A VISIT TO THE LAWYER.
Mrs. Rushton was braiding straw when
Robert entered with his berries.
“Couldn’t you sell your berries, Robert?”
she asked.
“I haven’t tried yet, mother.”
“The berrying season won’t
last much longer,” said his mother, despondently.
“Don’t borrow trouble, mother. I
am sure we shall get along well.”
“You feel more confidence than I do.”
“I just met Halbert Davis in the street.”
“Have you made up with him?”
“It is for him to make up with me.”
“I am afraid you are too high-spirited,
Robert. Did Halbert speak to you?”
“Oh, yes,” said Robert,
laughing. “He takes a great interest in
my affairs. He predicts that we shall come to
the poorhouse yet.”
“He may be right.”
“Now, mother, don’t be
so desponding. We’ve got enough money to
pay our expenses for more than a year, even if we
both stop work.”
“What can you mean, Robert?”
said his mother, looking up in surprise. “You
must be crazy.”
“Does that look like going to
the poorhouse?” asked Robert, drawing out his
money.
Mrs. Rushton uttered an exclamation of surprise.
“Whose money is that, Robert?”
“Mine!”
“You haven’t done anything wrong?”
“No, mother; I thought you knew
me too well for that. I see you are anxious to
hear how I obtained it, so I’ll tell you all
about it.”
He sat down, and in brief words told
his mother the story of the train and its peril, how
he had rescued it, and, lastly, of the generous gift
which he had so unexpectedly received. The mother’s
heart was touched, and she forgot all her forebodings.
“My son, I am proud of you,”
she said, her eyes moist. “You have done
a noble deed, and you deserve the reward. But
what a risk you ran!”
“I know it, mother, but we won’t
think of that, now that it is over. How much,
money do you think I have here?”
“Two or three hundred dollars.”
“Six hundred and thirty-five!
So you see, mother, we needn’t go to the poorhouse
just yet. Now, how much better off should I have
been if I had kept my place in the factory? It
would have taken me more than two years to earn as
much money as this. But that isn’t all.
I have been the means of saving a great many lives,
for the train was sure to be thrown down the embankment.
I shall remember that all my life.”
“We have reason to be grateful
to Heaven that you have been the means of doing so
much good, Robert, while, at the same time, you have
benefited yourself.”
“That is true, mother.”
“I shall be afraid to have so
much money in the house. If it were known, we
might be robbed.”
“I will leave it with Mr. Paine
until I get a chance to put it in a savings bank.
He has a safe in his office. At the same time
I will carry him some berries as a present. It
won’t be much, but I should like to do it on
account of his kindness about the boat. I will
offer now to bear the expense of its repair.”
After washing his hands and adjusting
his clothes a little, for Robert, though no fop like
Halbert, was not regardless of appearances, especially
as he thought Hester might see him, he set out for
the lawyer’s office.
“Excuse my bringing in my berries,”
said Robert, as he entered the office, “but
I want to ask your acceptance of them.”
Many persons, under the supposition
that Robert was too poor to afford a gift, would have
declined it, or offered to pay for it, thinking they
were acting kindly and considerately. But Mr.
Paine knew that Robert would be mortified by such
an offer, and he answered:
“Thank you, Robert; I will accept
your gift with thanks on one condition.”
“What is it, Mr. Paine?”
inquired our hero, a little puzzled.
“That you will take tea with
us to-morrow evening, and help us do justice to them.”
“Thank you,” said Robert,
not a little pleased at the invitation, “but
I shouldn’t like to leave my mother at home
alone.”
“Oh, we must have your mother,
too. Hester will call this evening, and invite
her.”
“Then,” said Robert, “I
can answer for myself, and I think for her, that we
should both be very happy to come.”
The lawyer’s social position
made such an invitation particularly gratifying to
Robert. Besides, he was led to value it more on
account of the persistent efforts of Halbert to injure
him in the general estimation. Then, too, it
was pleasant to think that he was to sit down to the
same table with Hester, as her father’s guest,
and to receive a call from her at his own house.
