FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   >>  
s the end of that scrape." "I don't see it," returned Lester. "It is only the beginning of it. Everybody in the settlement will know it before night." "Who cares if they do?" cried Bob, who began to feel like himself, now that he was on solid ground once more. "They can't prove that we went there to steal the quails, and we'll not confess it." "No, sir," replied Lester, emphatically. "You're a sharp one, Bob, to make up such a plausible story on the spur of the moment, but I know the General did not believe a word of it." "So do I, but what's the odds? Let's see him prove that I didn't tell him the truth. Now the next thing is something else; we must make up a story to tell my folks when we get home." "Can't we run back to the house and go to bed before any of the family are up?" "I am afraid to try it. A better plan would be to go back in the woods and build a fire and get warm. Then we'll go home, and if anybody asks us where we have been, we'll say we couldn't sleep, and so we got up and went 'coon-hunting." "I wish we had one or two 'coons to back up the story," said Lester. "O, that wouldn't help us any. People often go hunting and return empty-handed, you know." Leaving Bob and his friend to get out of their difficulties as best they can, we will go back to Godfrey's cabin and see what the two boys who live there are doing. The day of rest, which Don said would work such wonders in David, did not seem to be of much benefit to him after all. He had been somewhat encouraged by Bert's cheering words and the knowledge that influential friends were working for him, and, like Bob Owens, he had indulged in some rosy dreams of the future; but that short interview with the young horsemen who met him in the road below the General's house, reminded him that he had active enemies, who would not hesitate to injure him by every means in their power. He thought about his father all day, and wondered if there was anything he could do that would bring him back home where he belonged, and make a respectable man of him. He had ample leisure to turn this problem over in his mind, for he was alone the most of the day. As soon as he reached the cabin, Dan, who acted as if he did not want to be in his brother's company, shouldered his rifle and went off by himself; and it was while he was roaming through the woods that he made a discovery which did much to bring about some of the events we have already described.
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   >>  



Top keywords:

Lester

 

General

 
hunting
 

indulged

 

returned

 

future

 

horsemen

 

working

 

interview

 

dreams


influential

 
beginning
 
benefit
 

wonders

 
Everybody
 
knowledge
 

reminded

 

friends

 

cheering

 

encouraged


enemies

 

brother

 

company

 

reached

 

shouldered

 

discovery

 

events

 

roaming

 

thought

 
scrape

father

 

wondered

 
settlement
 

hesitate

 

injure

 
leisure
 

problem

 
belonged
 

respectable

 
active

Godfrey

 

afraid

 

ground

 
family
 

moment

 

emphatically

 
replied
 

plausible

 

quails

 
confess