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<h2> CHAPTER XIV. DAMON AND PYTHIAS </h2>
<p>Mrs. Bhaer was right; peace was only a temporary lull, a storm was
brewing, and two days after Bess left, a moral earthquake shook Plumfield
to its centre.</p>
<p>Tommy's hens were at the bottom of the trouble, for if they had not
persisted in laying so many eggs, he could not have sold them and made
such sums. Money is the root of all evil, and yet it is such a useful root
that we cannot get on without it any more than we can without potatoes.
Tommy certainly could not, for he spent his income so recklessly, that Mr.
Bhaer was obliged to insist on a savings-bank, and presented him with a
private one an imposing tin edifice, with the name over the door, and a
tall chimney, down which the pennies were to go, there to rattle
temptingly till leave was given to open a sort of trap-door in the floor.</p>
<p>The house increased in weight so rapidly, that Tommy soon became satisfied
with his investment, and planned to buy unheard-of treasures with his
capital. He kept account of the sums deposited, and was promised that he
might break the bank as soon as he had five dollars, on condition that he
spent the money wisely. Only one dollar was needed, and the day Mrs. Jo
paid him for four dozen eggs, he was so delighted, that he raced off to
the barn to display the bright quarters to Nat, who was also laying by
money for the long-desired violin.</p>
<p>"I wish I had 'em to put with my three dollars, then I'd soon get enough
to buy my fiddle," he said, looking wistfully at the money.</p>
<p>"P'raps I'll lend you some. I haven't decided yet what I'll do with mine,"
said Tommy, tossing up his quarters and catching them as they fell.</p>
<p>"Hi! boys! come down to the brook and see what a jolly great snake Dan's
got!" called a voice from behind the barn.</p>
<p>"Come on," said Tommy; and, laying his money inside the old winnowing
machine, away he ran, followed by Nat.</p>
<p>The snake was very interesting, and then a long chase after a lame crow,
and its capture, so absorbed Tommy's mind and time, that he never thought
of his money till he was safely in bed that night.</p>
<p>"Never mind, no one but Nat knows where it is," said the easy-going lad,
and fell asleep untroubled by any anxiety about his property.</p>
<p>Next morning, just as the boys assembled for school, Tommy rushed into the
room breathlessly, demanding,</p>
<p>"I say, who has got my dollar?"</p>
<p>"What are you talking about?" asked Franz.</p>
<p>Tommy explained, and Nat corroborated his statement.</p>
<p>Every one else declared they knew nothing about it, and began to look
suspiciously at Nat, who got more and more alarmed and confused with each
denial.</p>
<p>"Somebody must have taken it," said Franz, as Tommy shook his fist at the
whole party, and wrathfully declared that,</p>
<p>"By thunder turtles! if I get hold of the thief, I'll give him what he
won't forget in a hurry."</p>
<p>"Keep cool, Tom; we shall find him out; thieves always come to grief,"
said Dan, as one who knew something of the matter.</p>
<p>"May be some tramp slept in the barn and took it," suggested Ned.</p>
<p>"No, Silas don't allow that; besides, a tramp wouldn't go looking in that
old machine for money," said Emil, with scorn.</p>
<p>"Wasn't it Silas himself?" said Jack.</p>
<p>"Well, I like that! Old Si is as honest as daylight. You wouldn't catch
him touching a penny of ours," said Tommy, handsomely defending his chief
admirer from suspicion.</p>
<p>"Whoever it was had better tell, and not wait to be found out," said Demi,
looking as if an awful misfortune had befallen the family.</p>
<p>"I know you think it's me," broke out Nat, red and excited.</p>
<p>"You are the only one who knew where it was," said Franz.</p>
<p>"I can't help it I didn't take it. I tell you I didn't I didn't!" cried
Nat, in a desperate sort of way.</p>
<p>"Gently, gently, my son! What is all this noise about?" and Mr. Bhaer
walked in among them.</p>
<p>Tommy repeated the story of his loss, and, as he listened, Mr. Bhaer's
face grew graver and graver; for, with all their faults and follies, the
lads till now had been honest.</p>
<p>"Take your seats," he said; and, when all were in their places, he added
slowly, as his eye went from face to face with a grieved look, that was
harder to bear than a storm of words,</p>
<p>"Now, boys, I shall ask each one of you a single question, and I want an
honest answer. I am not going to try to frighten, bribe, or surprise the
truth out of you, for every one of you have got a conscience, and know
what it is for. Now is the time to undo the wrong done to Tommy, and set
yourselves right before us all. I can forgive the yielding to sudden
temptation much easier than I can deceit. Don't add a lie to the theft,
but confess frankly, and we will all try to help you make us forget and
forgive."</p>
<p>He paused a moment, and one might have heard a pin drop, the room was so
still; then slowly and impressively he put the question to each one,
