Do and Dare β a Brave Boy's Fight for Fortune by Jr. Horatio Alger (good books for 8th graders .TXT) π
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- Author: Jr. Horatio Alger
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Herbert pressed forward, and said, quietly:
βI know something of him; I passed the morning in his company.β
The thief turned quickly, but he didn't seem gratified to see Herbert.
βThe boy is mistaken,β he said, hurriedly; βI never saw him before.β
βBut I have seen you, sir,β retorted our hero. βYou saw me draw some money from a bank in State Street, scraped acquaintance with me, and tried to rob me of it on Bunker Hill.β
βIt's a lie!β said the prisoner, hoarsely.
βDo you wish to make a charge to that effect?β asked the policeman.
βNo, sir; I only mentioned what I knew of him to support the charge of this gentleman,β indicating the jeweler's clerk.
The old gentleman appeared to lose his interest in the prisoner after Herbert's statement, and he was escorted without further delay to the station house, where a gold watch and the diamond ring were both found on his person. It is scarcely needful to add that he was tried and sentenced to a term of imprisonment in the very cityβCharlestownβwhere he had attempted to rob Herbert.
βIt is not always that retribution so quickly overtakes the wrongdoer,β said Melville. βSt. Louis will hardly be proud of the man who claims her citizenship.β
βDishonesty doesn't seem to pay in his case,β said Herbert, thoughtfully.
βIt never pays in any case, Herbert,β said George Melville, emphatically. βEven if a man could steal enough to live upon, and were sure not to be found out, he would not enjoy his ill-gotten gain, as an honest man enjoys the money he works hard for. But when we add the risk of detection and the severe penalty of imprisonment, it seems a fatal mistake for any man to overstep the bounds of honesty and enroll himself as a criminal.β
βI agree with you, Mr. Melville,β said Herbert, thoughtfully. βI don't think I shall ever be tempted, but if I am, I will think of this man and his quick detection.β
When they reached the depot, a little before four o'clock, George Melville sent Herbert to the ticket office to purchase tickets, while he remained in the waiting room.
βI might as well accustom you to the duties that are likely to devolve upon you,β he said, with a smile.
Herbert had purchased the tickets and was turning away, when to his surprise he saw Ebenezer Graham enter the depot, laboring evidently under considerable excitement. He did not see Herbert, so occupied was he with thoughts of an unpleasant nature, till the boy greeted him respectfully.
βHerbert Carr!β he said; βwhen did you come into Boston?β
βThis morning, sir.β
βHave you seen anything of my son, Eben, here?β gasped Mr. Graham.
βYes, sir; he was on the same train, but I did not see him to speak to him till after I reached the city.β
βDo you know what he has been doing here?β asked Ebenezer, his face haggard with anxiety.
βI only saw him for five minutes,β answered Herbert, reluctant to tell the father what he knew would confirm any suspicion he might entertain.
βWhere did you see him?β demanded Ebenezer, quickly.
βAt a railroad ticket office not far from the Old South Church.β
βDo you know if he bought any ticket?β asked Ebenezer, anxiously.
βYes,β answered Herbert. βI overheard him purchasing a ticket to Chicago.β
Ebenezer groaned, and his face seemed more and more wizened and puckered up.
βIt is as I thought!β he exclaimed, bitterly. βMy own son has robbed me and fled like a thief, as he is.β
Herbert was shocked, but not surprised. He didn't like to ask particulars, but Ebenezer volunteered them.
βThis morning,β he said, βI foolishly gave Eben a hundred dollars, and sent him to Boston to pay for a bill of goods which I recently bought of a wholesale house on Milk Street. If I had only known you were going in, I would have sent it by you.β
Herbert felt gratified at this manifestation of confidence, especially as he had so recently been charged with robbing the post office, but did not interrupt Mr. Graham, who continued:
βAs soon as Eben was fairly gone, I began to feel sorry I sent him, for he got into extravagant ways when he was in Boston before, and he had been teasing me to give him money enough to go out West with. About noon I discovered that he had taken fifty dollars more than the amount I intrusted to him, and then I couldn't rest till I was on my way to Boston to find out the worst. I went to the house on Milk Street and found they had seen nothing of Eben. Then I knew what had happened. The graceless boy has robbed his father of a hundred and fifty dollars, and is probably on his way West by this time.β
βHe was to start by the three o'clock train, I think,β said Herbert, and gave his reasons for thinking so.
Ebenezer seemed so utterly cast down by this confirmation of his worst suspicions, that Herbert called Mr. Melville, thinking he might be able to say something to comfort him.
CHAPTER XIX. EBENEZER GRAHAM'S GRIEF.
βHow much have you lost by your son, Mr. Graham?β asked George Melville.
βNearly two hundred and fifty dollars,β groaned Ebenezer, βcounting what I paid in the city to his creditors, it is terrible, terrible!β and he wrung his hands in his bitterness of spirit.
βI am sorry for you,β said Melville, βand still more for him.β
βWhy should you be sorry for him?β demanded Ebenezer, sharply. βHe hasn't lost anything.β
βIs it nothing to lose his consciousness of integrity, to leave his home knowing that he is a thief?β
βLittle he'll care for that!β said Mr. Graham, shrugging his shoulders. βHe's laughing in his sleeve, most likely, at the way he has duped and cheated me, his father.β
βHow old is Eben, Mr. Graham?β
βHe will be twenty in November,β answered Ebenezer, apparently puzzled by the question.
βThen, as he is so young, let us hope that he may see the error of his ways, and repent.β
βThat won't bring me back my money,β objected Ebenezer, querulously. It was clear that he thought more of the money he had lost than of his son's lack of principle.
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