A PLAUSIBLE stranger.
Three days later found Carl still
on his travels. It was his custom to obtain his
meals at a cheap hotel, or, if none were met with,
at a farmhouse, and to secure lodgings where he could,
and on as favorable terms as possible. He realized
the need of economy, and felt that he was practicing
it. He had changed his ten-dollar bill the first
day, for a five and several ones. These last
were now spent, and the five-dollar bill alone remained
to him. He had earned nothing, though everywhere
he had been on the lookout for a job.
Toward the close of the last day he
overtook a young man of twenty-five, who was traveling
in the same direction.
“Good-afternoon,” said the young man,
sociably.
“Good-afternoon, sir.”
“Where are you bound, may I ask?”
“To the next town.”
“Fillmore?”
“Yes, if that is the name.”
“So am I. Why shouldn’t we travel together?”
“I have no objection,” said Carl, who
was glad of company.
“Are you in any business?”
“No, but I hope to find a place.”
“Oh, a smart boy like you will soon find employment.”
“I hope so, I am sure.
I haven’t much money left, and it is necessary
I should do something.”
“Just so. I am a New York
salesman, but just now I am on my vacation—taking
a pedestrian tour with knapsack and staff, as you see.
The beauty of it is that my salary runs on just as
if I were at my post, and will nearly pay all my traveling
expenses.”
“You are in luck. Besides
you have a good place to go back to. There isn’t
any vacancy, is there? You couldn’t take
on a boy?” asked Carl, eagerly.
“Well, there might be a chance,”
said the young man, slowly. “You haven’t
any recommendations with you, have you?”
“No; I have never been employed.”
“It doesn’t matter. I will recommend
you myself.”
“You might be deceived in me,” said Carl,
smiling.
“I’ll take the risk of that. I know
a reliable boy when I see him.”
“Thank you. What is the name of your firm?”
“F. Brandes & Co., commission
merchants, Pearl Street. My own name is Chauncy
Hubbard, at your service.”
“I am Carl Crawford.”
“That’s a good name.
I predict that we shall be great chums, if I manage
to get you a place in our establishment.”
“Is Mr. Brandes a good man to work for?”
“Yes, he is easy and good-natured.
He is liberal to his clerks. What salary do you
think I get?”
“I couldn’t guess.”
“Forty dollars a week, and I
am only twenty-five. Went into the house at sixteen,
and worked my way up.”
“You have certainly done well,” said Carl,
respectfully.
“Well, I’m no slouch, if I do say it myself.”
“I don’t wonder your income pays the expenses
of your vacation trip.”
“It ought to, that’s a
fact, though I’m rather free handed and like
to spend money. My prospects are pretty good
in another direction. Old Fred Brandes has a
handsome daughter, who thinks considerable of your
humble servant.”
“Do you think there is any chance
of marrying her?” asked Carl, with interest.
“I think my chance is pretty
good, as the girl won’t look at anybody else.”
“Is Mr. Brandes wealthy?”
“Yes, the old man’s pretty
well fixed, worth nearly half a million, I guess.”
“Perhaps he will take you into the firm,”
suggested Carl.
“Very likely. That’s what I’m
working for.”
“At any rate, you ought to save something out
of your salary.”
“I ought, but I haven’t.
The fact is, Carl,” said Chauncy Hubbard, in
a burst of confidence, “I have a great mind
to make a confession to you.”
“I shall feel flattered, I am sure,” said
Carl, politely.
“I have one great fault—I gamble.”
“Do you?” said Carl, rather
startled, for he had been brought up very properly
to have a horror of gambling.
“Yes, I suppose it’s in
my blood. My father was a very rich man at one
time, but he lost nearly all his fortune at the gaming
table.”
“That ought to have been a warning
to you, I should think.”
“It ought, and may be yet, for I am still a
young man.”
“Mr. Hubbard,” said Carl,
earnestly, “I feel rather diffident about advising
you, for I am only a boy, but I should think you would
give up such a dangerous habit.”
“Say no more, Carl! You
are a true friend. I will try to follow your
advice. Give me your hand.”
Carl did so, and felt a warm glow
of pleasure at the thought that perhaps he had redeemed
his companion from a fascinating vice.
“I really wish I had a sensible
boy like you to be my constant companion. I should
feel safer.”
“Do you really have such a passion for gambling,
then?”
“Yes; if at the hotel to-night
I should see a party playing poker, I could not resist
joining them. Odd, isn’t it?”
“I am glad I have no such temptation.”
“Yes, you are lucky. By the way, how much
money have you about you?”
“Five dollars.”
“Then you can do me a favor.
I have a ten-dollar bill, which I need to get me home.
Now, I would like to have you keep a part of it for
me till I go away in the morning. Give me your
five, and I will hand you ten. Out of that you
can pay my hotel bill and hand me the balance due me
in the morning.”
“If you really wish me to do so.”
“Enough said. Here is the ten.”
Carl took the bill, and gave Mr. Hubbard his five-dollar
note.
“You are placing considerable confidence in
me,” he said.
“I am, it is true, but I have
no fear of being deceived. You are a boy who
naturally inspires confidence.”
Carl thought Mr. Chauncy Hubbard a
very agreeable and sensible fellow, and he felt flattered
to think that the young man had chosen him as a guardian,
so to speak.
“By the way, Carl, you haven’t
told me,” said Hubbard, as they pursued their
journey, “how a boy like yourself is forced to
work his own way.”
“I can tell you the reason very
briefly—I have a stepmother.”
“I understand. Is your father living?”
“Yes.”
“But he thinks more of the stepmother than of
you?”
“I am afraid he does.”
“You have my sympathy, Carl.
I will do all I can to help you. If you can only
get a place in our establishment, you will be all right.
Step by step you will rise, till you come to stand
where I do.”
“That would satisfy me. Has Mr. Brandes
got another daughter?”
“No, there is only one.”
“Then I shall have to be content
with the forty dollars a week. If I ever get
it, I will save half.”
“I wish I could.”
“You can if you try. Why,
you might have two thousand dollars saved up now,
if you had only begun to save in time.”
“I have lost more than that
at the gaming table. You will think me very foolish.”
“Yes, I do,” said Carl, frankly.
“You are right. But here we are almost
at the village.”
“Is there a good hotel?”
“Yes—the Fillmore. We will take
adjoining rooms if you say so.”
“Very well.”
“And in the morning you will pay the bill?”
“Certainly.”
The two travelers had a good supper,
and retired early, both being fatigued with the journey.
It was not till eight o’clock the next morning
that Carl opened his eyes. He dressed hastily,
and went down to breakfast. He was rather surprised
not to see his companion of the day before.
“Has Mr. Hubbard come down yet?” he asked
at the desk.
“Yes; he took an early breakfast, and went off
by the first train.”
“That is strange. I was to pay his bill.”
“He paid it himself.”
Carl did not know what to make of
this. Had Hubbard forgotten that he had five
dollars belonging to him? Fortunately, Carl had
his city address, and could refund the money in New
York.
“Very well! I will pay my own bill.
How much is it?”
“A dollar and a quarter.”
Carl took the ten-dollar bill from
his wallet and tendered it to the clerk.
Instead of changing it at once, the
clerk held it up to the light and examined it critically.
“I can’t take that bill,” he said,
abruptly.
“Why not?”
“Because it is counterfeit.”
Carl turned pale, and the room seemed
to whirl round. It was all the money he had.