Andy Grant's Pluck eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 206 pages of information about Andy Grant's Pluck.

Andy Grant's Pluck eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 206 pages of information about Andy Grant's Pluck.
“Sometimes I see your father.  He looks careworn.  I suppose he is thinking of the difficult position in which he is placed.  I am sorry to say that last week he lost his best cow by some disease.  I heard that he valued it at fifty dollars.  I hope that you won’t let this worry you.  The tide will turn some time.  I saw your mother day before yesterday.  She is glad of your success, but of course she misses you.  She always receives me very cordially, knowing that we are intimate friends.

    “I wish I could see you, Andy.  You have no idea how I miss you.  I
    like quite a number of the boys, but none is so near to me as you
    were.

    “Well, Andy, I must close.  Come to Arden soon, if you can.  It will
    do us good to see you, and I think even Conrad will be glad, as it
    will give him a chance to pump you as to your position.

    “Your affectionate friend,

    “VALENTINE BURNS.”

“So father has lost his best cow—­old Whitey,” said Andy, thoughtfully.  “If I were not owing money to Mr. Crawford for the land in Tacoma I would buy him a new one, but some time I hope the land will be valuable, and then I can make the loss good to father.”

The reader has not, I hope, forgotten Andy’s fellow lodger, S. Byron Warren.  Mr. Warren was always writing something for the Century, the Atlantic, or some other leading magazine, but never had been cheered by an acceptance.  The magazine editors seemed leagued against him.

But one evening, when Andy returned from the office, he found Mr. Warren beaming with complacence.

“You look happy to-night, Mr. Warren,” he said.

“Yes,” answered the author; “look at that.”

He held out to Andy an eight-page paper called The Weekly Magnet, and pointed out a story of two columns on the second page.  Under the title Andy read, “By S. Byron Warren.”  It was called “The Magician’s Spell; A Tale of Sunny Spain.”

“I congratulate you,” said Andy.  “When did you write the story?”

“Last winter.”

“How does it happen to be published so late?”

“You see, I sent it first to Scribner’s, then to Harper’s, and then to the Atlantic.  They didn’t seem to fancy it, so I sent it to the Magnet.”

“I hope they paid you for it.”

“Yes,” answered Warren, proudly.  “They gave me a dollar and a half for it.”

“Isn’t that rather small?”

“Well, it is small, but the paper is poor.  The editor wrote to me that he would be glad to pay me ten dollars for such a sketch when they are more prosperous.”

“I suppose you will write again?  You must feel greatly encouraged.”

“I have been writing another story to-day.  I shall mail it to them to-morrow.”

“I hope the Magnet will prosper for your sake.”

“Thank you.  I hope so, too.  Ah, Andy, you don’t know how it seems to see your own words in print!” said the author.

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Andy Grant's Pluck from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.