Alonzo is puzzled.
Alonzo, who had his share of curiosity,
as soon as he saw Phil’s approach, determined
to speak to him, and ascertain what were his plans
and what he was doing. With the petty malice which
he inherited from his mother, he hoped that Phil had
been unable to find a place and was in distress.
“It would serve him right,”
said Alonzo to himself, “for trying to get into
Uncle Oliver’s good graces. I s’pose
he would like to cut me out, but he’ll find
that he can’t fight against ma and me.”
“Oh, it’s you, is it?”
was Alonzo’s salutation when they met.
“Yes,” answered Phil.
“Pa bounced you, didn’t he?” continued
Alonzo complacently.
“Yes,” answered Phil.
“That is, he discharged me. I suppose that
is what you meant.”
“You’ve got it right the first time,”
said Alonzo.
“Have you got another place?”
“Do you ask because you feel interested in me?”
asked Phil.
“Well, not particularly,”
answered Alonzo appearing quite amused by the suggestion.
“Then you ask out of curiosity?”
“S’pose I do?”
“I don’t mind telling you that I have
found a place, then.”
“What sort of a place?” asked Alonzo,
disappointed.
“There is no need of going into particulars.”
“No. I s’pose not,”
sneered Alonzo. “You’re probably selling
papers or blacking boots.”
“You are mistaken. I have
a much better situation than I had with your father.”
Alonzo’s lower jaw fell. He was very sorry
to hear it.
“Didn’t your employer ask for a recommendation?”
“He didn’t seem to think one necessary!”
replied Phil.
“If he’d known pa had sacked you, he wouldn’t
have wanted you, I guess.”
“He knows it. Have you got through asking
questions, Alonzo?”
“You are too familiar. You can call me
Mr. Pitkin.”
Phil laughed at Alonzo’s assumption
of dignity, but made no comment upon it.
“I want to ask you what you
did with that letter Mr. Carter gave you to post for
me?” asked Phil.
Alonzo was indeed surprised, not to
say dismayed. The truth was that, judging from
the “feel” of the letter, it contained
money, and he had opened it and appropriated the money
to his own use. Moreover he had the bank-note
in his pocket at that very moment, not having any wish
to spend, but rather to hoard it.
“That’s a queer question,”
he stammered. “What letter do you refer
to?”
“A letter Mr. Carter gave you to mail to me.”
“If he gave me any such letter
I mailed it,” answered Alonzo, scarcely knowing
what to say.
“I didn’t receive it.”
“How do you know he gave me any letter?”
demanded Alonzo, puzzled.
“I don’t care to tell.
I only know that there was such a letter handed to
you. Do you know what was in it?”
“Writing, I s’pose,” said Alonzo
flippantly.
“Yes, there was, but there was
also a ten-dollar bill. I didn’t receive
the letter,” and Phil fixed his eyes searchingly
upon the face of Alonzo.
“That’s a pretty story!”
said Alonzo. “I don’t believe Uncle
Oliver would be such a fool as to send you ten dollars.
If he did, you got it, and now want to get as much
more, pretending you haven’t received it.”
“You are mistaken,” said Phil quietly.
“If you didn’t get the
letter, how do you know any was written, and that
there was anything in it?” asked Alonzo triumphantly,
feeling that the question was a crusher.
“I don’t care to tell you how I know it.
Do you deny it?”
“I don’t remember whether Uncle Oliver
gave me any letter or not.”
“Will you be kind enough to
give me his address in Florida, so that I may write
to him and find out?”
“No, I won’t,” said
Alonzo angrily, “and I think you are very cheeky
to ask such a thing. Ma was right when she said
that you were the most impudent boy she ever came
across.”
“That’s enough, Alonzo,”
said Phil quietly. “I’ve found out
all I wanted to.”
“What have you found out?”
asked Alonzo, his tone betraying some apprehension.
“Never mind. I think I know what became
of that letter.”
“Do you mean to say I opened
it and took out the money?” demanded Alonzo,
reddening.
“I wouldn’t charge anybody
with such a mean act, unless I felt satisfied of it.”
“You’d better not!”
said Alonzo, in a bullying tone. “If I find
out who you’re working for, I’ll let him
know that pa bounced you.”
“Just as you please! I
don’t think that any words of yours will injure
me with the gentleman I have the good fortune to work
for.”
“Don’t you be too sure!
If you think he wouldn’t mind a boy, I’ll
refer him to pa and ma. They’ll give you
a good setting out.”
“I don’t doubt it,”
said Phil indifferently, and turned to go away.
He was called back by Alonzo, who
had not quite satisfied his curiosity.
“Say, are you boarding with
that woman who came to see ma the same day you were
at the house?” he asked.
“No; I have left her.”
Alonzo looked well pleased. He
knew that his mother felt rather uneasy at the two
being together, dreading lest they should make a concerted
attempt to ingratiate themselves with her rich uncle.
“Ma says she behaved very badly,”
Alonzo could not help adding.
“Mrs. Forbush is an excellent
Lady,” said Phil warmly, for he could not hear
one of his friends spoken against.
“Lady! She’s as poor as poverty,”
sneered Alonzo.
“She is none the worse for that.”
“Uncle Oliver can’t bear her!”
“Indeed!” said Phil; pausing to see what
else Alonzo would say.
“Ma says she disgraced herself,
and all her relations gave her up. When you see
her tell her she had better not come sneaking round
the house again.”
“If you will write a letter
to that effect, I will see that she gets it,”
said Phil. “That letter won’t miscarry.”
“I don’t care to take any notice of her,”
said Alonzo loftily.
“You are very kind to have wasted
so much notice upon me,” said Phil, amused.
Alonzo did not see fit to answer this,
but walked away with his head in the air. He
was, however, not quite easy in mind.
“How in the world,” he
asked himself, “could that boy have found out
that Uncle Oliver gave me a letter to post? If
he should learn that I opened it and took the money,
there’d be a big fuss. I guess I’d
better not meet him again. If I see him any day
I’ll go in a different direction. He’s
so artful he may get me into trouble.”
It is needless to say that neither
Mr. or Mrs. Pitkin knew of Alonzo’s tampering
with the letter. Much as they would have been
opposed to Phil’s receiving such a letter, they
would have been too wise to sanction such a bold step.
“Well,” said Mr. Carter,
when Phil returned, “did you see Rebecca—Mrs.
Forbush?”
“Yes, sir, and handed her the
money. She was overjoyed; not so much at receiving
so generous a sum as at learning that you were reconciled
to her.”
“Poor girl!” said the
old man, forgetting that she was now a worn woman.
“I am afraid that she must have suffered much.”
“She has met with many hardships,
sir, but she won’t mind them now.”
“If I live her future shall
be brighter than her past. I will call to-morrow.
You, Philip, shall go with me.”
“I should like to do so, sir.
By the way, I met Alonzo on Broadway.”
He detailed the conversation that
had taken place between them.
“I am afraid he took the money,”
said Mr. Carter. “I am sorry any relative
of mine should have acted in that way. Let him
keep it. Any benefit he may derive from it will
prove to have been dearly purchased.”