The Wrong Box


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'
'
'
Then pay your bill,' said Mr Watts.  
Take that,' cried the old man, tossing him the negotiable bill.  
It is not legal tender,' replied Mr Watts. 'You must leave my house at  
once.'  
'You cannot appreciate the contempt I feel for you, Mr Watts,' said the  
old gentleman, resigning himself to circumstances. 'But you shall feel  
it in one way: I refuse to pay my bill.'  
'I don't care for your bill,' responded Mr Watts. 'What I want is your  
absence.'  
'That you shall have!' said the old gentleman, and, taking up his  
forage cap as he spoke, he crammed it on his head. 'Perhaps you are  
too insolent,' he added, 'to inform me of the time of the next London  
train?'  
'
It leaves in three-quarters of an hour,' returned the innkeeper with  
alacrity. 'You can easily catch it.'  
Joseph's position was one of considerable weakness. On the one hand, it  
would have been well to avoid the direct line of railway, since it was  
there he might expect his nephews to lie in wait for his recapture; on  
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