CHAPTER VII
THE TRAMP MAKES ANOTHER CALL
My readers will naturally be surprised
at the tramp’s restitution of a coin, which,
though counterfeit, he would probably have managed
to pass, but this chapter will throw some light on
his mysterious conduct.
When he made a sudden exit from Mrs.
Barclay’s house, upon the appearance of the
squire and his friend, he did not leave the premises,
but posted himself at a window, slightly open, of the
room in which the widow received her new visitors.
He listened with a smile to the squire’s attempt
to force Mrs. Barclay to sell her house.
“He’s a sly old rascal!”
thought the tramp. “I’ll put a spoke
in his wheel.”
When the squire and his wife’s
cousin left the house, the tramp followed at a little
distance. Not far from the squire’s handsome
residence Kirk left him, and the tramp then came boldly
forward.
“Good-evenin’,” he said familiarly.
Squire Davenport turned sharply, and
as his eye fell on the unprepossessing figure, he
instinctively put his hand in the pocket in which
he kept his wallet.
“Who are you?” he demanded apprehensively.
“I ain’t a thief, and
you needn’t fear for your wallet,” was
the reply.
“Let me pass, fellow! I can do nothing
for you.”
“We’ll see about that!”
“Do you threaten me?” asked Squire Davenport,
in alarm.
“Not at all; but I’ve
got some business with you—some important
business.”
“Then call to-morrow forenoon,”
said Davenport, anxious to get rid of his ill-looking
acquaintance.
“That won’t do; I want to leave town tonight.”
“That’s nothing to me.”
“It may be,” said the
tramp significantly. “I want to speak to
you about the husband of the woman you called on to-night.”
“The husband of Mrs. Barclay!
Why, he is dead!” ejaculated the squire, in
surprise.
“That is true. Do you
know whether he left any property?”
“No, I believe not.”
“That’s what I want to talk about.
You’d better see me to-night.”
There was significance in the tone
of the tramp, and Squire Davenport looked at him searchingly.
“Why don’t you go and see Mrs. Barclay
about this matter?” he asked.
“I may, but I think you’d better see me
first.”
By this time they had reached the Squire’s gate.
“Come in,” he said briefly.
The squire led the way into a comfortable
sitting room, and his rough visitor followed him.
By the light of an astral lamp Squire Davenport looked
at him.
“Did I ever see you before?” he asked.
“Probably not.”
“Then I don’t see what
business we can have together. I am tired, and
wish to go to bed.”
“I’ll come to business
at once, then. When John Barclay died in Chicago,
a wallet was found in his pocket, and in that wallet
was a promissory note for a thousand dollars, signed
by you. I suppose you have paid that sum to
the widow?”
Squire Davenport was the picture of
dismay. He had meanly ignored the note, with
the intention of cheating Mrs. Barclay. He had
supposed it was lost, yet here, after some years,
appeared a man who knew of it. As Mr. Barclay
had been reticent about his business affairs, he had
never told his wife about having deposited this sum
with Squire Davenport, and of this fact the squire
had meanly taken advantage.
“What proof have you of this
strange and improbable story?” asked the squire,
after a nervous pause.
“The best of proof,” answered
the tramp promptly. “The note was found
and is now in existence.”
“Who holds it—that
is, admitting for a moment the truth of your story?”
“I do; it is in my pocket at this moment.”
At this moment Tom Davenport opened
the door of the apartment, and stared in open-eyed
amazement at his father’s singular visitor.
“Leave the room, Tom,”
said his father hastily. “This man is
consulting me on business.”
“Is that your son, squire?”
asked the tramp, with a familiar nod. “He’s
quite a young swell.”
“What business can my father
have with such a cad?” thought Tom, disgusted.
Tom was pleased, nevertheless, at
being taken for “a young swell.”