An explanation.
It would be hard to tell which of
the two was the more surprised at the meeting, Philip
or Mr. Carter.
“I don’t understand how
Mr. Pitkin came to hear of my return. I didn’t
telegraph,” said the old gentleman.
“I don’t think he knows anything about
it,” said Phil.
“Didn’t he send you to the pier?”
“No, sir.”
“Then how is it that you are
not in the store at this time?” asked Mr. Carter,
puzzled.
“Because I am no longer in Mr.
Pitkin’s employ. I was discharged last
Saturday.”
“Discharged! What for?”
“Mr. Pitkin gave no reason.
He said my services were no longer required.
He spoke roughly to me, and has since declined to give
me a recommendation, though I told him that without
it I should be unable to secure employment elsewhere.”
Mr. Carter frowned. He was evidently
annoyed and indignant.
“This must be inquired into,”
he said. “Philip, call a carriage, and I
will at once go to the Astor House and take a room.
I had intended to go at once to Mr. Pitkin’s,
but I shall not do so until I have had an explanation
of this outrageous piece of business.”
Phil was rejoiced to hear this, for
he was at the end of his resources, and the outlook
for him was decidedly gloomy. He had about made
up his mind to sink his pride and go into business
as a newsboy the next day, but the very unexpected
arrival of Mr. Carter put quite a new face on matters.
He called a carriage, and both he
and Mr. Carter entered it.
“How do you happen to be back
so soon, sir?” asked Phil, when they were seated.
“I thought you were going to Florida for a couple
of months.”
“I started with that intention,
but on reaching Charleston I changed my mind.
I expected to find some friends at St. Augustine, but
I learned that they were already returning to the
North, and I felt that I should be lonely and decided
to return. I am very glad I did, now. Did
you receive my letter?”
“Your letter?” queried
Philip, looking at Mr. Carter in surprise.
“Certainly. I gave Alonzo
a letter for you, which I had directed to your boarding-house,
and requested him to mail it. It contained a ten-dollar
bill.”
“I never received any such letter,
sir. It would have been of great service to me—the
money, I mean; for I have found it hard to live on
five dollars a week. Now I have not even that.”
“Is it possible that Alonzo
could have suppressed the letter?” said Mr.
Carter to himself.
“At any rate I never received it.”
“Here is something else to inquire
into,” said Mr. Carter. “If Alonzo
has tampered with my letter, perhaps appropriated the
money, it will be the worse for him.”
“I hardly think he would do
that, sir; though I don’t like him.”
“You are generous; but I know
the boy better than you do. He is fond of money,
not for the sake of spending it, but for the sake of
hoarding it. Tell me, then, how did you learn
that I had gone to Florida?”
“I learned it at the house in Twelfth Street.”
“Then you called there?”
“Yes, sir; I called to see you.
I found it hard to get along on my salary, and I did
not want Mrs. Forbush to lose by me, so I——”
“Mrs. Forbush?” repeated
the old gentleman quickly. “That name sounds
familiar to me.”
“Mrs. Forbush is your niece,”
said Phil, a hope rising in his heart that he might
be able to do his kind landlady a good turn.
“Did she tell you that?”
“No, sir; that is, I was ignorant
of it until I met her just as I was going away from
Mrs. Pitkin’s.”
“Did she call there, too—to
see me?” asked the old gentleman.
“Yes, sir; but she got a very
cold reception. Mrs. Pitkin was very rude to
her, and said that you were so much prejudiced against
her that she had better not call again.”
“That’s like her cold
selfishness. I understand her motives very well.
I had no idea that Mrs. Forbush was in the city.
Is she—poor?”
“Yes, sir; she is having a hard
struggle to maintain herself and her daughter.”
“And you board at her house?”
“Yes, sir.”
“How strangely things come about!
She is as nearly related to me as Lavinia—Mrs.
Pitkin.”
“She told me so.”
“She married against the wishes
of her family, but I can see now that we were all
unreasonably prejudiced against her. Lavinia,
however, trumped up stories against her husband, which
I am now led to believe were quite destitute of foundation,
and did all she could to keep alive the feud.
I feel now that I was very foolish to lend myself
to her selfish ends. Of course her object was
to get my whole fortune for herself and her boy.”
Phil had no doubt of this, but he
did not like to say so, for it would seem that he,
too, was influenced by selfish motives.
“Then you are not so much prejudiced
against Mrs. Forbush as she was told?” he allowed
himself to say.
“No, no!” said Mr. Carter
earnestly. “Poor Rebecca! She has a
much better nature and disposition than Mrs. Pitkin.
And you say she is poor?”
“She had great difficulty in
paying her last month’s rent,” said Philip.
“Where does she live?”
Phil told him.
“What sort of a house is it?”
“It isn’t a brown-stone
front,” answered Phil, smiling. “It
is a poor, cheap house; but it is as good as she can
afford to hire.”
“And you like her?”
“Very much, Mr. Carter.
She has been very kind to me, and though she finds
it so hard to get along, she has told me she will keep
me as long as she has a roof over her head, though
just now I cannot pay my board, because my income
is gone.”
“It will come back again, Philip,” said
the old gentleman.
Phil understood by this that he would
be restored to his place in Mr. Pitkin’s establishment.
This did not yield him unalloyed satisfaction, for
he was sure that it would be made unpleasant for him
by Mr. Pitkin. Still he would accept it, and
meet disagreeable things as well as he could.
By this time they had reached the Astor House.
Phil jumped out first, and assisted Mr. Carter to
descend.
He took Mr. Carter’s hand-bag, and followed
him into the hotel.
Mr. Carter entered his name in the register.
“What is your name?” he asked—“Philip
Brent?”
“Yes, sir.”
“I will enter your name, too.”
“Am I to stay here?” asked Phil, in surprise.
“Yes; I shall need a confidential
clerk, and for the present you will fill that position.
I will take two adjoining rooms—one for
you.”
Phil listened in surprise.
“Thank you, sir,” he said.
Mr. Carter gave orders to have his
trunk sent for from the steamer, and took possession
of the room. Philip’s room was smaller,
but considerably more luxurious than the one he occupied
at the house of Mrs. Forbush.
“Have you any money, Philip?” asked the
old gentleman.
“I have twenty-five cents,” answered Philip.
“That isn’t a very large
sum,” said Mr. Carter, smiling. “Here,
let me replenish your pocketbook.”
He drew four five-dollar bills from his wallet and
handed them to Phil.
“How can I thank you, sir?” asked Phil
gratefully.
“Wait till you have more to
thank me for. Let me tell you this, that in trying
to harm you, Mr. and Mrs. Pitkin have done you a great
service.”
“I should like to see Mrs. Forbush
this evening, if you can spare me, to let her know
that she needn’t be anxious about me.”
“By all means. You can go.”
“Am I at liberty to mention that I have seen
you, sir?”
“Yes. Tell her that I will call to-morrow.
And you may take her this.”
Mr. Carter drew a hundred-dollar bill
from his wallet and passed it to Phil.
“Get it changed at the office
as you go out,” he said. “Come back
as soon as you can.”
With a joyful heart Phil jumped on
a Fourth Avenue car in front of the hotel, and started
on his way up town.