Phil is “BOUNCED.”
Saturday, as is usual in such establishments,
was pay-day at the store of Phil’s employers.
The week’s wages were put up in small envelopes
and handed to the various clerks.
When Phil went up to the cashier to
get his money he put it quietly into his vest-pocket.
Daniel Dickson, the cashier, observing this, said:
“Brent, you had better open your envelope.”
Rather surprised, Phil nevertheless did as requested.
In the envelope, besides the five-dollar
bill representing his week’s salary, he found
a small slip of paper, on which was written these
ominous words:
“Your services will not be required
after this week.” Appended to this notice
was the name of the firm.
Phil turned pale, for to him, embarrassed
as he was, the loss of his place was a very serious
matter.
“What does this mean, Mr. Dickson?” he
asked quickly.
“I can’t inform you,”
answered the cashier, smiling unpleasantly, for he
was a selfish man who sympathized with no one, and
cared for no one as long as he himself remained prosperous.
“Who handed you this paper?” asked Phil.
“The boss.”
“Mr. Pitkin?”
“Of course.”
Mr. Pitkin was still in his little
office, and Phil made his way directly to him.
“May I speak to you, sir?” asked our hero.
“Be quick about it then, for
I am in a hurry,” answered Pitkin, in a very
forbidding tone.
“Why am I discharged, sir?”
“I can’t go into details. We don’t
need you any longer.”
“Are you not satisfied with me?”
“No!” said Pitkin brusquely.
“In what respect have I failed to satisfy you,
sir?”
“Don’t put on any airs,
boy!” returned Pitkin. “We don’t
want you, that’s all.”
“You might have given me a little notice,”
said Phil indignantly.
“We made no stipulation of that kind, I believe.”
“It would only be fair, sir.”
“No impertinence, young man!
I won’t stand it! I don’t need any
instructions as to the manner of conducting my business.”
Phil by this time perceived that his
discharge was decided upon without any reference to
the way in which he had performed his duties, and that
any discussion or remonstrance would be unavailing.
“I see, sir, that you have no
regard for justice, and will leave you,” he
said.
“You’d better, and without delay!”
said Pitkin irascibly.
Phil emerged upon the street with
a sinking heart. His available funds consisted
only of the money he had just received and seventy-five
cents in change, and what he was to do he did not
know. He walked home with slow steps, looking
sad in spite of his usually hopeful temperament.
When he entered the house he met Mrs.
Forbush in the hall. She at once noticed his
gravity.
“Have you had any bad luck, Philip?” she
asked.
“Yes,” answered Phil. “I have
lost my situation.”
“Indeed!” returned the
landlady, with quick sympathy. “Have you
had any difficulty with your employer?”
“Not that I am aware of.”
“Did he assign any reason for your discharge?”
“No; I asked him for an explanation,
but he merely said I was not wanted any longer.”
“Isn’t there any chance of his taking
you back?”
“I am sure there is not.”
“Don’t be discouraged,
Philip. A smart boy like you won’t be long
out of a place. Meanwhile you are welcome to
stay here as long as I have a roof to cover me.”
“Thank you, Mrs. Forbush,”
said Phil warmly, “you are a true friend.
You are in trouble yourself, yet you stand by me!”
“I have had a stroke of good
luck to-day,” said Mrs. Forbush cheerfully.
“A former boarder, whom I allowed to remain here
for five or six weeks when he was out of employment,
has sent me thirty dollars in payment of his bill,
from Boston, where he found a position. So I shall
be able to pay my rent and have something over.
I have been lucky, and so may you.”
Phil was cheered by the ready sympathy
of his landlady, and began to take a more cheerful
view of matters.
“I will go out bright and early
on Monday and see if I can’t find another place,”
he said. “Perhaps it may be all for the
best.”
Yet on the day succeeding he had some
sober hours. How differently he had been situated
only three months before. Then he had a home and
relatives. Now he was practically alone in the
world, with no home in which he could claim a share,
and he did not even know where his step-mother and
Jonas were. Sunday forenoon he attended church,
and while he sat within its sacred precincts his mind
was tranquilized, and his faith and cheerfulness increased.
On Monday he bought the Herald, and
made a tour of inquiry wherever he saw that a boy
was wanted. But in each place he was asked if
he could produce a recommendation from his last employer.
He decided to go back to his old place and ask for
one, though he was very reluctant to ask a favor of
any kind from a man who had treated him so shabbily
as Mr. Pitkin. It seemed necessary, however,
and he crushed down his pride and made his way to
Mr. Pitkin’s private office.
“Mr. Pitkin!” he said.
“You here!” exclaimed
Pitkin, scowling. “You needn’t ask
to be taken back. It’s no use.”
“I don’t ask it,” answered Phil.
“Then what are you here for?”
“I would like a letter of recommendation,
that I may obtain another place.”
“Well, well!” said Pitkin, wagging his
head. “If that isn’t impudence.”
“What is impudence?” asked
Phil. “I did as well as I could, and that
I am ready to do for another employer. But all
ask me for a letter from you.”
“You won’t get any!” said Pitkin
abruptly.
“Where is your home?”
“I have none except in this city.”
“Where did you come from?”
“From the country.”
“Then I advise you to go back
there. You may do for the country. You are
out of place in the city.”
Poor Phil! Things did indeed
look dark for him. Without a letter of recommendation
from Mr. Pitkin it would be almost impossible for him
to secure another place, and how could he maintain
himself in the city? He didn’t wish to
sell papers or black boots, and those were about the
only paths now open to him.
“I am having a rough time!”
he thought, “but I will try not to get discouraged.”
He turned upon his heel and walked out of the store.
As he passed the counter where Wilbur was standing,
the young man said:
“I am awfully sorry, Philip.
It’s a shame! If I wasn’t broke I’d
offer to lend you a fiver.”
“Thank you all the same for your kind offer,
Wilbur,” said Phil.
“Come round and see me.”
“So I will—soon.”
He left the store and wandered aimlessly about the
streets.
Four days later, sick with hope deferred,
he made his way down to the wharf of the Charleston
and Savannah boats, with a vague idea that he might
get a job of carrying baggage, for he felt that he
must not let his pride interfere with doing anything
by which he could earn an honest penny.
It so happened that the Charleston
boat was just in, and the passengers were just landing.
Phil stood on the pier and gazed listlessly at them
as they disembarked.
All at once he started in surprise, and his heart
beat joyfully.
There, just descending the gang-plank,
was his tried friend, Mr. Oliver Carter, whom he supposed
over a thousand miles away in Florida.
“Mr. Carter!” exclaimed Phil, dashing
forward.
“Philip!” exclaimed the
old gentleman, much surprised. “How came
you here? Did Mr. Pitkin send you?”