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"What did you do with it, you young spendthrift? Gambled on the boat, I dare say."
"Well, I had a little game," answered Jasper, coolly.
"And lost?"
"Yes, I lost."
"Of course. You are too green to cope with the sharpers that infest those boats. Haven't I forbidden you to play?"
"There was nothing else to do."
"You appear to pay very slight regard to my commands. In return I shall allow you to know what it is to be penniless for a time."
"Won't you give me any money, father?"
"No, I won't."
Jasper looked dark and sullen. He was an utterly spoiled boy, if one can be called spoiled, who had so few good qualities which admitted of being spoiled. He inherited his father's bad traits, his selfishness and unscrupulousness, in addition to a spirit of deceitfulness and hypocrisy from his mother's nature. He was not as censurable as he would have been had he not possessed these bad tendencies.
He finished his breakfast and went out.
"That's a model son to have--a son to be proud of," soliloquized his father. "He is already a gambler, a liar, and cares for me only as I have it in my power to promote his selfish ends. I have let him grow up like an evil weed, and I am afraid he will some day disgrace me."
Though himself unscrupulous and bad, Mr. Grey would have been glad to have his son better than himself. In his secret heart he felt the superiority of Gilbert to his cousin. Yet Jasper, with all his faults, was his son, and the wily father schemed to secure to him the property which belonged to his nephew.
He was interrupted by the entrance of a colored servant.
Pompey had originally been a slave, as he showed by his language at times.
"Well, Pompey, have you been to the post-office?"
"Yes, sar."
"I suppose you found a paper for me, didn't you?"
"No, ma.s.sa, didn't see nothing of no paper," said Pompey; "but I found this letter," and he displayed a letter in a yellow envelope.
"Give it to me."
Mr. Grey took it in his hand, and saw that it was post-marked "Cincinnati." The handwriting he did not recognize. His curiosity was aroused.
"You can go, Pompey," he said, waving his hand.
"I'm gone, ma.s.sa."
James Grey tore open the letter hastily, and turned at once to the signature.
"Maurice Walton!" he repeated. "Why that's my young spy. It must be about my nephew."
He read with eager interest:
"DEAR SIR:--(so it commenced) You asked me to write you if anything happened. I think you will like to know that your nephew, Gilbert Grey, if he is your nephew, which I doubt, has just left here for St. Louis. I suppose, from what I can learn, that he is in search of you. I don't think he has any idea where you really live. He has not learned from me, for I hate him, and I won't tell him anything he wants to know. I didn't know but you might happen to be in St.
Louis, so I write to put you on your guard. I hope you will write to me, so that I may know this letter went straight.
"Yours, respectfully,
"MAURICE WALTON."
"He wants me to write to him, inclosing ten dollars," thought James Grey. "Well, he shall not be disappointed. His information is worth that. So my young nephew is on the trail is he? He really thinks he is a match for me. Well, well, we shall see. He mustn't push his inquiries too far, or he may find me dangerous," and Mr. Grey's face a.s.sumed a dark and threatening look. "However, he is not likely to find me in this out-of-the-way place."
Mr. Grey went into his library, and penned a short letter to Maurice Walton, commending him for his watchfulness, and inclosing a ten-dollar greenback.
He had scarcely finished the letter when Pompey entered, and said:
"Scuse me, ma.s.sa, but there's a young gemman below that axes to see you."
"A young gentleman!" repeated Mr. Grey. "Can it be my nephew?" flashed through his mind with sudden suspicion.
"Bring him up, Pompey," he said, aloud.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
THE GUEST OF HIS ENEMY.
While Pompey was gone to seek Gilbert and invite him to the library, James Grey gave the time to rapid reflection. He saw that our hero was a determined and dangerous opponent. He had not credited him with such courage and perseverance. He thought that, being a mere boy, he would be easily intimidated--that opposition and difficulty would daunt him.
But he had hardly reached home, and his nephew was already on his track.
"How could he have found out my residence?" thought he. "Maurice Walton wouldn't tell him. He must be sharper than I supposed."
When intimidation and force fail, a good general has recourse to strategy. James Grey was a man of expedients, and he rapidly decided upon a change of base. When, therefore, Gilbert entered the library, expecting an angry reception, he was astonished by seeing his uncle rise from his chair and advance to meet him with hand outstretched.
"Good-morning," he said, smiling. "How did you find your way here?"
"I accidentally learned where you lived, Mr. Grey."
"Precisely so. I was quite sure I had not mentioned my address to you."
"No, sir, you did not."
"It was an oversight on my part. Did you have a pleasant journey from Cincinnati?"
"Quite pleasant, sir."
"Are you traveling on business?"