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"Will you have some soup, Mr. Fowler?" asked the housekeeper.
She was a tall thin woman, with a reserved manner that was somewhat repellant. She had only nodded slightly at the introduction, fixing her eyes coldly and searchingly on the face of our hero. It was evident that whatever impression the service rendered might have made upon the mind of Mr. Wharton, it was not calculated to warm the housekeeper to cordiality.
"Thank you," he answered, but he could not help feeling at the same time that Mrs. Bradley was not a very agreeable woman.
"You ought to have a good appet.i.te," said Mr. Wharton. "You have to work hard during the day. Our young friend is a cash-boy at Gilbert & Mack's, Mrs. Bradley.
"Oh, indeed!" said Mrs. Bradley, arching her brows as much as to say: "You have invited strange company to dinner."
"Do your parents live in the city, Frank--I believe your name is Frank?"
"No, sir; they are dead. My mother died only a few weeks since."
"And have you no brothers and sisters?"
"I have one sister--Grace."
"I suppose she is in the city here with you?"
"No, sir. I left her in the country. I am here alone."
"I will ask you more about yourself after dinner. If you have no engagement, I should like to have you stay with me a part of the evening."
"Thank you, sir."
Frank accepted the invitation, though he knew Jasper would wonder what had become of him. He saw that the old gentleman was kindly disposed toward him, and in his present circ.u.mstances he needed such a friend.
But in proportion as Mr. Wharton became more cordial, Mrs. Bradley became more frosty, until at last the old gentleman noticed her manner.
"Don't you feel well this evening, Mrs Bradley?" he asked.
"I have a little headache," said the housekeeper, coldly.
"You had better do something for it."
"It will pa.s.s away of itself, sir."
They arose from the dinner table, and Mr. Wharton, followed by Frank, ascended the staircase to the front room on the second floor, which was handsomely fitted up as a library.
"What makes him take such notice of a mere cash-boy?" said Mrs. Bradley to herself. "That boy reminds me of somebody. Who is it?"
CHAPTER VIII
AN UNEXPECTED ENGAGEMENT
"Take a seat, Frank," said Mr. Wharton, pointing to a luxurious armchair on one side of the cheerful grate fire; "I will take the other, and you shall tell me all about yourself."
"Thank you, sir," said our hero.
His confidence was won by Mr. Wharton's kind tone, and he briefly recounted his story.
At the conclusion, Mr. Wharton said:
"How old are you, Frank?"
"Fourteen, sir."
"You are a brave boy, and a good boy, and you deserve success."
"Thank you, sir."
"But I am bound to say that you have a hard task before you."
"I know it, sir."
"Why not let your sister go to the poorhouse for a few years, till you are older, and better able to provide for her?"
"I should be ashamed to do it, sir," he said. "I promised my mother to take care of Grace, and I will."
"How much do you earn as a cash-boy?"
"Three dollars a week."
"Only three dollars a week! Why, that won't pay your own expenses!" said the old gentleman in surprise.
"Yes, sir, it does. I pay fifty cents a week for my room, and my meals don't cost me much."
"But you will want clothes."
"I have enough for the present, and I am laying up fifty cents a week to buy more when I need them."
"You can't buy many for twenty-six dollars a year. But that doesn't allow anything for your sister's expenses."
"That is what puzzles me, sir," said Frank, fixing a troubled glance upon the fire. "I shall have to work in the evenings for Grace."
"What can you do?"
"I could copy, but I suppose there isn't much chance of getting copying to do."
"Then you have a good handwriting?"
"Pretty fair, sir."
"Let me see a specimen. There are pen and ink on the table, and here is a sheet of paper."
Frank seated himself at the table, and wrote his name on the paper.