2016년 9월 21일 수요일

Digging for Gold 3

Digging for Gold 3


“Rodney,” said his mother, “your kind offer is thrown away.”
 
“So I see,” said Rodney, extending his plate for another piece of pie.
 
“I’m sorry you take Grant’s part, Mrs. T.,” said the farmer. “I won’t
countenance no extravagance. What’s the use of spending good money when
a suit of clothes is offered for nothing.”
 
“If the suit is a good one,” retorted Grant, “why does Rodney lay it
aside?”
 
“There is a difference between him and you,” said Mrs. Bartlett in an
acid tone.
 
“What difference?”
 
“I’m a gentleman and you’re a farm boy,” said Rodney, taking it upon
himself to answer.
 
“I shan’t always be a farm boy!”
 
“No, you won’t be a boy when you’re grown up,” returned Rodney, looking
around to see if his joke were appreciated.
 
“There aint no disgrace in bein’ a farm boy,” said Seth Tarbox. “I
worked on a farm myself when I was a boy, and I’ve worked on a farm ever
since.”
 
“I’m going to college, and be a lawyer,” said Rodney in a consequential
tone.
 
“It costs a sight of money to go to college, Sophia,” said Tarbox
deprecatingly.
 
“I shall make a lot of money when I am a lawyer,” explained Rodney.
“Why, I read in the paper that there are some lawyers that make fifty
thousand dollars. Besides, I may get elected to Congress. That’s better
than working on a farm. When Grant is getting fifteen dollars a month
and his board, as a hired man on a farm, I will ride in my carriage, and
live like a gentleman.”
 
“I may be a rich man myself,” interrupted Grant.
 
“You a rich man! Ho, ho!” laughed Rodney. “You look like it.”
 
“No, I don’t look like it, but I may get there all the same.”
 
“You talk a good deal for a boy of your age,” remarked Mrs. Bartlett in
a tone of rebuke.
 
“No more than Rodney.”
 
But Grant, looking at his mother, saw that she was disturbed, and
refrained from noticing any further speeches of his young antagonist.
 
“By the way, father,” said Mrs. Bartlett, “you remember John Heywood, of
our town?”
 
“Yes; what of him?”
 
“He’s just got back from California.”
 
“It’s dreadful expensive goin’ to California.”
 
“That isn’t of much account if you can bring back a lot of money.”
 
“Did John Heywood bring back a lot of money?” asked the farmer, pricking
up his ears.
 
“He brought back ten thousand dollars.”
 
“Sho! How you talk!”
 
“It’s true, every word of it.”
 
“How did he make it?”
 
“Mining, I believe. He’s bought the Ezra Jones place, and is going to
put up a nice house.”
 
Among the most interested listeners was Grant Colburn. His color went
and came, and he seemed excited.
 
“How long was Mr. Heywood in California,” he asked.
 
“About a year. He was gone a good deal longer, for he went across the
plains, and it took four months. He came back across the Isthmus.”
 
“I would like to go California,” said Grant thoughtfully.
 
“_You_ go to California! A boy like you!” repeated Mrs. Bartlett
scornfully. “What could you do?”
 
“I could make more money than I do here,” answered Grant with spirit.
 
“I reckon you won’t go in a hurry,” said Seth Tarbox composedly. “You
haven’t money enough to get you twenty-five miles, and I s’pose it’s as
much as two thousand miles from Iowa to Californy.”
 
Grant felt that there was a good deal of truth in his step-father’s
words, but the idea had found lodgment in his brain, and was likely to
remain there.
 
“I mean to go sometime!” he said resolutely.
 
“You’d better start right off after dinner!” said Rodney in a sneering
tone.
 
 
 
 
CHAPTER III.
A TERRIBLE RESPONSIBILITY.
 
 
“Grant, you may go over to the other farm and ask Luke Weldon for the
pitchfork he borrowed of me last week. There’s no knowing how long he
would keep it if I didn’t send for it.”
 
“All right, sir.”
 
“Rodney can walk with you if he wants to.”
 
“Thank you,” said Rodney, shrugging his shoulders, “but I don’t care to
walk a mile and a half for a pitchfork. I’ll go part way, though, to the
village.”
 
The two boys started out together. Rodney looked askance at his
companion’s poor clothes.
 
“You’re foolish not to take the suit I offered you,” he said. “Its a
good deal better than yours.”
 
“I presume it is.”
 
“Then why don’t you want it?”
 
“Because it will prevent your grandfather buying me a new one.”
 
“Have you asked him?”
 
“Yes, I asked him this morning.”
 
“What did he say?”
 
“That he would buy a new one for himself, and have his best suit cut
down for me.”
 
Rodney laughed.
 
“You’d look like a fright,” he said.
 
“I think so myself,” assented Grant with a smile.
 
“You’d better take mine than his. Grandfather isn’t much like a dude in
dress.”
 
“No; he tells me that I dress as well as he.”
 
“So you do, nearly. However, it does not make much difference how an old
man like him dresses.”
 
Rodney rather approved of his grandfather’s scanty outlay on dress, for
it would enable him to leave more money to his mother and himself.
 
“Do you know how old grandfather is?” asked Rodney.
 
“I believe he is sixty-nine.”
 
“That’s pretty old. He won’t live many years longer probably. Then the
property will come to mother and me.”
 
“Shall you come to live on the farm?”
 
“Not much. Mother says she’ll sell both farms, and then we may go to
Chicago to live.”
 
Grant did not like Mr. Tarbox, but he was rather disgusted to hear his
grandson speculate so coolly about his death.
 
“Don’t you think grandfather is failing?” continued Rodney.
 
“I don’t know that he is,” answered Grant coldly.
 
“Mother thinks he’s got kidney disease. Old men are very apt to have
that trouble.”
 
“I never heard him complain of being sick.”
 
By this time the two boys had reached the village.
 
“I think I’ll drop into the drug store,” said Rodney. “They keep
cigarettes there, don’t they?” 

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