receiving the same answer in varying tones from all. Every face was
flushed and excited, so that Mr. Bhaer could not take color as a witness,
and some of the little boys were so frightened that they stammered over
the two short words as if guilty, though it was evident that they could
not be. When he came to Nat, his voice softened, for the poor lad looked
so wretched, Mr. Bhaer felt for him. He believed him to be the culprit,
and hoped to save the boy from another lie, by winning him to tell the
truth without fear.</p>
<p>"Now, my son, give me an honest answer. Did you take the money?"</p>
<p>"No, sir!" and Nat looked up at him imploringly.</p>
<p>As the words fell from his trembling lips, somebody hissed.</p>
<p>"Stop that!" cried Mr. Bhaer, with a sharp rap on his desk, as he looked
sternly toward the corner whence the sound came.</p>
<p>Ned, Jack, and Emil sat there, and the first two looked ashamed of
themselves, but Emil called out,</p>
<p>"It wasn't me, uncle! I'd be ashamed to hit a fellow when he is down."</p>
<p>"Good for you!" cried Tommy, who was in a sad state of affliction at the
trouble his unlucky dollar had made.</p>
<p>"Silence!" commanded Mr. Bhaer; and when it came, he said soberly,</p>
<p>"I am very sorry, Nat, but evidences are against you, and your old fault
makes us more ready to doubt you than we should be if we could trust you
as we do some of the boys, who never fib. But mind, my child, I do not
charge you with this theft; I shall not punish you for it till I am
perfectly sure, nor ask any thing more about it. I shall leave it for you
to settle with your own conscience. If you are guilty, come to me at any
hour of the day or night and confess it, and I will forgive and help you
to amend. If you are innocent, the truth will appear sooner or later, and
the instant it does, I will be the first to beg your pardon for doubting
you, and will so gladly do my best to clear your character before us all."</p>
<p>"I didn't! I didn't!" sobbed Nat, with his head down upon his arms, for he
could not bear the look of distrust and dislike which he read in the many
eyes fixed on him.</p>
<p>"I hope not." Mr. Bhaer paused a minute, as if to give the culprit,
whoever he might be, one more chance. Nobody spoke, however, and only
sniffs of sympathy from some of the little fellows broke the silence. Mr.
Bhaer shook his head, and added, regretfully,</p>
<p>"There is nothing more to be done, then, and I have but one thing to say:
I shall not speak of this again, and I wish you all to follow my example.
I cannot expect you to feel as kindly toward any one whom you suspect as
before this happened, but I do expect and desire that you will not torment
the suspected person in any way, he will have a hard enough time without
that. Now go to your lessons."</p>
<p>"Father Bhaer let Nat off too easy," muttered Ned to Emil, as they got out
their books.</p>
<p>"Hold your tongue," growled Emil, who felt that this event was a blot upon
the family honor.</p>
<p>Many of the boys agreed with Ned, but Mr. Bhaer was right, nevertheless;
and Nat would have been wiser to confess on the spot and have the trouble
over, for even the hardest whipping he ever received from his father was
far easier to bear than the cold looks, the avoidance, and general
suspicion that met him on all sides. If ever a boy was sent to Coventry
and kept there, it was poor Nat; and he suffered a week of slow torture,
though not a hand was raised against him, and hardly a word said.</p>
<p>That was the worst of it; if they would only have talked it out, or even
have thrashed him all round, he could have stood it better than the silent
distrust that made very face so terrible to meet. Even Mrs. Bhaer's showed
traces of it, though her manner was nearly as kind as ever; but the
sorrowful anxious look in Father Bhaer's eyes cut Nat to the heart, for he
loved his teacher dearly, and knew that he had disappointed all his hopes
by this double sin.</p>
<p>Only one person in the house entirely believed in him, and stood up for
him stoutly against all the rest. This was Daisy. She could not explain
why she trusted him against all appearances, she only felt that she could
not doubt him, and her warm sympathy made her strong to take his part. She
would not hear a word against him from any one, and actually slapped her
beloved Demi when he tried to convince her that it must have been Nat,
because no one else knew where the money was.</p>
<p>"Maybe the hens ate it; they are greedy old things," she said; and when
Demi laughed, she lost her temper, slapped the amazed boy, and then burst
out crying and ran away, still declaring, "He didn't! he didn't! he
didn't!"</p>
<p>Neither aunt nor uncle tried to shake the child's faith in her friend, but
only hoped her innocent instinct might prove sure, and loved her all the
better for it. Nat often said, after it was over, that he couldn't have
stood it, if it had not been for Daisy. When the others shunned him, she
