se that Jennings would care to
receive a boy in his house, or that tall grenadier of a housekeeper,
either. I expect she rules the household."
"She could tuck him under her arm and walk off with him," said Leonard,
laughing.
"The boy must be artful to have wormed his way into the favor of the
strange pair. He seems to be a favorite."
"Yes, uncle, I think he is. However, I like my position better than
his."
"He will learn his business from the beginning. I don't know but it was
a mistake for you to leave the factory."
"I am not at all sorry for it, uncle."
"Your position doesn't amount to much."
"I am paid just as well as I was when I was in the factory."
"But you are learning nothing."
"You are going to teach me bookkeeping."
"Even that is not altogether a desirable business. A good bookkeeper can
never expect to be in business for himself. He must be content with a
salary all his life."
"You have done pretty well, uncle."
"But there is no chance of my becoming a rich man. I have to work hard
for my money. And I haven't been able to lay up much money yet. That
reminds me? Leonard, I must impress upon you the fact that you have
your own way to make. I have procured you a place, and I provide you a
home----"
"You take my wages," said Leonard, bluntly.
"A part of them, but on the whole, you are not self-supporting. You must
look ahead, Leonard, and consider the future. When you are a young man
you will want to earn an adequate income."
"Of course, I shall, uncle, but there is one other course."
"What is that?"
"I may marry an heiress," suggested Leonard, smiling.
The bookkeeper winced.
"I thought I was marrying an heiress when I married your aunt," he
said, "but within six months of our wedding day, her father made a bad
failure, and actually had the assurance to ask me to give him a home
under my roof."
"Did you do it?"
"No; I told him it would not be convenient."
"What became of him?"
"He got a small clerkship at ten dollars a week in the counting room of
a mercantile friend, and filled it till one day last October, when he
dropped dead of apoplexy. I made a great mistake when I married in not
asking him to settle a definite sum on his daughter. It would have been
so much saved from the wreck."
"Did aunt want him to come and live here?"
"Yes, women are always unreasonable. She would have had me support the
old man in idleness, but I am not one of that kind. Ever
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