The Wrong Box


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not have accepted in silence the tragic contents of the water-butt; a  
man, who was not already up to the hilts in gore, would have lacked  
the means of secretly disposing them. This process of reasoning left a  
horrid image of the monster, Pitman. Doubtless he had long ago disposed  
of the body--dropping it through a trapdoor in his back kitchen, Morris  
supposed, with some hazy recollection of a picture in a penny dreadful;  
and doubtless the man now lived in wanton splendour on the proceeds of  
the bill. So far, all was peace. But with the profligate habits of a man  
like Bent Pitman (who was no doubt a hunchback in the bargain), eight  
hundred pounds could be easily melted in a week. When they were gone,  
what would he be likely to do next? A hell-like voice in Morris's own  
bosom gave the answer: 'Blackmail me.'  
Anxiety the Second: The Fraud of the Tontine; or, Is my Uncle dead?  
This, on which all Morris's hopes depended, was yet a question. He had  
tried to bully Teena; he had tried to bribe her; and nothing came of  
it. He had his moral conviction still; but you cannot blackmail a sharp  
lawyer on a moral conviction. And besides, since his interview with  
Michael, the idea wore a less attractive countenance. Was Michael  
the man to be blackmailed? and was Morris the man to do it? Grave  
considerations. 'It's not that I'm afraid of him,' Morris so far  
condescended to reassure himself; 'but I must be very certain of my  
ground, and the deuce of it is, I see no way. How unlike is life to  
novels! I wouldn't have even begun this business in a novel, but what  
I'd have met a dark, slouching fellow in the Oxford Road, who'd have  
become my accomplice, and known all about how to do it, and probably  
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