clung to him closer than ever, and turned her back on the rest. She did
not sit on the stairs now when he solaced himself with the old fiddle, but
went in and sat beside him, listening with a face so full of confidence
and affection, that Nat forgot disgrace for a time, and was happy. She
asked him to help her with her lessons, she cooked him marvelous messes in
her kitchen, which he ate manfully, no matter what they were, for
gratitude gave a sweet flavor to the most distasteful. She proposed
impossible games of cricket and ball, when she found that he shrank from
joining the other boys. She put little nosegays from her garden on his
desk, and tried in every way to show that she was not a fair-weather
friend, but faithful through evil as well as good repute. Nan soon
followed her example, in kindness at least; curbed her sharp tongue, and
kept her scornful little nose from any demonstration of doubt or dislike,
which was good of Madame Giddy-gaddy, for she firmly believed that Nat
took the money.</p>
<p>Most of the boys let him severely alone, but Dan, though he said he
despised him for being a coward, watched over him with a grim sort of
protection, and promptly cuffed any lad who dared to molest his mate or
make him afraid. His idea of friendship was as high as Daisy's, and, in
his own rough way, he lived up to it as loyally.</p>
<p>Sitting by the brook one afternoon, absorbed in the study of the domestic
habits of water-spiders, he overheard a bit of conversation on the other
side of the wall. Ned, who was intensely inquisitive, had been on
tenterhooks to know certainly who was the culprit; for of late one or two
of the boys had begun to think that they were wrong, Nat was so steadfast
in his denials, and so meek in his endurance of their neglect. This doubt
had teased Ned past bearing, and he had several times privately beset Nat
with questions, regardless of Mr. Bhaer's express command. Finding Nat
reading alone on the shady side of the wall, Ned could not resist stopping
for a nibble at the forbidden subject. He had worried Nat for some ten
minutes before Dan arrived, and the first words the spider-student heard
were these, in Nat's patient, pleading voice,</p>
<p>"Don't, Ned! oh, don't! I can't tell you because I don't know, and it's
mean of you to keep nagging at me on the sly, when Father Bhaer told you
not to plague me. You wouldn't dare to if Dan was round."</p>
<p>"I ain't afraid of Dan; he's nothing but an old bully. Don't believe but
what he took Tom's money, and you know it, and won't tell. Come, now!"</p>
<p>"He didn't, but, if he did, I would stand up for him, he has always been
so good to me," said Nat, so earnestly that Dan forgot his spiders, and
rose quickly to thank him, but Ned's next words arrested him.</p>
<p>"I know Dan did it, and gave the money to you. Shouldn't wonder if he got
his living picking pockets before he came here, for nobody knows any thing
about him but you," said Ned, not believing his own words, but hoping to
get the truth out of Nat by making him angry.</p>
<p>He succeeded in a part of his ungenerous wish, for Nat cried out,
fiercely,</p>
<p>"If you say that again I'll go and tell Mr. Bhaer all about it. I don't
want to tell tales, but, by George! I will, if you don't let Dan alone."</p>
<p>"Then you'll be a sneak, as well as a liar and a thief," began Ned, with a
jeer, for Nat had borne insult to himself so meekly, the other did not
believe he would dare to face the master just to stand up for Dan.</p>
<p>What he might have added I cannot tell, for the words were hardly out of
his mouth when a long arm from behind took him by the collar, and, jerking
him over the wall in a most promiscuous way, landed him with a splash in
the middle of the brook.</p>
<p>"Say that again and I'll duck you till you can't see!" cried Dan, looking
like a modern Colossus of Rhodes as he stood, with a foot on either side
of the narrow stream, glaring down at the discomfited youth in the water.</p>
<p>"I was only in fun," said Ned.</p>
<p>"You are a sneak yourself to badger Nat round the corner. Let me catch you
at it again, and I'll souse you in the river next time. Get up, and clear
out!" thundered Dan, in a rage.</p>
<p>Ned fled, dripping, and his impromptu sitz-bath evidently did him good,
for he was very respectful to both the boys after that, and seemed to have
left his curiosity in the brook. As he vanished Dan jumped over the wall,
and found Nat lying, as if quite worn out and bowed down with his
troubles.</p>
<p>"He won't pester you again, I guess. If he does, just tell me, and I'll
see to him," said Dan, trying to cool down.</p>
<p>"I don't mind what he says about me so much, I've got used to it,"
answered Nat sadly; "but I hate to have him pitch into you."</p>
<p>"How do you know he isn't right?" asked Dan, turning his face away.</p>
<p>"What, about the money?" cried Nat, looking up with a startled air.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"But I don't believe it! You don't care for money; all you want is your
