summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--14369-0.txt6650
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/14369.txt7036
-rw-r--r--old/14369.zipbin0 -> 111204 bytes
6 files changed, 13702 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/14369-0.txt b/14369-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c5ca84f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/14369-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,6650 @@
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14369 ***
+
+The Young Engineers on the Gulf
+or
+The Dread Mystery of the Million Dollar Breakwater
+
+By H. Irving Hancock
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTERS
+ I. The Mystery of a Black Night
+ II. The Call of One in Trouble
+ III. Vanishing into Thin Air
+ IV. Some One Calls Again
+ V. Wanted---Daylight and Divers
+ VI. Mr. Bascomb is Peevish
+ VII. Tom Isn't as Easy as He Looks
+ VIII. Mr. Prenter Investigates
+ IX. Invited To Leave Camp
+ X. The Night is Not Over
+ XI. A Message from a Coward
+ XII. An Engineer's Fighting Blood
+ XIII. Wishing It on Mr. Sambo
+ XIV. The Black Man's Turn
+ XV. A David for a Goliath
+ XVI. A Test of Real Nerve
+ XVII. Tom Makes an Unexpected Capture
+XVIII. The Army "On the Job"
+ XIX. A New Mystery Peeps In
+ XX. A Secret in Sight
+ XXI. Evarts Hears a Noise
+ XXII. Mr. Bascomb Hears Bad News
+XXIII. Ebony Says "Thumbs Up"
+ XXIV. Conclusion
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MYSTERY OF A BLACK NIGHT
+
+
+"I wish I had brought my electric flash out here with me," muttered Harry
+Hazelton uneasily.
+
+"I told you that you'd better do it," chuckled Tom Reade.
+
+"But how could I know that the night would be pitch dark?" Harry demanded.
+"I don't know this gulf weather yet, and fifteen minutes ago the stars were
+out in full force. Now look at them!"
+
+"How can I look at them?" demanded Tom, halting. "My flashlight won't
+pierce the clouds."
+
+Reade halted on his dark, dangerous footway, and Harry, just behind him,
+uttered a sigh of relief and halted also.
+
+"I never was in such a place as this before."
+
+"You've been in many a worse place, though," rejoined Tom. "I never heard
+you make half as much fuss, either."
+
+"I think something must be wrong with my head," ventured Harry.
+
+"Undoubtedly," Tom Reade agreed cheerily.
+
+"Hear that water," Harry went on, in a voice scarcely less disconsolate
+than before.
+
+"Of course," nodded Tom. "But the water can hardly be termed a surprise.
+We both knew that the Gulf of Mexico is here. We saw it several times
+to-day."
+
+The two young men stood on a narrow ledge of stone that jutted out of the
+water. This wall of stone was the first, outer or retaining wall of
+masonry---the first work of constructing a great breakwater. At high tide,
+this ledge was just fourteen inches above the level surface of the Gulf of
+Mexico, and at the time of the above conversation it was within twenty
+minutes of high tide. The top of this wall of masonry was thirty inches
+wide, which made but a narrow footway for the two youths who, on a pitch
+black night, were more than half a mile out from shore.
+
+On a pleasant night, for a young man with a steady head, the top of this
+breakwater wall did not offer a troublesome footpath. In broad daylight
+hundreds of laborers and masons swarmed over it, working side by side, or
+on scows and dredges alongside.
+
+"Wait, and I'll show a light," volunteered Tom raising his foot-long
+flashlight.
+
+Some seventy-five yards behind them a crawling snake-like figure flattened
+itself out on the top of the rock wall.
+
+"Don't show the light just yet," pleaded Harry. "It might only make me
+more dizzy."
+
+The flattened figure behind them wriggled noiselessly along.
+
+"Just listen to the water," continued Hazelton. "Tom, I'm half-inclined to
+think that the water is roughening."
+
+"I believe it is," agreed Tom.
+
+"Fine time we'll have getting back, if a gale springs up from the
+southward," muttered Harry.
+
+"See here, old fellow," interposed Tom vigorously, "you're not up to
+concert pitch to-night. Now, I'll tell you what I'll do---first of all,
+what _you'll_ do. You sit right down flat on the top of the wall. Then
+I'll move on up forward and see what has been happening out there that
+should boom shoreward with such a racket. You stay right here, and I'll
+be back as soon as I've looked into the face of the mystery."
+
+"What do you take me for?" Harry asked almost fiercely. "A baby? Or a
+cold-foot?"
+
+"Nothing like it," answered Tom Reade with reassuring positiveness.
+"You're out of sorts, to-night. Your head, or your nerves, or some thing,
+has gone back on you, and you walk through this blackness with half a
+notion that you're going to walk over a precipice, or drop head-first into
+some danger. With such a feeling it would be cruelty to let you go
+forward, chum, and I'm not going to do it. I'll go alone."
+
+The crouching figure to the rear of the young engineers quivered as though
+this separation of the two engineers on this black night was a thing
+devoutly to be desired.
+
+"You're not going to do anything of the sort," retorted Harry Hazelton.
+"I'm going forward with you. I'm going to stick to you. All I wanted was
+a minute in which to brace myself. I've had that minute. Now get forward
+with you. I'm on your heels!"
+
+Tom Reade shrugged his shoulders slightly. However, he did not object or
+argue, for he realized that his chum was sensitive over any circumstance
+that seemed to point to sudden failure of his courage.
+
+"Come along, then," urged Tom. "Wait just a second, though. I'll flash
+the light ahead along the wall, to show you that it's all there, and just
+where it lies."
+
+A narrow beam of light shot ahead as Tom pressed the spring of his pocket
+flash lamp.
+
+A weird enough scene the night betrayed. In perspective the wall ahead
+narrowed, until the two sides seemed to come to a point. Back of all was
+the thick curtain of black that had settled down over the gulf. A little
+farther out, too, the water seemed rougher. There would seem to be hardly
+a doubt that a gale was brewing.
+
+"Shut that light off!" Hazelton commanded, fighting to repress a shudder.
+"I can do better in the darkness. Now, go ahead, and I'll follow."
+
+Tom started, but he went slowly now, feeling that this pace was more suited
+to the condition of his chum's nerves. Harry followed resolutely, though
+none but himself knew how much effort it took for him to keep on in the
+face of such a nameless yet terrible dread as now assailed him.
+
+To the rear a bulky, hulking figure rose and stood erect. With the softest
+of steps this apparition of the night followed after them, until it stole
+along, ghost-like, just behind Hazelton. Then a huge arm was raised,
+threateningly, over Harry's head.
+
+At that particular moment, as though insensibly warned, Hazelton stopped,
+half-wheeling. In the next second Harry bounded back just out of reach of
+the descending arm, the hand of which held something. But in that backward
+spring Harry, in order to save himself from pitching into the water, was
+oblige to turn toward Reade.
+
+"Tom!" exploded the young engineer. "Flash the light here quickly!"
+
+In the instant, however, that Harry had sprung backward the figure had
+slipped noiselessly into the water to the left. As Reade wheeled about,
+throwing on the light, he let the ray fall in the water to the right of the
+wall. But no sign of the intruder appeared; the water had closed
+noiselessly over the now vanished figure.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Reade, as he stood looking, then finally flashed
+his light over to the other side of the wall.
+
+"I saw---" began Hazelton. Then changed to: "I thought---er---I
+saw---oh, nonsense! You'll josh the life out of me!"
+
+"Not I," Tom affirmed gravely, as a thrill of pity, for what he deemed his
+friend's unfortunate "nervous condition," shook him. "Tell me what you
+saw, Harry."
+
+"Why, I thought I saw a big fellow---a black man, too---right behind me,
+arm upraised, just ready to strike me."
+
+"Well, where is he?" Tom demanded blankly, flashing the light on either
+side of the narrow wall-top. "See him anywhere now, chum?"
+
+Harry didn't. In fact, he hardly more than pretended to look. The thing
+that had been so real a moment before was now utterly invisible. Hazelton
+began to share his chum's suspicion as to the utter breakdown of his nerves
+and powers of vision.
+
+"It was nothing, of course," said Harry, shamefacedly, but Tom vigorously
+took the other side of the question.
+
+"See here, Harry, it must have been something," insisted Reade. "You're
+not dreaming, and you're not crazy. It would take either one of those
+conditions to make you see something that didn't really exist. No mere
+nervous tremor is going to make you see something as tall as a man,
+standing right over you, when no such thing exists."
+
+"Well, then, where is the fellow?" Harry Hazelton demanded, helplessly, as
+he stared about. "There isn't any human being but ourselves in sight,
+either on the wall or in the water. Your light shows that."
+
+The light did not quite show that, and could not, since the huge prowler
+was now swimming gently under water, some seven or eight feet from the
+surface.
+
+"We'll have to solve the question before we leave here," declared Tom.
+"We can't have folks following us up in a ticklish place like this.
+Besides, Harry, I'm willing to wager that your vision---whatever it
+was---has some real connection with the mystery that we're going out
+yonder to investigate. So we'll solve the puzzle that's right here before
+we go forward to look at the bigger riddle that the dark now hides from us
+out yonder. Use your eyes, lad, an I'll do the same with mine!"
+
+Neither Tom Reade nor Harry Hazelton are strangers to the readers of this
+series, nor of the series that have preceded the present one.
+
+Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton, now engineers in charge of a big breakwater
+job on the Alabama gulf coast, were first introduced to our readers in the
+"_Grammar School Boys Series_." There we met them as members of that
+immortal band of American schoolboys known as Dick & Co. Back in the old
+school days Dick Prescott had been the leader of Dick & Co., though, as all
+our readers know, Prescott was not the sole genius of Dick & Co. Greg
+Holmes, Dave Darrin, Dan Dalzell and Tom and Harry had been the other
+members of that famous sextette of schoolboy athletes.
