[Oscar by Walter Aimwell]@TWC D-Link bookOscar CHAPTER IX 7/20
If you get in my way with it again, I shall serve it worse than I did this time." The boys passed on their way, and Ralph and George, whose "fun" had been thus suddenly and unjustly spoiled by their insolent and domineering companions, concluded to return home.
Poor Ralph dreaded to meet Oscar; but yet he hunted him up, as soon as he got home, and told him what had befallen the beautiful sled.
Oscar was very angry when he heard the story, but he generously acquitted his brother of all blame in the matter, and declared that he would pay back the boy who had thus taken advantage of his weakness.
He knew the offender, from Ralph's description, and from the name of his sled, which was the "Corsair." He even proposed to go directly to the Common, and settle the account at once; but Ralph, in whose heart revenge held a very small place, persuaded him out of the notion. But Oscar, unlike Ralph, was not the boy to forget or forgive an injury.
A day or two after the occurrence just related, while coasting on the Common, he fell in with the boy who run into his brother. Keeping his eye upon him until he could catch him a little aside from the other boys, when the favorable moment came, he suddenly dealt him a severe blow, which nearly knocked him over, accompanying it with the remark: "There, take that for running down my little brother, when he was coasting with my sled, the other day." The other boy, without saying a word, sprang at Oscar, and, for a moment or two, blows and kicks were freely exchanged.
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