“No, you’d better not. After the loss is discovered, it might excite some remark, and possibly suspicion, if it were remembered.”
“Then I’ll be going. I’ve got an errand over at the store. Shall I see you to-night?”
“You’d better not come around till to-morrow morning. It may help avert suspicion.”
“Just as you say.”
“A pretty good haul!” said Congreve to himself. “I didn’t think the little fool would have spunk enough to do it, but he has. I may pay him that fifty dollars, and then again I may not. I don’t think I shall care to come back again to this dull hole to-night. I shall have to leave my trunk, but it isn’t worth the sum I owe the landlord, and he is welcome to it. With the price of these bonds I can start anew cheaper.”
Philip left his friend, without the least suspicion that he intended to play him false. He felt very comfortable. He had got the bonds out of his possession, so that there was no danger of their being found on him, and he was to receive, the next morning, fifty dollars, a larger sum than he had ever possessed at one time in his life. He made up his mind that he would put it away in his trunk, and use it from time to time as he had occasion for it.
He went to the grocery store, and left his mother’s order. Then he took an aimless walk, for Congreve was away, and there was no one else he cared to be with.
So he turned to go home. He rather dreaded to enter the house, lest his father might have discovered his loss. In the yard he saw Tom Calder. Tom, remembering what he had seen the evening before, looked at Philip with a significant grin, but said nothing.
“What are you grinning at?” demanded Philip,
“Nothing. I feel gay and festive, that is all,” responded the stable boy.