+
+After reading of the doings of Dick & Co. in the "_Grammar School Boys
+Series_," our readers again followed them, through the events recorded in
+the four volumes of the "_High School Boys Series_". Here their really
+brilliant work Boys Series athletes was stirringly chronicled, as along
+with scores of non-athletic adventures that befell them.
+
+At the close of the high school course Dick Prescott and Greg Holmes
+secured appointments as cadets at the United States Military Academy at
+West Point. All that befell them there is duly set forth in the "_West
+Point Series_." Dave Darrin and Dan Dalzell were fortunate enough to
+secure appointments as midshipmen in the United States Naval Academy at
+Annapolis, and their doings there are set forth in the "_Annapolis
+Series_."
+
+Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton, on the other hand, had felt no call to
+military glory. For their work in life they longed to become part of the
+great constructive force wielded by modern civil engineers. During the
+latter part of their high school work they had studied hard with ambition
+to become surveyors and civil engineers. In their school vacations they
+had sought training and experience in the offices of an engineering firm
+in their home town of Gridley. After being graduated from the Gridley High
+School, Tom and Harry had done more work in the same offices. Then, in a
+sudden desire for advancement, and possessed by the longing for a wider
+field of endeavor, Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton had secured positions as
+"cub engineers" on the construction work that was being done to rush a new
+railway, system over the Rocky Mountains in Colorado. The stern, hard work
+that lay before them, the many adventures in a rough wilderness, and the
+chain of circumstances that at last placed Tom Reade in charge of the
+railroad building, with Harry as first assistant engineer, are all told in
+the first volume of this present series, "_The Young Engineers In
+Colorado_."
+
+That great feat finished satisfactorily, the ambition of our young
+engineers led them further afield, as told in "_The Young Engineers in
+Arizona_." A great, man-killing quicksand had to be filled in and
+effectively stopped from shifting. Reade & Hazelton undertook the task.
+Incidentally Tom came into serious, dangerous conflict with gamblers and
+other human birds-of-prey, who had heretofore fattened on the earnings of
+the railway laborers. It was a tremendously exciting time that the young
+engineers had in Arizona, but they at last got away with their lives and
+were at the same time immensely successful in their undertaking.
+
+In "_The Young Engineers In Nevada_" we found our young friends under
+changed conditions. While at work in Colorado and in Arizona Tom and
+Harry had studied the occurrence of precious ores, and also the methods
+of assaying and extracting ores. Having their time wholly to themselves
+after finishing in Arizona the dauntless young pair went to Nevada, there
+to study mining at first hand. In time they located a mining claim, though
+there were other claimants, and around this latter fact hung an extremely
+exciting story. Both young engineers nearly lost their lives in Nevada,
+and met with many strenuous situations. Their sole idea in pushing their
+mine forward to success was that the money so earned would enable them to
+further their greatest ambition; they longed to have their own engineering
+offices. In the end, their mine, which the young engineers had named "The
+Ambition," proved a success. Thereupon they left their mining partner, Jim
+Ferrers, in charge and went east to open their offices.
+
+We next found the young engineers engaged to the south of the United States
+border. These adventures were fully set forth in the preceding volume in
+this series, entitled "_The Young Engineers in Mexico_." Tom and Harry,
+engaged to solve some problems in a great Mexican mine, found themselves
+the intended tools of a pair of mine swindlers of wealth and influence.
+From their first realization of the swindle Tom and Harry, even in the face
+of threats of assured death, held out for an honest course. How they
+struggled to save a syndicate of American investors from being swindled out
+of millions of dollars was splendidly told in that fourth volume.
+
+And now we find our young friends down at the gulf coast town of Blixton,
+Alabama. Here they are engaged in a kind of engineering work wholly unlike
+any they had hitherto undertaken. The owners of the Melliston Steamship
+Line, with a fleet of twenty-two freight steamships engaged in the West
+Indian and Central American trade, had looked in vain for suitable dock
+accommodations for their vessels, worth a total of more than six million
+dollars. In their efforts to improve their service the Melliston owners
+had found at Blixton a harbor that would have suited them excellently, but
+for one objection. The bay at Blixton was too open to shelter vessels from
+the severity of some of the winter gales. Up to the present time Blixton
+had not been used for harbor purposes. But the Melliston owners had
+conceived the idea that a great breakwater could be so built as to shelter
+the waters of the bay. They had quietly bought up most of the shore front
+of the little town, which had railway connection. Then they had searched
+about for engineers capable of building the needed breakwater. Reade &
+Hazelton, hearing of the project, had applied for the work. As the young
+men furnished most excellent recommendations from former employers they had
+finally secured the opportunity.
+
+By no means was the task an easy one, as will presently be shown. It was
+a work that would have to be carried on in the very teeth of jealous
+Nature. Tom and Harry were fully aware of the great difficulties that lay
+before them. What they did not know was that they would presently have to
+contend, also, with forces set loose by wicked human minds. What started
+these untoward forces in operation, and how the forces worked out, will
+soon be seen.
+
+Captain of a queer crew was Tom Reade, and Harry was his lieutenant. Of
+the laborers, seven hundred in number, some four hundred were negroes;
+there were also two hundred Italians and about a hundred Portuguese. Many,
+of each race, were skilled masons; others were but unskilled laborers.
+There were six foremen, all Americans, and a superintendent, also American.
+There were a few more Americans and two or three Scotchmen, employed as
+stationary engineers and in similar lines of work.
+
+A touch of the old Arizona trouble had invaded the camp. There had
+recently been a pay-day, and gamblers had descended upon the camp of tents
+and shanties. Once more Reade had driven off the gamblers, though this
+time with less trouble than in Arizona. At Blixton, Tom had merely sent
+for the four peace officers in the town of Blixton, and had had the
+gamblers warned out of camp. They had gone, but there had been wrathful
+mutterings among many of the workmen.
+
+The camp was a half mile back from the water's edge, on a low hillside.
+Here the men of the outfit were settled. There had been mutinous
+mutterings among some of the men, but so far there had been no open revolt.
+
+Tom, however, who had had considerable experience in such matters, looked
+for some form of trouble before the smouldering excitement quieted. So did
+Harry.
+
+On this dark night Tom had proposed that he and his chum take a stroll down
+to the shore front to see whether all were well there. Soon after leaving
+camp behind, the young engineers had started on a jog-trot. Just before
+they reached the water's edge the wind had borne to their ears the faint
+report of what must have been an explosion out over the waters of the gulf.
+
+"Trouble!" Tom whispered in his chum's ear. "Most likely some of the
+rascals that we drove out of camp have been trying to set back our work
+with dynamite. If they have done so we'll teach 'em a lesson if we can
+catch them!"
+
+So the young engineers had started out over their narrow retaining wall.
+We have seen how they had walked most of the distance when Harry had had
+his sudden warning of the hostile arm uplifted over his head.
+
+"What could it have been?" demanded Tom in a low voice, as he continued to
+cast the light from his flash lamp out over the waters on either side of
+the wall.
+
+"It must have been my nervous imagination," admitted Harry. "Whew! But
+it _did_ seem mighty real for the moment."
+
+"Then you're inclined, now, to believe that it was purely imagination?"
+pursued Tom.
+
+"Ye---e---es, it must have been," assented Harry reluctantly.
+
+Tom made some final casts with the light.
+
+While they were conversing, well past the short radius of the flash lamp's
+glare, a massive black head bobbed up and down with the waves. Out there
+the huge negro who had swiftly vanished from the wall, and who had swum
+under water for a long distance, was indolently treading water. Wholly at
+home in the gulf, the man's black head blended with the darkness of the
+water and the blackness of the night.
+
+"Oh, then," suggested Reade, "we may as well go along on our way. Plainly
+there's nothing human around here to look at but ourselves."
+
+So they started slowly forward over the wall. Leisurely the black man swam
+to the wall, taking up the dogged trail again in the darkness behind the
+pair of young engineers.
+
+Several minutes more of cautious walking brought Tom Reade to a startled
+halt.
+
+"Look there, Harry!" uttered Reade, stopping and throwing the light ahead.
+
+Out beyond them, not far from the end of the wall, some hundred feet of the
+top had been torn away. For all the young engineers could see, the
+foundations might have gone with the superstructure.
+
+"Dynamite!" Tom muttered grimly. "So this is the way our newly-found
+enemies will fight us?"
+
+"It won't be such a big job to repair this gap," muttered Harry calmly.
+
+"No; but it'll take a good many dollars to pay the bills," retorted Tom.
+
+"Well, the expense can't be charged to us, anyway," maintained Harry. "We
+didn't do this vandal's work, and we didn't authorize its being done."
+
+"No; but you know why it was done, Harry," Tom continued. "It was because
+we drove the gamblers out of the camp, and thus made enemies for ourselves
+on both sides of the camp lines."
+
+"Anyway, the company's officers can't blame us for trying to maintain
+proper order in the camp," Hazelton insisted stoutly.
+
+"Not if we can stop the outrages with this one explosion, perhaps," replied
+Tom thoughtfully. "Yet, if there are many more tricks like this one played
+on the wall you'll find that the company's officers will be blaming us all
+the way up to the skies and down again. Big corporations are all right on
+enforcing morality until it hits their dividends too hard. Then you'll
+find that the directors will be urging us to let gambling go on again if
+the laborers insist on having it."
+
+"Well, we won't have gambling in the camp, anyway," Harry retorted
+stubbornly. "We're simply looking after the interests of the men
+themselves. I wonder why they can't see it, and act like men, not fools."
+
+"We're going to stop the gambling, and keep it stopped," Tom went on, his
+jaws setting firmly together. "But, Harry, we're going to have a big row
+on our hands, and various attempts against the company's property will be
+made."
+
+"If the company's officers order us to let up on the gambling," proposed
+Harry, "we can resign and get out of this business altogether."