old bugs and things," and Nat laughed, incredulously.</p>
<p>"I want a butterfly net as much as you want a fiddle; why shouldn't I
steal the money for it as much as you?" said Dan, still turning away, and
busily punching holes in the turf with his stick.</p>
<p>"I don't think you would. You like to fight and knock folks round
sometimes, but you don't lie, and I don't believe you'd steal," and Nat
shook his head decidedly.</p>
<p>"I've done both. I used to fib like fury; it's too much trouble now; and I
stole things to eat out of gardens when I ran away from Page, so you see I
am a bad lot," said Dan, speaking in the rough, reckless way which he had
been learning to drop lately.</p>
<p>"O Dan! don't say it's you! I'd rather have it any of the other boys,"
cried Nat, in such a distressed tone that Dan looked pleased, and showed
that he did, by turning round with a queer expression in his face, though
he only answered,</p>
<p>"I won't say any thing about it. But don't you fret, and we'll pull
through somehow, see if we don't."</p>
<p>Something in his face and manner gave Nat a new idea; and he said,
pressing his hands together, in the eagerness of his appeal,</p>
<p>"I think you know who did it. If you do, beg him to tell, Dan. It's so
hard to have 'em all hate me for nothing. I don't think I can bear it much
longer. If I had any place to go to, I'd run away, though I love Plumfield
dearly; but I'm not brave and big like you, so I must stay and wait till
some one shows them that I haven't lied."</p>
<p>As he spoke, Nat looked so broken and despairing, that Dan could not bear
it, and, muttered huskily,</p>
<p>"You won't wait long," and he walked rapidly away, and was seen no more
for hours.</p>
<p>"What is the matter with Dan?" asked the boys of one another several times
during the Sunday that followed a week which seemed as if it would never
end. Dan was often moody, but that day he was so sober and silent that no
one could get any thing out of him. When they walked he strayed away from
the rest, and came home late. He took no part in the evening conversation,
but sat in the shadow, so busy with his own thoughts that he scarcely
seemed to hear what was going on. When Mrs. Jo showed him an unusually
good report in the Conscience Book, he looked at it without a smile, and
said, wistfully,</p>
<p>"You think I am getting on, don't you?"</p>
<p>"Excellently, Dan! and I am so pleased, because I always thought you only
needed a little help to make you a boy to be proud of."</p>
<p>He looked up at her with a strange expression in his black eyes an
expression of mingled pride and love and sorrow which she could not
understand then but remembered afterward.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid you'll be disappointed, but I do try," he said, shutting the
book with no sign of pleasure in the page that he usually liked so much to
read over and talk about.</p>
<p>"Are you sick, dear?" asked Mrs. Jo, with her hand on his shoulder.</p>
<p>"My foot aches a little; I guess I'll go to bed. Good-night, mother," he
added, and held the hand against his cheek a minute, then went away
looking as if he had said good-bye to something dear.</p>
<p>"Poor Dan! he takes Nat's disgrace to heart sadly. He is a strange boy; I
wonder if I ever shall understand him thoroughly?" said Mrs. Jo to
herself, as she thought over Dan's late improvement with real
satisfaction, yet felt that there was more in the lad than she had at
first suspected.</p>
<p>One of things which cut Nat most deeply was an act of Tommy's, for after
his loss Tommy had said to him, kindly, but firmly,</p>
<p>"I don't wish to hurt you, Nat, but you see I can't afford to lose my
money, so I guess we won't be partners any longer;" and with that Tommy
rubbed out the sign, "T. Bangs & Co."</p>
<p>Nat had been very proud of the "Co.," and had hunted eggs industriously,
kept his accounts all straight, and had added a good sum to his income
from the sale of his share of stock in trade.</p>
<p>"O Tom! must you?" he said, feeling that his good name was gone for ever
in the business world if this was done.</p>
<p>"I must," returned Tommy, firmly. "Emil says that when one man 'bezzles
(believe that's the word it means to take money and cut away with it) the
property of a firm, the other one sues him, or pitches into him somehow,
and won't have any thing more to do with him. Now you have 'bezzled my
property; I shan't sue you, and I shan't pitch into you, but I must
dissolve the partnership, because I can't trust you, and I don't wish to
fail."</p>
<p>"I can't make you believe me, and you won't take my money, though I'd be
thankful to give all my dollars if you'd only say you don't think I took
your money. Do let me hunt for you, I won't ask any wages, but do it for
nothing. I know all the places, and I like it," pleaded Nat.</p>
<p>But Tommy shook his head, and his jolly round face looked suspicious and
hard as he said, shortly, "Can't do it; wish you didn't know the places.
