RODNEY LOSES HIS PUPIL.
Jasper had little doubt that his letter
would lead to Rodney’s loss of position.
It was certainly a mean thing to plot another’s
downfall, but Jasper was quite capable of it.
Had he secured the loan he asked he would have been
willing to leave Rodney alone, but it would only have
been the first of a series of similar applications.
It was several days before Jasper
had an opportunity of learning whether his malicious
plan had succeeded or not. On Sunday forenoon
he met Rodney on Fifth Avenue just as the church services
were over. He crossed the street and accosted
the boy he had tried to injure.
“Good morning, Ropes,”
he said, examining Rodney’s face curiously to
see whether it indicated trouble of any kind.
“Good morning!” responded Rodney coolly.
“How are you getting along in your place?”
“Very well, thank you.”
“Shall I find you at your pupil’s house
if I call there some afternoon?”
“Yes, unless I am out walking with Arthur.”
“I wonder whether he’s
bluffing,” thought Jasper. “I daresay
he wouldn’t tell me if he had been discharged.
He takes it pretty coolly.”
“How long do you think your engagement will
last?” he asked.
“I don’t know. I never had a talk
with Mr. Sargent on that point.”
“Do you still give satisfaction?”
Rodney penetrated Jasper’s motives
for asking all these questions, and was amused.
“I presume if I fail to satisfy Mr. Sargent
he will tell me so.”
“It would be a nice thing if you could stay
there three or four years.”
“Yes: but I don’t
anticipate it. When Arthur get a little older
he will be sent to school.”
“What will you do then?”
“I haven’t got so far as that.”
“I can’t get anything
out of him,” said Jasper to himself. “I
shouldn’t be a bit surprised if he were already
discharged.”
They had now reached Madison Square, and Jasper left
Rodney.
The latter looked after him with a smile.
“I think I have puzzled Jasper,”
he said to himself. “He was anxious to
know how his scheme had worked. He will have to
wait a little longer.”
“If Mr. Sargent keeps Ropes
after my letter he must be a fool,” Jasper decided.
“I wonder if Ropes handles the mail. He
might have suppressed the letter.”
But Rodney was not familiar with his
handwriting, and would have no reason to suspect that
the particular letter contained anything likely to
injure him in the eyes of Mr. Sargent.
Later in his walk Jasper met Philip
Carton. His former friend was sitting on a bench
in Madison Square. He called out to Jasper as
he passed.
“Come here, Jasper, I want to talk with you.”
Jasper looked at him in a manner far from friendly.
“I am in a hurry,” he said.
“What hurry can you be in? Come and sit
down here. I must speak to you.”
Jasper did not like his tone, but
it impressed him, and he did not dare to refuse.
He seated himself beside Philip, but
looked at him askance. Carton was undeniably
shabby. He had the look of a man who was going
down hill and that rapidly.
“I shall be late for dinner,” grumbled
Jasper.
“I wish I had any dinner to
look forward to,” said Carton. “Do
you see this money?” and he produced a nickel
from his pocket.
“What is there remarkable about it?”
“It is the last money I have. It won’t
buy me a dinner.”
“I am sorry, but it is none
of my business,” said Jasper coolly. “You
are old enough to attend to your own affairs.”
“And I once thought you were my friend,”
murmured Philip bitterly.
“Yes, we were friends in a way.”
“Now you are up and I am down—Jasper,
I want a dollar.”
“I dare say you do. Plenty want that.”
“I want it from you.”
“I can’t spare it.”
“You can spare it better than you can spare
your situation.”
“What do you mean by that?” asked Jasper,
growing nervous.
“I’ll tell you what I
mean. How long do you think you would stay in
the store if Mr. Goodnow knew that you were concerned
in the theft from which he has suffered?”
“Was I the only one?”
“No; I am equally guilty.”
“I am glad you acknowledge it.
You see you had better keep quiet for your own sake.”
“If I keep quiet I shall starve.”
“Do you want to go to prison?”
