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PinkMonkey.com-Nicholas Nickelby by Charles Dickens




1089

with anybody. Upon this, the pursuers took counsel together, and,
coming so near the truth as to arrive at the conclusion that Gride
and Ralph, with Squeers for their instrument, were negotiating for
the recovery of some of the stolen papers which would not bear
the light, and might possibly explain the hints relative to Madeline
which Newman had overheard, resolved that Mrs Sliderskew
should be taken into custody before she had parted with them:
and Squeers too, if anything suspicious could be attached to him.
Accordingly, a search-warrant being procured, and all prepared,
Mr Squeers’s window was watched, until his light was put out, and
the time arrived when, as had been previously ascertained, he
usually visited Mrs Sliderskew. This done, Frank Cheeryble and
Newman stole upstairs to listen to their discourse, and to give the
signal to the officer at the most favourable time. At what an
opportune moment they arrived, how they listened, and what they
heard, is already known to the reader. Mr Squeers, still half
stunned, was hurried off with a stolen deed in his possession, and
Mrs Sliderskew was apprehended likewise. The information being
promptly carried to Snawley that Squeers was in custody--he was
not told for what--that worthy, first extorting a promise that he
should be kept harmless, declared the whole tale concerning
Smike to be a fiction and forgery, and implicated Ralph Nickleby
to the fullest extent. As to Mr Squeers, he had, that morning,
undergone a private examination before a magistrate; and, being
unable to account satisfactorily for his possession of the deed or
his companionship with Mrs Sliderskew, had been, with her,
remanded for a week.

All these discoveries were now related to Ralph,
circumstantially, and in detail. Whatever impression they secretly


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PinkMonkey.com-Nicholas Nickelby by Charles Dickens



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