"You might."
"I promise not to, if you will let me go."
"That"s all very well, but when you get out you might break your promise."
"Then it would be for the first time," said Jasper, proudly. "I never break my promises."
"You talk well, boy, but it"s easy to talk."
"It"s all I can do. There is no way of proving what I say."
"That"s so; and that"s the reason I"m going to keep you."
"At that rate, you will have to keep me all my life."
"No; there"s another way."
"What is it?" asked Jasper, eagerly.
"Join us, and when you"re in the same box you won"t go to blabbing."
"What do you mean by joining you?" asked Jasper, though he was afraid he understood only too well.
"You ought to be smart enough to know that."
"I don"t know what your business is," said our hero.
"You don"t!" said Jack, ironically. "Perhaps you think we"re commission merchants, or bankers, or something of that kind, Bill and me?"
"I don"t think you are either of them," said Jasper, laughing.
"Why not?"
"You don"t look like a commission merchant or a banker."
"What do I look like, eh, boy?"
"You may be angry if I answer that question."
"No, I won"t. Go ahead!"
"You look as if you didn"t get your living in any way so honest as that."
"Well, suppose you are right?"
"Then I am sorry. I wish you would reform and lead a different life."
"No preaching! I didn"t bargain for that."
"Then all I have to say is, you are in no danger from me. I shall not betray you."
"Perhaps you are to be trusted, but I can"t run the risk. You must join us."
"You may be wicked yourself. You have no right to make me so," said Jasper, firmly.
"That"s all nonsense. The world owes me a living, and you, too."
"Not without work. I"m going to work for my living."
"I mean you shall. You shall work for me."
"That kind of work will do the world no good. I want to do something useful."
"So you shall. You shall help us bleed some of these bloated aristocrats. They"ve got more money than is good for them--more than they have any business to keep."
"I don"t agree with you," said Jasper.
"You"d better. It is for your interest," said Jack, frowning.
"It can"t be for my interest to become a law-breaker."
"Then you can stay here till you rot!" retorted the burglar, roughly.
"You won"t come out of this chamber till you have agreed to become one of us."
There was something in this threat which startled Jasper, bold and brave as he was.
"Such an outrage won"t be permitted," he said.
"Won"t it?" sneered Jack. "We"ll see about that. I"ll take the risk. You don"t know me yet," he added, with an oath.
"Is it wholly because you are afraid I will betray you that you treat me in this way?" asked Jasper.
"No."
"What other reason have you?"
"I"ll tell you. You"re the sort of boy we want. You ain"t any whining, milk-and-water sort of boy. You"re brave and spirited. You would be worth a good deal to us."
Burglar though Jack was, Jasper was not insensible to the compliment.
Any boy likes to be considered spirited, even if he does not deserve it, and he felt flattered by this tribute, which he felt that he deserved, at least, in part.
"I am glad you have a good opinion of my courage," he said, "but I think I can find a better use for it than in the career you open to me. If I accepted your proposal from fear of imprisonment it would show that I was not such a boy as you describe."
"You are an obstinate fool!" said Jack, with a frown.
"I am obstinate in this," said Jasper, composedly. "You want to spoil my life by making me a criminal."
"Do you mean to call me a criminal!" exclaimed Jack, angrily.