THE HOUSEKEEPER’S NEPHEW
“By no means,” said Mr.
Wharton, as the housekeeper was about to withdraw;
“don’t imagine you are intruding.
Come in and sit down.”
“Thank you, sir,” said
Mrs. Bradley, in a measured tone. “You are
very considerate, I am sure, but if you’ll excuse
me, I won’t come in this evening.”
“Mrs. Bradley has been with
me a good many years,” explained Mr. Wharton,
“and I dare say she feels a little disturbed
at seeing another occupy her place, even in a duty
like this.”
“I am afraid she will be offended
with me, sir,” said Frank.
“Oh, no; I will explain matters
to her. Go on with your reading, Frank.”
At half-past nine, Mr. Wharton took out his watch.
“It is getting late,”
he said. “I have no doubt you are tired
and need rest.”
“I am not tired, sir.”
“I believe in going to bed early.
I shall seldom keep you later than this. Do you
think you can find your way out?”
“Yes, sir. When shall I come to-morrow
evening?”
“A little before eight.”
“I will be punctual.”
Jasper was waiting for him, not wholly
without anxiety, for it was very unusual for Frank
to be late.
“Well, Frank!” he exclaimed;
“this is a pretty time for you to come home.
I began to think you had got into trouble. I was
just going around to the nearest station house in
search of you.”
“I was in quite a different place, Jasper.”
Frank told his story, including an account of his
engagement.
“So it seems I am to lose your
company in the evening. I am sorry for that,
but I am glad you are so lucky.”
“It was better than I expected,” said
Frank, with satisfaction.
“What sort of a man is this Mr. Wharton?”
said Jasper.
“He is very kind and generous.
I am lucky to have so good a friend. There’s
only one thing that is likely to be disagreeable.”
“What’s that?”
“The housekeeper—her
name is Mrs. Bradley—for some reason or
other she doesn’t want me there.”
“What makes you think so?”
“Her manner, and the way she
speaks. She came in to read to Mr. Wharton last
evening, and didn’t seem to like it because I
had been taken in her place.”
“She is evidently jealous.
You must take care not to offend her. She might
endeavor to have you dismissed.”
“I shall always treat her politely,
but I don’t think I can ever like her.”
Meanwhile, the housekeeper, on leaving
the library, had gone to her own room in dudgeon.
“Mr. Wharton’s a fool!” she muttered
to herself.
“What possessed him to take
this cash-boy from the streets, invite him to dinner,
and treat him as an honored guest, and finally to engage
him as a reader? I never heard of anything so
ridiculous! Is this little vagabond to take my
place in the old man’s good graces? I’ve
been slaving and slaving for twenty years, and what
have I got by it? I’ve laid up two thousand
dollars; and what is that to provide for my old age?
If the old man would die, and remember me handsomely
in his will, it would be worth while; but this new
favorite may stand in my way. If he does I’ll
be revenged on him as sure as my name is Ulrica Bradley.”
Here the area bell rang, and in a
moment one of the housemaids entered Mrs. Bradley’s
room.
“There’s your nephew outside,
ma’am, and wanting to see you.”
“Tell him to come in,”
and the housekeeper’s cold face became softer
and pleasanter in aspect as a young man of twenty
entered and greeted her carelessly.
“How are you, aunt?”
“Pretty well, Thomas,”
she answered. “You haven’t been here
for some time.”
“No. I’ve had a lot
of work to do. Nothing but work, work, all the
time,” he grumbled. “I wish I was
rich.”
“You get through at six o’clock, don’t
you?”
“Yes.”
“I hope you spend your evenings profitably,
Thomas?”
“I ain’t likely to go
on any sprees, aunt, if that’s what you mean.
I only get twelve dollars a week.”
“I should think you might live on it.”
“Starve, you mean. What’s
twelve dollars to a young fellow like me when he’s
got his board to pay, and has to dress like a gentleman?”
“You are not in debt, I hope, Thomas?”
said Mrs. Bradley, uneasily.
“I owe for the suit I have on,
and I don’t know where I’m going to get
the money to pay for it.”
He was dressed in a flashy style,
not unlike what is popularly denominated a swell.
His coarse features were disfigured with unhealthy
blotches, and his outward appearance was hardly such
as to recommend him. But to him alone the cold
heart of the housekeeper was warm. He was her
sister’s son and her nearest relative. Her
savings were destined for him, and in her attachment
she was not conscious of his disagreeable characteristics.
She had occasionally given him a five-dollar bill to
eke out what he termed his miserable pay, and now whenever
he called he didn’t spare hints that he was
out of pocket, and that a further gift would be acceptable.
Indeed, the only tie that bound him to his aunt was
a mercenary one.
But the housekeeper, sharp-sighted
as she ordinarily was, did not detect the secret motive
of such attention she received from her nephew.
She flattered herself that he really loved her, not
suspecting that he was too selfish to love anybody
but himself.
“Thomas,” she said, with
a sudden thought, “I may be able to help you
to an increase of your income. Mr. Wharton needs
somebody to read to him evenings. On my recommendation
he might take you.”
“Thank you, aunt, but I don’t
see it. I don’t want to be worked to death.”
“But, think, Thomas,”
said his aunt, earnestly. “He is very rich.
He might take a fancy to you and remember you in his
will.”
“I wish somebody would remember
me in his will. Do you really think there’s
any chance of the old boy’s doing something handsome
for me?”
“That depends on yourself. You must try
to please him.”
“Well, I must do something. What’ll
he give?”
“I don’t know yet. In fact, there’s
another reading to him just now.”
“Then there’s no chance for me.”
“Listen to me. It’s
a boy he’s picked up in the streets, quite unsuited
for the place. He’s a cash-boy at Gilbert
& Mack’s. Why, that’s where you are,”
she added, with sudden recollection.
“A cash-boy from my own place? What’s
his name?”
“Fowler, I believe.”
“I know him—he’s lately come.
How did he get in with the old man?”
“Mr. Wharton fell in the street,
and he happened to be near, and helped him home.”
“You’ll have to manage it, aunt.”
“I’ll see what I can do
to-morrow. He ought to prefer my nephew to a
strange boy, seeing I have been twenty years in his
service. I’ll let you know as soon as I
have accomplished anything.”
“I don’t half like the
idea of giving up my evenings. I don’t believe
I can stand it.”
“It is only for a little while,
to get him interested in you.”
“Maybe I might try it a week,
and then tell him my health was failing, and get him
to do something else for me.”
“At any rate, the first thing
must be to become acquainted.”
Thomas now withdrew, for he did not
enjoy spending an evening with his aunt, the richer
by five dollars, half of which was spent before the
evening closed at a neighboring billiard saloon.