Andy Grant's Pluck. Alger Horatio Jr.

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laugh.

      "Yes, I suppose so."

      "Oh, well, it's the best thing for you. I thought it foolish when your father sent you off to the academy. If the Arden grammar school is good enough for me it is good enough for you."

      "There is nothing to prevent your going to the academy."

      "I know that. My father could afford it, even if it cost a good deal more. You wanted to go to college, didn't you?"

      "Yes."

      "It was very foolish for a poor boy like you."

      "Of course your age and experience make your opinion of value," said

      Andy, with a sarcasm which he did not care to conceal.

      "I advise you not to be too independent," returned Conrad, displeased.

      "Are you going to work on the farm?"

      "I may till I get a situation."

      "I'll speak to father. He might take you for an errand boy."

      "I don't think that place would suit me."

      "Why not?"

      "I want to go into some mercantile establishment and learn business."

      "That's what I am going to do when I get through school. Of course there is no hurry in my case."

      "I suppose not."

      "I suppose you know that my father has taken a mortgage on your father's farm?"

      "Yes, I know that."

      "If your father can't pay the mortgage when it is due, father will have to take the farm."

      Andy made no answer, but thought Conrad more disagreeable than ever. By way of changing the conversation, he said:

      "That's a new bicycle, isn't it?"

      "Yes; I got tired of the old one. This is a very expensive one.

      Wouldn't you like to own a bicycle?"

      "Yes."

      "Of course, you never will."

      "Then I must be content without one."

      "Well, I must leave you. I'll come around soon and see you ride a horse to plow."

      As Conrad sped away on his wheel, Andy said to himself:

      "I shouldn't like to be rich if it made me as disagreeable as Conrad."

      CHAPTER IV.

      PREPARING FOR THE PICNIC

      The change in his father's circumstances had come so suddenly that Andy could not immediately decide upon a plan of securing employment.

      He was not idle, however. There was work to do on the farm, and he took off his uniform, for Penhurst Academy was a military school, and donned, instead, a rough farm suit, in which he assisted his father.

      If he felt a pang of regret he did not show it, for he did not wish to add to his father's grief over his imprudent act of friendship.

      It was while he was at work hoeing corn that Conrad Carter came up one day, and leaning against the fence, looked at Andy with an amused expression.

      "Oho, you've turned farmer in earnest!" he said.

      "Yes, for the time being," answered Andy, composedly.

      "You look fine in your overalls."

      "Do you think so? Thank you for the compliment."

      "You might as well keep on. You will probably succeed better as a farmer than in business."

      "I mean to succeed in anything I undertake."

      "You've got a comfortable opinion of yourself."

      "While you, on the contrary, are modest and unassuming."

      "What do you mean?" asked Conrad, coloring.

      "I meant to compliment you, but if you don't like it I will take it back. Suppose I say that you are neither modest nor unassuming."

      "If that is the way you are going to talk to me I will go away," said

      Conrad, haughtily. "It is a little imprudent, considering—"

      "Considering what?"

      "That my father can turn you all out at the end of two years."

      "If that is the way you are going to talk to me I shall be glad to have you go away, as you just threatened."

      "Pride and poverty don't go together very well," said Conrad, provoked.

      "I don't want to be either proud or poor," returned Andy, smiling.

      "That fellow provokes me," thought Conrad. "However, he'll repent it some time."

      In five minutes his place was taken by Valentine Burns, an intimate friend of Andy's. His father kept the village store, and was one of the leading citizens of Arden.

      "Hard at work, I see, Andy," he said.

      "Don't you want to help me?"

      "No, I'm too lazy. I have to work in the store out of school hours, you know. Are you going to the picnic?"

      "What picnic?"

      "There's a Sunday-school picnic next Thursday afternoon. Both churches unite in it. All the young people will be there. You would have heard of it if you hadn't been absent at school."

      "I will certainly go. There are so few amusements in Arden that I can't afford to miss any. I suppose there will be the usual attractions?"

      "Yes, and an extra one besides. There's a gentleman from the city staying at the hotel, who has offered a prize of ten dollars to the boy who will row across the pond in the shortest time."

      "The distance is about half a mile, isn't it?"

      "Yes; a little more."

      "I suppose you will go in for the prize, Val. You have a nice boat to practice in."

      "No amount of practice would give me the prize. I don't excel as a rower."

      "Who is expected to win?"

      "Conrad Carter confidently counts on securing the prize. There is no boy in Arden that can compete with him, except—"

      "Well, except whom?"

      "Andy Grant."

      "I don't know," said Andy, thoughtfully. "I can row pretty well—that is, I used to; but I am out of practice."

      "Why don't you get back your practice?"

      "I have no boat."

      "Then use mine,"

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