Mind you don't go hunting on the sly, and speculate in my eggs."</p>
<p>Poor Nat was so hurt that he could not get over it. He felt that he had
lost not only his partner and patron, but that he was bankrupt in honor,
and an outlaw from the business community. No one trusted his word,
written or spoken, in spite of his efforts to redeem the past falsehood;
the sign was down, the firm broken up, and he a ruined man. The barn,
which was the boys' Wall Street, knew him no more. Cockletop and her
sisters cackled for him in vain, and really seemed to take his misfortune
to heart, for eggs were fewer, and some of the biddies retired in disgust
to new nests, which Tommy could not find.</p>
<p>"They trust me," said Nat, when he heard of it; and though the boys
shouted at the idea, Nat found comfort in it, for when one is down in the
world, the confidence of even a speckled hen is most consoling.</p>
<p>Tommy took no new partner, however, for distrust had entered in, and
poisoned the peace of his once confiding soul. Ned offered to join him,
but he declined, saying, with a sense of justice that did him honor,</p>
<p>"It might turn out that Nat didn't take my money, and then we could be
partners again. I don't think it will happen, but I will give him a
chance, and keep the place open a little longer."</p>
<p>Billy was the only person whom Bangs felt he could trust in his shop, and
Billy was trained to hunt eggs, and hand them over unbroken, being quite
satisfied with an apple or a sugar-plum for wages. The morning after Dan's
gloomy Sunday, Billy said to his employer, as he displayed the results of
a long hunt,</p>
<p>"Only two."</p>
<p>"It gets worse and worse; I never saw such provoking old hens," growled
Tommy, thinking of the days when he often had six to rejoice over. "Well,
put 'em in my hat and give me a new bit of chalk; I must mark 'em up, any
way."</p>
<p>Billy mounted a peck-measure, and looked into the top of the machine,
where Tommy kept his writing materials.</p>
<p>"There's lots of money in here," said Billy.</p>
<p>"No, there isn't. Catch me leaving my cash round again," returned Tommy.</p>
<p>"I see 'em one, four, eight, two dollars," persisted Billy, who had not
yet mastered the figures correctly.</p>
<p>"What a jack you are!" and Tommy hopped up to get the chalk for himself,
but nearly tumbled down again, for there actually were four bright
quarters in a row, with a bit of paper on them directed to "Tom Bangs,"
that there might be no mistake.</p>
<p>"Thunder turtles!" cried Tommy, and seizing them he dashed into the house,
bawling wildly, "It's all right! Got my money! Where's Nat?"</p>
<p>He was soon found, and his surprise and pleasure were so genuine that few
doubted his word when he now denied all knowledge of the money.</p>
<p>"How could I put it back when I didn't take it? Do believe me now, and be
good to me again," he said, so imploringly, that Emil slapped him on the
back, and declared he would for one.</p>
<p>"So will I, and I'm jolly glad it's not you. But who the dickens is it?"
