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The two walked down to the bridge, and here the young man from the city left Ralph, and went off with Bob Sanderson to see how the repairs to the sloop were coming on.
Ralph was in no happy frame of mind when left alone. He had tried only to a.s.sert his rights, but the future looked black in consequence.
Presently his mother came down from the cottage to talk matters over with him. She knew her son had gone off with Horace Kelsey to Uriah d.i.c.ks'
store.
"The squire is certainly very unreasonable," she said, after Ralph had told his story. "Every one around Westville knows that Percy is arrogant to the last degree."
"That is so, mother, but, to the squire, Percy is perfection. I do not see how he can be so blind."
"If you lose your position on the bridge, Ralph, what in the world will we do? Times are so hard in Westville."
"I'll have to look for work in Eastport or Chambersburgh, I suppose,"
returned the son. "But I haven't lost the job yet," he added, as cheerfully as he could.
"But if Uriah d.i.c.ks and the postmaster and the squire are against you, they can put you out. There are only five in the committee, and three are a majority."
Ralph was about to reply, but several pa.s.sengers had to be waited on, and he went on to collect the tolls. Then a whistle sounded from up Big Silver Lake, notifying him that a steamboat wished to pa.s.s through the draw, and the opening and closing of the bridge took ten minutes or more.
"If I were only bookkeeper enough to strike a job in one of the factories, I wouldn't care whether I lost the place here or not," said Ralph, when he was again at leisure. "This is a lazy sort of a job, and I would much prefer office work."
"That is true, my son, but one must be thankful to get work of any kind now," returned Mrs. Nelson.
"Oh, I know that, and I am not grumbling, mother, but the--what's that?"
Ralph broke off suddenly. A crash of gla.s.s, coming from the neighborhood of the cottage, sounded in their ears. The first crash was followed by half-a-dozen others in rapid succession.
"What in the world can that mean?" cried Mrs. Nelson, and, without waiting, she ran from the bridge.
Ralph looked up and down to see if any one was coming across, and, sighting none, followed.
On a run it did not take long to reach the little home by the side path.
As they neared it, Ralph pointed excitedly to the sitting-room windows.
"Look, mother," he cried, in deep indignation. "Some vandal has broken nearly every pane of gla.s.s in the house!"
"Perhaps there are thieves around!" returned Mrs. Nelson, quickly.
"No, they wouldn't break gla.s.s needlessly. This was done out of pure meanness."
They hurried around to the door and into the cottage. Alas! a single glance around was enough. Fully half the panes of gla.s.s in the cottage were smashed, and on the floors of the various rooms lay a dozen stones as big as a man's hand.
"I know who did this!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Ralph, in high anger. "Percy Paget, and no one else!"
"Would he dare?" faltered Mrs. Nelson.
"Yes; and it is just in line with his sneak-like character. I am going to see if I can find him."
Ralph dashed out of the cottage as rapidly as he had entered it. He made a strict search about the grounds, up the road, and in the wood on the other side. But it was of no avail; the person who had committed the contemptible act had disappeared.
CHAPTER X.
RALPH IS GIVEN NOTICE.
Had it not been for his duties on the bridge, Ralph would have continued his search still farther. But already several persons had pa.s.sed over and dropped their pennies on the counter of the little office, and now a horn was blowing from the deck of the little schooner sailing up Silver Lake.
So telling his mother that he would be back as soon as possible, he hurried to the bridge. Half-a-dozen boats wished to go through the draw, including a string of ca.n.a.l boats, and it was nearly noon before he could leave the spot.
Then Bob Sanderson came around the cove in the sloop _Magic_. Beside him sat Horace Kelsey. The repairs to the _Magic_ were now completed, and the little craft was practically as good as new.
"Hallo, Bob, come up here and tend for me, will you?" shouted Ralph, as soon as he caught sight of the old man.
"All right, Ralph! What's up?"
"I must go home," returned the young bridge tender, and when the sloop was tied up near by, he told the two occupants of what had occurred.
"I never heard the like!" burst out Bob Sanderson. "If it was really that Paget boy, he ought to have a whip across his back!"
Horace Kelsey accompanied Ralph to the cottage to see the extent of the damage done. The young man from New York was also of the opinion that the guilty party ought to be brought to swift justice.
"But no one saw Percy, and we cannot prove anything," said Mrs. Nelson.
"Perhaps we can," said Ralph. "I'm going to hunt him up, if that is possible."
Horace Kelsey did not feel able to remain longer at Westville, and so he left when Ralph did. Before he went, however, he insisted on presenting Ralph with another twenty-dollar bill, to replace the one lost.
"Here is my card," he said, on leaving. "If you ever come to New York, drop in and see me."
"Thank you; I shall be very much pleased to," replied Ralph.
He noted that Horace Kelsey was in the insurance business, with an office on Broadway, and then he placed the address carefully away in a drawer of the old-fas.h.i.+oned desk in the sitting-room.
"Who knows, but if I am discharged here I may some day go to New York,"
thought the young bridge tender.
After taking another look about the cottage and through the wood, Ralph started up the road leading to the center of the village. Presently he came across a young man named Edgar Steiner, who was one of Percy Paget's intimate friends.
"Steiner, do you know where Percy Paget is?" he asked.
"Percy has gone to Silver Cove," returned Steiner.
"When did he go?"
"Went early this morning. He drove down to see about a dog he is going to buy from a sport who lives there."