A terrible situation.
Phil tried the door, but now it was
locked on the outside, and he found that he was securely
trapped. He went to the window, but here, too,
there was no chance of escape. Even if he had
been able to get safely out, he would have landed
in a back-yard from which there was no egress except
through the house, which was occupied by his enemies.
“What shall I do?” Phil
asked himself, despairingly. “Mr. Carter
will be anxious about me, and perhaps he may think
I have gone off with the money!”
This to Phil was the worst of his
troubles. He prized a good reputation and the
possession of an honorable name, and to be thought
a thief would distress him exceedingly.
“What a fool I was to walk into
such a trap!” he said to himself. “I
might have known Mr. Carter would not be in such a
neighborhood.”
Phil was too severe upon himself.
I suspect that most of my boy readers, even those
who account themselves sharp, might have been deceived
as easily. The fact is, rogues are usually plausible,
and they are so trained in deception that it is no
reflection upon their victims that they allow themselves
to be taken in.
Hours passed, and still Phil found
himself a prisoner. Each moment he became more
anxious and troubled.
“How long will they keep me?”
he asked himself. “They can’t keep
me here forever.”
About six o’clock the door was
opened slightly, and a plate of bread and butter was
thrust in, together with a glass of cold water.
Who brought it up Phil did not know, for the person
did not show himself or herself.
Phil ate and drank what was provided,
not that he was particularly hungry, but he felt that
he must keep up his strength.
“They don’t mean to starve
me, at any rate,” he reflected. “That
is some consolation. While there is life, there
is hope.”
A little over an hour passed.
It became dark in Phil’s prison, but he had
no means of lighting the gas. There was a small
bed in the room, and he made up his mind that he must
sleep there.
All at once there was a confused noise
and disturbance. He could not make out what it
meant, till above all other sounds he heard the terrible
cry of “Fire!”
“Fire! Where is it?” thought Phil.
It was not long before he made a terrible
discovery. It was the very house in which he
was confined! There was a trampling of feet and
a chorus of screams. The smoke penetrated into
the room.
“Heavens! Am I to be burned
alive!” thought our poor hero.
He jumped up and down on the floor,
pounded frantically on the door, and at last the door
was broken open by a stalwart fireman, and Phil made
his way out, half-suffocated.
Once in the street, he made his way
as fast as possible homeward.