+
+"We won't resign, and we won't knuckle down to any lot of swindlers either,
+Harry!" cried Tom. "Some one is fighting us, and this wreck of a sea-wall
+is the first proof. All right! If any one wants to fight us he shall find
+that we know how to fight back, and that we can hit hard. Harry, from this
+minute on we're after those crooks, and we'll make them realize that
+there's some sting to us!"
+
+"Good enough!" cheered Hazelton. "I like that old-time fight talk! But
+are you going to do anything to protect the wall to-night, Tom?"
+
+"I am," announced the young chief engineer.
+
+"What's the plan?"
+
+"Let me think," urged Reade. "Now, I believe, I have it. We'll send one
+of the motor boats out here, with a foreman and four laborers. They can
+arm themselves with clubs and patrol the water on both sides of the wall.
+The 'Thomas Morton' has a small search-light on her that will be of use in
+keeping a close eye over the wall."
+
+"That ought to stop the nonsense," Harry nodded. "But I don't imagine that
+any further efforts to destroy the wall will be made tonight, anyway."
+
+"We'll have the night patrol out _every_ night after this," Tom declared.
+"But I'm not so sure either, that another effort won't be made to-night, if
+we don't put a watch on to stop this wicked business. Harry, do you mind
+remaining out here while I run back and get the boat out?"
+
+"Why should I mind?" Hazelton wanted to know.
+
+"Well, I didn't know whether you would, or not---after seeing that
+imaginary something behind you."
+
+"Don't laugh at me! I may have had a start, but you ought to be the first
+to know, Tom, that I haven't frozen feet."
+
+"I do know it, Harry. You've been through too many perils to be suspected
+of cowardice. Well, then, I'll run back."
+
+Tom Reade had really intended to leave the flash lamp with his chum, but
+he forgot to do so, and, as he jogged steadily along over the wall he threw
+the light ahead of him. As he got nearer shore Tom increased his jog to a
+brisk run.
+
+Once, on the way, he passed the prowling negro without knowing it. That
+huge fellow, seeing the ray of light come steadily near him, hesitated for
+a few moments, then took to the water, swimming well out. After Reade had
+passed, the fellow swam in toward the wall.
+
+Up on the wall climbed the negro. For a few minutes he crouched there,
+shaking the water from his garments. Then, cautiously, he began to crawl
+forward.
+
+"Boss Reade, he done gone in," muttered the prowler. "Boss Hazelton, Ah
+reckon he's mah poultry!"
+
+Harry, keeping his lone vigil away out on the narrow retaining wall, was
+growing sleepy. He had nearly forgotten his scare. Indeed, he was
+inclined to look upon it as a trick of his own brain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE CALL OF ONE IN TROUBLE
+
+
+Once Tom Reade reached the solid land he let his long legs out into a brisk
+run.
+
+With his years of practice on the Gridley High School athletic team he was
+not one to lose his wind readily.
+
+So he made his way at the same speed all the way up to the camp.
+
+"Who dar?" called a negro watchman, as Tom raced up to the outskirts of
+the camp.
+
+"Reade, chief engineer," Tom called, then wheeled and made off to the
+right, where the more substantial barracks of the foremen stood.
+Superintendent Renshaw lived in a two-story barrack still farther to the
+right, as the guest of the young engineers.
+
+"_Quien vive_?" (who's there?) hailed another voice, between the two
+barracks buildings.
+
+"So, Nicolas, you rascal, you haven't gone to bed?" demanded Tom, halting.
+"What did I tell you about earlier hours?"
+
+Nicolas was the young Mexican servant whom Tom and Harry had brought back
+with them from Mexico. Readers of the previous volume know all about this
+faithful fellow.
+
+"You and Senor Hazelton, you waire not in bed," replied Nicolas stolidly.
+
+"You're not expected to stay up and watch over us as if we were babies,
+Nicolas," spoke Tom, in a gentler voice. "You'd better turn in now."
+
+"Senor Hazelton, where is he?" insisted Nicolas, anxiously.
+
+"Oh, bother! Never mind where he is," Tom rejoined. "We won't either of
+us be in for a little while yet. But you turn in now---at
+once---instanter!"
+
+Then Tom bounded over to the little porch before the foremen's barracks,
+where he pounded lustily on the door.
+
+"Who's there? What's wanted?" demanded a sleepy voice from the inside.
+
+"Is that you, Evarts?" called Reade.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Get on your duds and turn out as quickly as you can."
+
+"You want me?" yawned Evarts.
+
+"Now, see here, my man, if I didn't want you why on earth would I call you
+out in the middle of the night?"
+
+"It's late," complained Evarts.
+
+"I know it. That's why I want you to get behind yourself and push
+yourself," retorted the young chief engineer energetically. "Hustle!"
+
+Twice, while he waited impatiently, Tom kicked the toe of one boot against
+the door to emphasize the need of haste. Other drowsy voices remonstrated.
+
+"Hang a man who has to sleep _all_ the time!" grunted Tom Reade.
+
+After several minutes the door opened, and a lanky, loose-jointed,
+lantern-jawed man of some forty-odd years stepped out.
+
+"Well, what's up, Mr. Reade?" questioned the foreman, hiding a yawn behind
+a bony, hairy hand.
+
+"You are, at last, thank goodness!" Tom exclaimed. "Evarts, I want you to
+rout out four good men. Lift 'em to their feet and begin to throw the
+clothes on 'em!"
+
+"It's pretty late to call men out of their beds, sir," mildly objected the
+foreman.
+
+"No---it's early, but it can't be helped," Tom Reade retorted. "Hustle
+'em out!"
+
+"Black or white?" sleepily inquired Evarts.
+
+"White, and Americans at that," Tom retorted. "Put none but Americans
+on guard tonight, Evarts! What do you suppose has happened?"
+
+"Can't guess."
+
+"No! You're still too sleepy. Evarts, some scoundrels have blown out a
+good part of our wall yonder."
+
+"Are you joking, Mr. Reade?"
+
+"No, sir; I am not. Dynamite must have been used. Hazelton and I heard
+the noise of the blast, but of course we got out there too late to catch
+any miscreant at the job."
+
+Evarts, at first, was inclined to regard the news with mild disbelief, but
+he soon realized that something must have happened very nearly as the young
+chief engineer had described.
+
+"Well, what are you standing there for?" Tom demanded, impatiently. "Are
+you going to wait for daylight? Get the four men out---all Americans, mind
+you. _Hustle_, man!"
+
+Evarts started away; toward the camp over to the left of them. As he did
+so Tom darted in another direction. Two minutes later Tom was back,
+piloting by one arm a man who was still engaged in rubbing the sleep out of
+his eyes. This was Conlon, engineer of the motor boat, "Morton."
+
+"Where's Evarts?" Reade queried, impatiently. "Oh, Evarts! Where are you,
+and what are you doing?"
+
+"Trying to get four men awake," bawled back the voice of the foreman, from
+the distance. "As soon as I get one man on his feet the other three have
+sunk back to sleep."
+
+"Wait until I get over there then!" called Tom, striding forward. "Come
+along, Conlon! Don't you lag on me."
+
+"There! Do you fellows reckon you want Mr. Reade to bump in here and shake
+you out?" sounded the warning voice of Evarts.
+
+As Tom and the motor boat's engine tender reached the little, box-like
+shack from which Evarts's tones proceeded, four men, seated on the floor,
+were seen to be lacing their shoes by the dim light of a lantern.
+
+"A nice lot you are!" called Tom crisply. "How many hours does it take you
+to get awake when you're called in the middle of the night?"
+
+"This overtime warn't in the agreement," sleepily retorted one of the men.
+
+"You're wrong there," Reade informed him, vehemently. "Overtime _is_ in
+the agreement for every man in this camp when it's wanted of him---from
+the chief engineer all along the line. Now, you men oblige me by hustling.
+I don't want to wait more than sixty seconds for the last man of you."
+
+"I've a good mind to crawl back into my bunk," growled another of the men.
+
+"All right," retorted Tom Reade, with suspicious cheerfulness. "Try it and
+see what kind of fireworks I carry concealed on my person. Or, just lag a
+little bit on me, and you'll see the same thing. Men, do you realize that
+there's foul play afoot out on the retaining wall? We've got to go out
+there in time to stop anything more happening. Now, you've got your shoes
+on; grab the rest of your clothing and hustle it on as we make for the
+beach. Come along!"
+
+Tom fairly got behind the men and pushed them outside. They would have
+liked to complain, but they didn't. Some of them were larger and heavier
+than the chief engineer, but they knew quite well that, at sign of any
+trifling mutiny to-night, Reade would thrash them all.
+
+"If any one is trying to blow up the wall, Mr. Reade, it's all your fault,
+anyway," ventured Evarts, as the little party started at a brisk walk for
+the beach. "When you've got a mixed crowd of men working for you, you
+shouldn't interfere too much with their amusements. Yet you would have the
+gamblers run out of camp just when our boys were getting ready to have some
+pleasant evenings."
+
+"I'll run out any one else who attempts to bring disorderly doings into
+this camp," Tom retorted quietly.
+
+"Then there'll be some more of your seawalls blown up," Evarts warned him
+gloomily.
+
+"If such a thing happens again there'll be some men hurt, and some others
+breaking into prison," Tom answered with spirit. "Any evildoers that try
+to set themselves up in business around here will soon wish they had kept
+away---that's all."
+
+"It's a bad business," insisted Evarts, wagging his head. "When you have
+a mixed crowd of workmen---"
+
+"I think you've said that before," Tom broke in coolly. "To-night we're
+in too much of a hurry to listen to the same thing twice. Come on, men.
+You can go a little faster than a walk. Jog a bit---I'll show you how."
+
+"This is pretty hard on men in the middle of the night," hinted Evarts,
+after the jogging had gone on for a full minute. "It ain't right to-----"
+
+"Stop it, Evarts!" Tom cut in crisply. "I don't mind a little grumbling
+at the right time, and I often do a bit myself, but not when I'm as rushed
+as I am to-night. There's the dock ahead, men---a little faster spurt
+now!"