said Tommy, after shaking hands heartily with Nat.</p>
<p>"Never mind, as long as it's found," said Dan with his eyes fixed on Nat's
happy face.</p>
<p>"Well, I like that! I'm not going to have my things hooked, and then
brought back like the juggling man's tricks," cried Tommy, looking at his
money as if he suspected witchcraft.</p>
<p>"We'll find him out somehow, though he was sly enough to print this so his
writing wouldn't be known," said Franz, examining the paper.</p>
<p>"Demi prints tip-top," put in Rob, who had not a very clear idea what the
fuss was all about.</p>
<p>"You can't make me believe it's him, not if you talk till you are blue,"
said Tommy, and the others hooted at the mere idea; for the little deacon,
as they called him, was above suspicion.</p>
<p>Nat felt the difference in the way they spoke of Demi and himself, and
would have given all he had or ever hoped to have to be so trusted; for he
had learned how easy it is to lose the confidence of others, how very,
very hard to win it back, and truth became to him a precious thing since
he had suffered from neglecting it.</p>
<p>Mr. Bhaer was very glad one step had been taken in the right direction,
and waited hopefully for yet further revelations. They came sooner than he
expected, and in a way that surprised and grieved him very much. As they
sat at supper that night, a square parcel was handed to Mrs. Bhaer from
Mrs. Bates, a neighbor. A note accompanied the parcel, and, while Mr.
Bhaer read it, Demi pulled off the wrapper, exclaiming, as he saw its
contents,</p>
<p>"Why, it's the book Uncle Teddy gave Dan!"</p>
<p>"The devil!" broke from Dan, for he had not yet quite cured himself of
swearing, though he tried very hard.</p>
<p>Mr. Bhaer looked up quickly at the sound. Dan tried to meet his eyes, but
could not; his own fell, and he sat biting his lips, getting redder and
redder till he was the picture of shame.</p>
<p>"What is it?" asked Mrs. Bhaer, anxiously.</p>
<p>"I should have preferred to talk about this in private, but Demi has
spoilt that plan, so I may as well have it out now," said Mr. Bhaer,
looking a little stern, as he always did when any meanness or deceit came
up for judgment.</p>
<p>"The note is from Mrs. Bates, and she says that her boy Jimmy told her he
bought this book of Dan last Saturday. She saw that it was worth much more
than a dollar, and thinking there was some mistake, has sent it to me. Did
you sell it, Dan?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," was the slow answer.</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"Wanted money."</p>
<p>"For what?"</p>
<p>"To pay somebody."</p>
<p>"To whom did you owe it?"</p>
<p>"Tommy."</p>
<p>"Never borrowed a cent of me in his life," cried Tommy, looked scared, for
he guessed what was coming now, and felt that on the whole he would have
preferred witchcraft, for he admired Dan immensely.</p>
<p>"Perhaps he took it," cried Ned, who owed Dan a grudge for the ducking,
and, being a mortal boy, liked to pay it off.</p>
<p>"O Dan!" cried Nat, clasping his hands, regardless of the bread and butter
in them.</p>
<p>"It is a hard thing to do, but I must have this settled, for I cannot have
you watching each other like detectives, and the whole school disturbed in
this way, did you put that dollar in the barn this morning?" asked Mr.
Bhaer.</p>
<p>Dan looked him straight in the face, and answered steadily, "Yes, I did."</p>
<p>A murmur went round the table, Tommy dropped his mug with a crash; Daisy
cried out, "I knew it wasn't Nat;" Nan began to cry, and Mrs. Jo left the
room, looking so disappointed, sorry, and ashamed that Dan could not bear
it. He hid his face in his hands a moment, then threw up his head, squared
his shoulders as if settling some load upon them, and said, with the
dogged look, and half-resolute, half-reckless tone he had used when he
first came,</p>
<p>"I did it; now you may do what you like to me, but I won't say another
word about it."</p>
<p>"Not even that you are sorry?" asked Mr. Bhaer, troubled by the change in
him.</p>
<p>"I ain't sorry."</p>
<p>"I'll forgive him without asking," said Tommy, feeling that it was harder
somehow to see brave Dan disgraced than timid Nat.</p>
<p>"Don't want to be forgiven," returned Dan, gruffly.</p>
<p>"Perhaps you will when you have thought about it quietly by yourself, I
won't tell you now how surprised and disappointed I am, but by and by I
will come up and talk to you in your room."</p>
<p>"Won't make any difference," said Dan, trying to speak defiantly, but
failing as he looked at Mr. Bhaer's sorrowful face; and, taking his words
for a dismissal, Dan left the room as if he found it impossible to stay.</p>
