Phil is SHADOWED.
Phil felt that he must be more than
usually careful, because the money he had received
was in the form of bills, which, unlike the check,
would be of use to any thief appropriating it.
That he was in any unusual danger, however, he was
far from suspecting.
He reached Broadway, and instead of
taking an omnibus, started to walk up-town. He
knew there was no haste, and a walk up the great busy
thoroughfare had its attractions for him, as it has
for many others.
Behind him, preserving a distance
of from fifteen to twenty feet, walked a dark-complexioned
man of not far from forty years of age. Of course
Phil was not likely to notice him.
Whatever the man’s designs might
be, he satisfied himself at first with simply keeping
our hero in view. But as they both reached Bleecker
Street, he suddenly increased his pace and caught up
with Phil. He touched the boy on the shoulder,
breathing quickly, as if he had been running.
Phil turned quickly.
“Do you want me, sir?” he asked, eying
the stranger in surprise.
“I don’t know. Perhaps
I am mistaken. Are you in the employ of Mr. Oliver
Carter?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Ah I then you are the boy I want. I have
bad news for you.”
“Bad news!” repeated Phil, alarmed.
“What is it?”
“Mr. Carter was seized with a fit in the street
half an hour since.”
“Is he—dead?” asked Phil, in
dismay.
“No, no! I think he will come out all right.”
“Where is he?”
“In my house. I didn’t
of course know who he was, but I found in his pocket
a letter directed to Oliver Carter, Madison Avenue.
There was also a business card. He is connected
in business with Mr. Pitkin, is he not?”
“Yes, sir,” answered Phil; “where
is your house?”
“In Bleecker Street, near by.
Mr. Carter is lying on the bed. He is unconscious,
but my wife heard him say: ‘Call Philip.’
I suppose that is you?”
“Yes, sir; my name is Philip.”
“I went around to his place
of business, and was told that you had just left there.
I was given a description of you and hurried to find
you. Will you come to the house and see Mr. Carter?”
“Yes, sir,” answered Phil,
forgetting everything except that his kind and generous
employer was sick, perhaps dangerously.
“Thank you; I shall feel relieved.
Of course you can communicate with his friends and
arrange to have him carried home.”
“Yes, sir; I live at his house.”
“That is well.”
They had turned down Bleecker Street, when it occurred
to Phil to say:
“I don’t understand how Mr. Carter should
be in this neighborhood.”
“That is something I can’t
explain, as I know nothing about his affairs,”
said the stranger pleasantly. “Perhaps he
may have property on the street.”
“I don’t think so.
I attend to much of his business, and he would have
sent me if there had been anything of that kind to
attend to.”
“I dare say you are right,” said his companion.
“Of course I know nothing about it. I only
formed a conjecture.”
“Has a physician been sent for?” asked
Phil.
“Do you know of any we can call in?”
“My wife agreed to send for
one on Sixth Avenue,” said the stranger.
“I didn’t wait for him to come, but set
out for the store.”
Nothing could be more ready or plausible
than the answers of his new acquaintance, and Phil
was by no means of a suspicious temperament. Had
he lived longer in the city it might have occurred
to him that there was something rather unusual in
the circumstances, but he knew that Mr. Carter had
spoken of leaving the house at the breakfast-table,
indeed had left it before he himself had set out for
the store. For the time being the thought of
the sum of money which he carried with him had escaped
his memory, but it was destined very soon to be recalled
to his mind.
They had nearly reached Sixth Avenue,
when his guide stopped in front of a shabby brick
house.
“This is where I live,” he said.
“We will go in.”
He produced a key, opened the door,
and Phil accompanied him up a shabby staircase to
the third floor. He opened the door of a rear
room, and made a sign to Phil to enter.