+
+Tom urged his men along to the dock. With no loss of time they tumbled
+aboard the "Morton," a broad, somewhat shallow, forty-foot motor boat of
+open construction.
+
+"Get up and take the wheel, Evarts," Tom. directed. "Get at work on your
+spark, Conlon, and I'll throw the drive-wheel over for you. Some of you
+men cast, off!"
+
+In a very short time the "Morton" was going "put-put-put" away from the
+dock.
+
+Tom, after seeing that everything was moving satisfactorily, turned around
+to look at the four men huddled astern.
+
+"Don't any of you go to sleep," he urged. "A good part of our success
+depends on how well you all keep awake and use your eyes and ears."
+
+That said, Tom Reade hastened forward, stationing himself close to Evarts,
+who had the steering wheel.
+
+Some of the men astern began to talk.
+
+"Silence, if you please," Tom called softly. "Don't talk except on matters
+of business. We want to be able to use our ears. Conlon, make your engine
+a little less noisy if you can."
+
+Now Reade had leisure to wonder how matters had gone with Harry Hazelton.
+
+"Of course that threatening figure Harry saw behind him was an imaginary
+one," Tom said to himself, but he felt uneasy nevertheless.
+
+A few moments later Reade clutched at one of Evarts's arms.
+
+"Did you hear that, man?" the young engineer demanded.
+
+"Hear what?" Evarts wanted to know.
+
+"It sounded like a yell out there yonder," Tom rejoined.
+
+"Didn't hear it, Mr. Reade."
+
+"There it goes again!" cried Tom, leaping up. "Some one is calling my
+name. It must be Harry Hazelton, and he must want help. Conlon, slam it
+to that engine of yours!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+VANISHING INTO THIN AIR
+
+
+Left by himself Harry had stood, at first, motionless, or nearly so. He
+strained his hearing in trying to detect any unusual sound of the night,
+since it was so dark that vision would not aid him much.
+
+There was nothing, however, but the mournful sighing of the wind and the
+lapping of the waves. It seemed to Hazelton that the wind was growing
+gradually more brisk and the waves larger, but he was not sure of that
+until the water commenced splashing across his shoes. The footway on the
+masonry became more slippery in consequence.
+
+"With these rocks well wet down I wouldn't care much about having to run
+back to the land," muttered Harry, dryly. "However, I won't have to go
+back on my own feet. Tom will have the boat out here, and undoubtedly he
+will plan to have us both taken back to shore after we get through cruising
+around here. We should have brought the boat out in the first place."
+
+A night bird screamed, then flapped its wings close to Harry's face in its
+flight past him. The young engineer saw the moving wings for an instant;
+then they vanished into the black beyond.
+
+Farther out some other kind of bird screamed. The whole situation was a
+weird one, but Harry was no coward, though a less courageous youth would
+have found the situation hard on his nerves.
+
+Still another night bird screamed, of some species with which Hazelton was
+wholly unacquainted. The cry was answered by some sort of strange call
+from the shore.
+
+"It's a fine thing that I'm not superstitious," laughed the young engineer
+to himself, "or I'd surely feel cold chills chasing each other up and down
+my spine."
+
+As it was, Harry shivered slightly, though not from fear. With the
+increasing wind it was growing chilly out there for one who could not warm
+himself with exercise.
+
+"It's a long time, or it seems so," muttered the young engineer presently.
+"Yet I'll wager that Tom is hustling himself and others on the very jump."
+
+Again the call of a night bird, and once more a sound from shore seemed
+to answer it.
+
+"Real birds?" wondered Hazelton, with a start of sudden curiosity. "Or
+have I been listening to human signals? If so, the signals can't cover
+any good or honest purpose."
+
+That train of thought set him to listening more acutely than before. Yet,
+as no more calls reached his ears the attention of the young engineer soon
+began to flag.
+
+The monotonous lapping of the waves against the stone wall, the constant
+splashing of water over the rocks and the steady blowing of the wind all
+tended to make the watcher feel drowsy.
+
+"What on earth can be keeping good old Tom?" Harry wondered, more than
+once.
+
+It would have been well, indeed, had Harry kept his eyes turned oftener
+toward the shore end of the wall. In that case he might more speedily
+have detected the wriggling, snake-like movement of the big negro moving
+toward him.
+
+With great caution the huge prowler came onward, raising his head a few
+inches every now and then and listening. The black man's nostrils moved
+feverishly. He was using them, as a dog would have done, to scent any
+signs of alarm on the part of the human quarry that he was after.
+
+At last Harry Hazelton turned sharply, for his own ears were attuned to
+the stillnesses of the western forests and his hearing was unusually acute.
+He had just heard a sound on the wall, not far away. Instantly the young
+engineer was on the alert.
+
+Then his eyes, piercing the darkness, made out the crawling, dark form,
+which did not appear to be more than fifty feet away from him.
+
+For a second or two Harry stared. But he knew there could be no snake as
+broad as this crawling figure appeared to be.
+
+"Who's there?" Hazelton called quickly.
+
+The writhing mass became still, flattening itself against the bed of rock.
+Hazelton was not to be deceived, however.
+
+"Who's there?" Harry repeated. "You had better talk up, my man!"
+
+Still no sound. Harry started forward to investigate. His foot touched
+against a good sized fragment of rock left there by one of the masons.
+
+Without delay Harry reached down, picking up the rock, which was rather
+more than half as large as his head.
+
+Holding this in his right hand Harry advanced with still more confidence,
+for he felt himself to be armed. Hazelton had been a clever pitcher in
+his high school days and knew that he could make this fragment of rock
+land pretty close to where he wanted it to go.
+
+"Who are you?" demanded Hazelton, once more, as he stepped cautiously
+forward. "No use in your keeping silent, my man. I see you and know that
+you're there. Moreover, I'm going to drag the truth out of you as to what
+you're doing out here on the wall at this hour of the night---and to-night
+of all nights."
+
+Still no answer; Harry went steadily forward, until he was within a dozen
+feet of the head of the flattened brute in human guise. Hazelton could now
+see every line of his adversary plainly, though he could not make out the
+fellow's face.
+
+"You'd better get up and talk," warned Harry, poising the rock fragment
+for a throw. "If you don't you'll cast all the more suspicion upon
+yourself. For the last time, my man, who are you and what are you doing
+here?"
+
+The huge black figure might have been a log for all the answer that came
+forth.
+
+"All right, then; it's your own fault," Harry Hazelton continued calmly.
+"As you won't speak I'm going to crack the nut for myself. Your head will
+be the nut, and this rock I have in my hand shall be the hammer. I'm going
+to slam this rock on your head with all the force I've got, and I'm a good,
+straight thrower."
+
+Yet, though Hazelton spoke with such confidence, he was far from meaning
+all he said. In the first place, he had no legal right, under the
+circumstances, to go as close to murder as it might be for him to throw the
+rock at the rascal's head. Moreover, Harry would hardly have exercised
+such a legal right, had he possessed it, without the strongest provocation.
+
+From the black prowler came a sudden, fierce snort. It sounded altogether
+like defiance.
+
+"Ho---ho! You're finding your voice, are you, my man?" Hazelton jeered.
+"Then talk up in time to save yourself!"
+
+Instead the huge black man began to writhe forward.
+
+"Stop that!" ordered Harry dangerously. He did not retreat from the
+writhing human thing, but he took better aim, noting that the black man was
+hatless and that his head offered a fair mark. "You're going to get hurt
+in just about a second more," he added.
+
+Uttering another snort the bulky black sprang to his feet with surprising
+agility in one of his great size.
+
+Harry now let his right hand fall back quickly. He was poising for the
+throw in earnest, for there could no longer be any doubt that the stranger
+was planning a deadly assault.
+
+"Take it, then, since you want it!" snapped out Harry Hazelton. The
+fragment of rock left his hand, propelled with force and directed with
+accurate aim at the negro's face.
+
+But the crafty black dodged just in time, at the same instant throwing up
+his hands.
+
+Harry gasped as he saw his unknown assailant deftly catch the rock
+fragment as though it had been a base ball.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!" jeered the black, in a hoarse, rumbling voice.
+
+He threw back his hand, gathering impetus for the cast. Hazelton could do
+nothing but throw himself on the defensive, planning to duplicate the black
+man's catch.
+
+Then the stone came---but it did not go high, instead, by a jerk of his
+wrist, the negro hurled it at Harry's right foot.
+
+That granite-like fragment struck Hazelton's foot with full force.
+
+"You---you scoundrel!" groaned Harry, in an all but admiring gasp.
+
+Like a flash he bent over, snatching up the fragment for his own use.
+
+"Now, I'll slam you into the middle of the Gulf of Mexico!" cried the young
+engineer, vengefully, as he tried to straighten up.
+
+A groan escaped him. His injured foot was paining him more than he had
+expected.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!" harshly jeered this mysterious, evil creature. The
+black man had halted as Harry prepared to throw, but he showed no sign of
+hesitation. Though he stood still, he thrust his repulsive, leering face
+forward, as though to offer that face as the best mark.
+
+Harry found that he could not stand straight---the pain in his injured foot
+was now too intense.
+
+"Get back with you!" ordered Harry. "Get back if you don't want a heap
+worse than you gave me."
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!" came the sneering laugh. Then the stranger reached out
+his hands as though to seize the youth.
+
+"I guess I'll have to do it---though not because I really want to hurt
+you!" muttered Harry ruefully.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!"
+
+There could be no question that the unknown was merely playing with him.
+Little as he liked to make the ugly throw Harry knew that he had to do it.
+When Hazelton had anything to do he believed in doing it well. So, putting
+all possible force into his throw, Harry let the rock fragment fly, and
+this time he was sure that his enemy would not be able to dodge in time.
