Horatio Alger Jr.

The Young Adventurer: or, Tom's Trip Across the Plains


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you are foolish," said his wife; but she was well pleased, nevertheless. Poor as her husband was, she had never dreamed of regretting her choice.

      "Be it so; but about this affair of Tom – what shall I say to him in the morning?"

      Mrs. Nelson recovered her gravity instantly.

      "Decide as you think right, Mark," she said. "If you judge that Tom had better go I will do my best to become reconciled to his absence, and set about getting him ready."

      "It is a great responsibility, Mary," said Mark slowly; "but I accept it. Let the boy go, if he wishes. He will leave our care, but we can trust him to the care of his heavenly Father, who will be as near to him in California as at home."

      Thus Tom's future was decided. His father and mother retired to bed, but not to sleep. They were parting already in imagination with their first-born, and the thought of that parting was sad indeed.

      CHAPTER V.

      TOM RAISES THE MONEY

      Tom got up early the next morning – in fact, he was up first in the house – and attended to his usual "chores." He was splitting wood when his father passed him on the way to the barn with the milk-pail in his hand.

      "You are up early, Tom," he said.

      "Yes," answered our hero.

      Tom could not help wondering whether his father had come to any decision about letting him go to California; but he did not like to ask. In due time he would learn, of course. He felt that he should like to have it decided one way or the other. While his plans were in doubt he felt unsettled and nervous.

      At an early hour the family gathered about the breakfast table. Tom noticed that his father and mother looked grave, and spoke in a subdued tone, as if they had something on their minds; but he did not know what to infer from this, except that they had his prospects still in consideration.

      When breakfast was over, Mark Nelson pushed back his chair, and said: "How soon can you get Tom ready to start, Mary?"

      "Am I going, father?" asked Tom, his heart giving an eager bound.

      "Is Tom really going?" asked the younger children, with scarcely less eagerness.

      "If Squire Hudson doesn't go back on his promise. Tom, you can go with me to the squire's."

      "How soon?"

      "In about an hour. He doesn't breakfast as early as we do. I think he will be ready to receive us in about an hour."

      "Thank you, father," said Tom. "You are doing a great deal for me."

      "I can't do much for you, my boy. I can probably get you to California, and then you will be thrown upon your own exertions."

      "I mean to work very hard. I think I shall succeed."

      "I hope so, at least, Tom. When the time comes to start the other boys, I shall be glad to have your help in doing it."

      Tom was pleased to hear this, though it placed upon his shoulders a new and heavy responsibility. He was assuming the responsibility not only for his own future, but for that of his brothers. But it made him feel more manly, as if the period of his dependent boyhood were over, and he had become a young man all at once.

      "I hope I sha'n't disappoint you, father," he said.

      "If you do, I don't think it will be your fault, Tom," said his father kindly. "Fortune may be against you, but we must take the risk of that."

      "I don't know what to think about it, Tom," said his mother, in a tone of doubt and mental disturbance. "I feel as if you were too young to go out in the wide world to seek your fortune."

      "I am not so very young, mother. I am old enough to make my way."

      "So your father says, and I have yielded to his judgment; but, Tom, I don't know how to let you go."

      There were tears in Mrs. Nelson's eyes as she spoke. Tom was moved, and if he needed anything to strengthen him in the good resolutions he had formed, his mother's emotion supplied it.

      "You sha'n't regret giving your consent, mother," he said manfully, and, rising from his seat, he went to his mother and kissed her.

      "Mary," said Mr. Nelson, "you haven't answered my question. How long will it take to get Tom ready? If he is to go, he may as well start as soon as possible."

      "Let me see," said Mrs. Nelson, "how many shirts have you got, Tom?"

      "Five."

      "Are they all in good order?"

      "I believe one needs mending."

      "I don't know whether that will be enough," said Mrs. Nelson doubtfully.

      "Mary," said her husband, "don't provide too large a supply of clothing. Tom may find it a burden. Remember, in California, he will have to travel on foot and carry his own baggage."

      "Then I think he is already pretty well provided. But some of his clothes may need mending. That won't take long, and I will attend to it at once."

      "Perhaps Squire Hudson will go back on you, after all," said Walter.

      Tom's face was overcast. That would be a disappointment he could not easily bear.

      "I shall soon know," he said.

      An hour later Tom and his father set out for Squire Hudson's residence. Tom felt nervous; he could not well help it.

      "Tom," said his father, "this is an important visit for you."

      "Yes, sir," said Tom.

      "You are feeling nervous, I see. Try to take it coolly, and don't feel too low-spirited if things don't turn out as you hope."

      "I will try to follow your advice, father, but I am not sure as I can."

      "If you are disappointed, try to think it is for the best. A boy of your age had made all arrangements to visit Europe with a party of friends. The day before starting something happened which made it impossible for him to go. For weeks he had been looking forward with eager anticipation to his journey, and now it was indefinitely postponed."

      "What a terrible disappointment!" said Tom.

      "Yes, it seemed so, but mark the issue. The steamer was lost, and all on board were drowned. The disappointment saved his life."

      "It might not always turn out so," objected Tom.

      "No, that is true. Still, if we are willing to think that our disappointments are not always misfortunes, we shall go through life with more cheerfulness and content."

      "Still, I hope I shall not be disappointed in this," said Tom.

      "You are perhaps too young to be philosophical," said his father.

      Mark Nelson had enjoyed only the usual advantages of education afforded by a common school; but he was a man of good natural capacity, and more thoughtful than many in his vocation. From him Tom inherited good natural abilities and industrious habits. It would not be fair, however, to give all the credit to his father. Mrs. Nelson was a superior woman, and all her children were well endowed by nature.

      As they turned into Squire Hudson's gravel-path, the squire himself opened the front door.

      "Were you coming to see me?" he asked.

      "We would like to speak with you a few minutes, squire, if you can spare the time."

      "Oh, yes, I have nothing pressing on hand," said the squire, with unusual affability. "Walk in, Mr. Nelson."

      He led the way into the room where Tom had had his interview with him the day before.

      "Your son did me a good turn yesterday," he said graciously. "He behaved in a very creditable manner."

      "He told me that he found your pocketbook, Squire Hudson."

      "Yes; it contained a large sum of money. Some boys would have kept it."

      "None of my boys would," said Mark Nelson proudly.

      "Of course not. They're too well brought up."

      "Tom