Eben’s last hope fails.
Ebenezer Graham had taken no stock
in his son’s charge against Herbert. He
was not prejudiced in favor of Herbert, nor did he
feel particularly friendly to him, but he was a man
of shrewdness and common sense, and he knew that Herbert
was not a fool. When Eben made known to him the
fact that the stamps and money were missing, he said
keenly: “What has become of ’em?”
“I don’t know,”
answered Eben, “but I can guess well enough.”
“Guess, then,” said his father, shortly.
“You know Herbert Carr took my place last evening?”
“Well?”
“There’s no doubt that he took the stamps
and money.”
“That isn’t very likely.”
“I feel sure of it—so sure that I
mean to charge him with it.”
“Well, you can see what he says.”
Ebenezer did not understand that Eben
intended to have the boy arrested, and would not have
consented to it had he known. But Eben slipped
out of the store, and arranged for the arrest without
his father’s knowledge. Indeed, he did
not learn till the trial had already commenced, Eben
having made some excuse for his absence.
When Eben returned his father greeted
him in a tone very far from cordial.
“Well, Eben, I hear you’ve gone and made
a fool of yourself?”
“I have only been defending
your property, father,” said Eben, sullenly.
“I thought you’d appreciate it better than
this.”
“You’ve charged an innocent
boy with theft, and now all his friends will lay it
up agin’ us.”
“Were you going to be robbed
without saying a word?” asked Eben.
“No, I’m not, Eben Graham;
I’m goin’ to say a word, and now’s
the time to say it. You can’t pull wool
over my eyes. The money’s gone, and the
stamps are gone, and somebody’s got ’em.”
“Herbert Carr!”
“No, it isn’t Herbert
Carr. It’s somebody nearer to me, I’m
ashamed to say, than Herbert Carr.”
“Do you mean to say I took them?” asked
Eben.
“I won’t bring a charge
unless I can prove it, but I shall watch you pretty
closely after this.”
“In that case, I don’t
wish to work for you any longer; I throw up the situation,”
said Eben, loftily.
“Verv well. When are you going to leave
town?”
“I ain’t going to leave town at present.”
“Where are you going to board, then?”
Eben regarded his father in dismay.
“You’re not going to send
me adrift, are you?” he asked, in consternation.
“I’m not going to support
you in idleness; if you give up your situation in
the store, you’ll have to go to work for somebody
else.”
“I wish I could,” thought
Eben, thinking of the rich young man at the hotel,
from whom he had sought a position as companion.
“Then I shall have to leave
Wayneboro,” he said; “there’s nothing
to do here.”
“Yes, there is; Farmer Collins wants a hired
man.”
“A hired man!” repeated
Eben, scornfully. “Do you think I am going—to
hire out on a farm?”
“You might do a great deal worse,”
answered Ebenezer, sensibly.
“After being a dry-goods salesman
in Boston, I haven’t got down to that, I beg
to assure you,” said Eben, with an air of consequence.
“Then you will have to work
in the store if you expect to stay at home,”
said his father. “And hark you, Eben Graham,”
he added, “don’t report any more losses
of money or stamps. I make you responsible for
both.”
Eben went back to his work in an uneasy
frame of mind. He saw that he had not succeeded
in imposing upon his father, and that the clear-sighted
old gentleman strongly suspected where the missing
articles had gone. Eben might have told, had he
felt inclined, that the five-dollar bill had been
mailed to a lottery agent in New York in payment for
a ticket in a Southern lottery, and that the stamps
were even now in his possession, and would be sold
at the first opportunity. His plan to throw suspicion
upon Herbert had utterly failed, and the cold looks
with which he had been greeted showed what the villagers
thought of his attempt.
“I won’t stay in Wayneboro
much longer,” Eben inwardly resolved. “It’s
the dullest hole in creation. I can get along
somehow in a large place, but here there’s positively
nothing. Hire out on a farm, indeed! My
father ought to be ashamed to recommend such a thing
to his only son, when he’s so well off.
If he would only give me two hundred dollars, I would
go to California and trouble him no more. Plenty
of people make money in California, and why shouldn’t
I? If that ticket draws a prize—”
And then Eben went into calculations
of what he would do if only he drew a prize of a thousand
dollars. That wasn’t too much to expect,
for there were several of that amount, and several
considerably larger. He pictured how independent
he would be with his prize, and how he would tell
his father that he could get along without him, displaying
at the same time a large roll of bills. When he
reached California he could buy an interest in a mine,
and perhaps within three or four years he could return
home twenty times as rich as his father. It was
pleasant to think over all this, and almost to persuade
himself that the good luck had actually come.
However, he must wait a few days, for the ticket had
not yet come, and the lottery would not be drawn for
a week.
The ticket arrived two days later;
Eben took care to slip the envelope into his pocket
without letting his father or anyone else see it,
for unpleasant questions might have been asked as to
where he got the money that paid for it, Mr. Graham
knowing very well that his son had not five dollars
by him.
For a few days Eben must remain in
Wayneboro, until the lottery was drawn. If he
was unlucky, he would have to consider some other plan
for raising money to get away from Wayneboro.
It was not till the day after the
trial and his triumphant acquittal, that Herbert saw
Eben. He came to the store to buy some groceries
for his mother.
“Good-evening, Herbert,” said Eben.
“Eben,” said Herbert,
coldly, “except in the way of business, I don’t
want to speak to you.”
“You don’t bear malice
on account of that little affair, do you, Herbert?”
said Eben, smoothly.
“That little affair, as you
call it, might have been a very serious affair to
me.”
“I only did my duty,” said Eben.
“Was it your duty to charge an innocent person
with theft?”
“I didn’t see who else could have taken
the things,” said Eben.
“Probably you know as well as
anybody,” said Herbert, contemptuously.
“What do you mean?” demanded Eben, coloring.
“You know better than I do. How much do
I owe you?”
“Thirty-three cents.”
“There is your money,” said Herbert, and
walked out of the store.
“I hate that boy!” said
Eben, scowling at Herbert’s retreating figure.
“He puts on too many airs, just because a city
man’s taken him in charity and is paying his
expenses. Some time I’ll be able to come
up with him, I hope.”
Herbert was not of an unforgiving
nature, but he felt that Eben had wronged him deeply,
and saw no reason why he would not repeat the injury
if he ever got the chance. He had at least a partial
understanding of Eben’s mean nature and utter
selfishness, and felt that he wished to have nothing
to do with him. Ebenezer Graham was very “close,”
but he was a hard-working man and honest as the world
goes. He was tolerably respected in Wayneboro,
though not popular, but Eben seemed on the high road
to become a rascal.
A week slipped by, and a circular
containing the list of prizes drawn was sent to Eben.
He ran his eyes over it in a flutter
of excitement. Alas! for his hopes. In the
list of lucky numbers the number on his ticket was
not included.
“I have drawn a blank!
Curse the luck!” he muttered, savagely.
“The old man needn’t think I am going
to stay here in Wayneboro. If he won’t
give me money to go out West, why, then—”
But he did not say what then.