+
+Nor did the black man make any seeming effort to dodge.
+
+Bump! Squarely in the black face the rock landed. Harry heard the sound
+and felt ill within himself. Yet the black man did not stagger. With a
+contemptuous snort he kicked the fragment of rock into the water as it
+landed at his feet.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!"
+
+For the first time Harry Hazelton felt positively dismayed. He saw the
+long, massive arms moving, looking like a powerful ape's arms. There could
+be no doubt that the unknown was ready for a spring.
+
+Harry did not retreat. Where could he run to? Only a few yards could he
+go out towards the end of the wall. Then, if he wished to continue his
+flight he could only take to the water.
+
+Only a glance was needed at the bulky, powerful frame of the unknown to
+make it appear certain that the latter could swim two rods to the young
+engineer's one.
+
+Harry decided instantly to stand his ground and to make the most valiant
+fight possible on so slippery a footing as that presented by the top of
+the retaining wall.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!"
+
+It was as though the black unknown sought to terrify his intended victim
+with his repetitions of that harsh, discordant laugh. Harry braced himself
+and waited.
+
+Then, off shoreward, came the sound of "put-put-put." The motor boat,
+"Morton," was putting out at last.
+
+"If I can keep this fellow busy for a few minutes, I can have all the help
+I want," flashed through Hazelton's mind. So he opened his mouth, raising
+his voice in a long, pent-up hail.
+
+"R e---e---e a d e! To---o---o---om R e a d e! Quick! Hazelton!"
+
+"Ha, ha!" jeered the unknown black.
+
+Then, suddenly, he leaped---not unexpectedly, however, for Harry had been
+watching, cat-like.
+
+The unknown threw out his arms, seeking to wrap them around Hazelton.
+
+Not in vain had Harry been trained, season after season, on the athletic
+ground of one of the best high school elevens in the United States.
+
+As the fellow leaped at him Harry crouched lower and went straight at his
+opponent.
+
+Powerful as the stranger was he was no football player. Harry "tackled"
+him in the neatest possible way, then strove to rise with this great
+human being.
+
+In the first instant it seemed to the young engineer as though he were
+trying to lift a mountain. His back felt as though it were snapping under
+a giant's task. Yet, but for one fact, Hazelton would have risen with his
+man, and would have hurled the mysterious one over into the waters of the
+gulf.
+
+Just in the instant of victory Harry's injured right foot gave out under
+him. With a stifled groan he sank down just as he threw his opponent.
+
+The black, instead of going into the water, landed hard on his back on the
+top of the wall. He was up again, however, before Hazelton could repress
+the pain in his foot and leap at the wretch.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!" came the tantalizing challenge.
+
+"Put-put-put!" sounded over the water, coming nearer all the time.
+
+"Re---e---e---e a d e! T o m R e a d e! Help---quick!" yelled Harry,
+lustily.
+
+This, doubtless, was the first call that Tom, at the bow of the motor boat,
+thought he heard.
+
+Uttering a snort, this time, instead of the laugh, the black sprang at his
+intended prey. Their heads met, with considerable force. Then, with a
+wild chuckle, the black wound his apelike arms around the young engineer.
+
+"Reade! Tom Reade! Reade!" bellowed Hazelton lustily, as he tried
+desperately to free himself from the crushing embrace of the other.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Over the waters came the penetrating beam of a small search-light. The
+"Morton" was coming nearer all the time, but the ray did not yet reach with
+any great clearness the point where Harry Hazelton had been fighting for
+his life against his strange foe in the black night.
+
+"Keep parallel with the wall, Evarts," Tom ordered, crisply. "Conlon, are
+you pushing the engines for all it's worth?"
+
+"Yes, sir," came from the engine-tender. "This old craft isn't good for
+quite seven miles' an hour, anyway."
+
+"There! Now I've picked up the part of the wall where there isn't any wall
+in sight just now," said Tom, wincing over his own bull. "Hazelton ought
+to be just this side of there."
+
+"There's no one near the breach," replied Evarts.
+
+"So I see," Reade admitted, in a tone of worriment. "Oh, well, Harry isn't
+such an infant as to be wiped out all in one moment."
+
+"Where is Mr. Hazelton then?" inquired Evarts, as Tom swung the arc of the
+searchlight in broad curves.
+
+"Great Scott! I wish I knew!" gasped Reade, his perplexity and his anxiety
+growing with every second. "There appears to be no one on top of the
+wall."
+
+Evarts ran in within a few feet of the wall, on the shore-side of the
+breach.
+
+"Shall I land you there, sir?" questioned the foreman.
+
+"Presently," Tom nodded. "But now, back out a few feet and swing the
+boat's nose around so that I can make a search with this light." Evarts
+obeyed the order. Despite the smallness of the light, Reade was able to
+send the searching beam of light back nearly one-half of the way to shore.
+Nowhere was there any human being visible on the wall.
+
+"Harry! Hazelton!" bawled Tom, with all the power in his lungs.
+
+There was no answer.
+
+"Jupiter! You'll have to land me, I reckon," quaked Tom Reade. "Drive
+her nose in---gently. I'll be ready to jump."
+
+"Be careful how you _do_ jump," warned Evarts. "It's mighty slippery on
+that wall tonight."
+
+Tom poised himself as the boat moved in close. Then he took a light
+leap, landing safely.
+
+Here the young chief engineer again brought his pocket flash lamp into
+play. Closely he scanned the top of the wall all around where he knew he
+had left his chum.
+
+But Harry was nowhere to be seen, nor, on the wet wall, could Tom find
+any signs of a scuffle, or any other sign that gave him a clue.
+
+"Evarts, this is mighty mysterious!" groaned the young chief.
+
+"Unless---" hinted the foreman.
+
+"Unless what?"
+
+"Perhaps Mr. Hazelton ran along the walltop to the shore."
+
+"He'd have hailed us, then, in passing, wouldn't he?" choked Tom Reade.
+"Besides, I had the light playing on this wall most of the way. If he
+had run back we would have seen him, even if he hadn't hailed. And he
+couldn't have run farther out to seaward. Evarts, I'm downright worried."
+
+Tom Reade might indeed well be worried over the grewsome mysteries of this
+night of evil deeds.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+SOME ONE CALLS AGAIN
+
+
+Half an hour later Tom Reade leaped ashore at the little pier.
+
+"My orders, Mr. Reade."
+
+"They're brief and concise," Tom rejoined. "You're to cruise the length
+of the wall, especially farther out from shore. Use your searchlight
+freely. Keep the wall so guarded that no rascal can slip out there, either
+over the wall or by boat, and do any damage. Mr. Evarts, the safety of
+the wall until daylight is your whole charge."
+
+"Very good, sir. But I'm sure that nothing more will happen to the wall."
+
+"If anything does it will be up to you, Mr. Evarts," Tom assured him
+grimly. "I'll hold you responsible."
+
+"I won't let anything happen, Mr. Reade. And I hope you find Mr. Hazelton
+all right."
+
+"He may be up at camp," Tom answered, though in his heart he did not
+believe it.
+
+Had Harry escaped whatever danger had menaced him, Tom knew very well that
+his chum, after appealing for help, would by some means have signaled his
+subsequent safety.
+
+However, Tom started toward camp at a run. He was wholly mystified. The
+search in the neighborhood of the breach in the wall had been continued
+until its hopelessness had been fully demonstrated. The search had also
+been continued over the water, for a possible clue to the mystery.
+
+Though Tom ran, he felt himself choking, stifling. Despite all his efforts
+to cheer himself the young chief engineer felt certain that his chum had
+mysteriously met his fate, and that brave, dependable Harry Hazelton was no
+more.
+
+Yet how could he have vanished so completely, and what possibly could have
+happened to his assailant or assailants?
+
+"It'll be an awful night, until daylight," Tom groaned inwardly, as he
+ran. "At daylight, of course, we can make a far better search, especially
+over the water. But in the hours that must elapse---! It's going to be a
+tough period of waiting!"
+
+Arrived at camp, Tom made straight for his own barracks, letting himself
+in with a latch-key as soon as he could control his shaking hand
+sufficiently to use the key.
+
+Tom bounded straight for the bed-room of the superintendent, at the rear
+of the little building.
+
+"Mr. Renshaw!" shouted the young chief, throwing open the bed-room door.
+
+The barrack was lighted by electricity. Tom threw on the light, then
+wheeled toward the bed, to find the superintendent sitting up, revolver
+in hand.
+
+"Oh, it's you, is it?" gasped the superintendent. "Mr. Reade, in my
+stupor from being aroused I was just on the point of shooting you for a
+burglar. It's awful!"
+
+"You ought to throw that revolver to the bottom of the gulf," Tom rasped
+out.
+
+"Not much!" retorted the superintendent. "Handling as mixed a crew as we
+have on this work I wouldn't think of going about unarmed. And you ought
+to go armed, too, Mr. Reade."
+
+"Bosh!" uttered Tom. He had a well-known objection to carrying a pistol.
+Reade always maintained that a pistol-carrying man was a coward. A coward
+is one who is afraid, and the man who is not afraid has no reason to carry
+a weapon.
+
+"Renshaw," added Tom, "there's just one circumstance in which I would
+carry a pistol---and that is, if I were carrying large sums of other
+people's money. If I were a pay-master, or a bank messenger, I'd carry
+a pistol, but under no other circumstances, outside of military service,
+would I carry a weapon. But---are you thoroughly awake, now?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Then, Mr. Renshaw, get up and hide that pistol somewhere. While you're
+about it, listen to me. Some scoundrel has blown out a large portion of
+our retaining wall to-night. I left Hazelton on guard at the point and
+came ashore to get out the motor boat, 'Morton.' Before I could return
+I heard Hazelton's call for help, and---he has disappeared! There's
+wicked work on hand to-night. You'll have to get up and help me. Be quick
+with your dressing. We've work to do to-night, and all of it is man's
+work."
