Horatio Alger Jr.

Luke Walton


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boy spoke with calm and resolute dignity hardly to be expected in one so young, and with a deep conviction that surprised his mother.

      "Luke," she said, "I hardly know you to-night. You don't seem like a boy. You speak like a man."

      "I feel so. It is the thought of this man triumphant in his crime, that makes me feel older than I am. Now, mother, I feel that I have a purpose in life. It is to find this man, and punish him for what he has done, unless he will make reparation."

      Mrs. Walton shook her head. It was not from her that Luke had inherited his independent spirit. She was a fond mother, of great amiability, but of a timid shrinking disposition, which led her to deprecate any aggressive steps.

      "Promise me not to get yourself into any trouble, Luke," she said, "even if you do meet this man."

      "I can't promise that, mother, for I may not be able to help it. Besides, I haven't met him yet, and it isn't necessary to cross a bridge till you get to it. Now let us talk of something else."

      "How much did you make to-day, Luke?" asked Bennie, his young brother, seven years old.

      "I didn't make my fortune, Bennie. Including the morning papers, I only made sixty cents."

      "That seems a good deal to me, Luke," said his mother. "I only made twenty-five. They pay such small prices for making shirts."

      "I should think they did. And yet you worked harder and more steadily than I did."

      "I have worked since morning, probably about eight hours."

      "Then you have made only three cents an hour. What a shame!"

      "If I had a sewing-machine, I could do more, but that is beyond our means."

      "I hope soon to be able to get you one, mother. I can pay something down and the rest on installments."

      "That would be quite a relief, Luke."

      "If you had a sewing-machine, perhaps I could help you," suggested Bennie.

      "I should hardly dare to let you try, Bennie. Suppose you spoiled a shirt. It would take off two days' earnings. But I'll tell you what you can do. You can set the table and wash the dishes, and relieve me in that way."

      "Or you might take in washing," said Luke, with a laugh. "That pays better than sewing. Just imagine how nice it would look in an advertisement in the daily papers: A boy of seven is prepared to wash and iron for responsible parties. Address Bennie Walton, No. 161-1/2 Green Street."

      "Now you are laughing at me, Luke," said Bennie, pouting. "Why don't you let me go out with you and sell papers?"

      "I hope, Bennie," said Luke, gravely, "you will never have to go into the street with papers. I know what it is, and how poor boys fare. One night last week, at the corner of Monroe and Clark Streets, I saw a poor little chap, no older than you, selling papers at eleven o'clock. He had a dozen papers which he was likely to have left on his hands, for there are not many who will buy papers at that hour."

      "Did you speak to him, Luke?" asked Benny, interested.

      "Yes; I told him he ought to go home. But he said that if he went home with all those papers unsold, his stepfather would whip him. There were tears in the poor boy's eyes as he spoke."

      "What did you do, Luke?"

      "I'll tell you what I did, Bennie. I thought of you, and I paid him the cost price on his papers. It wasn't much, for they were all penny papers, but the poor little fellow seemed so relieved."

      "Did you sell them yourself, Luke?"

      "I sold four of them. I went over to Madison Street, and stood in front of McVicker's Theater just as the people were coming out. It so happened that four persons bought papers, so I was only two cents out, after all. You remember, mother, that was the evening I got home so late."

      "Yes, Luke, I felt worried about you. But you did right. I am always glad to have you help those who are worse off than we are. How terribly I should feel if Bennie had to be out late in the streets like that!"

      "There are many newsboys as young, or at any rate not much older. I have sometimes seen gentlemen, handsomely dressed, and evidently with plenty of money, speak roughly to these young boys. It always makes me indignant. Why should they have so easy a time, while there are so many who don't know where their next meal is coming from? Why, what such a man spends for his meals in a single day would support a poor newsboy in comfort for a week."

      "My dear Luke, this is a problem that has puzzled older and wiser heads than yours. There must always be poor people, but those who are more fortunate ought at least to give them sympathy. It is the least acknowledgment they can make for their own more favored lot."

      "I am going out a little while this evening, mother."

      "Very well, Luke. Don't be late."

      "No, mother, I won't. I want to call on a friend of mine, who is sick."

      "Who it is, Luke?"

      "It is Jim Norman. The poor boy took cold one day, his shoes were so far gone. He has a bad cough, and I am afraid it will go hard with him.

      "Is he a newsboy, too, Luke?" asked Bennie Walton.

      "No; he is a bootblack."

      "I shouldn't like to black boots."

      "Nor I, Bennie; but if a boy is lucky there is more money to be made in that business."

      "Where does he live?" asked Mrs. Walton.

      "On Ohio Street, not very far from here. There's another boy I know lives on that street Tom Brooks; but he isn't a friend of mine. He wanted me to keep five dollars, and treat him and some other boys to an evening at the theater, and a supper afterwards."

      "I hope you won't associate with him, Luke."

      "Not more than I can help."

      Luke took his hat and went downstairs into the street.

      In the hall he met Nancy. She waylaid him with an eager look on her face.

      "Who was the letter from, Luke?" she asked.

      "From a friend of the family, who is now dead," answered Luke, gravely.

      "Good gracious! How could he write it after he was dead?" ejaculated Nancy.

      "It was given to a person to mail who forgot all about it, and carried it in his pocket for a year."

      "My sakes alive! If I got a letter from a dead man it would make me creep all over. No wonder your ma came near faintin'."

      CHAPTER IV

      AN ATTACK IN THE DARK

      Luke turned into Milwaukee Avenue, and a few steps took him to West Ohio Street, where his friend lived. On his way he met Tom Brooks, who was lounging in front of a cigar store, smoking a cigarette.

      "Good-evening, Tom," said Luke, politely.

      "Evenin'!" responded Tom, briefly. "Where you goin'?"

      "To see Jim Norman. He's sick."

      "What's the matter of him?"

      "He's got a bad cold and is confined to the house?"

      Tom shrugged his shoulders.

      "I don't go much on Jim Norman," he said, "He ought to be a girl. He never smoked a cigarette in his life."

      "Didn't he? All the better for him. I don't smoke myself."

      "You have smoked."

      "Yes, I used to, but it troubled my mother, and I promised her I wouldn't do it again."

      "So you broke off?"

      "Yes."

      "I wouldn't be tied to a woman's apron strings."

      "Wouldn't you try to oblige your mother?"

      "No, I wouldn't. What does a woman know about boys? If I was a gal it would be different."

      "Then we don't agree, that is all."

      "I say, Luke, won't you take me to the theayter?"

      "I