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Five Hundred Dollars; or, Jacob Marlowe’s Secret
Chapter 38. Mr. Barton Defies The Squire
Horatio Alger
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       _ CHAPTER XXXVIII. MR. BARTON DEFIES THE SQUIRE
       Squire Marlowe sat down, while John Barton, instead of quailing in his presence, eyed him with cool indifference.
       "What is the meaning of this tomfoolery?" asked Albert Marlowe, uneasily.
       "You may call it what you like, but the time has come for an explanation. Albert Marlowe, you have done me a cruel wrong. It is through you that I have had my name blackened and have been forced to fly from my country."
       "So you went to Canada, did you?" sneered the squire. "It's a popular resort for gentlemen of your class."
       "Your words do not trouble me, for I never committed the crime with which I was charged."
       "Of course not. It is wonderful how innocent you all are. But you say that I am responsible for the consequences of your crime. What do you mean by that?"
       "I mean," answered Barton, with a penetrating glance, "that the bonds were stolen by you, and that you schemed to throw the blame upon me. Is this plain?"
       "Are you mad?" said the squire, angrily, "do you expect the world to believe this, or are you in a conspiracy to blackmail me?"
       "The last question you can ask when I demand money from you as the price of my silence."
       "Take care, John Barton! Your silly tale is the last desperate expedient of a criminal. You ought to see the folly of attacking a man in my position. For years I have been the most prominent man in Lakeville, owner of the large shoe factory that gives employment to fifty hands. It is no idle boast--and your wife will confirm my words--that I am the most influential and respected citizen of this town."
       "And on what are your position and prosperity based, Albert Marlowe? Where did you obtain the capital that enabled you to start in business?"
       Squire Marlowe looked confused for a moment, but his audacity did not desert him.
       "I started," he answered, "on borrowed money."
       "Of whom did you borrow?"
       "That is my affair," returned Marlowe, doggedly.
       "You would find it hard to answer. Let me answer for you."
       The squire did not speak, but waited, not without uneasiness, for Barton to answer his own question. He didn't have long to wait.
       "You started your factory on the money realized from the stolen bonds."
       "You will have to prove this," said Marlowe, furiously.
       "Do you wish me to do so?" asked John Barton, significantly.
       "This is all a scheme to clear yourself from the charge," exclaimed the squire. "Don't think I am so dull that I don't see through it. How happens it that you have waited ten years before it occurred to you to implicate me?"
       "It did not immediately occur to me; but when you started in business on a large scale, though you were no better off than myself at the time of the theft, it set me to thinking."
       "I have already told you that I used borrowed money."
       "You won't tell me where you borrowed it."
       "Because it is my private business. John Barton, I warn you that you are making a powerful enemy. If you keep quiet and let me alone, I will not call attention to your presence in Lakeville, and for safety's sake I will not appear to know anything about you. Do you make that promise?"
       "Albert Marlowe, I am an innocent man, but I am under a ban. I want to prove my innocence, and regain the right to live with my family, and hold up my head before my fellow-men. If, in doing this, attention should be drawn to you as the real criminal I cannot help it."
       "So you defy me, do you?" demanded the squire.
       "If what I have said is a defiance, then I defy you," answered John Barton, calmly.
       Squire Marlowe rose from his seat, his face flushed with anger.
       "Be it so," he said. "You will hear from me again."
       "Oh, John," exclaimed Mrs. Barton as the squire left the room, "I am afraid Albert will do you some harm."
       "Then, Mary, to relieve you, let me say that I have heard through Uncle Jacob that Bert has found the missing witness, Ralph Harding, and that both are probably in New York at this moment."
       On his return Squire Marlowe telegraphed from a neighboring town as follows:
       "To Robert Manning, No. 71 1-2 Fulton St., Brooklyn:
       "John Barton, who ten years since stole your bonds,
       and escaped trial, is at Lakeville, at his wife's house.
       "ALBERT MARLOWE."
       The last act in the drama was about to be played, and Squire Marlowe went about with a gleam in his eye as he anticipated the final downfall of the man who had dared to defy him. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. A New Arrival In Lakeville
Chapter 2. Uncle Jacob's Reception
Chapter 3. A Visit To The Factory
Chapter 4. Uncle Jacob's Startling Revelation
Chapter 5. Uncle Jacob Receives His Walking Papers
Chapter 6. Squire Marlowe Is Surprised
Chapter 7. Uncle Jacob Leaves Lakeville
Chapter 8. Discharged
Chapter 9. Mrs. Barton's Secret
Chapter 10. Stolen Money
Chapter 11. The Twenty-Dollar Bill
Chapter 12. Mr. Jones Is Excited
Chapter 13. Percy Gets Rid Of The Bill
Chapter 14. Bert Stands Trial
Chapter 15. Bert's Triumphant Vindication
Chapter 16. What Became Of The Stolen Note
Chapter 17. After The Trial
Chapter 18. Bert Obtains Work
Chapter 19. Bert's Experience As A Farmer's Boy
Chapter 20. Bert Is Placed In An Embarrassing Position
Chapter 21. The Midnight Visit To The Pantry
Chapter 22. A Panic At Farmer Wilson's
Chapter 23. Bert Forms A Resolution
Chapter 24. The Office Of The Magnet Mine
Chapter 25. An Advertisement And What Came Of It
Chapter 26. Bert Secures Board In Harrisburg
Chapter 27. A Boarding-House In Harrisburg
Chapter 28. Bert's First Appearance On Any Stage
Chapter 29. Bert Secures A Box Of Mr. Harding's Papers
Chapter 30. Bert Obtains An Important Clew
Chapter 31. Squire Marlowe Is Surprised
Chapter 32. Hiram French, Of Chicago
Chapter 33. A Late Arrival At Mrs. Barton's Cottage
Chapter 34. Bert Interviews Harding's Sister
Chapter 35. Success Comes Strangely
Chapter 36. Ralph Harding Is Found
Chapter 37. Albert Marlowe Meets His Victim
Chapter 38. Mr. Barton Defies The Squire
Chapter 39. Conclusion