Samantha among the Brethren โ Volume 3 by Marietta Holley (best novels to read .txt) ๐
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- Author: Marietta Holley
Read book online ยซSamantha among the Brethren โ Volume 3 by Marietta Holley (best novels to read .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Marietta Holley
โHow are you, father?โ he said, nonchalantly, taking a cigar from his mouth. โDidn't expect to see me, did you?โ
โWhat brings you here, Eben?โ asked Mr. Graham, uneasily.
โWell, the cars brought me to Stockton, and I've walked the rest of the way.โ
โI've heard of you,โ said his father, frowning. โI got a letter last night from Mrs. Jones.โ
โShe said she was going to write,โ said Eben, shrugging his shoulders.
โHow came it,โ said his father, his voice trembling with anger, โthat you haven't paid your board bill for six weeks?โ
โI didn't have the money,โ said Eben, with a composure which was positively aggravating to his father.
โAnd why didn't you have the money? Your wages are ample to pay all your expenses.โ
โIt costs more money to live in Boston than you think for, father.โ
โDon't you get ten dollars a week, sir? At your age I got only seven, and saved two dollars a week.โ
โYou didn't live in Boston, father.โ
โI didn't smoke cigars,โ said his father, angrily, as he fixed his eye on the one his son was smoking. โHow much did you pay for that miserable weed?โ
โYou're mistaken, father. It's a very good article. I paid eight dollars a hundred.โ
โEight dollars a hundred!โ gasped Mr. Graham. โNo wonder you can't pay your board billโI can't afford to spend my money on cigars.โ
โOh, yes, you can, father, if you choose. Why, you're a rich man.โ
โA rich man!โ repeated Mr. Graham, nervously. โIt would take a rich man to pay your bills. But you haven't told me why you have come home.โ
โI lost my situation, fatherโsome meddlesome fellow told my employer that I occasionally played a game of pool, and my tailor came to the store and dunned me; so old Boggs gave me a long lecture and my walking papers, and here I am.โ
Ebenezer Graham was sorely troubled, and, though he isn't a favorite of mine, I confess, that in this matter he has my sincere sympathy.
CHAPTER IV. HERBERT LOSES HIS PLACE.
Ebenezer Graham with some difficulty ascertained from Eben that he had other bills, amounting in the aggregate to forty-seven dollars. This added to the board bill, made a total of seventy-seven dollars. Mr. Graham's face elongated perceptibly.
โThat is bad enough,โ he said; โbut you have lost your income also, and that makes matters worse. Isn't there a chance of the firm taking you back?โ
โNo, sir,โ replied the prodigal. โYou see, we had a flare up, and I expressed my opinion of them pretty plainly. They wouldn't take me back if I'd come for nothing.โ
โAnd they won't give you a recommendation, either?โ said Ebenezer, with a half groan.
โNo, sir; I should say not.โ
โSo you have ruined your prospects so far as Boston is concerned,โ said his father, bitterly. โMay I ask how you expect to get along?โ
โI have a plan,โ said Eben, with cheerful confidence.
โWhat is it?โ
โI would like to go to California. If I can't get any situation in San Francisco, I can go to the mines.โ
โVery fine, upon my word!โ said his father, sarcastically. โAnd how do you propose to get to California?โ
โI can go either by steamer, across the isthmus, or over the Union Pacific road.โ
โThat isn't what I mean. Where are you to get the money to pay your fare with?โ
โI suppose you will supply that,โ said Eben.
โYou do? Well, it strikes me you have some assurance,โ ejaculated Mr. Graham. โYou expect me to advance hundreds of dollars, made by working early and late, to support a spendthrift son!โ
โI'll pay you back as soon as I am able,โ said Eben, a little abashed.
โNo doubt! You'd pay me in the same way you pay your board bills,โ said Ebenezer, who may be excused for the sneer. โI can invest my money to better advantage than upon you.โ
โThen, if you will not do that,โ said Eben, sullenly, โI will leave you to suggest a plan.โ
โThere is only one plan I can think of, Eben. Go back to your old place in the store. I will dismiss the Carr boy, and you can attend to the post office, and do the store work.โ
โWhat, go back to tending a country grocery, after being a salesman in a city store!โ exclaimed Eben, disdainfully.
โYes, it seems the only thing you have left. It's your own fault that you are not still a salesman in the city.โ
Eben took the cigar from his mouth, and thought rapidly.
โWell,โ he said, after a pause, โif I agree to do this, what will you pay me?โ
โWhat will I pay you?โ
โYes, will you pay me ten dollars a weekโthe same as I got at Hanbury & Deane's?โ
โTen dollars a week!โ ejaculated Ebenezer, โI don't get any more than that myself.โ
โI guess there's a little mistake in your calculations, father,โ said Eben, significantly. โIf you don't make at least forty dollars a week, including the post office, then I am mistaken.โ
โSo you areโridiculously mistaken!โ said his father, sharply. โWhat you presume is entirely out of the question. You forget that you will be getting your board, and Tom Tripp only received a dollar and a half a week without board.โ
โIs that all you pay to Herbert Carr?โ
โI pay him a leetle more,โ admitted Ebenezer.
โWhat will you give me?โ
โI'll give you your board and clothes,โ said Ebenezer, โand that seems to be more than you made in Boston.โ
โAre you in earnest?โ asked Eben, in genuine dismay.
โCertainly. It isn't a bad offer, either.โ
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