CHAPTER XI.

  PHIL ENTERS UPON HIS DUTIES.

  Phil presented himself in good season the next morning at the store inFranklin Street. As he came up in one direction the youth whom he hadseen in the store the previous day came up in the opposite direction.The latter was evidently surprised.

  "Halloo, Johnny!" said he. "What's brought you here again?"

  "Business," answered Phil.

  "Going to buy out the firm?" inquired the youth jocosely.

  "Not to-day."

  "Some other day, then," said the young man, laughing as if he had said avery witty thing.

  As Phil didn't know that this form of expression, slightly varied, hadbecome a popular phrase of the day, he did not laugh.

  "Do you belong to the church?" asked the youth, stopping short in hisown mirth.

  "What makes you ask?"

  "Because you don't laugh."

  "I would if I saw anything to laugh at."

  "Come, that's hard on me. Honor bright, have you come to do any businesswith us?"

  It is rather amusing to see how soon the cheapest clerk talks of "us,"quietly identifying himself with the firm that employs him. Not that Iobject to it. Often it implies a personal interest in the success andprosperity of the firm, which makes a clerk more valuable. This was not,however, the case with G. Washington Wilbur, the young man who was nowconversing with Phil, as will presently appear.

  "I am going to work here," answered Phil simply.

  "Going to work here!" repeated Mr. Wilbur in surprise. "Has old Pitkinengaged you?"

  "Mr. Pitkin engaged me yesterday," Phil replied.

  "I didn't know he wanted a boy. What are you to do?"

  "Go to the post-office, bank, and so on."

  "You're to be errand boy, then?"

  "Yes."

  "That's the way I started," said Mr. Wilbur patronizingly.

  "What are you now?"

  "A salesman. I wouldn't like to be back in my old position. What wagesare you going to get?"

  "Five dollars."

  "Five dollars a week!" ejaculated Mr. G. Washington Wilbur, inamazement. "Come, you're chaffing."

  "Why should I do that? Is that anything remarkable?"

  "I should say it was," answered Mr. Wilbur slowly.

  "Didn't you get as much when you were errand boy?"

  "I only got two dollars and a half. Did Pitkin tell you he would pay youfive dollars a week."

  "No; Mr Carter told me so."

  "The old gentleman--Mr. Pitkin's uncle?"

  "Yes. It was at his request that Mr. Pitkin took me on."

  Mr. Wilbur looked grave.

  "It's a shame!" he commenced.

  "What is a shame; that I should get five dollars a week?"

  "No, but that I should only get a dollar a week more than an errand boy.I'm worth every cent of ten dollars a week, but the old man only givesme six. It hardly keeps me in gloves and cigars."

  "Won't he give you any more?"

  "No; only last month I asked him for a raise, and he told me if I wasn'tsatisfied I might go elsewhere."

  "You didn't?"

  "No, but I mean to soon. I will show old Pitkin that he can't keep a manof my experience for such a paltry salary. I dare say that Denning orClaflin would be glad to have me, and pay me what I am worth."

  Phil did not want to laugh, but when Mr. Wilbur, who looked scarcelyolder than himself, and was in appearance but a callow youth, referredto himself as a man of experience he found it hard to resist.

  "Hadn't we better be going up stairs?" asked Phil.

  "All right. Follow me," said Mr. Wilbur, "and I'll take you to thesuperintendent of the room."

  "I am to report to Mr. Pitkin himself, I believe."

  "He won't be here yet awhile," said Wilbur.

  But just then up came Mr. Wilbur himself, fully half an hour earlierthan usual.

  Phil touched his hat politely, and said:

  "Good-morning."

  "Good-morning!" returned his employer, regarding him sharply. "Are youthe boy I hired yesterday?"

  "Yes, sir."

  "Come up-stairs, then."

  Phil followed Mr. Pitkin up-stairs, and they walked together through thesales-room.

  "I hope you understand," said Mr. Pitkin brusquely, "that I have engagedyou at the request of Mr. Carter and to oblige him."

  "I feel grateful to Mr. Carter," said Phil, not quite knowing what wascoming next.

  "I shouldn't myself have engaged a boy of whom I knew nothing, and whocould give me no city references."

  "I hope you won't be disappointed in me," said Phil.

  "I hope not," answered Mr. Pitkin, in a tone which seemed to imply thathe rather expected to be.

  Phil began to feel uncomfortable. It seemed evident that whatever he didwould be closely scrutinized, and that in an unfavorable spirit.

  Mr. Pitkin paused before a desk at which was standing a stout man withgrayish hair.

  "Mr. Sanderson," he said, "this is the new errand boy. His name is--whatis it, boy?"

  "Philip Brent."

  "You will give him something to do. Has the mail come in?"

  "No; we haven't sent to the post-office yet."

  "You may send this boy at once."

  Mr. Sanderson took from the desk a key and handed it to Philip.

  "That is the key to our box," he said. "Notice the number--534. Open itand bring the mail. Don't loiter on the way."

  "Yes, sir."

  Philip took the key and left the warehouse. When he reached the streethe said to himself:

  "I wonder where the post-office is?"

  He did not like to confess to Mr. Sanderson that he did not know, forit would probably have been considered a disqualification for the postwhich he was filling.

  "I had better walk to Broadway," he said to himself. "I suppose thepost-office must be on the principal street."

  In this Phil was mistaken. At that time the post-office was on NassauStreet, in an old church which had been utilized for a purpose verydifferent from the one to which it had originally been devoted.

  Reaching Broadway, Phil was saluted by a bootblack, with a grimy buthonest-looking face.

  "Shine your boots, mister?" said the boy, with a grin.

  "Not this morning."

  "Some other morning, then?"

  "Yes," answered Phil.

  "Sorry you won't give me a job," said the bootblack. "My taxes comes dueto-day, and I ain't got enough to pay 'em."

  Phil was amused, for his new acquaintance scarcely looked like a heavytaxpayer.

  "Do you pay a big tax?" he asked.

  "A thousand dollars or less," answered the knight of the brush.

  "I guess it's less," said Phil.

  "That's where your head's level, young chap."

  "Is the post-office far from here?"

  "Over half a mile, I reckon."

  "Is it on this street?"

  "No, it's on Nassau Street."

  "If you will show me the way there I'll give you ten cents."

  "All right! The walk'll do me good. Come on!"

  "What's your name?" asked Phil, who had become interested in his newacquaintance.

  "The boys call me Ragged Dick."

  It was indeed the lively young bootblack whose history was afterwardgiven in a volume which is probably familiar to many of my readers. Atthis time he was only a bootblack, and had not yet begun to feel thespur of that ambition which led to his subsequent prosperity.

  "That's a queer name," said Phil.

  "I try to live up to it," said Dick, with a comical glance at his raggedcoat, which had originally been worn by a man six feet in height.

  He swung his box over his shoulder, and led the way to the oldpost-office.