+
+Tom hastily added such other particulars as were needed. Renshaw, while
+he dressed hurriedly, listened with a horror that he took no pains to
+conceal.
+
+"Evarts claims that it's revenge work, on the part of some of our men,
+because Hazelton and I stopped gambling in the camp," Tom continued.
+
+"It might be," Renshaw admitted thoughtfully. "But to me it seems that
+there must be a lot more behind the whole terrible matter."
+
+"That's the way it strikes me, too," Tom nodded. "However, you're dressed,
+so now we can hurry out and get busy."
+
+"What shall we do first?" Superintendent Renshaw inquired.
+
+"That's what I've been thinking over while you were dressing," Tom replied.
+"Of course the one thing of real importance is to find Hazelton."
+
+"Killed, beyond a doubt," replied the older man.
+
+"I refuse to believe it," Tom retorted. "There's a mystery in his fate,
+but I simply won't believe that Harry has been killed."
+
+"Then why didn't you hear from him further?"
+
+"That's the mystery."
+
+Tom had shaped their course for the barracks occupied by the foremen. He
+bounded upon the little porch and began to hammer on the door with both
+fists.
+
+"Turn out, everybody!" Tom bellowed. "Every foreman is on duty to-night.
+Show a light, and let us in as soon as you can."
+
+Some one was heard stirring. Then Dill, one of the foremen, admitted the
+callers.
+
+"Are all the others up?" Reade asked, sharply.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Good! Tell your associates to finish dressing as quickly as possible and
+to meet me in the office."
+
+"The office" was a little room just inside the entrance to the building.
+It was a room where the foremen sat and chatted in the evenings.
+
+"Put a double-hustle on, everyone," Tom called after Dill.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Barely three minutes had passed when all of the six remaining foremen had
+assembled. Tom plunged instantly into a brief account of what had
+happened.
+
+"It seems to me, sir---" Dill began.
+
+"Keep it to yourself, then, if you please," Tom interrupted him gently.
+"We haven't any time for opinions to-night. What we want is swift,
+intelligent work, and a lot of it."
+
+Tom thereupon gave each man his directions.
+
+"Now, each of you go to your own gangs in the camp," he added. "Wake what
+men you need and put 'em to work. If any of the men object to being taken
+from their cots in the night, just lift them out. Don't stand any
+nonsense. Let each foreman make it his business to know just what the men
+under him are doing."
+
+One foreman was to take men with lanterns and go out carefully over every
+foot of the seawall. Another was to organize a beach patrol. Still
+another, with but two men, was to go into the town of Blixton and see if
+any tidings of Hazelton could be obtained there. To one foreman fell the
+task of searching carefully through camp before going to other work
+assigned to him.
+
+"Now, get to work, all of you," Tom ordered. "As an extra inducement you
+can tell your men that the one who finds Hazelton, whether dead or alive,
+shall have a reward of one hundred dollars. Remember the watchword for
+to-night, which is, 'hustle!'"
+
+In all, some sixty men were pulled from their cots. Tom, having given the
+orders, walked down to the beach with his superintendent.
+
+"You've covered everything that's possible, I think, Mr. Reade," commented
+the foreman.
+
+"I think I have. But there won't be any rest for any one until we have
+found Hazelton."
+
+"Are you going to have the water dragged?"
+
+"Not before daylight---perhaps not then," Reade replied. "I can't bring
+myself to believe that Harry was thrown into the water and that he drowned
+there."
+
+"It'll take the chief a day or two to realize that," sighed the
+superintendent to himself. "Yet that is exactly what has happened. The
+chief won't believe it, though, until the body is found."
+
+Down on the beach there was really nothing for Tom and his head man to do
+after the arrival of the foremen and their gangs. Everything went ahead in
+an orderly manner.
+
+"I don't suppose you could get any rest, under the circumstances, Mr.
+Reade," hinted the superintendent, "yet that is just what you are going
+to need."
+
+"Rest?" echoed Tom, gazing at the man, in a strange, wide-eyed way, while
+a grim smile flickered around the corners of his mouth. "What have rest
+and I to do with each other just now?"
+
+"Yet there's nothing you can do here."
+
+"I am here, anyway," Reade retorted. "I'm on the spot---that's something."
+
+"Let me run back to the house and get you some blankets," urged the
+superintendent. "Then you can lie down on the sand and rest. Of course
+I know you can't sleep at present."
+
+"It is not necessary go back," volunteered a voice behind them. "I have
+the blankets."
+
+"Nicolas!" gasped Tom, in surprise. "How did you know I was here?"
+
+"I wake up when you talk to Meester Renshaw," replied the Mexican simply.
+"I listen. I know, now---poor Senor Hazelton!"
+
+Nicolas's voice broke, and, as he stepped closer, Tom beheld some large
+tears trickling down the little Mexican's face.
+
+"Nicolas, you're a good fellow!" cried Tom, impulsively, "but I don't want
+the blankets. Spread them on the sand, then lie down on them yourself
+until I need you."
+
+"What---me? I lie down?" demanded Nicolas. "No, no! That impossible is.
+I must walk, walk! Me? I am like the caged panther to-night. I want
+nothing but find the enemy who have hurt Senor Hazelton. Then I jump on
+the back of that enemy!"
+
+Saying which Nicolas saluted, and, as became his position of servant, fell
+back some yards. But first he had dropped the blankets to the beach.
+
+The light of lanterns showed that the men of one gang were searching
+thoroughly all along the top of the wall. Once in a while a man belonging
+to the beach patrol passed the chief engineer and the superintendent,
+reporting only that no signs of Harry had been found.
+
+An hour thus passed. Then, from over the water, as the lantern-bearing
+searchers were returning, a dull explosion boomed across the water.
+
+"Great Scott!" quivered Tom. "There they go at it again, Mr. Renshaw!
+Another section of the retaining wall has gone---blown up!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+WANTED---DAYLIGHT AND DIVERS
+
+
+In a trice the foreman of the gang on the wall wheeled his men about,
+running them out seaward toward the scene of the latest explosion. That
+much was plain from the twinkling of the rapidly-moving lanterns.
+
+"Come on, Renshaw!" Tom shouted. "You, too, Nicolas. You can pull an
+oar."
+
+Reade was already racing out on to the small dock. He all but threw
+himself into a rowboat that lay tied alongside.
+
+"Cast off and get in," Tom ordered his companions, as he pushed out a pair
+of oars. "Nicolas, you're also good with a pair of oars. Mr. Renshaw,
+you take the tiller. Inform me instantly when you see the first gleam of
+the 'Morton's' search-light. Evarts ought to have caught the scoundrels
+this time. Evidently he's been cruising softly without showing a light."
+
+Mr. Renshaw gathered up the tiller ropes as Tom pushed off from the dock.
+Then the chief engineer addressed himself to the task of rowing. His firm
+muscles, working at their best, shot the little craft ahead. Nicolas, at
+the bow oars, did his best to keep up with his chief in the matter of
+rowing, though the Mexican was neither an oarsman nor an athlete.
+
+"Don't you make out the motor boat's lights yet?" Tom asked impatiently,
+after the first long spurt of rowing.
+
+"Not yet, sir," replied the superintendent. "I shan't miss the light when
+it shows."
+
+A few minutes later the superintendent announced in a low voice:
+
+"There's some craft, motionless, just a bit ahead."
+
+Tom, without stopping his work at the oars, turned enough to glance
+forward.
+
+"Why, it's---it's the 'Morton'!" he gasped.
+
+"I believe it is," declared the superintendent, staring keenly at the
+nearly shapeless black mass ahead.
+
+Tom, with his jaws set close, bent harder than ever at the oars.
+
+"Senor!" wailed Nicolas, gaspingly. "If you do not go more easily I shall
+expire for lack of breath. I cannot keep up with you."
+
+Reade fell into a slower, stronger stroke.
+
+"Drop the oars any time you want to, Nicolas," Reade urged. "There won't
+be much more rowing to do, anyway."
+
+Presently Tom himself rested on his oars, as the boat, moving under its
+own headway, approached the motor boat.
+
+"Going to board her on the quarter?" the superintendent asked.
+
+"No; by the bow," Tom answered. "Let go the tiller ropes. I'll pull
+alongside."
+
+As they started to pass the boat a sound reached them that made Reade grow
+wild with anger. Snore after snore, from five busy sleepers!
+
+Tom pulled softly up to the bow.
+
+"There's the anchor cable!" snorted Tom, Pointing to a rope that ran from
+the bow of the "Morton" down into the water. "Did you ever see more
+wicked neglect of important duty? And not even a lantern out to mark her
+berth! Get aboard, Mr. Renshaw, and go aft to start the engine. Nicolas,
+you take this boat astern and make fast. Don't wake the sleepers---poor,
+tired shirkers!"
+
+Tom, in utter disgust, leaped aboard the boat at the bow. There, behind
+the wheel, Evarts lay on the floor of the boat, his rolled-up coat serving
+as a pillow.
+
+Almost noiselessly Tom hauled up the light anchor. Then he stood by the
+wheel.
+
+"All ready at the engine, Mr. Reade!" called the superintendent, softly.
+
+"Let her go," Tom returned, "as soon as Nicolas boards."
+
+The Mexican was quickly aboard, after having made the rowboat's painter
+fast.
+
+"Headway!" announced Renshaw, throwing over the drive-wheel of the engine.
+
+"Put-put-put!" sputtered the motor. Then the "Morton" began really to
+move. With the first real throb of the engine the electric running lights
+gleamed out.
+
+Aft Conlon began to stir. Then he opened his eyes.
+
+"What---" he began.
+
+"Silence!" commanded Mr. Renshaw.
+
+"Tell me who's at the wheel?" Conlon begged.
