[The Story of Paul Boyton by Paul Boyton]@TWC D-Link bookThe Story of Paul Boyton CHAPTER XIX 103/103
Next morning they steamed up the river to Guayquil and he felt himself free. To Panama was but a short run and the twenty-five dollars in gold that he had to pay for his trip across the isthmus from there to Aspinwall, left him almost penniless.
At Aspinwall he found the same steamer on which he had sailed from New York, the Crescent City, and he put up his baggage for a passage home on her.
No trouble was experienced in making such an arrangement for the trip north, for as soon as the Captain learned who he was and the straits he was in, he was received with open arms and every attention paid him. Eight days after, Paul stood in Broadway, New York, without a cent in his pocket, instead of the hundreds of thousands he had anticipated earning when he cast his fortunes with Peru.
But he felt rich in the joy of his mother and family, who welcomed him as it were from the grave. Kiefer, who had gone south with him, succeeded in making his escape for the mountains where he remained several years, collecting antiquities and shipping them north.
He died of consumption soon after his return to the United States in 1889..
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