The Wrong Box by Robert Louis Stevenson;Lloyd Osbourne
page 15 of 221 (06%)
page 15 of 221 (06%)
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'Oh, brayvo!' cried John. 'But why?' 'I've found it out, John,' returned his brother gently. 'It? What?' enquired John. 'Why Michael won't compromise,' said Morris. 'It's because he can't. It's because Masterman's dead, and he's keeping it dark.' 'Golly!' cried the impressionable John. 'But what's the use? Why does he do it, anyway?' 'To defraud us of the tontine,' said his brother. 'He couldn't; you have to have a doctor's certificate,' objected John. 'Did you never hear of venal doctors?' enquired Morris. 'They're as common as blackberries: you can pick 'em up for three-pound-ten a head.' 'I wouldn't do it under fifty if I were a sawbones,' ejaculated John. 'And then Michael,' continued Morris, 'is in the very thick of it. All his clients have come to grief; his whole business is rotten eggs. If any man could arrange it, he could; and depend upon it, he has his plan all straight; and depend upon it, it's a good one, for he's clever, and be damned to him! But I'm clever too; and I'm desperate. I lost seven thousand eight hundred pounds when I was an orphan at school.' 'O, don't be tedious,' interrupted John. 'You've lost far more already |
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