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    Chapter XXIII. Ben's Visit to Thirty-First Street
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    Chapter XXIII. Ben's Visit to Thirty-First Street - Page 2

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    mistaken!" said Ben, looking him fearlessly in the face.

    "I hope so, for your sake. Do you know what kind of a place this is?"

    "I suppose it is a gambling house," Ben answered, without hesitation.

    "Did you know this before you came here?"

    "I had not the least idea of it."

    The man regarded him suspiciously, but no one could look into Ben's honest face and doubt his word.

    "At any rate, you've found it out. Do you mean to blab?"

    "No; that is no business of mine."

    "Then you can go, but take care that you never come here again."

    "I certainly never will."

    "Give me your name and address."

    "Why do you want it?"

    "Because if you break your word, you will be tracked and punished."

    "I have no fear," answered Ben, and he gave his name and address.

    "Never admit this boy again, Peter," said the man with whom Ben had been conversing; neither this boy, nor any other, except a telegraph boy."

    "All right, sah."

    A minute later, Ben found himself on the street, very much perplexed by the events of the evening. Who could have invited him to a gambling house, and with what object in view? Moreover, why had not James Barnes kept the appointment he had himself made? These were questions which Ben might have been better able to answer if he could have seen, just around the corner, the triumphant look of one who was stealthily watching him.

    This person was Conrad Hill, who took care to vacate his position before Ben had reached the place where he was standing.

    "So far, so good!" he muttered to himself. "Master Ben has been seen coming out of a gambling house. That won't be likely to recommend him to Mrs. Hamilton, and she shall know it before long."

    Ben could not understand what had become of the note summoning him to the gambling house. In fact, he had dislodged it from the vest pocket in which he thrust it, and it had fallen upon the carpet near the desk in what Mrs. Hamilton called her "office." Having occasion to enter the room in the evening, his patroness saw it on the carpet, picked it up, and read it, not without surprise.

    "This is a strange note for Ben to receive," she said to herself. "I wonder what it means?"

    Of course, she had no idea of the character of the place indicated, but was inclined to hope that some good luck was really in store for her young secretary.

    "He will be likely to tell me sooner or later," she said to herself. "I will wait patiently, and let him choose his own time. Meanwhile I will keep the note."

    Mrs. Hamilton did not see Ben till the next morning. Then he looked
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