gentleman, your friend from
India, will advise you when I am gone.
You don’t understand, Mister,” he ad
dressed Lala Roy, “the nature of a bill.
Once you start a bill, and begin to renewal,
it’s like planting a tree, for it grows and
grows of its own accord, and by Act of Par
liament, too, though they do try to hack
and "ut it down in the most cruel way.
You see Mr. Emblem is obstinate. He’s got
to pay off that bill, which is a bill of sale,
and he won’t do it. Make him write ths
check and have done with it.”
“This is the best day’s work I ever did
Mr. Emblem went on. “To remember the
letter, word for word, and everything! Mr.
Arbuthnot has, very likely, finished the
whole business by now. Thousands—thou
sands—and all for Iris!”
“Look here, Mr. Emblem,” said the law
yer, angril.-.. “You’ll not only be a bank
rupt if you go on like this, but you’ll be a
fraudulent bankrupt as well. Is it honest,
I want to know, to refuse to pay your just
debts when you’ve put by thousands, as you
boast—you actually boast—for your grand
daughter?’’
“Yes,” said the old man, “Iris will have
thousands. ”
“I think, sir,” said Lala Roy, “that you
are unier an illusion. Mr. Emblem does
not possess any such savings or investments
as you imagine.”
“Then why does he go on talking al out
thousands?”
“Ho has had a shock; he cannot quite un
derstan 1 what has happened. You had bet
ter leave him f.> the present.”
“Leave him! And nothing but these
mouldy old books! Here, you, sir—you—
James—you shopman—come herel What is
the stock worth!”
“It depends upon whether you are buying
or selling,” said Jamas. “If you were to sell
it under the hammer, in lots, it wouldn’t
fetch a hundred pounus.”
“There, you hear—you hear, all of you!
Not a hundred pounds, and my bill of sale
is three-fifty.”
“Pray, sir,” said Lala Roy, “who told you
that Mr. Emblem was so wealthy?"
“His grandson.”
“Then, sir, perhaps it would be well to
question the grandson further. He may
know things of which we have heard noth
ing.”
Mr. Chalker went away at length, leaving
the man—the professional person—behind.
Then Lala Roy persuaded Mr. Emblem to
go up stairs again. He did so without any
apparent consciousness that there was a
man in possession. t
“James,” said Lala Roy, “you have heard
that your master has been robbed. You are
reflecting and meditating on this circum
stance. Another thing is that a creditor
has threatened to sell off everything for
debt. Most likely, everything will be sold,
and the shop closed. You will, therefore,
lose the place you have had for five-and
twenty years. That is a very bad business
for you. You are unfortunate this morn
ing. To lose your place—and then this rob
bery. That seems also a bad business."
“It is,” said James with a hollow groan.
“It is, Mr. Lala Roy. It is a dreadful bad
business.”
“Pray, Mr. James,” continued this man
with grave, searching eyes which made
sinners shake in their shoes, “pray, why did
you run away, and where did you go after
you opened the shop this morning! You
went to see Mr. Emblem’s grandson, did
you not!”
“Yes, I did, said James.
“Why did you go to see him ?”
“I w—w —went—-oh, Lord ! —I went to tell
him what had happened, bicause he mas
ter’s grands n, and I thought he ought to
know," said James.
“Did you tell him?”
“No; he has left his lodgings. I don’t
know where he is—oh, and he always told
me the shop was his—settled on him,” he
said.
“He is the Father of Lies; his end will be
confusion. Shame and confusion shall wait
upon all who have hearkened unto him or
worked with him, until they repent and
make atonement."
“Don’t, Mister Lala Roy—don’t; you
frighten me," said James. “Oh, what a
dreadful liar he Is!”
All that morning the Philosopher sat in
the bookseller’s chair, and James, in the
outer shop, felt that those deep eyes were
resting continually upon him, and knew
that bit by bit his secret would be dragged
out of him. If he could get up and run
away—if a customer would oome—if the
dark gentleman would go up stairs—if he
oould think of something else 1 But
none of these happened, and James,
at his table with the paste be
fore him, passed a morning com
pared with which any seat anywhere in
Purgatory would have been comfortable.
Presently a strange feeling came over him*
as if some invisible force was pushing and
dragging him and forcing him to leave his
chair, and throw himself at the Philosopher’s
feet and confess everything. This was the
mesmeric effect of those reproachful eyes
fixed steadily upon him. And in the door
way, like some figure in a nightmare—a fig
ure incongruous and out of place—the man
in possession sitting, passive and uncon
cerned, with one eye on the street and the
other on the shop. Upstairs Mr. Emblem
was sitting fast asleep; joy had made him
sleepy; and Iris was at work among her
pupils’ letters, compiling suras for the fruit
erer, making a paper on coiiio sections for
the Cambridge man, and working out trigo
nometrical equations for the young school
master, and her mind full of solemn exulta
tion and glory, for she was a woman who
was loved. The other things troubled her
but little. Her grandfather would get back
his equilibrium of mind; the shop might be
shut up, but that mattered little. Arnold,
and Lala Roy, and her grandfather and
herself, would all live together, and she and
Arnold would work. The selfishness* of
youth is really astonishing. Nothing—ex
cept perhaps toothache —can make a girl
unhappy who is loved and newly betrothed.
She may say what she pleases, and her face
may be a yard long when she speaks of the
misfortunes of others, but all the time her
heart is dancing.
