Joe the Hotel Boy - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Joe the Hotel Boy Part 33 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"He trun water all over me!"
"Ugh! but dat's a regular ice bath, dat is!"
"That's what you get for throwing me into the hole!" cried Joe. "After this you had better leave me alone."
"I've got some mortar in me eye!" screamed Jack Sagger, dancing around in pain. "Oh, me eye is burned out!"
"I'm wet to de skin!" said Nick Sammel, with a s.h.i.+ver. "Oh, say, but it's dead cold, ain't it?"
Waiting to hear no more, Joe ran along the scaffolding and then leaped through a window of the unfinished building. A street light now guided him and he came out through the back of the structure and into an alleyway. From this he made his way to the street.
"I'll have to hurry," he reasoned. "If they catch me now they will want to half kill me!"
"Don't let him git away!" he heard Sagger roar. "Catch him! Catch him!"
"Hold on there, you young rascals!" came a voice out of the darkness.
"What are you doing around these buildings?"
A watchman had come on the scene, with a lantern in one hand and a heavy club in the other.
"We ain't doin' nuthin," said one of the boys.
"Maybe you're the gang that stole that lumber a couple of nights ago,"
went on the watchman, coming closer.
"Ain't touched yer lumber," growled Jack Sagger.
"We're after anudder feller wot hid in here," said Sammel.
"That's a likely story. I believe you are nothing but a crowd of young thieves," grumbled the watchman. "Every night somebody is trying to steal lumber or bricks, or something. I've a good mind to make an example of you and have you all locked up."
"We ain't touched a thing!" cried a small boy, and began to back away in alarm. At once several followed him.
"Here's a barrel of water knocked over and everything in a mess. You've been skylarking, too. I'm going to have you locked up!"
The watchman made a dash after the boys and the crowd scattered in all directions. Sagger received a crack on the shoulder that lamed him for a week, and Sammel tripped and went down, taking the skin off of the end of his nose.
"Oh, me nose!" he moaned. "It's busted entirely!"
"Run!" cried Sagger. "If you don't you'll be nabbed sure!" And then the crowd ran with all their speed, scrambling out of the hole as best they could. They did not stop until they were half a dozen blocks away and on their way home.
"We made a fizzle of it dat trip," said Sagger, dolefully.
"It's all your fault," growled one of the boys. "I ain't goin' out wid you again. You promise big things but you never do 'em."
"Oh, Jack 's a gas-bag, dat's wot he is," was the comment of another, and he walked off by himself. Presently one after another of the boys followed suit, leaving Jack Sagger to sneak home, a sadder if not a wiser lad.
CHAPTER XXI.
DAYS AT THE HOTEL.
"Perhaps those fellows have learned a lesson they won't forget in a hurry," remarked Frank to Joe, after he learned the particulars of the attack in the dark.
"I hope they don't molest me further," answered our hero. "If they'll only let me alone I'll let them alone."
"That Sagger is certainly on the downward path," said Frank. "If he doesn't look out he'll land in jail."
What Frank said was true, and less than a week later they heard through another hotel boy that Jack Sagger had been arrested for stealing some lead pipe out of a vacant residence. The pipe had been sold to a junkman for thirty cents and the boy had spent the proceeds on a ticket for a cheap theater and some cigarettes. He was sent to the House of Correction, and that was the last Joe heard of him.
With the coming of winter the hotel filled up and Joe was kept busy from morning to night, so that he had little time for studying. He performed his duties faithfully and the hotel proprietor was much pleased in consequence.
"Joe is all right," he said to his cas.h.i.+er, "I can trust him with anything."
"That's so, and he is very gentlemanly, too," replied the cas.h.i.+er.
Ulmer Montgomery was still at the hotel. He was now selling antiquaries, and our hero often watched the fellow with interest. He suspected that Montgomery was a good deal of a humbug, but could not prove it.
At length Montgomery told Joe that he was going to the far West to try his fortunes. The man seemed to like our hero, and the night before he left the hotel he called Joe into his room.
"I want to make you a present of some books I own," said Ulmer Montgomery. "Perhaps you'll like to read them. They are historical works."
"Thank you, Mr. Montgomery, you are very kind."
"I used to be a book agent, but I gave that up as it didn't pay me as well as some other things."
"And you had these books left over?"
"Yes. The firm I worked for wouldn't take them back so I had to keep them."
"And now you are selling curiosities."
At this Ulmer Montgomery smiled blandly.
"Not exactly, Joe--I only sell curiosities, or antiquities, when I am hard up. On other occasions I do like other folks, work for a living."
"I don't quite understand."
"I dropped into selling curiosities when I was in the South and hard up for cash. I wanted money the worst way, and I--well, I set to work to raise it. Maybe you'd like to hear my story."
"I would."
"Mind you, I don't pose as a model of goodness and I shouldn't advise you to follow in my footsteps. But I wanted money and wanted in badly.
So I put on my thinking cap, and I soon learned of a very zealous antiquary living about five miles from where I was stopping. He was wealthy and a bachelor, and spent no inconsiderable portion of his income on curiosities."
"And you went to him?" said Joe, becoming interested.