<p>It would have done him good if he had stayed; for the boys talked the
matter over with such sincere regret, and pity, and wonder, it might have
touched and won him to ask pardon. No one was glad to find that it was he,
not even Nat; for, spite of all his faults, and they were many, every one
liked Dan now, because under his rough exterior lay some of the manly
virtues which we most admire and love. Mrs. Jo had been the chief prop, as
well as cultivator, of Dan; and she took it sadly to heart that her last
and most interesting boy had turned out so ill. The theft was bad, but the
lying about it, and allowing another to suffer so much from an unjust
suspicion was worse; and most discouraging of all was the attempt to
restore the money in an underhand way, for it showed not only a want of
courage, but a power of deceit that boded ill for the future. Still more
trying was his steady refusal to talk of the matter, to ask pardon, or
express any remorse. Days passed; and he went about his lessons and his
work, silent, grim, and unrepentant. As if taking warning by their
treatment of Nat, he asked no sympathy of any one, rejected the advances
of the boys, and spent his leisure hours roaming about the fields and
woods, trying to find playmates in the birds and beasts, and succeeding
better than most boys would have done, because he knew and loved them so
well.</p>
<p>"If this goes on much longer, I'm afraid he will run away again, for he is
too young to stand a life like this," said Mr. Bhaer, quite dejected at
the failure of all his efforts.</p>
<p>"A little while ago I should have been quite sure that nothing would tempt
him away, but now I am ready of any thing, he is so changed," answered
poor Mrs. Jo, who mourned over her boy and could not be comforted, because
he shunned her more than any one else, and only looked at her with the
half-fierce, half-imploring eyes of a wild animal caught in a trap, when
she tried to talk to him alone.</p>
<p>Nat followed him about like a shadow, and Dan did not repulse him as
rudely as he did others, but said, in his blunt way, "You are all right;
don't worry about me. I can stand it better than you did."</p>
<p>"But I don't like to have you all alone," Nat would say, sorrowfully.</p>
<p>"I like it;" and Dan would tramp away, stifling a sigh sometimes, for he
was lonely.</p>
<p>Passing through the birch grove one day, he came up on several of the
boys, who were amusing themselves by climbing up the trees and swinging
down again, as they slender elastic stems bent till their tops touched the
ground. Dan paused a minute to watch the fun, without offering to join in
it, and as he stood there Jack took his turn. He had unfortunately chosen
too large a tree; for when he swung off, it only bent a little way, and
left him hanging at a dangerous height.</p>
<p>"Go back; you can't do it!" called Ned from below.</p>
<p>Jack tried, but the twigs slipped from his hands, and he could not get his
legs round the trunk. He kicked, and squirmed, and clutched in vain, then
gave it up, and hung breathless, saying helplessly,</p>
<p>"Catch me! help me! I must drop!"</p>
<p>"You'll be killed if you do," cried Ned, frightened out of his wits.</p>
<p>"Hold on!" shouted Dan; and up the tree he went, crashing his way along
till he nearly reached Jack, whose face looked up at him, full of fear and
hope.</p>
<p>"You'll both come down," said Ned, dancing with excitement on the slope
underneath, while Nat held out his arms, in the wild hope of breaking the
fall.</p>
<p>"That's what I want; stand from under," answered Dan, coolly; and, as he
spoke, his added weight bent the tree many feet nearer the earth.</p>
<p>Jack dropped safely; but the birch, lightened of half its load, flew up
again so suddenly, that Dan, in the act of swinging round to drop feet
foremost, lost his hold and fell heavily.</p>
<p>"I'm not hurt, all right in a minute," he said, sitting up, a little pale
and dizzy, as the boys gathered round him, full of admiration and alarm.</p>
<p>"You're a trump, Dan, and I'm ever so much obliged to you," cried Jack,
gratefully.</p>
<p>"It wasn't any thing," muttered Dan, rising slowly.</p>
<p>"I say it was, and I'll shake hands with you, though you are," Ned checked
the unlucky word on his tongue, and held out his hand, feeling that it was
a handsome thing on his part.</p>
<p>"But I won't shake hands with a sneak;" and Dan turned his back with a
look of scorn, that caused Ned to remember the brook, and retire with
undignified haste.</p>
<p>"Come home, old chap; I'll give you a lift;" and Nat walked away with him
leaving the others to talk over the feat together, to wonder when Dan
