[Now or Never by Oliver Optic]@TWC D-Link bookNow or Never CHAPTER XIII 9/11
If I had any boys, I would lock them up in their chambers if I could not keep them at home Sundays." "Poor Tom!" mused Bobby, recalling the conversation he had had with him on Saturday, and then wishing that he had been a little more pliant with him. "It is too bad; but I must say I am more sorry for his poor mother than I am for him," added the squire.
"However, I hope it will do him good, and be a lesson he will remember as long as he lives." Bobby bade the squire and Annie adieu again, and resumed his journey towards the railroad station.
His thoughts were busy with Tom Spicer's case.
The reason why he had not joined him, as he expected and feared he would, was now apparent.
He pitied him, for he realized that he must endure a great deal of pain before he could again go out; but he finally dismissed the matter with the squire's sage reflection, that he hoped the calamity would be a good lesson to him. The young merchant did not walk to Boston this time, for he had come to the conclusion that, in the six hours it would take him to travel to the city on foot, the profit on the books he could sell would be more than enough to pay his fare, to say nothing of the fatigue and the expense of shoe leather. Before noon he was at B---- again, as busy as ever in driving his business.
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