+
+"Mr. Reade," replied the superintendent, dryly. "Now, keep still!"
+
+"Whew---ew---ew!" whistled Conlon, in dire dismay. Then he sank back,
+watching the engine with moody eyes. The other three men aft still slept.
+
+Presently Tom, in shifting his position, touched one foot lightly against
+the foreman's head. Evarts half-awoke, then realized that the boat was
+moving.
+
+"Who started this craft against my orders?" he drowsily demanded, as he
+sat up.
+
+"I did," Tom retorted witheringly, "though I didn't hear your orders to
+the contrary."
+
+"You---Mr. Reade?" gasped the foreman, leaping to his feet.
+
+"Yes---and a fine fellow you are to trust!" Tom rejoined. "I leave you
+with very definite orders, and you go to sleep. Then there's another
+explosion out on the wall and you sleep right along."
+
+"Another explosion?" blurted Evarts, rubbing his eyes with his fists.
+"Here, let me have that wheel, sir. I'll have you out there quick!"
+
+"You've nothing more to do here," Tom answered, dryly, without yielding
+the wheel.
+
+"What do you mean by that?" Evarts cried quickly.
+
+"Can't you guess?" wondered Reade.
+
+"Mr. Reade means," said Conlon, who had come forward, "that we're
+fired---discharged."
+
+"Nonsense!" protested Evarts.
+
+"Conlon has guessed rightly, as far as you're concerned," Tom continued.
+"To-morrow, Evarts, you go to Mr. Renshaw and get your pay. As for you,
+Conlon, you're not discharged this time. Evarts admitted himself that it
+was he who gave positive orders to tie the boat up at anchor. You were
+under his orders, so I can't hold you responsible. Are you wide awake,
+now?"
+
+"Yes, sir," answered Conlon meekly.
+
+"Then go back and attend to your engine. Look sharp for hail or bell."
+
+"I guess you'll find you can't quite get along without me," argued Evarts
+moodily. "You'll find that you need me to manage some of the men you've
+got."
+
+"You're through with this job, as I just did you the honor to inform you,"
+Tom responded quietly. "To-morrow Mr. Renshaw will pay you off up to
+date."
+
+"If I'm bounced, then you'll pay me for the balance of the month, anyway!"
+snarled the foreman defiantly. "You can't drop me without notice like
+that."
+
+"You'll be paid to date only," Tom retorted. "You've been discharged for
+wilful and serious neglect of duty, and you're not entitled to pay for the
+balance of the month."
+
+"All right, then," retorted the other hotly. "I'll collect my money
+through the courts. I'll show you!"
+
+"Just as you please," Reade replied indifferently. "But I imagine any
+court will consider seven dollars a day pretty large pay for a man who
+goes to sleep on duty."
+
+"See here, I'll---"
+
+"You'll keep quiet, Evarts, or you'll go overboard," Reade interrupted
+significantly. "I happen to know that you can swim, so I won't be
+bothered with you here if you insist on making a nuisance of yourself."
+
+Mr. Renshaw, having been relieved at the engine, now came forward.
+
+"Mr. Renshaw," directed the young chief engineer, "as soon after daylight
+as it is convenient for you you'll pay Evarts off in full to date and let
+him go. He threatens to sue if he is not paid to the end of the month, but
+if he wants to we'll let the courts do our worrying."
+
+"All right, sir," nodded the superintendent.
+
+Evarts had dropped into a seat just forward of the engine. He sat there,
+regarding Tom Reade with a baleful look of hate.
+
+"You're a success, all right, at one thing, and that's making enemies,"
+muttered the discharged foreman under his breath.
+
+Besides attending to the wheel Tom now reached out with one hand and
+switched on the search-light, which he manipulated with one hand. Shortly
+he found the spot where the portion of the wall had been blown away by the
+first explosion. A hundred and fifty yards farther out he beheld the work
+of the second explosion. Some seventy-five yards in length was the new
+open space, where at least as much of the retaining wall as was visible
+above the water had been blown out.
+
+"Slow down, Cordon," ordered Tom. "All we want is headway."
+
+"All right, sir."
+
+Tom drifted in within a few feet of the former site of the retaining wall.
+The "Morton" moved slowly by, Tom, by the aid of the searchlight, noting
+the extent of the disaster.
+
+"Get back aft, Evarts," ordered the young engineer, turning and beholding
+the late foreman. "We don't want you here."
+
+For a moment or two it looked as though Evarts would refuse. Then, with
+a growl, he rose and picked his way aft. By this time the other men who
+had been in his gang were awake. They regarded their former foreman with
+no great display of sympathy.
+
+"I'll confess I'm mystified," muttered Tom, watching the scene of the
+latest explosion for some minutes after the engine had been stopped.
+"When daylight comes and we can use the divers we ought to know a bit more
+about how such a big blast is worked in the dead of night when the
+scoundrels ought to make noise enough to be heard. It must have been a
+series of connected blasts, all touched off at the same moment, Mr.
+Renshaw, but even such a series is by no means easy to lay. And then the
+blasts have to be drilled for, and then tamped."
+
+"As you say, sir," replied the superintendent, "a much clearer idea can be
+formed when we have daylight and the divers."
+
+Tom held his watch to one side of the searchlight.
+
+"Nearly two hours yet until daylight, Mr. Renshaw," he announced. "And,
+of course, it will be two or three hours after daylight before we can get
+the divers at work. A fearful length of time to wait!"
+
+"You'd better go back to the shore, sir," urged the superintendent.
+
+"Not while this boat needs to be run," objected Reade. "For the rest of
+the night I want a man here whom I can trust."
+
+"Will you trust me with the boat?" proposed the superintendent.
+
+"Why, of course!"
+
+"Then let me run back to the dock and put you ashore, Mr. Reade. After
+that I'll come out here and patrol along the wall until broad daylight."
+
+That was accordingly done. The "Morton" lay alongside the dock, and
+Nicolas instantly busied himself with casting off the rowboat and making
+her fast to the pier instead.
+
+Evarts sullenly remained in the boat.
+
+"Come on, Evarts," spoke Tom quietly.
+
+"Mr. Reade," expostulated the late foreman, "I'm not going to be thrown
+out of my job like this."
+
+"Which especial way of being thrown out do you prefer then?" Tom queried,
+dryly.
+
+"I'm not going to be put out of my job until I've had at least one good
+talk with you," insisted the foreman.
+
+"I'm afraid the time has passed for talking with you," Reade responded,
+turning toward the shore. "You lost a great chance, to-night, to serve
+the company with distinction, and your negligence cost the company a lot
+of money through the second explosion. Are you coming out of that
+boat---or shall I come back after you?"
+
+Evarts rose, with a surly air. He stepped slowly ashore, after which one
+of the crew cast off. The engine began to move, and the "Morton" started
+back to her post.
+
+"Oh, you feel fine and important, just at this minute!" grumbled the
+discharged foreman, under his breath, glaring wickedly at the broad back
+of the young chief engineer. "But I'll do something to take the
+importance out of you before very long, Tom Reade!"
+
+Truth to tell, Tom, though he was still alert to the interests of his
+employers, felt anything but important. The thought of Harry Hazelton's
+unknown fate caused a great, choking lump in his throat as Reade stepped
+from the pier to land.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MR. BASCOMB IS PEEVISH
+
+
+At the first blush of dawn Tom despatched the tireless Nicolas to Blixton
+to notify the police of the explosions and of the disappearance of Harry
+Hazelton.
+
+Two men in blue, wearing stars on their coats, came over within an hour,
+walked about and looked wise until noon. They discovered nothing whatever,
+and their theories did not strike Reade as being worthy of attention.
+
+As soon as possible the divers were sent down at the two wrecked parts of
+the retaining wall. These men reported that the breaches extended ten
+feet beneath the surface at some points; only eight feet at other points.
+The foundations of the walls were reported as being secure. Then Tom,
+under the directions of two divers, put on a diver's suit and went down
+himself, for the first time in his life. After some two hours, with
+frequent ascents to the surface, the young chief engineer had satisfied
+himself that the foundations were secure. Then he did some rapid figuring.
+
+"The loss will not exceed eight thousand dollars---the cost of rebuilding
+the missing parts of the walls," Reade informed Superintendent Renshaw.
+
+"Only eight thousand dollars!" whistled the superintendent.
+
+"Well, that figure isn't anywhere nearly as high as I feared it might be,"
+Tom pursued.
+
+"But it will strike the directors of the Melliston Company as being pretty
+big for an extra bill," muttered Renshaw. "Especially, since---"
+
+The superintendent paused.
+
+"You were going to say," smiled Tom, wanly, "since the loss wouldn't have
+happened if I hadn't kicked the gamblers out of camp."
+
+"That's about the size of it, Mr. Reade," nodded Renshaw. "Directors of
+big companies are less interested in moral reforms than in dividends.
+They're likely to make a big kick over what your crusade has cost them
+already, even if it costs them no more."
+
+"We'll see to it that it doesn't cost them any more," Tom retorted.
+"Every night we'll watch that sea wall the way a mother does a sick baby.
+There'll be no more explosions. As to the directors kicking over the
+present expense, they'll have a prompt chance to do it. As soon as the
+telegraph office in Blixton was open this morning I wired the president of
+the company. Now, I'm going ashore. I can't do anything out here to help
+you, can I?"
+
+"Nothing," replied Renshaw. "If I didn't know how foolish the advice would
+sound, Mr. Reade, I'd urge you to take a nap."
+
+"I'll take a nap when I find it impossible to keep my eyes open any
+longer," Tom compromised. "For the next few hours---work and lots of it."
+
+As yet no effort had been made to repair the breaches in the wall. The
+different gangs were working that day in nearer shore. The divers,
+gathered on a scow, were now waiting for the "Morton" to convey them back
+to shore. Reade decided to go with them.
