Joe the Hotel Boy; Or, Winning out by Pluck by Pluck by Jr. Horatio Alger (novels to read .txt) ๐
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- Author: Pluck by Jr. Horatio Alger
Read book online ยซJoe the Hotel Boy; Or, Winning out by Pluck by Pluck by Jr. Horatio Alger (novels to read .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Pluck by Jr. Horatio Alger
โHow far to the nearest village?โ asked our hero.
โHalf a mile.โ
โThank you.โ
โHow is it you are out here in the rain?โ went on the track-walker.
โWe got off our train and it went off without us.โ
โOh, I see. Too bad.โ
Again our hero and his companion hurried on, and soon came in sight of a small village. They inquired their way to a tavern, and there dried their clothing and procured a good, hot meal, which made both feel much better.
โI am going to send a telegram to Mr. Vane,โ said Joe, and did so without further delay. He was careful of the satchel and did not leave it out of his sight.
They found they could get a train for the West that evening at seven o'clock and at the proper time hurried to the depot.
โI'm glad I met you,โ said Joe, to his newly-made friend. โNow, what do you think I owe you for what you did?โ
โAs we didn't land the fellows in jail you don't owe me anything,โ said Bill Badger, promptly.
โOh, yes, I do.โ
โWell then, you can pay the extra expense, and let that fill the bill.โ
โI'll certainly do that,โ said Joe, promptly.
As they rode along Bill Badger told something of himself and of the mine his father owned, and then Joe told something of his own story.
โDid you say your name is Joe Bodley?โ asked the young westerner, with deep interest.
โYes.โ
โAnd you are looking for a man by the name of William A. Bodley?โ
โI am.โ
โIt seems to me I know a man by that name, although the miners all call him Bill Bodley.โ
โWhere is this Bill Bodley?โ
โOut in Montana somewhere. He worked for my father once, about three years ago. He was rather a strange man, about fifty years old. He had white hair and a white beard, and acted as if he had great trouble on his mind.โ
โYou do not know where he is now?โ
โNo, but perhaps my father knows.โ
โThen I'm going to see your father as soon as I can,โ said Joe, decidedly.
โMind you, I don't say that this Bill Bodley is the man you are after, Joe. I don't want to raise any false hopes.โ
โDid you ever hear where the man came from?โ
โI think he told somebody that he once owned a farm in Kansas or Iowa.โ
โThis William A. Bodley once owned a farm at Millville, Iowa.โ
โIs that so! Then he may be the same man after all. To tell the truth, he looked a little bit like you.โ
โWas he a good man?โ asked Joe, eagerly.
โYes, indeed. But some of the men poked fun at him because he was so silent and strange at times. I liked him and so did father. He left us to go prospecting in the mountains.โ
Thus the talk ran on for half an hour, when the train came to a sudden halt.
โAre we at a station?โ asked Bill Badger.
โI don't know,โ said Joe.
Both looked out of the window but could see nothing except hills and forests.
โWe are in the foothills,โ said the young westerner. โSomething must be wrong on the tracks.โ
โMore fallen trees perhaps.โ
โOr a landslide. They have them sometimes, when it rains as hard as it did to-day.โ
They left the car with some others and soon learned that there had been a freight collision ahead and that half a dozen freight cars had been smashed to splinters.
โDo you think it can be the freight that Caven and Malone boarded?โ came from our hero, on hearing this news.
โIt might be,โ answered Bill Badger. โLet us take a look. Our train won't move for hours now.โ
They walked to the scene of the wreck. One of the cars had been burnt up but the conflagration was now under control and a wrecking crew was already at work clearing the tracks so that they might be used.
โAnybody hurt?โ asked Joe of a train hand.
โYes, two men killed. They were riding between the cars.โ
โTramps?โ
โThey didn't look like tramps. But they hadn't any right to ride on the freight.โ
โWhere are they?โ
โOver in the shanty yonder.โ
With a queer sensation in his heart Joe walked to the little building, accompanied by Bill Badger. A curious crowd was around and they had to force their way to the front.
One look was enough. Gaff Caven and Pat Malone lay there, cold in death. They had paid the penalty of their crimes on earth and gone to the final judgment.
CHAPTER XXX.
CONCLUSION.
โLet us go away!โ whispered Joe, and moved out of the gathering without delay.
โIt was sure rough on 'em,โ was Bill Badger's comment.
โOh, it was awful!โ cried our hero. โIโI didn't expect this, did you?โ
โNobody did. It must have come sudden like on to 'em.โ
โIt makes me sick at heart to think of it. IโI hope it wasn't our fault.โ
โNot at all. If they hadn't broke away they'd be alive this minute. They'll never bother you or your friend again, Joe.โ
Our hero felt weak at the knees and was glad enough to go back to the train, where he sank into his seat. He scarcely said another word until the wreck was cleared away and they were once more
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