Nicky-Nan, Reservist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about Nicky-Nan, Reservist.

Nicky-Nan, Reservist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about Nicky-Nan, Reservist.

He knelt and groped on the stone floor to a corner clear of the fallen rubbish.  On his way his fingers encountered a coin and clutched it—­comfort, tangible proof that he had not been dreaming.  He seated himself in the corner, propping his back there, and fell to speculating—­sensing the coin in his palm, fingering it from time to time.

The Old Doctor had always, in his lifetime, been accounted a well-to-do man. . . .  Very likely he had started this hoard in Bonaparte’s days, and had gone on adding to it in the long years of peace. . . .  It would certainly be a hundred pounds.  It might be a thousand.  One thousand pounds!

But no—­not so fast!  Put it at a hundred only, and daylight would be the unlikelier to bring disappointment.  The scattered coins he had seen by that one brief flash of the candle danced and multiplied themselves before his eyes like dots of fire in the darkness.  Still he resolutely kept their numbers down to one hundred.

A hundred pounds! . . .  Why, that, or even fifty, meant all the difference in life to him.  He could look Pamphlett in the face now.  He would step down to the Bank to-morrow, slap seven sovereigns down on the counter—­but not too boldly; for Pamphlett must not suspect—­ and demand the change in silver, with his receipt.  Full quittance—­ he could see Pamphlett’s face as he fetched forth the piece of paper and made out that quittance, signing his name across a postage stamp.

Not once in the course of his vision-building did it cross Nicky-Nan’s mind that the money was—­that it could be—­less than legitimately his.  Luck comes late to some men; to others, never.  It had come late to him, yet in the nick of time, as a godsend.  His family and the Old Doctor’s had intermarried, back along, quite in the old days; or so he had heard. . . .  Nicky-Nan knew nothing of any law about treasure-trove.  Wealth arrived to men as it befell or as they deserved; and, any way, “findings was keepings.”  His notion of other folks’ concern in this money reached no further than a vague fear of folks in general—­that they might rob him or deprive him of it in some way.  He must go to work cautiously.

Thus out of despair Fortune lifted him and began to install him in fear.

He must go to work very cautiously.  Being all unused to the possession of money, but accustomed to consider it as a weapon of which fortunate men obtained a hold to employ it in “besting” others less fortunate, he foresaw endless calls upon his cunning.  But this did not forbid his indulging in visions in which—­being also at bottom good-natured—­he pictured himself as playing the good genius in his native town, earning general gratitude, building in a large-handed way the new pier that was so badly needed, conferring favours right and left, departing this life amid the mourning of the township, perchance (who could tell?) surviving for the wonder of generations to come in a carved

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Nicky-Nan, Reservist from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.