demands it."
"I am sorry, Dodge, that you have been so long in coming to such
a conclusion," replied the lawyer, almost coldly.
"What do you mean?"
"Why, you still owe Prescott and Darrin that thousand dollars
offered by your family as a reward for finding you when your
misfortune happened."
"But my son, Bert------"
"Is the bitter enemy of young Prescott, who is one of the manliest
young fellows ever reared in Gridley."
"But my wife has also opposed my paying the reward," argued Mr.
Dodge. "She declares that the two boys were out on a jaunt and
just stumbled upon me."
"Your wife, like all good mothers, is much inclined to take the
part of her own son," rejoined Lawyer Ripley. "However, at the
time Prescott and Darrin found you, they were not out on a jaunt.
They were serving 'The Blade,' and I happen to know that the
young men did some remarkably good detective work in trailing
and rescuing you. They started fair and even with the police,
but they beat the police at the latter's own game. Dodge, by
every consideration of right and justice, you owe that reward
to Prescott and Darrin! If they had not found and rescued you,
you might not be here today. There is no telling what might have
happened to you had you been left helpless less in the custody
of the pair of scoundrels who had you in that shack. I repeat
that you owe that thousand dollars as fairly as you ever owed
a penny in your life"
"Well, then, I'll pay it," assented Theodore
Dodge reluctantly, after some hesitation. "I am afraid my wife
will oppose it, however."
"You can tell Mrs. Dodge just what I've said, or I'll tell her,
if you prefer."
"Will you attend, Ripley, to rewarding all the boys for their
gallant conduct in rescuing my daughter."
"Yes; if you'll leave the matter wholly in my hands, and agree
not to interfere"
Theodore Dodge agreed to this, and Lawyer Ripley went ahead.
The legal gentleman, however had a more difficult time than he
had expected. It took a lot of argument, and more than one meeting,
to make Dick & Co. agree to accept anything whatever.
It was at last settled, however, Mr. Ripley urging upon the young
men that they had no right to slight their own future prospects
or education by refusing to "lay by" money to which they were
honestly entitled, when it cane in the form of an earned reward
from a citizen amply able to pay the reward.
So Dick and Dave received that thousand dollars, which, of
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