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disturbed. But, Gerald, I have one warning to give you. When I am gone this man will leave no stone unturned to get possession of those papers. Don’t let him have them!

      “I won’t, father. You had better not let him know that I have them.”

      “I shall not, but he will guess it. You will need all your shrewdness to defeat him.”

      “I will bear that in mind, father. Now dismiss the matter from your thoughts. I know your wishes, and I understand the character of the man who is your enemy and mine.”

      Warren Lane breathed a sigh of relief.

      “That lifts a burden from my mind,” he said. “I am glad I took you into my confidence this morning. It was high time. I have done all I could, and must leave the rest to Providence and your own judgment and discretion.”

      “That’s right, father. You have taught me to rely upon myself. I am ready and willing to paddle my own canoe.”

      “I hope you won’t make such a failure of life as I have, Gerald.”

      “Don’t say that, father. Rather let me hope that when I die I shall leave behind me one who will love me as much as I love you.”

      Warren Lane regarded his son with affection.

      “You have my blessing, Gerald. May God bless you as you have blessed me.”

      An hour later Bradley Wentworth re-entered the cabin. A table was spread, and the appetizing odors of the trout were grateful to the nostrils of the hungry man. With boiled potatoes, cornbread and coffee, the meal was by no means to be despised. Seldom in his own luxurious house had Bradley Wentworth so enjoyed a dinner.

      “You have a son, too, Wentworth,” remarked Warren Lane during the progress of the meal.

      “Yes.”

      “How old is he?”

      “Seventeen.”

      “Then he is a year older than Gerald – I remember now he was about a year old when Gerald was born. Is he living at home with his parents?”

      “He is at an academy preparing for Yale College.”

      “Ah!” said Warren Lane with a sigh, “he is enjoying the advantages I would like to give my boy. Is he studious?”

      “Don’t ask me!” replied Wentworth bitterly. “He has developed a far greater talent for spending money foolishly than for Latin or Greek.”

      “Being the son of a rich man, his temptations are greater than if, like Gerald, he were born to poverty.”

      “Perhaps so, but his taste for drink does not result from the possession of money. He has classmates quite as rich as he who are perfectly steady, and doing credit to their families.”

      “He may yet turn out all right, Bradley,” said Mr. Lane, for the moment forgetting their points of difference and only remembering that he and Mr. Wentworth had been young men together. “Don’t be too stern with him. It is best to be forbearing with a boy of his age.”

      “Forbearing! I try to be, but only last month bills were sent to me amounting to five hundred dollars, run up by Victor within three months.”

      Warren Lane inwardly thanked God that he had no fault to find with his boy. Gerald had never given him a moment’s uneasiness. He had always been a dutiful son.

      “After all,” he thought, “wealth can’t buy everything. I would not exchange my poverty for Bradley Wentworth’s wealth, if I must also exchange sons. Poverty has its compensations.”

      “You are still living in Chicago?” said Lane.

      “No; I have my office in Chicago, but I retain my residence in Seneca.”

      “Do you still keep up the factory?”

      “Yes. I do more business than my uncle ever did.”

      He said this in a complacent tone.

      “How unequally fortune is distributed!” thought Mr. Lane with an involuntary sigh. “Still – I have Gerald!”

       CHAPTER V

      A COMPACT

      After dinner Warren Lane complained of fatigue, and lay down.

      “I will talk with you to-morrow, Wentworth,” he said. “To-day I am too tired.”

      “Very well,” assented Wentworth with some reluctance. “But I ought not to remain here longer than to-morrow. My business requires me at home.”

      “To-morrow, then!” said Lane drowsily.

      “Shall we take a walk?” asked Wentworth, directing the question to Gerald.

      “I don’t think I ought to leave my father. He doesn’t seem at all well.”

      “But you left him this morning.”

      “Yes, and perhaps he would spare me now, but I have a feeling that I ought to stay with him. I should feel uneasy if I left him.”

      “Oh, well, do as you think best,” said Wentworth rather crossly. He found the cabin insupportably dull, and would like to have wandered around with Gerald as a guide.

      “I am sorry. I am afraid you will find time hang heavy on your hands.”

      “It can’t be helped!” said Wentworth dryly. “I came here at your father’s request, and to-morrow I must start for home. I will take a walk by myself.”

      He strolled out into the woods, taking his bearings, so as not to lose the way.

      “Well, well, this will soon be over,” he said to himself. “Warren Lane is doomed. If I could only get hold of those papers before he dies I would leave the place content, and would not care if I never saw him or Gerald again. Where can he keep them? If the boy hadn’t interrupted me as he did, I might have found them. Does he keep them about his person, I wonder?”

      He sauntered along for half an hour in a different direction from the one he had taken in his earlier walk.

      “Not a house, or even a cabin!” he soliloquized. “This is indeed a forlorn place. One couldn’t well get more out of the world.

      “Ha, here is a cabin and its owner,” he exclaimed a few moments later as his eye lighted on a log hut in a small clearing. “It seems pleasant to see a living being.”

      The owner referred to was a man of sturdy make, very dark as to complexion, with coarse, black hair. He was roughly dressed, and was smoking a pipe. Wentworth coughed to attract attention, and the man looked up.

      “Who are you?” he demanded, surveying his visitor with a glance half curious, half suspicious.

      “I am a stranger – just arrived,” answered Wentworth in a conciliatory tone, for he did not feel the most absolute confidence in this man with his brigandish look.

      “Ha, a tenderfoot!”

      “Well, I don’t know about that. My feet will be tender, though, if I tramp round here much longer.”

      “Humph! Where might you be from?”

      “From Chicago.”

      “And what brings you here?”

      Bradley Wentworth did not quite like the man’s intrusive curiosity, but he thought it policy not to betray his feeling.

      “I came to see a friend – a sick friend,” he answered, after a pause.

      “The old man that lives a mile east of here? He has a son.”

      “The same.”

      “So you are his friend!”

      “Yes, do you know him?”

      “Yes. I’ve seen him, but he ain’t much to look at. He ain’t my style.”

      “I should think not,” passed through Wentworth’s mind, but he was tempted by curiosity to inquire: “What do you mean

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