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β€œI believe this is interest day,” returned the widow.

β€œYes. I presume you have by this time seen the folly of holding on to the place. You can't afford it, and it is best to accept my offer.”

β€œMy mother and I have thought it over, and decided to sell,” said Herbert.

β€œI am glad you are so sensible,” observed Squire Leech, in a tone of satisfaction. β€œI will give you three hundred dollars over and above the mortgage.”

β€œYou offered us fifty dollars more before.”

β€œThen is not now. You should have accepted my offer when I made it.”

β€œWe have no idea of selling at that price,” said Herbert. β€œOur lowest price is six hundred and fifty dollars over and above the mortgage.”

β€œAre you crazy?” ejaculated the squire, angrily.

β€œNo; we have fixed upon that as a fair price,” said Herbert, coolly.

β€œYou know you can't get it.”

β€œThen we won't sell.”

β€œYoung man, I apprehend you do not understand how the matter stands. You will have to sell.”

β€œWhy must we?”

β€œYou can't live on nothing.”

β€œOf course not.”

β€œYou have made a failure in New York.”

β€œI made my expenses while I was there.”

β€œThen why didn't you stay?”

β€œI wanted to do something for mother's support.”

β€œYou have altogether too high an idea of your own abilities.”

β€œI hope not, sir.”

β€œYou influence your mother to her harm.”

β€œI don't think so, Squire Leech.”

β€œBut in this case you must yield. You can't expect me to wait for my money.”

β€œDo you mean the interest?”

β€œOf course I do.”

β€œWe shall not ask you to wait. I am ready to pay it.”

The squire stared in discomfiture while Herbert drew out the precise sum needed to pay the interest.

β€œWhere did you get that money?” he inquired, chop-fallen.

β€œHonestly, Squire Leech. Will you give me a receipt?”

The squire did so mechanically.

β€œI will give you the three hundred and fifty dollars,” he said; β€œbut you must accept it to-day, or it is withdrawn.”

β€œNeither to-day nor any other day will it be accepted, Squire Leech,” said Herbert, firmly. β€œIf you choose to pay six hundred and fifty, we will sell.”

β€œYou must think I am crazy.”

β€œNo, sir; it is a fair offer. If you don't want to buy, we will make another offer. We will rent the house for ninety dollars a year. That is the interest on fifteen hundred dollars at six per cent. I believe a man in your employ wishes to live here.”

β€œWhere do you propose to live?” asked Squire Leech, in surprise.

β€œWe are going to leave town.”

β€œHave you got a chance to work outside?”

β€œYes; but I have declined to. I am going to school for two yearsβ€”to an academy.”

β€œBut how are you going to live all this time?” inquired the squire, in amazement.

β€œI shall live on my income,” answered Herbert, smiling.

β€œIncome! Have you had a legacy?”

β€œYes.”

β€œFrom whom? I thought you only got a trunk of old clothes from your uncle.”

β€œMy legacy comes from my father.”

β€œBut he died poor.”

β€œHe left behind him an invention, half of which we have sold for an income of a thousand dollars a year.”

β€œA thousand a year!” ejaculated the squire.

β€œYes. I have sold it to the father of Mr. Cameron, who employed me last summer. You see, there is no occasion for our selling the house.”

β€œYou have been very fortunate,” said Squire Leech, soberly. β€œI congratulate you both.”

β€œThank you,” said Herbert, who privately thought their visitor looked excessively annoyed at their good fortune.

β€œI will see you about the house,” he said, as he rose to go.

β€œWell, the squire congratulated us,” said Herbert, after he went away; β€œbut he didn't look happy when he did so. I shouldn't wonder if he accepted our terms, now that he knows we needn't sell.”

Herbert proved to be right. Two days later the squire offered six hundred dollars over the mortgage for the place, and it was accepted.

β€œThe place is worth more, mother,” he said; β€œbut it will relieve us from care to sell it.”

James was even more annoyed than his father when he heard of Herbert's good fortune; but after his first annoyance he showed a disposition to be friendly. It is the way of the world. Nothing makes us sought after like a little good fortune. James felt that, now Herbert was in a position to live without work, he was a gentleman, and to be treated accordingly. Herbert received his overtures politely, but rated them at their real value.

Two years slipped away.

Herbert has finished his course at the academy, and is about to enter the manufactory as an office clerk. Mr. Cameron means to promote him as he merits, and I should not be at all surprised if our young friend eventually became junior partner. He and his mother have bought the house into which they moved, and have done not a little to convert it into a tasteful home. The invention has proved all that Mr. Cameron hoped for it. It has been widely introduced, and Herbert realizes as much from his own half as Mr. Cameron agreed to pay for that which he purchased. So his father's invention has proved to be Herbert Carter's most valuable legacy.

Squire Leech has been unfortunate. Too late he found, that Andrew Temple had deceived and defrauded him. All his large property, except a few thousand dollars, has been swept away, and James, disappointed in his lofty hopes, last week applied to Herbert to use his influence to obtain him a situation in Mr. Cameron's establishment. There was no vacancy there, but our hero has found him a place in a dry-goods store in the same town. Whether he will keep it remains to be seen. Times have

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