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.
North.  Godfrey followed them there with all haste, sought an interview with Don, and by telling him some plausible story, induced him to advance the other five dollars.  Godfrey hoped in this way to get the start of Dan and enjoy his ill-gotten gains all by himself, but Dan was there and saw it all, and his father, alarmed by the look he saw on his face, divided the money with him.  Of course David knew nothing of this.  He was saving those ten dollars for his mother.  He did not expect to spend a cent of it on himself; and how he first learned of his loss and what was done about it, perhaps we shall see as our story progresses.

The two young gentlemen, Clarence and Marshall Gordon, for whom Don and Bert were waiting, and who landed from the steamer, Emma Deane, that morning, had been sent away from the city by their father, in order that they might be out of the way of temptation; but, as it happened, one of them ran directly into it.  Clarence, the older, was anything but a model boy.  He was much addicted to ale and cigars, and thought of nothing in the world so much as money.  He was a spendthrift, and, like Godfrey Evans, had a great desire to be rich, but he never thought of working and saving in order to gain the wished-for end.  This good old-fashioned and safe way was too long and tedious for him, and he was constantly on the lookout for a short road to wealth and consequent happiness.  Before he had been twenty-four hours under his uncle’s roof, he thought he had discovered it, and this was the way it came about: 

Clarence and his brother arrived at the General’s house in the forenoon, and before night came, the former wished most heartily that he had stayed at home.  He was lonely and utterly disgusted with the quiet of the country, and the old-fashioned, prosy way his two cousins had of enjoying themselves.  Music, horseback-riding, hunting, fishing and visiting made up the round of their amusements, and Clarence could see no fun in such things.  As soon as it grew dark he slipped out of the house, and leaning over a fence that ran between the barnyard and a potato-patch, lighted a cigar and settled into a comfortable position to enjoy it.  He had not been there many minutes, before he was startled by the stealthy approach of two persons, a man and a boy, who stopped a short distance from him and began digging with a shovel.  Clarence listened to the words which the man uttered for the encouragement of the boy, who was doing the work, and was amazed to learn that there was a fortune hidden in that field, and that these two had come there to dig it up.  In his eagerness and excitement Clarence leaned half way over the fence, puffing vigorously at his cigar all the while.  The little round ball of fire glowing through the darkness caught the eye of the boy, who showed it to his companion, and the two, frightened almost out of their senses, took to their heels, leaving the eavesdropper lost in wonder.

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The Boy Trapper from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.