The Boy Trapper eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about The Boy Trapper.

The Boy Trapper eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about The Boy Trapper.

Godfrey and Dan lived in a most unenviable frame of mind for a year or more, and then the former one day happened to think of the barrel which old Jordan had told him was hidden in the potato-patch.  He spoke of it while the family were at dinner, and announced that he and Dan would begin the work of unearthing the buried treasure that very night.  If they didn’t find it the first time they tried, they would go the next night; and they would keep on digging until they obtained possession of it, if they had to dig up the whole state of Mississippi.  Dan almost went wild over the news.  He and his father spent a few minutes in building air-castles, and then Godfrey, who felt as rich as though he already had the money in his possession, hurried down to the landing, entered the store there and called for a plug of tobacco, which the merchant refused to give him until he showed that he had twenty-five cents to pay for it.

Although Dan and his father had great expectations, which they believed would very soon be realized, they did not neglect to pay attention to small matters, and to pick up any stray dollars that chanced to fall in their way.  David was a famous dog-breaker, and Don Gordon had offered him ten dollars to train a pointer for him.  The offer was made in the presence of Dan and his father, and the former at once laid his plans to obtain possession of a portion of the money.  While the two were on their way to the landing, where a shooting-match was to be held that afternoon, Dan stopped at General Gordon’s barn, and having borrowed a shovel, with which to dig up the buried treasure, he went to the house, where he found Bert reading a book.  He told him that David had sent him there after five dollars, as he wished to buy a new dress for his mother, and Bert, although he was well aware that, according to the agreement his brother had made with David, the money was not to be paid until the pointer was thoroughly broken for the field, advanced him the amount he requested.  Arriving at the landing, Dan got the bill changed for notes of smaller denomination, and, while he was picking up his money, was surprised by his father, who was greatly amazed to see his son with such a roll of greenbacks in his hand.  Knowing that Dan was too lazy to work—­too much of a gentleman was the way Godfrey expressed it—­he could not imagine where the money came from, and Dan refused to enlighten him on this point, fearing that if he did his father would go straight to Don Gordon and ask for the rest of the ten dollars.  Godfrey urged and commanded to no purpose, and was obliged to be satisfied with the loan of a dollar, which he promised to return with heavy interest as soon as the barrel was found.  He paid seventy-five cents of it for the privilege of entering as one of the contestants in the shooting-match, and the rest he used in purchasing the plug of tobacco for which the grocer had refused to credit him.  He won nothing during the match, while Dan, to his father’s great disgust, came in for one of the first prizes—­a fine quarter of beef.

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Project Gutenberg
The Boy Trapper from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.