Try and Trust; Or, Abner Holden's Bound Boy by Jr. Horatio Alger (best e books to read .TXT) π
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- Author: Jr. Horatio Alger
Read book online Β«Try and Trust; Or, Abner Holden's Bound Boy by Jr. Horatio Alger (best e books to read .TXT) πΒ». Author - Jr. Horatio Alger
He looked up as he heard Herbert's step, and said, abruptly: βWell, boy, what do you want?β
His manner was rough, but our hero was not afraid. He answered frankly, βI am hiding.β
βHiding? Who from?β
βFrom Abner Holden.β
βHumph! Why should you hide from him? What has he to do with you?β
βI am bound to him, and he is angry with me because he thinks I interfered in a trade of his. He wanted to beat me, so I ran away.β
βGood!β said Ralph, approvingly. βTell me about it.β
Herbert drew near, and told his story.
Ralph listened attentively.
βBoy,β said he, βI think you are honest. There are not many that can be said of. As for Abner Holden, I know him. He's a mean skinflint. Pah!β and he spit, contemptuously. βYou'd better not go back to him.β
βI don't mean to,β said Herbert, promptly.
βWhat are your plans? Have you formed any?β
βI want to go to New York.β
βTo New York,β repeated Ralph, thoughtfully. βYou wish to get into the crowd, while I seek to avoid it. But it is natural to youth. At your age, it was so with me. I hope, my boy, the time will not come when you, like me, will wish to shun the sight of men.β
Herbert listened in sympathy, not unmingled with surprise, to the speech of this man, which was quite superior to what might have been expected from one of his appearance.
βWhen do you wish to start?β asked Ralph, after a pause.
βFirst, I want to get my clothes.β
βWhere are they?β
βIn my room, at Mr. Holden's house.β
βHow do you expect to get them?β
βMrs. Bickford, the housekeeper, is a friend of mine. I thought I might go there to-night, and attract her attention without rousing Mr. Holden. She would get them for me.β
βGood! I will go with you.β
βWill you?β asked Herbert, gladly.
He had felt a little doubt as to the result of his expedition, as, if Mr. Holden should be awake and start in pursuit, he would stand a good chance of being captured, which, above all things, he most dreaded. But with so able an auxiliary as Ralph, he knew he could bid easy defiance to Abner, however much the latter might desire to molest him.
βYes, I will stand by you, and you shall share my cabin with me as long as you like. You are not afraid of me?β
βNo,β said Herbert, quickly.
Ralph looked kindly at him.
βSome of the children run from me,β he said. βIt is not strange, perhaps, for I look savage, I suppose, but you do well to trust me. I will be your friend, and that is something I have not said to any living being for years. I like your face. It is brave and true.β
βThank you for your favorable opinion, Mr.ββ Here Herbert paused in uncertainty, for he had never heard Ralph's surname.
βCall me Ralph. I have done with the title of civilization. Call me Ralph. That will suit me best.β
βThank you for your kindness, then, Ralph.β
βWhat is your name?β
βHerbertβHerbert Mason.β
βThen, Herbert, I think you must be hungry. Have you eaten your dinner?β
βNo,β said Herbert.
βThen you shall share mine. My food is of the plainest, but such as it is, you are welcome. Come in.β
Herbert entered the cabin. The only table was a plank supported at each end by a barrel. From a box in the corner Ralph drew out some corn-bread and some cold meat. He took a tin measure, and, going out of the cabin, filled it with water from a brook near by. This he placed on the rude table.
βAll is ready,β he said. βTake and eat, if my food is not too rude.β
Herbert did eat, and with appetite. He was a growing boy, whose appetite seldom failed him, and he had been working hard since breakfast, which he had taken at six, while it was now one o'clock. No wonder he was hungry.
Ralph looked on with approval.
βYou are the first that has shared my meal for many a long day,β he said. βDay after day, and year after year, I have broken my fast alone, but it seems pleasant, after all,β he said, musingly. βMen are treacherous and deceitful, but you,β he said, resting his glance on the frank, ingenuous face of his youthful guest, βyou must be honest and true, or I am greatly deceived.β
βI hope you will find me so,β said Herbert, interested more and more in the rough-looking recluse, about whose life he suspected there must be some sad secret, of which the world knew nothing.
After dispatching the meal provided by his hospitable entertainer, Herbert sat down on the grass just outside the cabin, and watched lazily the smoke which issued from Ralph's pipe, as it rose in many a fantastic curl.
βHow long have you lived here, Ralph?β asked our hero at length.
βTen years,β said the recluse, removing his pipe from his lips.
βIt is a long time.β
βYes, boy, a long time in the life of one as young as you, but to me it seems but yesterday that I built this cabin and established myself here.β
βAre you not often lonely?β
βLonely? Yes, but not more so than I should be in the haunts of men. I have company, too. There are the squirrels that leap from bough to bough of the tall trees. Then there are the birds that wake me with their singing. They are company for me. They are better company than men. They, at least, will not deceive me.β
He paused, and bent his eyes upon the ground. He was thinking, not of the boy beside him, but of some time
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