Nothing that Mr. Paine could have done would have
afforded him an equal amount of gratification,
“There is one other matter I
wanted to speak to you about, Mr. Paine,” he
said. “Will you take care of some money
for me until I get a chance to deposit it in the savings
bank?”
“Certainly, Robert,” was
the reply, but the lawyer’s manner showed some
surprise. He knew the circumstances of the Rushtons,
and he had not supposed they had any money on hand.
“How much is it?”
“Six hundred and thirty-five
dollars,” answered Robert, producing it.
“Will you count it, and see if it is all right?”
“Is this your money?”
asked the lawyer, laying down his pen and gazing at
Robert in astonishment.
“Yes, sir,” said Robert,
enjoying his surprise. “I will tell you
how I got it”
So the story was told, with a modest
reserve as to his own courage, but still showing,
without his intending it, how nobly he had behaved.
“Give me your hand, Robert,”
said Mr. Paine, cordially. “You have shown
yourself a hero. We shall be proud of your company
to tea to-morrow evening.”
Robert flushed with gratification
at the high compliment conveyed in these words.
What did he care then for Halbert
Davis and his petty malice! He had the approval
of his own conscience, the good opinion of those whom
he most respected and a provision against want sufficient
to avert all present anxiety.
“There is one thing more, Mr.
Paine,” he added. “It’s about
the boat Will was kind enough to lend me.”
“Have you seen the carpenter about repairing
it?”
“Yes, sir, and he will attend
to it as soon as he can spare the time. But that
was not what I wanted to say. I think I ought
to bear the expense of repairing it. I would
have spoken about it at first, but then I had no money,
and didn’t know when I should have any.
Will you be kind enough to take as much of my money
as will be needed to pay Mr. Plane’s bill when
it comes in?”
“Certainly not, Robert.
It was not your fault that the boat was injured.”
“It wouldn’t have happened
if I had not borrowed it. It isn’t right
that the expense should fall on you.”
“Don’t trouble yourself
about that, Robert. I am able and willing to pay
it. It is very honorable in you to make the offer,
and I like you the better for having made it.
Won’t you need any of this money for present
expenses?”
“Perhaps I had better take the
thirty-five dollars. Mother may be in want of
something.”
Robert received back the sum named,
and returned home, much pleased with his interview.
About seven o’clock, sitting
at the window of the little cottage, he saw Hester
Paine opening the front gate. He sprang to his
feet and opened the door.
“Good-evening, Robert,”
she said. “Is your mother at home?”
“Yes, Hester. Won’t you come in?”
“Thank you, Robert. Father
has been telling me what a hero you were, and it made
me feel proud that you were a friend of mine.”
Robert’s face lighted with pleasure.
“You compliment me more than
I deserve,” he answered, modestly; “but
it gives me great pleasure to know that you think
well of me.”
“I am sure that there is no
boy in Millville that would have dared to do such
a thing. Good-evening, Mrs. Rushton. Are
you not proud of your son?”
“He is a good son to me,”
said Mrs. Rushton, with a glance of affection.
“It is such a splendid thing
he did. He will be quite a hero. Indeed,
he is one already. I’ve got a New York
paper giving an account of the whole thing. I
brought it over, thinking you might like to read it.”
She displayed a copy of a great city
daily, in which full justice was done to Robert’s
bravery. Our hero listened with modest pleasure
while it was being read.
“I don’t deserve all that,” he said.
“You must let us judge of that,”
said Hester. “But I have come this evening,
Mrs. Rushton, to ask you to take tea with us to-morrow
evening, you and Robert. You will come, won’t
you?”
Mrs. Rushton was pleased with this
mark of attention, and after a slight demur, accepted.
I do not intend to give an account
of the next evening, and how Robert, in particular,
enjoyed it. That can be imagined, as well as Halbert’s
chagrin when he heard of the attention his rival was
receiving in a quarter where he himself so earnestly
desired to stand well. I must pass on to a communication
received by Mrs. Rushton, a communication of a very
unexpected character, which had an important effect
upon the fortunes of our hero.