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feel no interest in him," said Silas, doggedly.

      "Are you willing to pay his expenses? He has no money."

      "No, I ain't," snarled Silas. "Ef you take him you take him at your own risk."

      "You wouldn't have us turn him into the street?" said Chester, indignantly.

      "You can do as you like. It ain't no affair of mine. I s'pose he sent you here."

      "No, he didn't; and I wouldn't have come if we had been better fixed. But we haven't enough money to live on ourselves."

      "Then tell him to go away. I never wanted him to come to Wyncombe."

      "It seems to me you ought to do something for your own nephew."

      "I can't support all my relations, and I won't," said Silas, testily. "It ain't no use talkin'. Walter Bruce is shif'less and lazy, or he'd take care of himself. I ain't no call to keep him."

      "Then you won't do anything for him? Even two dollars a week would help him very much."

      "Two dollars a week!" ejaculated Silas. "You must think I am made of money. Why, two dollars a week would make a hundred and four dollars a year."

      "That wouldn't be much for a man of your means, Mr. Tripp."

      "You talk foolish, Chester. I have to work hard for a livin'. If I helped all my shif'less relations I'd end my days in the poorhouse."

      "I don't think you'll go there from that cause," Chester could not help saying.

      "I guess not. I ain't a fool. Let every tub stand on its own bottom, I say. But I won't be too hard. Here's twenty-five cents," and Silas took a battered quarter from the money drawer.

      "Take it and use it careful."

      "I think we will try to get along without it," said Chester, with a curl of the lip. "I'm afraid you can't afford it."

      "Do just as you like," said Silas, putting back the money with a sigh of relief, "but don't say I didn't offer to do something for Walter."

      "No; I will tell him how much you offered to give."

      "That's a queer boy," said Mr. Tripp, as Chester left the store. "Seems to want me to pay all Walter Bruce's expenses. What made him come to Wyncombe to get sick? He'd better have stayed where he lived, and then he'd have had a claim to go to the poorhouse. He can't live on me, I tell him that. Them Rands are foolish to take him in. They're as poor as poverty themselves, and now they've taken in a man who ain't no claim on them. I expect they thought they'd get a good sum out of me for boardin' him. There's a great many onrasonable people in the world."

      "I will go and see Mr. Morris, the minister," decided the perplexed Chester. "He will tell me what to do."

      Accordingly he called on the minister and unfolded the story to sympathetic ears.

      "You did right, Chester," said Mr. Morris. "The poor fellow was fortunate to fall into your hands. But won't it be too much for your mother?"

      "It's the expense I am thinking of, Mr. Morris. You know I have lost my situation, and mother has no shoes to bind."

      "I can help you, Chester. A rich lady of my acquaintance sends me a hundred dollars every year to bestow in charity. I will devote a part of this to the young man whom you have so kindly taken in, say at the rate of eight dollars a week."

      "That will make us feel easy," said Chester gratefully. "How much do you think his uncle offered me?"

      "I am surprised that he should have offered anything."

      "He handed me twenty-five cents, but I told him I thought we could get along without it."

      "And you will. Silas Tripp has a small soul, hardly worth saving. He has made money his god, and serves his chosen deity faithfully."

      "I wouldn't change places with him for all his wealth."

      "Some day you may be as rich as he, but I hope, if you are, you will use your wealth better."

      At the beginning of the third week Walter Bruce became suddenly worse. His constitution was fragile, and the disease had undermined his strength. The doctor looked grave.

      "Do you think I shall pull through, doctor?" asked the young man.

      "While there is life there is hope, Mr. Bruce."

      "That means that the odds are against me?"

      "Yes, I am sorry to say that you are right."

      Walter Bruce looked thoughtful.

      "I don't think I care much for life," he said. "I have had many disappointments, and I know that at the best I could never be strong and enjoy life as most of my age do—I am resigned."

      "How old are you, Walter?" asked Chester.

      "Twenty-nine. It is a short life."

      "Is there anyone you would wish me to notify if the worst comes?"

      "No, I have scarcely a relative—except Silas Tripp," he added, with a bitter smile.

      "You have no property to dispose of by will?" asked the doctor.

      "Yes," was the unexpected answer, "but I shall not make a will. A will may be contested. I will give it away during my life."

      Chester and the doctor looked surprised. They thought the other might refer to a ring or some small article.

      "I want everything to be legal," resumed Bruce. "Is there a lawyer in the village?"

      "Yes, Lawyer Gardener."

      "Send for him. I shall feel easier when I have attended to this last duty."

      Within half an hour the lawyer was at his bedside.

      "In the inside pocket of my coat," said Walter Bruce, "you will find a document. It is the deed of five lots in the town of Tacoma, in Washington Territory. I was out there last year, and having a little money, bought the lots for a song. They are worth very little now, but some time they may be of value."

      "To whom do you wish to give them?" asked Mr. Gardner.

      "To this boy," answered Bruce, looking affectionately toward Chester. "He and his have been my best friends."

      "But your uncle—he is a relative!" suggested Chester.

      "He has no claim upon me. Lawyer, make out a deed of gift of these lots to Chester Rand, and I will sign it."

      The writing was completed, Bruce found strength to sign it, and then sank back exhausted. Two days later he died. Of course the eight dollars a week from the minister's fund ceased to be paid to the Rands. Chester had not succeeded in obtaining work. To be sure he had the five lots in Tacoma, but he who had formerly owned them had died a pauper. The outlook was very dark.

      CHAPTER V.

      CHESTER'S FIRST SUCCESS

      Chester and his mother and a few friends attended the funeral of Walter Bruce. Silas Tripp was too busy at the store to pay this parting compliment to his nephew. He expressed himself plainly about the folly of the Rands in "runnin' into debt for a shif'less fellow" who had no claim upon them. "If they expect me to pay the funeral expenses they're mistaken," he added, positively. "I ain't no call to do it, and I won't do it."

      But he was not asked to defray the expenses of the simple funeral. It was paid for out of the minister's charitable fund.

      "Some time I will pay you back the money, Mr. Morris," said Chester. "I am Mr. Bruce's heir, and it is right that I should pay."

      "Very well, Chester. If your bequest amounts to anything I will not object. I hope for your sake that the lots may become valuable."

      "I don't expect it, Mr. Morris. Will you be kind enough to take care of the papers for me?"

      "Certainly, Chester. I will keep them with my own papers."

      At this time Tacoma contained only four hundred inhabitants. The Northern Pacific Railroad had not been completed, and there was no certainty when it would be. So Chester did not pay much attention or give much thought to his Western property, but began to look round anxiously for something

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