HERBERT IS PROVIDED WITH A NEW HOME
Mrs. Barton regarded the newcomers with a wondering
stare.
“Did you want to see Joel?” she asked.
“I shall be glad to see him
in due time, Mrs. Barton,” returned Willis Ford,
with unwonted politeness; “but I came principally
to see you.”
“Who be you?” inquired
Mrs. Barton, unceremoniously; “I don’t
know you no more’n the dead.”
“There is a slight connection
between us, however. I am the stepson of Pauline
Estabrook, of New York, who is a cousin of yours.”
“You don’t say Pauline
is your mother?” ejaculated the lady of the
house. “Well, I never expected to see kith
or kin of hers out here. Is that your son?”
“No, Mrs. Barton; but he is under my charge.”
Herbert was about to disclaim this,
but an ominous frown from Willis Ford intimidated
him.
“My name is Willis Ford; his is Sam Green.”
Herbert’s eyes opened wide with astonishment
at this statement.
“My name is—” he commenced.
“Silence!” hissed Ford,
with a menacing look. “You must not contradict
me.”
“I s’pose I ought to invite
you to stay here,” said Mrs. Barton, awkwardly;
“but he’s so shif-less, and such a poor
provider, that I ain’t got anything in the house
fit for dinner.”
“Thank you,” returned
Ford, with an inward shudder. “I shall dine
at the hotel; but I have a little business matter
to speak of, Mrs. Barton, and I would wish to speak
in private. I will come into the house, with
your permission, and we will leave the two boys together.”
“Come right in,” said
Mrs. Barton, whose curiosity was aroused. “Here,
you Abner, just take care of the little boy.”
Abner proceeded to do this, first
thinking it necessary to ask a few questions.
“Where do you live when you’re
at home, Sam?” he asked.
“In New York; but my name isn’t Sam,”
replied Herbert.
“What is it, then?”
“Herbert.”
“What makes him call you Sam,
then?” asked Abner, with a jerk of the finger
toward the house.
“I don’t know, except he is afraid I will
be found.”
Abner looked puzzled.
“Is he your guardeen?” he asked.
“No; he was my father’s clerk.”
“Ho! Did your father have clerks?”
“Yes; he is a rich man and does business in
New York.”
“What made him send you out here?”
“He didn’t.”
“Then why did you come?”
“Mr. Ford was mad with papa, and stole me away.”
“He wouldn’t steal me
away easy!” said Abner, defiantly; “but,
then, I ain’t a little kid like you.”
“I’m not a kid,” said Herbert, who
was not used to slang.
“Oh, you don’t know what
I mean—you’re a little boy and couldn’t
do nothin’. If he tried to take me, he’d
find his hands full.”
Herbert, who was not very much prepossessed
by Abner’s appearance, thought it very doubtful
whether any one would ever attempt to kidnap him.
“What’s he goin’ to do with you?”
continued Abner.
“I don’t know. I
expect he’ll make papa pay a good sum to get
me back.”
“Humph!” remarked Abner,
surveying with some contempt the small proportions
of the boy before him. “You ain’t
much good. I don’t believe he’ll
pay much for you.”
Tears sprang to the eyes of the little
boy, but he forced them back.
“My papa would think differently,” he
said.
“Papa!” mimicked Abner.
“Oh, how nice we are! Why don’t you
say dad, like I do?”
“Because it isn’t a nice
name. Papa wouldn’t like to have me call
him so.”
“Where did you get them clothes?
I don’t think much of ’em.”
“Nor I,” answered Herbert.
“They’re not my own clothes. Mr. Ford
bought them for me in Chicago.”
“He must like you, to buy you new clothes.”
“No, he doesn’t.
My own clothes were much nicer. He sold them.
He was afraid some one would know me in the others.”
“I wonder what he and marm are talking about
so long?”
This question Herbert was unable to
answer. He did not guess how nearly this conversation
affected him.
No sooner had the two entered the
house than Willis Ford began.
“Mrs. Barton,” he said,
“I’ll tell you now what brought me here.”
“Go ahead,” said the lady, encouragingly.
“I want you to take the boy I have brought with
me to board.”
“Land sakes! I don’t keep a boardin’
house!”
“No; but if I will make it worth
your while you will take him, won’t you?”
“How much will you give?” asked Mrs. Barton,
shrewdly.
“Four dollars a week.”
“He’ll be a sight of trouble,”
said the lady; but there was something in her tone
that satisfied Ford that she was favorably inclined
to the proposal.
“Oh, no, he won’t.
He’s so small that you can twist him round your
finger. Besides, Abner will be company for him.
He will be with him most of the time.”
“Say five dollars and it’s
a bargain,” said Mrs. Barton.
Ford hesitated. He did not care
to spend more than he was obliged to, but it was of
importance to obtain at least a temporary refuge for
the boy, of whose care he was heartily tired.
It seemed to him that five dollars would be enough
to support the whole family in the style in which
they were apparently accustomed to live. However,
it was politic to make the sum sufficient to interest
these people in retaining charge of the boy.
“Well,” he said, after
a pause, “it’s more than I expected to
pay, but I suppose I shall have to accept your terms.
I conclude Mr. Barton will not object to your taking
a boarder?”
“Oh, Joel is of no account,”
returned Mrs. Barton, contemptuously. “I
run this house!”
Willis Ford suppressed a smile.
He could easily believe from Mrs. Barton’s appearance
that she was the head of the establishment.
“There’s one thing more,”
added Mrs. Barton; “you’re to pay the
money to me. Jest as sure as it goes into Joel’s
hands, it’ll go for drink. The way that
man carries on is a disgrace.”
“I should prefer to pay the money to you,”
said Ford.
“You’ll have to pay somethin’
in advance, if you want the boy to have anythin’
to eat. I’ve got to send to the village,
and I haven’t got a cent in the house.”
Willis Ford took out a pocketbook.
Extracting therefrom four five-dollar bills, he handed
them to Mrs. Barton.
“There’s money for four
weeks,” he said. “When that time is
up I’ll send you more.”
Mrs. Barton’s eyes sparkled,
and she eagerly clutched the money.
“I ain’t seen so much
money for years,” she said. “I’ll
jest look out Joel don’t get hold of it.
Don’t you tell Joel or Abner how much you’ve
paid me.”
“I’ll take care of that,
Mrs. Barton. By the way, I must caution you not
to believe any of the boy’s stories. He’s
the son of a friend of mine, who’s put him under
my care. The boy’s weak-minded, and has
strange fancies. He thinks his name isn’t
Sam Green, and that his father is rich. Why,
only the other day he insisted his name was George
Washington.”
“Land’s sake! How
cur’us!” “Of course; you won’t
pay any attention to what he says. He may take
it into his head to run away. If he does, you
must get him back.”
“You can trust me to do that!”
said Mrs. Barton, with emphasis. “I ain’t
goin’ to let no five-dollar boarder slip through
my fingers!”
“That’s well! Now
I must be going. You will hear from me from time
to time.”
He passed through the front door into the yard.
“Good-by!” he said.
Herbert was about to follow him, but he waived him
back.
“You are not to come with me,
Sam,” he said. “I shall leave you
for a few weeks with this good lady.”
Herbert stared at him in dismay.
This was something he had never dreamed of.