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.
“That is bad enough,”
he said; “but you have lost your income also,
and that makes matters worse. Isn’t there
a chance of the firm taking you back?”
“No, sir,” replied the
prodigal. “You 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.”
“And they won’t give you
a recommendation, either?” said Ebenezer, with
a half groan.
“No, sir; I should say not.”
“So you have ruined your prospects
so far as Boston is concerned,” said his father,
bitterly. “May I ask how you expect to get
along?”
“I have a plan,” said Eben, with cheerful
confidence.
“What is it?”
“I would like to go to California.
If I can’t get any situation in San Francisco,
I can go to the mines.”
“Very fine, upon my word!”
said his father, sarcastically. “And how
do you propose to get to California?”
“I can go either by steamer,
across the isthmus, or over the Union Pacific road.”
“That isn’t what I mean.
Where are you to get the money to pay your fare with?”
“I suppose you will supply that,” said
Eben.
“You do? Well, it strikes
me you have some assurance,” ejaculated Mr.
Graham. “You expect me to advance hundreds
of dollars, made by working early and late, to support
a spendthrift son!”
“I’ll pay you back as
soon as I am able,” said Eben, a little abashed.
“No doubt! You’d
pay me in the same way you pay your board bills,”
said Ebenezer, who may be excused for the sneer.
“I can invest my money to better advantage than
upon you.”
“Then, if you will not do that,”
said Eben, sullenly, “I will leave you to suggest
a plan.”
“There 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.”
“What, go back to tending a
country grocery, after being a salesman in a city
store!” exclaimed Eben, disdainfully.
“Yes, it seems the only thing
you have left. It’s your own fault that
you are not still a salesman in the city.”
Eben took the cigar from his mouth,
and thought rapidly.
“Well,” he said, after
a pause, “if I agree to do this, what will you
pay me?”
“What will I pay you?”
“Yes, will you pay me ten dollars
a week—the same as I got at Hanbury & Deane’s?”
“Ten dollars a week!”
ejaculated Ebenezer, “I don’t get any more
than that myself.”
“I guess there’s a little
mistake in your calculations, father,” said
Eben, significantly. “If you don’t
make at least forty dollars a week, including the
post office, then I am mistaken.”
“So you are—ridiculously
mistaken!” said his father, sharply. “What
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.”
“Is that all you pay to Herbert Carr?”
“I pay him a leetle more,” admitted Ebenezer.
“What will you give me?”
“I’ll give you your board
and clothes,” said Ebenezer, “and that
seems to be more than you made in Boston.”
“Are you in earnest?” asked Eben, in genuine
dismay.
“Certainly. It isn’t a bad offer,
either.”
“Do you suppose a young man like me can get
along without money?”
“You ought to get along without
money for the next two years, after the sums you’ve
wasted in Boston. It will cripple me to pay your
bills,” and the storekeeper groaned at the thought
of the inroads the payment would make on his bank
account.
“You’re poorer than I
thought, if seventy-five dollars will cripple you,”
said Eben, who knew his father’s circumstances
too well to be moved by this representation.
“I shall be in the poorhouse
before many years if I undertake to pay all your bills,
Eben.”
After all, this was not, perhaps,
an exaggeration, for a spendthrift son can get through
a great deal of money.
“I can’t get along without
money, father,” said Eben, decidedly. “How
can I buy cigars, let alone other things?”
“I don’t want you to smoke
cigars. You’ll be a great deal better off
without them,” said his father, sharply.
“I understand; it’s necessary
to my health,” said Eben, rather absurdly.
“You won’t smoke at my
expense,” said Ebenezer, decidedly. “I
don’t smoke myself, and I never knew any good
come of it.”
“All the same, I must have some
money. What will people say about a young man
of my age not having a cent in his pocket? They
think my father is very mean.”
“I’ll allow you fifty
cents a week,” said Mr. Graham, after a pause.
“That won’t do! You
seem to think I am only six or seven years old!”
Finally, after considerable haggling,
Mr. Graham agreed to pay his son a dollar and a half
a week, in cash, besides board and clothes. He
reflected that he should be obliged to board and clothe
his son at any rate, and should save a dollar and
a half from Herbert’s wages.
“Well,” he said, “when
will you be ready to go to work?”
“I must have a few days to loaf,
father. I have been hard at work for a long time,
and need some rest.”
“Then you can begin next Monday
morning. I’ll get Herbert to show you how
to prepare the mail, so that you won’t have any
trouble about the post-office work.”
“By the way, father, how do
you happen to have the post office? I thought
Mrs. Carr was to carry it on.”
“So she did, for a time, but
a woman ain’t fit for a public position of that
kind. So I applied for the position, and got it.”
“What’s Mrs. Carr going to do?”
“She’s got her pension,” said Ebenezer,
shortly.
“Eight dollars a month, isn’t it?”
“Yes.”
“That ain’t much to support a family.”
“She’ll have to do something else, then,
I suppose.”
“There isn’t much to do in Wayneboro.”
“That isn’t my lookout.
She can take in sewing, or washing,” suggested
Ebenezer, who did not trouble himself much about the
care of his neighbors. “Besides there’s
Herbert—he can earn something.”
“But I’m to take his place.”
“Oh well, I ain’t under
any obligations to provide them a livin’.
I’ve got enough to take care of myself and my
family.”
“You’d better have let
her keep the post office,” said Eben. He
was not less selfish than his father, but then his
own interests were not concerned. He would not
have scrupled, in his father’s case, to do precisely
the same.
“It’s lucky I’ve
got a little extra income,” said Ebenezer, bitterly;
“now I’ve got your bills to pay.”
“I suppose I shall have to accept
your offer, father,” said Eben, “for the
present; but I hope you’ll think better of my
California plan after a while. Why, there’s
a fellow I know went out there last year, went up
to the mines, and now he’s worth five thousand
dollars!”
“Then he must be a very different
sort of a person from you,” retorted his father,
sagaciously. “You would never succeed there,
if you can’t in Boston.”
“I’ve never had a chance to try,”
grumbled Eben.
There was sound sense in what his
father said. Failure at home is very likely to
be followed by failure away from home. There have
been cases that seemed to disprove my assertion, but
in such cases failure has only been changed into success
by earnest work. I say to my young readers, therefore,
never give up a certainty at home to tempt the chances
of success in a distant State, unless you are prepared
for disappointment.
When the engagement had been made
with Eben, Mr. Graham called Herbert to his presence.
“Herbert,” said he, “I
won’t need you after Saturday night. My
son is going into the store, and will do all I require.
You can tell him how to prepare the mails, et cetery.”
“Very well, sir,” answered
Herbert. It was not wholly a surprise, but it
was a disappointment, for he did not know how he could
make three dollars a week in any other way, unless
he left Wayneboro.