RAISING the rent.
Leaving Phil, we will precede him
to the house of Mrs. Forbush.
She had managed to pay the rent due,
but she was not out of trouble. The time had
come when it was necessary to decide whether she would
retain the house for the following year. In New
York, as many of my young readers may know, the first
of May is moving-day, and leases generally begin at
that date. Engagements are made generally by or
before March 1st.
Mr. Stone, the landlord, called upon
the widow to ascertain whether she proposed to remain
in the house.
“I suppose I may as well do so,” said
Mrs. Forbush.
She had had difficulty in making her
monthly payments, but to move would involve expense,
and it might be some time before she could secure
boarders in a new location.
“You can’t do better,”
said the landlord. “At fifty dollars a month
this is a very cheap house.”
“You mean forty-five? Mr. Stone?”
said Mrs. Forbush.
“No, I don’t,” said the landlord.
“But that is what I have been paying this last
year.”
“That is true, but I ought to
get fifty dollars, and if you won’t pay it somebody
else will.”
“Mr. Stone,” said the
widow, in a troubled voice, “I hope you will
be considerate. It has been as much as I could
do to get together forty-five dollars each month to
pay you. Indeed, I can pay no more.”
“Pardon me for saying that that
is no affair of mine,” said the landlord brusquely.
“If you can’t pay the rent, by all means
move into a smaller house. If you stay here you
must be prepared to pay fifty dollars a month.”
“I don’t see how I can,” answered
the widow in dejection.
“I’ll give you three days
to consider it,” said the landlord indifferently.
“You’ll make a mistake if you give the
house up. However, that is your affair.”
The landlord left the house, and Mrs.
Forbush sat down depressed.
“Julia,” she said to her
daughter, “I wish you were old enough to advise
me. I dislike to move, but I don’t dare
to engage to pay such a rent. Fifty dollars a
month will amount to——”
“Six hundred dollars a year!”
said Julia, who was good at figures.
“And that seems a great sum to us.”
“It would be little enough to
Mrs. Pitkin,” said Julia, who felt that lady’s
prosperity unjust, while her poor, patient mother had
to struggle so hard for a scanty livelihood.
“Oh, yes; Lavinia is rolling
in wealth,” sighed Mrs. Forbush. “I
can’t understand how Uncle Oliver can bestow
his favors on so selfish a woman.”
“Why don’t you ask Philip’s
advice about keeping the house?” said Julia.
It must be explained that Philip and
Julia were already excellent friends, and it may be
said that each was mutually attracted by the other.
“Poor Philip has his own troubles,”
said Mrs. Forbush. “He has lost his place
through the malice and jealousy of Mr. and Mrs. Pitkin,
for I am sure that Lavinia is the cause of his dismissal,
and I don’t know when he will be able to get
another.”
“You won’t send him away,
mother, if he can’t pay his board?”
“No,” answered her mother
warmly. “Philip is welcome to stay with
us as long as we have a roof over our heads, whether
he can pay his board or not.”
This answer seemed very satisfactory
to Julia, who rose impulsively and kissed her mother.
“That’s a good mother,”
she said. “It would be a pity to send poor
Philip into the street.”
“You seem to like Philip,”
said Mrs. Forbush, smiling faintly.
“Yes, mother. You know
I haven’t any brother, and Phil seems just like
a brother to me.”
Just then the door opened, and Philip
himself entered the room.
Generally he came home looking depressed,
after a long and ineffectual search for employment.
Now he was fairly radiant with joy.
“Phil, you’ve got a place;
I know you have!” exclaimed Julia, noticing
his glad expression. “Where is it?
Is it a good one?”
“Have you really got a place,
Philip?” asked Mrs. Forbush.
“Yes, for the present.”
“Do you think you shall like your employer?”
“He is certainly treating me
very well,” said Phil, smiling. “He
has paid me twenty dollars in advance.”
“Then the age of wonders has
not passed,” said the widow. “Of course
I believe you, Philip, but it seems extraordinary.”
“There is something more extraordinary
to come,” said Phil. “He has sent
you some money, too.”
“Me!” exclaimed Mrs. Forbush, in great
surprise.
“What can he know about me?”
“I told him about you.”
“But we are strangers.”
“He used to know you, and still feels an interest
in you, Mrs. Forbush.”
“Who can it be?” said the widow, looking
bewildered.
“I don’t want to keep
you in suspense any longer, so I may as well say that
it is your Uncle Oliver.”
“Uncle Oliver! Why, he is in Florida.”
“No; he came home from Charleston.
I happened to be at the pier—I went down
to see if I could get a job at smashing baggage—when
I saw him walking down the gang-plank.”
“Has he gone to his old quarters at Mr. Pitkin’s?”
“No; what I told about the way
they treated you and me made him angry, and he drove
to the Astor House. I have a room there, too,
and am to act as his private secretary.”
“So that is your new situation, Phil?”
said Julia.
“Yes, and it is a good one.”
“And he really feels kindly to me?” said
Mrs. Forbush hopefully.
“He sends you this and will
call to-morrow,” said Phil. “Actions
speak louder than words. There are a hundred
dollars in this roll of bills.”
“He sent all this to me?” she said.
“Yes, and of his own accord. It was no
suggestion of mine.
“Julia,” said Mrs. Forbush,
turning to her daughter, “I believe God has
heard my prayer, and that better days are in store
for all of us.”
“Philip included,” added Phil, smiling.
“Yes. I want you to share in our good fortune.”
“Mother, you had better consult Phil about keeping
the house.”
“Oh, yes.”
Mrs. Forbush thereupon told Philip
of the landlord’s visit and his proposal to
ask a higher rent.
“I hesitated about taking the
house,” she said; “but with this handsome
gift from Uncle Oliver, I don’t know but I may
venture. What do you think?”
“I think, Mrs. Forbush, you
had better not decide till you have seen your uncle.
He may have some plan of his own for you. At any
rate, you had better consult him. He will call
to-morrow. And now, let me pay you for my week’s
board.”
“No, Philip. I shall not
want it with all this money, which I should not have
received but for you.”
“A debt is a debt, Mrs. Forbush,
and I prefer to pay it. I shall not be here to
supper, as Mr. Carter is expecting me back to the Astor
House. I shall probably come with him when he
calls upon you to-morrow.”
On his return to the hotel, as he
was walking on Broadway, Phil came face to face with
Alonzo Pitkin.
“I think I’ll ask him
about that letter his uncle gave him to post to me,”
thought Phil, and he waited until Alonzo was close
at hand.