Herbert did not look forward with very joyful anticipations to the
new engagement he had formed. He knew very well that he should not
like Ebenezer Graham as an employer, but it was necessary that he
should earn something, for the income was now but two dollars a
week. He was sorry, too, to displace Tom Tripp, but upon this point
his uneasiness was soon removed, for Tom dropped in just after Mr.
Graham had left the house, and informed Herbert that he was to go to
work the next day for a farmer in the neighborhood, at a dollar and
a half per week, and board besides.
"I am glad to hear it, Tom," said Herbert, heartily. "I didn't want
to feel that I was depriving you of employment."
"You are welcome to my place in the store," said Tom. "I'm glad to
give it up. Mr. Graham seemed to think I was made of iron, and I
could work like a machine, without getting tired. I hope he pays you
more than a dollar and a half a week."
"He has agreed to pay me three dollars," said Herbert.
Tom whistled in genuine amazement.
"What! has the old man lost his senses?" he exclaimed. "He must be
crazy to offer such wages as that."
"He didn't offer them. I told him I wouldn't come for less."
"I don't see how he came to pay such a price."
"Because he wanted me to take care of the post office. I know all
about it, and he doesn't."
"As soon as he learns, he will reduce your wages."
"Then I shall leave him."
"Well, I hope you'll like store work better than I do."
The next two or three days were spent in removing the post office to
one corner of Eben-ezer Graham's store. The removal was
superintended by Herbert, who was not interfered with to any extent
by his employer, nor required to do much work in the store. Our hero
was agreeably surprised, and began to think he should get along
better than he anticipated.
At the end of the first week the storekeeper, while they were
closing the shutters, said: "I expect, Herbert, you'd just as lieves
take your pay in groceries and goods from the store?"
"No, sir," answered Herbert, "I prefer to be paid in money, and to
pay for such goods as we buy."
"I don't see what odds it makes to you," said Ebenezer. "It comes to
the same thing, doesn't it?"
"Then if it comes to the same thing," retorted Herbert, "why do you
want to pay me in goods?"
"Ahem! It saves trouble. I'll just charge everything you buy, and
give you the balance Saturday night."
"I should prefer the money, Mr. Graham," said Herbert, firmly.
So the storekeeper, considerably against his will, drew three
dollars in bills from the drawer and handed them to his young clerk.
"It's a good deal of money, Herbert," he said, "for a boy. There
ain't many men would pay you such a good salary."
"I earn every cent of it, Mr. Graham," said Herbert, whose views on
the salary question differed essentially from those of his employer.
The next morning Mr. Graham received a letter which evidently
disturbed him. Before referring to its contents, it is necessary to
explain that he had one son, nineteen years of age, who had gone to
Boston two years previous, to take a place in a dry-goods store on
Washington Street. Ebenezer Graham, Jr., or Eben, as he was
generally called, was, in some respects, like his father. He had the
same features, and was quite as mean, so far as others were
concerned, but willing to spend money for his own selfish pleasures.
He was fond of playing pool, and cards, and had contracted a
dangerous fondness for whisky, which consumed all the money he could
spare from necessary expenses, and even more, so that, as will
presently appear, he failed to meet his board bills regularly. Eben
had served an apprenticeship in his father's store, having been, in
fact, Tom Tripp's predecessor; he tired of his father's strict
discipline, and the small pay out of which he was required to
purchase his clothes, and went to Boston to seek a wider sphere.
To do Eben justice, it must be admitted that he had good business
capacity, and if he had been able, like his father, to exercise
self-denial, and make money-getting his chief enjoyment, he would no
doubt have become a rich man in time. As it was, whenever he could
make his companions pay for his pleasures, he did so.
I now come to the letter which had brought disquietude to the
storekeeper.
It ran thus:
"DEAR SIR: I understand that you are the father of Mr. Eben Graham,
who has been a boarder at my house for the last six months. I regret
to trouble you, but he is now owing me six weeks board, and I cannot
get a cent out of him, though he knows I am a poor widow, dependent
on my board money for my rent and house expenses. As he is a minor,
the law makes you responsible for his bills, and, though I dislike
to trouble you, I am obliged, in justice to myself, to ask you to
settle his board bill, which I inclose.
"You will do me a great favor if you will send me the amount--thirty
dollars--within a week, as my rent is coming due.
"Yours respectfully, SUSAN JONES."
The feelings of a man like Ebenezer Graham can be imagined when he
read this unpleasant missive.
"Thirty dollars!" he groaned. "What can the graceless boy be
thinking of, to fool away his money, and leave his bills to be
settled by me. If this keeps on, I shall be ruined! It's too bad,
when I am slaving here, for Eben to waste my substance on riotous
living. I've a great mind to disown him. Let him go his own way, and
fetch up in the poorhouse, if he chooses."
But it is not easy for a man to cast off an only son, even though he
is as poorly supplied with natural affections as Ebenezer Graham.
Besides, Eben's mother interceded for him, and the father, in
bitterness of spirit, was about to mail a registered letter to Mrs.
Jones, when the cause of his anguish suddenly made his appearance in
the store.
"How are you, father?" he said, nonchalantly, taking a cigar from
his mouth. "Didn't expect to see me, did you?"
"What brings you here, Eben?" asked Mr. Graham, uneasily.
"Well, the cars brought me to Stockton, and I've walked the rest of
the way."
"I've heard of you," said his father, frowning. "I got a letter last
night from Mrs. Jones."
"She said she was going to write," said Eben, shrugging his
shoulders.
"How came it," said his father, his voice trembling with anger,
"that you haven't paid your board bill for six weeks?"
"I didn't have the money," said Eben, with a composure which was
positively aggravating to his father.
"And why didn't you have the money? Your wages are ample to pay all
your expenses."
"It costs more money to live in Boston than you think for, father."
"Don't you get ten dollars a week, sir? At your age I got only
seven, and saved two dollars a week."
"You didn't live in Boston, father."
"I didn't smoke cigars," said his father, angrily, as he fixed his
eye on the one his son was smoking. "How much did you pay for that
miserable weed?"
"You're mistaken, father. It's a very good article. I paid eight
dollars a hundred."
"Eight dollars a hundred!" gasped Mr. Graham. "No wonder you can't
pay your board bill--I can't afford to spend my money on cigars."
"Oh, yes, you can, father, if you choose. Why, you're a rich man."
"A rich man!" repeated Mr. Graham, nervously. "It would take a rich
man to pay your bills. But you haven't told me why you have come
home."
"I lost my situation, father--some meddlesome fellow told my
employer that I occasionally played a game of pool, and my tailor
came to the store and dunned me; so old Boggs gave me a long lecture
and my walking papers, and here I am."
Ebenezer Graham was sorely troubled, and, though he isn't a favorite
of mine, I confess, that in this matter he has my sincere sympathy.