The Errand Boy; Or, How Phil Brent Won Success by Jr. Horatio Alger (bearly read books .txt) ๐
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- Author: Jr. Horatio Alger
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โAm I to be treated in the same way, Mr. Carter?โ asked Philip.
โExactly.โ
โThen, if you discharge me, I will fly for refuge to Mr. Pitkin.โ
โThat will be 'out of the frying-pan into the fire' with a vengeance.โ
By this time they had reached the house. It was an elegant brown-stone front, and proved, on entrance, to be furnished in the most complete and elegant manner. Mr. Carter selected the second floor for his own use; a good-sized room on the third was assigned to Philip, and Mrs. Forbush was told to select such rooms for Julia and herself as she desired.
โThis is much finer than Mrs. Pitkin's house,โ said Philip.
โYes, it is.โ
โShe will be jealous when she hears of it.โ
โNo doubt. That is precisely what I desire. It will be a fitting punishment for her treatment of her own cousin.โ
It was arranged that on the morrow Mrs. Forbush and Julia should close their small house, leaving directions to sell the humble furniture at auction, while Mr. Carter and Philip would come up from the Astor House.
โWhat will the Pitkins say when they hear of it?โ thought Philip. โI am afraid they will feel bad.โ
CHAPTER XXVII. AN UNPLEASANT SURPRISE.
While these important changes were occurring in the lives of Philip Brent and the poor cousin, Mrs. Pitkin remained in blissful ignorance of what was going on. Alonzo had told her of his encounter with Phil on Broadway and the intelligence our hero gave him of his securing a place.
โYou may rest assured the boy was lying, Lonny,โ said Mrs. Pitkin. โBoys don't get places so easily, especially when they can't give a recommendation from their last employer.
โThat's just what I thought, ma,โ said Alonzo.
โStill Phil looked in good spirits, and he was as saucy as ever.โ
โI can believe the last very well, Lonny. The boy is naturally impertinent. They were probably put on to deceive you.โ
โBut how does he get money to pay his way?โ said Alonzo puzzled.
โAs to that, he is probably selling papers or blacking boots in the lower part of the city. He could make enough to live on, and of course he wouldn't let you know what he was doing.โ
โI hope you're right, ma. I'd give ever so much to catch him blacking boots in City Hall Park, or anywhere else; I'd give him a job. Wouldn't he feel mortified to be caught?โ
โNo doubt he would.โ
โI've a great mind to go down town to-morrow and look about for him.โ
โVery well, Lonny. You may to if you want to.โ
Alonzo did go; but he looked in vain for Phil. The latter was employed in doing some writing and attending to some accounts for Mr. Carter, who had by this time found that his protege was thoroughly well qualified for such work.
So nearly a week passed. It so chanced that though Uncle Oliver had now been in New York a considerable time, not one of the Pitkins had met him or had reason to suspect that he was nearer than Florida.
One day, however, among Mrs. Pitkin's callers was Mrs. Vangriff, a fashionable acquaintance.
โMr. Oliver Carter is your uncle, I believe?โ said the visitor.
โYes.โ
โI met him on Broadway the other day. He was looking very well.โ
โIt must have been a fortnight since, then. Uncle Oliver is in Florida.โ
โIn Florida!โ repeated Mrs. Vangriff, in surprise.
โWhen did he go?โ
โWhen was it, Lonny?โ asked Mrs. Pitkin, appealing to her son.
โIt will be two weeks next Thursday.โ
โThere must be some mistake,โ said the visitor.
โI saw Mr. Carter on Broadway, near Twentieth Street, day before yesterday.โ
โQuite a mistake, I assure you, Mrs. Vangriff,โ said Mrs. Pitkin, smiling. โIt was some other person. You were deceived by a fancied resemblance.โ
โIt is you who are wrong, Mrs. Pitkin,โ said Mrs. Vangriff, positively. โI am somewhat acquainted with Mr. Carter, and I stopped to speak with him.โ
โAre you sure of this?โ asked Mrs. Pitkin, looking startled.
โCertainly, I am sure of it.โ
โDid you call him by name?โ
โCertainly; and even inquired after you. He answered that he believed you were well. I thought he was living with you?โ
โSo he was,โ answered Mrs. Pitkin coolly as possible, considering the startling nature of the information she had received. โProbably Uncle Oliver returned sooner than he anticipated, and was merely passing through the city. He has important business interests at the West.โ
โI don't think he was merely passing through the city, for a friend of mine saw him at the Fifth Avenue Theater last evening.โ
Mrs. Pitkin actually turned as pale as her sallow complexion would admit.
โI am rather surprised to hear this, I admit,โ she said. โWas he alone, do you know?โ
โNo; he had a lady and a boy with him.โ
โIs it possible that Uncle Oliver has been married to some designing widow?โ Mrs. Pitkin asked herself. โIt is positively terrible!โ
She did not dare to betray her agitation before Mrs. Vangriff, and sat on thorns till that lady saw fit to take leave. Then she turned to Alonzo and said, in a hollow voice:
โLonny, you heard what that woman said?โ
โYou bet!โ
โDo you think Uncle Oliver has gone and got married again?โ she asked, in a hollow voice.
โI shouldn't wonder a mite, ma,โ was the not consolitary reply.
โIf so, what will become of us? My poor boy, I looked upon you and myself as likely to receive all of Uncle Oliver's handsome property. As it isโโโ and she almost broke down.
โPerhaps he's only engaged?โ suggested Alonzo.
โTo be sure!โ said his mother, brightening up.
โIf so, the affair may yet be broken
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