“I stopped at a baker’s shop to get a lunch. When I got through I offered the bill. The old Dutchman put on his spectacles, and he looked first at the bill, then at me. Then he threatened to have me arrested for passing bad money. I told him I’d go out in the back yard and settle it with him. I tell you, boy, I’d have knocked him out in one round, and he knew it, so he bade me be gone and never darken his door again. Where did you get it?”
“It was passed on me by a man I was traveling with.”
“How much other money have you got?” asked the tramp.
“Very little.”
“Give it to me, whatever it is.”
This was a little too much for Carl’s patience.
“I have no money to spare,” he said, shortly.
“Say that over again!” said the tramp, menacingly.
“If you don’t understand me, I will. I have no money to spare.”
“You’ll spare it to me, I reckon.”