would "come round," and to wish one and all that Tommy's "confounded money
had been in Jericho before it made such a fuss."</p>
<p>When Mr. Bhaer came into school next morning, he looked so happy, that the
boys wondered what had happened to him, and really thought he had lost his
mind when they saw him go straight to Dan, and, taking him by both hands,
say all in one breath, as he shook them heartily,</p>
<p>"I know all about it, and I beg your pardon. It was like you to do it, and
I love you for it, though it's never right to tell lies, even for a
friend."</p>
<p>"What is it?" cried Nat, for Dan said not a word, only lifted up his head,
as if a weight of some sort had fallen off his back.</p>
<p>"Dan did not take Tommy's money;" and Mr. Bhaer quite shouted it, he was
so glad.</p>
<p>"Who did?" cried the boys in a chorus.</p>
<p>Mr. Bhaer pointed to one empty seat, and every eye followed his finger,
yet no one spoke for a minute, they were so surprised.</p>
<p>"Jack went home early this morning, but he left this behind him;" and in
the silence Mr. Bhaer read the note which he had found tied to his
door-handle when he rose.</p>
<p>"I took Tommy's dollar. I was peeking in through a crack and saw him put
it there. I was afraid to tell before, though I wanted to. I didn't care
so much about Nat, but Dan is a trump, and I can't stand it any longer. I
never spent the money; it's under the carpet in my room, right behind the
washstand. I'm awful sorry. I am going home, and don't think I shall ever
come back, so Dan may have my things.</p>
<p>"JACK"</p>
<p>It was not an elegant confession, being badly written, much blotted, and
very short; but it was a precious paper to Dan; and, when Mr. Bhaer
paused, the boy went to him, saying, in a rather broken voice, but with
clear eyes, and the frank, respectful manner they had tried to teach him,</p>
<p>"I'll say I'm sorry now, and ask you to forgive me, sir."</p>
<p>"It was a kind lie, Dan, and I can't help forgiving it; but you see it did
no good," said Mr. Bhaer, with a hand on either shoulder, and a face full
of relief and affection.</p>
<p>"It kept the boys from plaguing Nat. That's what I did it for. It made him
right down miserable. I didn't care so much," explained Dan, as if glad to
speak out after his hard silence.</p>
<p>"How could you do it? You are always so kind to me," faltered Nat, feeling
a strong desire to hug his friend and cry. Two girlish performances, which
would have scandalized Dan to the last degree.</p>
<p>"It's all right now, old fellow, so don't be a fool," he said, swallowing
the lump in his throat, and laughing out as he had not done for weeks.
"Does Mrs. Bhaer know?" he asked, eagerly.</p>
<p>"Yes; and she is so happy I don't know what she will do to you," began Mr.
Bhaer, but got no farther, for here the boys came crowding about Dan in a
tumult of pleasure and curiosity; but before he had answered more than a
dozen questions, a voice cried out,</p>
<p>"Three cheers for Dan!" and there was Mrs. Jo in the doorway waving her
dish-towel, and looking as if she wanted to dance a jig for joy, as she
used to do when a girl.</p>
<p>"Now then," cried Mr. Bhaer, and led off a rousing hurrah, which startled
Asia in the kitchen, and made old Mr. Roberts shake his head as he drove
by, saying,</p>
<p>"Schools are not what they were when I was young!"</p>
<p>Dan stood it pretty well for a minute, but the sight of Mrs. Jo's delight
upset him, and he suddenly bolted across the hall into the parlor, whither
she instantly followed, and neither were seen for half an hour.</p>
<p>Mr. Bhaer found it very difficult to calm his excited flock; and, seeing
that lessons were an impossibility for a time, he caught their attention
by telling them the fine old story of the friends whose fidelity to one
another has made their names immortal. The lads listened and remembered,
for just then their hearts were touched by the loyalty of a humbler pair
of friends. The lie was wrong, but the love that prompted it and the
courage that bore in silence the disgrace which belonged to another, made
Dan a hero in their eyes. Honesty and honor had a new meaning now; a good
name was more precious than gold; for once lost money could not buy it
back; and faith in one another made life smooth and happy as nothing else
could do.</p>
<p>Tommy proudly restored the name of the firm; Nat was devoted to Dan; and
all the boys tried to atone to both for former suspicion and neglect. Mrs.
Jo rejoiced over her flock, and Mr. Bhaer was never tired of telling the
story of his young Damon and Pythias.</p>
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