“I shouldn’t mind so much if you went
along, too.”
“Are you crazy, Philip Carton?”
“No, I am not, but I am beginning
to get sensible. If I go to prison I shall at
least have enough to eat, and now I haven’t.”
“What do you mean by all this foolish talk?”
“I mean that if you won’t
give me any money I will go to the store and tell
Mr. Goodnow something that will surprise him.”
Jasper was getting thoroughly frightened.
“Come, Philip.” he said, “listen
to reason. You know how poor I am.”
“No doubt. I know you have a good home
and enough to eat.”
“I only get seven dollars a week.”
“And I get nothing.”
“I have already been trying
to help you. I went to Ropes the other day, and
asked him to lend me five dollars. I meant it
for you.”
“Did he give it to you?”
“He wouldn’t give me a cent. He is
mean and miserly!”
“I don’t know. He
knows very well that you are no friend of his, though
he doesn’t know how much harm you have done him.”
“He’s rolling in money. However,
I’ve put a spoke in his wheel, I hope.”
“How?”
“I wrote an anonymous letter
to Mr. Sargent telling him that Ropes was discharged
from the store on suspicion of theft.”
“You are a precious scamp, Jasper.”
“What do you mean?”
“You are not content with getting
Ropes discharged for something which you yourself
did——”
“And you too.”
“And I too. I accept the
amendment. Not content with that, you try to
get him discharged from his present position.”
“Then he might have lent me the money,”
said Jasper sullenly.
“It wouldn’t have been
a loan. It would have been a gift. But no
matter about that. I want a dollar.”
“I can’t give it to you.”
“Then I shall call at the store
tomorrow morning and tell Mr. Goodnow about the stolen
goods.”
Finding that Carton was in earnest
Jasper finally, but with great reluctance, drew out
a dollar and handed it to his companion.
“There, I hope that will satisfy
you,” he said spitefully.
“It will—for the present.”
“I wish he’d get run over
or something,” thought Jasper. “He
seems to expect me to support him, and that on seven
dollars a week.”
Fortunately for Jasper, Philip Carton
obtained employment the next day which lasted for
some time, and as he was paid ten dollars a week he
was not under the necessity of troubling his old confederate
for loans.
Now and then Jasper and Rodney met,
but there were no cordial relations between them.
Jasper could not forgive Rodney for refusing to lend
him money, and Rodney was not likely to forget the
anonymous letter by which Jasper had tried to injure
him.
So three months passed. One day
Mr. Sargent arrived at home before it was time for
Rodney to leave.
“I am glad to see you, Rodney,”
said his employer. “I have some news for
you which I am afraid will not be entirely satisfactory
to you.”
“What is it, sir?”
“For the last three years I
have been wishing to go to Europe with my wife and
Arthur. The plan has been delayed, because I could
not make satisfactory business arrangements.
Now, however, that difficulty has been overcome, and
I propose to sail in about two weeks.”
“I hope you’ll enjoy your trip, sir.”
“Thank you. Of course it
will terminate, for a time at least your engagement
to teach Arthur.”
“I shall be sorry for that,
sir, but I am not selfish enough to want you to stay
at home on that account.”
“I thought you would feel that
way. I wish I could procure you another position
before I go, but that is uncertain. I shall, however,
pay you a month’s salary in advance in lieu
of a notice.”
“That is very liberal, sir.”
“I think it only just.
I have been very well pleased with your attention
to Arthur, and I know he has profited by your instructions
as well as enjoyed your companionship. I hope
you have been able to save something.”
“Yes, sir, I have something
in the Union Dime Savings Bank.”
“That’s well. You
will remain with me one week longer, but the last week
Arthur will need for preparations.”
Two weeks later Rodney stood on the
pier and watched the stately Etruria steam out into
the river. Arthur and his father were on deck,
and the little boy waved his handkerchief to his tutor
as long as he could see him.
Rodney turned away sadly.
“I have lost a good situation,”
he soliloquized. “When shall I get another?”