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"And escaped."
"Escaped!"
"Yes, and you know he did, for you met after that in the woods."
"It is false!"
"No it isn't, Mr. Martin. He was too smart for you, and he got away."
"Is he in Westville?" questioned Martin, anxiously.
"No; he is in New York."
"When is he coming home?"
"Never, if I can prevent it," returned Squire Paget, earnestly. "He wrote to his mother, but I got the letter. She does not even know he is alive."
"And he is in New York?" said Martin, looking suggestively at the squire.
"He is, Martin."
"I might go down there----"
"That is what I thought."
"I can go alone. Toglet is too chicken-hearted for this business. I know he wishes he was out of it. If he hadn't been in it from the start there would have been no failure."
"Then go alone, but lose no time, for he may write more letters, and one of them may slip through my hands. Now he has disappeared, I do not wish him to be heard of again."
"But he has a friend in New York."
"I don't care for that. I do not wish his mother to hear from him, that is the whole point."
"All right, squire. Give me time to get to the city and she'll never hear of her boy again. There will be no failure this time."
The two talked the matter over for half an hour longer, and arranged all of their plans. Then Martin took the first train for the metropolis, and Squire Paget the last boat for Westville.
CHAPTER x.x.xV.
RALPH A PRISONER.
At the appointed time, Ralph called again upon Horace Kelsey, and was given instructions in regard to the work he would be called on to do.
"But you had better not start in until you hear from your mother," said the insurance agent. "She may wish you to pay a visit home before you settle down here."
Ralph thought this good advice, and he resolved to act upon it.
"I ought to get a letter by to-morrow noon or night," he said. "And I will wait that long. If I don't get word, I'll take the trip home anyway, seeing as you say you will be kind enough to wait for me."
Kelsey then asked him what he intended to do while waiting, and learning Ralph had nothing in particular in view, he advised the boy to get a guide-book of the city and walk about, so that he might become familiar with the streets.
"The work I have for you will take you out more or less," he said. "And it is a great help if you understand how to get around."
At a nearby bookseller's Ralph purchased a guide-book for twenty-five cents. He studied it off and on the entire afternoon, walking around in the meantime. Before he retired that night at the hotel, he had taken in the city from Fourteenth street down to the Battery.
"It's awful big and crooked," he thought. "But I guess I'll manage to get around, especially if I keep the guide-book on hand for reference."
His first duty in the morning, even before he had breakfast, was to go to the post office. Of course, he found no letter there for him. He inquired at the information office about the Westville mail, and ascertained that the next pouch from that place would be ready for delivery about three o'clock in the afternoon.
"I'll wait for that," he thought. "And then, if there is no word, I'll take the first train home."
To tell the truth, Ralph was growing anxious. The more he thought over the matter, the more he became convinced that he had done wrong in not returning home at once. He was willing to admit that the sight of the great metropolis had proven too much for his better judgment.
When Ralph left the post office building he did not know that he was being followed, yet such was a fact. Martin, who had got into the city but a short while before, had been watching for him, knowing that he would most likely call for mail. The man slunk out of sight when Ralph appeared, and when he went out, dogged him through the crowd like a shadow.
Ralph returned from the post office across Park Row, and from there made his way toward the East Side, as the great tenement district of New York is termed. He had not been through this section very much, and thought to make a tour along the East River.
Martin followed him for a distance of eight or ten blocks. Just as Ralph was about to go past a coal yard he tapped the boy on the shoulder.
Ralph turned quickly, and was almost dumbfounded to see who it was that had accosted him.
"What, you!" he exclaimed.
"Then I am really right!" cried Martin, reaching forth and grasping his hand. "Thank heaven that you are safe!"
"Why, I don't understand," stammered Ralph.
He could not comprehend the other's manner.
"I was afraid you had been killed on the cars," went on Martin. "I am very glad to see that you escaped."
"Indeed! I thought you wished me dead," said Ralph, coldly.
"Dead! No, indeed, my young friend!"
"But you pushed me over the cliff on the island."
"That was accidental, I a.s.sure you."
"Perhaps our meeting in the woods was accidental, too," and the boy could not help sneering.
"It was all because I took charge of my poor friend Toglet," said Martin, with an anxious look in his face. "That poor, poor fellow has caused me no end of trouble."
"How?"