, Jules Verne 800 Leagues on the Amazon 

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living, and the proof, written throughout in the handwriting of the author of
the crime, he has assured me is in his hands! He offered to sell it to me!"
"Eh! Joam Dacosta!" answered Judge Jarriquez, "that would not have been dear
at the cost of the whole of your fortune!"
"If Torres had only asked my fortune, I would have given it to him and not one
of my people would have demurred! Yes, you are right, sir; a man cannot pay
too dearly for the redemption of his honor! But this scoundrel, knowing that I
was at his mercy, required more than my fortune!"
"How so?"
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111
"My daughter's hand was to be the cost of the bargain! I refused; he denounced
me, and that is why I am now before you!"
"And if Torres had not informed against you," asked Judge Jarriquez"if Torres
had not met with you on your voyage, what would you have done on learning on
your arrival of the death of Judge Ribeiro? Would you then have delivered
yourself into the hands of justice?"
"Without the slightest hesitation," replied Joam, in a firm voice; "for, I
repeat it, I had no other object in leaving Iquitos to come to Manaos."
This was said in such a tone of truthfulness that Judge Jarriquez experienced
a kind of feeling making its way to that corner of the heart where convictions
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are formed, but he did not yet give in.
He could hardly help being astonished. A judge engaged merely in this
examination, he knew nothing of what is known by those who have followed this
history, and who cannot doubt but that Torres held in his hands the material
proof of Joam Dacosta's innocence. They know that the document existed; that
it contained this evidence; and perhaps they may be led to think that Judge
Jarriquez was pitilessly incredulous. But they should remember that Judge
Jarriquez was not in their position; that he was accustomed to the invariable
protestations of the culprits who came before him. The document which Joam
Dacosta appealed to was not produced; he did not really know if it actually
existed; and to conclude, he had before him a man whose guilt had for him the
certainty of a settled thing.
However, he wished, perhaps through curiosity, to drive Joam Dacosta behind
his last entrenchments.
"And so," he said, "all your hope now rests on the declaration which has been
made to you by Torres."
"Yes, sir, if my whole life does not plead for me."
"Where do you think Torres really is?"
"I think in Manaos."
"And you hope that he will speakthat he will consent to goodnaturedly hand
over to you the document for which you have declined to pay the price he
asked?"
"I hope so, sir," replied Joam Dacosta; "the situation now is not the same for
Torres; he has denounced me, and consequently he cannot retain any hope of
resuming his bargaining under the previous conditions. But this document might
still be worth a fortune if, supposing I am acquitted or executed, it should
ever escape him. Hence his interest is to sell me the document, which can thus
not injure him in any way, and I think he will act according to his interest."
The reasoning of Joam Dacosta was unanswerable, and Judge Jarriquez felt it to
be so. He made the only possible objection.
"The interest of Torres is doubtless to selel you the documentif the document
exists."
"If it does not exist," answered Joam Dacosta, in a penetrating voice, "in
trusting to the justice of men, I must put my trust only in God!"
At these words Judge Jarriquez rose, and, in not quite such an indifferent
tone, said, "Joam Dacosta, in examining you here, in allowing you to relate
the particulars of your past life and to protest your innocence, I
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CHAPTER V. MATERIAL PROOFS
112
have gone further than my instructions allow me. An information has already
been laid in this affair, and you have appeared before the jury at Villa Rica,
whose verdict was given unanimously, and without even the addition of
extenuating circumstances. You have been found guilty of the instigation of,
and complicity in, the murder of the soldiers and the robbery of the diamonds
at Tijuco, the capital sentence was pronounced on you, and it was only by
flight that you escaped execution. But that you came here to deliver yourself
over, or not, to the hands of justice twentythree years afterward, you would
never have been retaken. For the last time, you admit that you are Joam
Dacosta, the condemned man of the diamond arrayal?"
"I am Joam Dacosta."
"You are ready to sign this declaration?"
"I am ready."
And with a hand without a tremble Joam Dacosta put his name to the foot of the
declaration and the report which Judge Jarriquez had made his clerk draw up.
"The report, addressed to the minister of justice, is to be sent off to Rio
Janeiro," said the magistrate. "Many days will elapse before we receive orders
to carry out your sentence. If then, as you say, Torres possesses the proof of
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your innocence, do all you can yourselfdo all you can through your friendsdo
everything, so that that proof can be produced in time. Once the order arrives
no delay will be possible, and justice must take its course."
Joam Dacosta bowed slightly.
"Shall I be allowed in the meantime to see my wife and children?" he asked.
"After today, if you wish," answered Judge Jarriquez; "you are no longer in
close confinement, and they can be brought to you as soon as they apply."
The magistrate then rang the bell. The guards entered the room, and took away
Joam Dacosta.
Judge Jarriquez watched him as he went out, and shook his head and muttered:
"Well, well! This is a much stranger affair than I ever thought it would be!"
CHAPTER VI. THE LAST BLOW
WHILE JOAM DACOSTA was undergoing this examination, Yaquita, from an inquiry
made by Manoel, ascertained that she and her children would be permitted to
see the prisoner that very day about four o'clock in the afternoon.
Yaquita had not left her room since the evening before. Minha and Lina kept
near her, waiting for the time when she would be admitted to see her husband.
Yaquita Garral or Yaquita Dacosta, he would still find her the devoted wife
and brave companion he had ever known her to be.
About eleven o'clock in the morning Benito joined Manoel and Fragoso, who were
talking in the bow of the jangada.
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CHAPTER VI. THE LAST BLOW
113
"Manoel," said he, "I have a favor to ask you."
"What is it?" [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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