To Lala Roy the situation presented a
problem with insufficient data, some of
which would have to be guessed. A letter,
now lost, said that a certain case contained
papers necessary to obtain an unknown in
heritance for Iris. How, then, to ascertain
whether anybody was expecting or looking
for a girl to claim an inheritance! Then
there was half a coatcof-arms, and Ic.'.’y
AH DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1885.
there was a certain customer of unknown
name, who had been acquainted with Iris’s
father before Ins marriage. So far for Ills.
As for the thief, Lala Roy had no doubt at
all. It was, he was quite certain, the grand
son, whose career ho had watched for some
years with interest an 1 curiosity. Who else
was there who would steal the papers? And
who would help him, and give him free ac
cess to the safe? He did not only suspect,
he was certain that James was in some way
cognizant of the deed. Why else did he
turn so pale? Why did be rush off to Joe’s
lodgings? Why did he sit trembling!
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1885.
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among the largest and best of the Family and
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copy given with every club of 20. It is the
most progressive Journal of its class. Its aim
is to be the newspaper of tlie people of the
whole country; to meet every intelligent want
in Journalism, and to make it so cheap that
all can afford to enjoy its weekly visits.
“THE ANNALS OF THE WAR” have been
one of the distinguished features of “THE
WEEKLY TIMES,” and it is now imitated in
that feature by many of the leading Journals
and periodicals of the country. The best
writers from the active participants of the
great struggle on both sides will continue
their contributions to the unwritten history
of the war in every number, and make the
paper specially entertaining and instructive
to the veterans of both the Blue and the
Gray. w
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Address, 11 IMB,
Times Building, Philad
Gr-sat Sicrinie in Peas.
THORBURN’S very best Marrowfat Peas,
81 80 cash per bushel.
THORBURN’S best Philadelphia Extra
Early Peas, at 83 25 cash per bushel.
FOR SALE AT
J. GARDNER ’ S
SEEDSMAN, 30% BULL STREET.
DRUGS AND .MEDICINES
New Pharmacy,
Bolton and Montgomery street*.
Pl iiE DRUGS
Dispensed by Careful and Exp>*
rienced Druggists.
13 ARK AHOY 1
ffikt barque which spreads Its sai. ,r
the favoring gale and with every cant”*,
drawing taut, sails the sea, a thing of life Aud
beauty, but that bark which comes from a
cold and hastens the traveler to that port
from whence there is no return. For this
bark uSe
“COUGH AND LUNG BALSAM.”
Itjls the best medicine ever presented for
coughs, colds and hoarseness, and for four
seasons has given entire satisfaction. Price
25 cents. Prepared only by
DAVID PORTER, Druggist,
Corner Broughton and Habersham streets,
J. c. c.
Jijm Ung ha
CLEANS CLOTHES,
Removes all Grease, Paints, Oils, Varnish
Tar, Dirt or Soils from any fabric
without injury.
FOR SALE BY
J. R. Haltiwang-er,
Cor Broughton and Drayton streets.
Also sold by L. C. Strong and E. A. Knapp
To Clean Your Last Winter’s Suit or
Anything Else Use
“Household Cleaning Fluid.”
It removes grease spots, stains, dirt, etc.,
from woolen, cotton, silk aud laces, without
injuring the most delicate fabric.
Prepared only by
DAVID PORTER, Druggist,
Corner Broughton and Habersham streets,
and
Gray Eagle
Livery and Bearding Stable,
Corner Congress and Drayton.
Headquarters for fine turnouts. Personal
attention given to boarding horses.
R. DeMartin & Son,
Proprietors.
REMOVED.
I have removed my entire livery establish
ment from York street to the
Pulaski House Stables
where I may hereafter be found. All orders
for carriages and buggies promptly attended
to Fine Saddle Horses for hire.
E. C. GLEASON,
Proprietor Pulaski House Stables.
Savannah Club, Livery & Board Stablea
~ Ay
Corner Drayton, McDonough and HuU sta.
A. W. HARMON, Prop’r.
Headquarters for fine Turn-Outs. Personal
attention given to Boarding Horses. Tele*
phone No. 205.
LUMBER AND TIMBER.
BACON, JOHNSON & Co’
PLANING MILL.
LUMBER
AND
WOOD YARD.
LARGE;STOCK OF
DRESSED AND ROUGH LUMBER
AT LOW PRICES!
rS~Good Lot of Wood Just Received.
J. J. McDonough. T. B. Thompson.
Ed. Burdett.
McDonough & co.,
Office : 1161 Bryan street.
Yellow Pine Lumber.
Lumber Yard and Planing Mill: Opposite
8., F. & W. Bailway Depot,
Savannah, Ga.
Saw Mills: Surrency. Ga., No. 6, Macon and
Brunswick Railroad.
D. C. Bacon, Wm. B. Stillwell,
H. P. Smart.
D. C. IJ ACO3V & CO
PITCH PINE
-AND—
Cypress Lumber & Timber
BY THE CARGO.
Savannah aud Brunswick, Ga.
P. O. SAVANNAH, GA.
This Idea of Doing West
to Colorado or New Mexico for pure air to re
lieve Consumption, is all a jnistake. Any
reasonable man would use Dr. Rosanko’s
Cough and Lung Syrup for Consumption in
all its first stages. It never fails to give re
lief in all cases of Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis,
Pains n the Chest ana all (flections that are
considered primary to Consumption. Price,
5o cents and 81. Sold by Oceola Butler and
. J. Kleffer.j
7