+
+"Twenty minutes to two," murmured Tom to himself, glancing at his watch as
+the "Morton" went laboriously back over the dancing, glinting waves.
+"There's a train due at Blixton at 1:30. By the time I get back to the
+house I ought to find one or more officials of the company impatiently
+waiting to jump on my devoted neck."
+
+Nor was Tom disappointed in this expectation. Pacing up and down on the
+porch of the house occupied by the engineers and superintendent was George
+C. Bascomb, president of the Melliston Company. Behind him stood Nicolas,
+respectfully eager to do anything he could for the comfort of the great
+man.
+
+"Ah, there you are, Reade," called President Bascomb in an irritated tone,
+as he caught sight of the young engineer striding forward. "Now, what's
+all this row that you wired us about?"
+
+"Will you come down to the water, and go out with me to look at the
+damage, sir?" asked Tom, as he took the president's reluctantly offered
+hand.
+
+"No," grunted Mr. Bascomb. "Let me hear the story first. Come inside
+and tell me about it."
+
+"Our friend is not quite so gracious as he has been on former meetings,"
+thought Tom, as he led the way inside. "I wonder if he is going to get
+cranky?"
+
+Inside was a little office room, as in the foremen's barracks.
+
+"Any decent cigars here?" questioned Mr. Bascomb, after exploring his own
+pockets and finding them innocent of tobacco.
+
+"No, sir," Tom answered. "No one here smokes."
+
+"I've got to have a cigar," the president of the company insisted.
+
+"Then, sir, if you'll give Nicolas your orders, he'll run over to Blixton
+and get you what you want."
+
+The Mexican departed in haste on the errand.
+
+"Now, first of all, Reade," began the president, "I am disgusted at
+learning of one fool mistake that you've made."
+
+"What is that, sir?" Tom asked, coloring.
+
+"I've just learned that you discharged Evarts---one of our best and most
+useful men."
+
+"I did discharge him, sir," Reade admitted.
+
+"Take him back, at once."
+
+"I'm sorry, sir, but I can't do it. He---"
+
+"I don't think you quite understand," broke in Mr. Bascomb coldly. "I
+directed you to take Mr. Evarts back on this work."
+
+"I was about to tell you, sir, why I can't do anything of the sort.
+I---"
+
+"Stop right there, Reade," ordered President Bascomb, in his most
+aggressive, bullying manner. "The first point that we have to settle is
+that Evarts must come back on the pay-roll and have his old position. Be
+good enough to let that proposition sink in before we take up the second."
+
+"I am very sorry, sir," Tom murmured respectfully, "but I can't and won't
+have Evarts back here. I won't have him around the work at all. Now what
+is the second proposition, sir?"
+
+As Tom spoke he looked straight into Mr. Bascomb's eyes. The other glared
+at him unbelievingly but angrily.
+
+"Young man, you don't appear to understand that I am president and head of
+the Melliston Company."
+
+"I quite understand it, sir," Reade answered. "At the same time I am chief
+engineer here, and I am committed to building the breakwater and dredging
+out the enclosed bay or harbor, all within a certain fixed appropriation.
+In order to keep my part of the bargain I must have men with me on whom I
+can depend to the fullest limit. Evarts isn't such a man and I won't have
+him on the work again."
+
+"He'll go on the pay-roll, anyway," snorted Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"I can't help what you may see fit to pay him, Mr. Bascomb, provided you
+pay him somewhere else. But the fellow can't go on the pay-roll here for
+the simple reason that he wouldn't be allowed to visit this construction
+camp for the purpose of getting his money. Mr. Bascomb, I am not trying to
+ride a high horse. I recognize that you are president of the company, and
+that I must take all reasonable orders from you and carry them out to the
+letter. Yet I can't take any orders that would simply hinder my work and
+damage my reputation as an engineer. Evarts can't come back into this camp
+as long as I am in charge here."
+
+"We'll take that up again presently," returned Mr. Bascomb, with an air of
+ruffled dignity. "Now, there's another matter that we must discuss. I
+know what has been done in the way of great damage to the retaining wall.
+I also know that this damage came through enmity that you stirred up by
+drumming certain parties out of this camp."
+
+"You refer, sir, I take it, to my act in having Blixton police officers
+come in here and chase out some gamblers who had come here for the purpose
+of winning the money of the workmen?"
+
+"That's it," nodded Bascomb. "In that matter you went too far---altogether
+too far!"
+
+"I'm afraid I don't understand you, sir."
+
+"You mean, Reade, that you don't want to understand me," snapped the
+president. "You admit having chased out the gamblers, don't you?"
+
+"Of course, I admit it, sir."
+
+"That was a bad move. In the future, Reade, you will not interfere with
+any forms of amusement that the men may select for themselves in their
+evening hours."
+
+Tom stared at the speaker in undisguised amazement.
+
+"But, Mr. Bascomb, the men are shamelessly robbed by the sharpers who come
+here to gamble with them."
+
+"That's the men's own affair," scoffed the president. "Anyway, they have
+a right to pitch away their wages if they want to. Reade, when you're as
+old as I am you will understand that workmen who throw away their money
+make the best workmen. They never have any savings, hence they must make
+every effort to keep their jobs. A workman with savings becomes too
+independent."
+
+"I am certain you have seen more of the world than I have, Mr. Bascomb,"
+Reade replied, respectfully. "At the same time I can't agree with you on
+the point you have just stated. A workman with a bank account has always
+a greater amount of self-respect, and a man who has self-respect is bound
+to make a good citizen and a good workman. But there are still other
+reasons why I had the gamblers chased out. Gambling here in the camp would
+always create a great deal of disorder. Disorder destroys discipline, and
+a camp like this, in order to give the best results in the way of work,
+must have discipline. Moreover, the men, when gambling, remain up until
+all hours of the night. A man who has been up most of the night can't give
+an honest day's work in return for his wages. Unless the men get their
+sleep and are kept in good condition we can't get the work out of them that
+we have a right to expect."
+
+"The right man can _drive_ workmen," declared Mr. Bascomb, with emphasis.
+"You'll have to drive your men. Get all the work out of them, but drop at
+once this foolish policy of interfering with what they do after the whistle
+blows. We can't have any more of this nonsense. It costs too much. By
+the way, how much will it cost to repair the damage to the retaining
+walls?"
+
+"About eight thousand dollars, sir, if my first figuring was correct," was
+Reade's answer.
+
+"Eight thousand dollars!" scowled President Bascomb. "Now, Reade, doesn't
+that amount of wanton, revengeful mischief teach you the folly of trying to
+regulate camp life outside of working hours?"
+
+"I'm afraid it doesn't, sir."
+
+"Then you must be a fool, Reade!"
+
+"Thank you, sir. I will add that you're not the first man who has
+suspected it."
+
+"You will, therefore, Reade," continued Mr. Bascomb, with his grandest air
+of authority, "cause it to become known throughout the camp that you are
+not going to interfere any further with any form of amusement that is
+brought to the camp evenings by outsiders."
+
+"Is that proposition number two, sir?" queried the young chief engineer.
+
+"It is."
+
+"Then please don't misunderstand me, sir," Reade begged, respectfully,
+"but it is declined, as is proposition number one."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you are going to go on with your fool way of
+doing things?"
+
+"Yes, sir---until I am convinced that it is a fool way."
+
+"But I've just told you that it is," snapped Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Then I say it very respectfully, sir, but pardon me for replying that I
+don't consider the evidence very convincing. I have shown you why I must
+have good order in the camp, and I have told you that I do not propose to
+allow gambling or any other disorderly conduct to go on within camp limits.
+I can't agree to these things, and then hope to win out by keeping the cost
+of the work within the appropriation."
+
+"Do you feel that you'll keep within the appropriation by making enemies
+who deliberately blow up our masonry?" glared Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"I doubt if there will be any more expense in that line, sir. I intend
+to have such a watch kept over the wall as to prevent any further mischief
+of the kind."
+
+"Watchmen are an item of expense, aren't they?" snorted the president.
+
+"Yes, sir; but next to nothing at all as compared with the mischief they
+can prevent."
+
+"I have already told you how to prevent the mischief, Reade. Stop all of
+your foolish nonsense and let the men have their old-time pastimes."
+
+"I can't do it, sir."
+
+"Have you paper, pen and ink here?" thundered Mr. Bascomb. "If so, bring
+them."
+
+Tom quietly obeyed.
+
+"Reade," again thundered the president of the Melliston Company, "I have
+had as much of your nonsense as I intend to stand. You are out of here,
+from this minute. Take that pen and sign your resignation!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+TOM ISN'T AS EASY AS HE LOOKS
+
+
+"I don't believe I'll do that, sir," murmured Tom, putting down the pen.
+
+"You don't, eh?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Oh, then you'd rather wait and be forced out?"
+
+"How about the contract, sir, between your company and Reade & Hazelton?
+Contracts can't be broken as lightly as your words imply."
+
+"I'll break that contract, if I set out to," declared Mr. Bascomb, purpling
+with half-suppressed rage. "I've every ground for breaking the contract.
+You're running things with a high hand here, and disorganizing all our
+efforts. No contract will stand on presentation of any such evidence as
+that before a court."
+
+"I am quite willing to leave that to a court, if I have to," Reade
+rejoined. His tones were decidedly cold. "Mr. Bascomb, even if I were
+inclined to forfeit the contract I would have no legal right to do so
+without the approval of my partner, Hazelton."
+
+"Humph! He's dead," snorted the president.
+
+"That yet remains to be proved, sir," Tom answered huskily, his voice
+breaking slightly at thought of Harry.
+
+"How on earth do you think you could defend a contract against a wealthy
+company like ours? Why, we could swamp you under our loose change alone.
+How much money have you in the world? Two or three thousand dollars,
+perhaps."
+
+"I've a little more than that," Tom Reade smiled. "For one thing, I'm a
+third owner in the Ambition mine, on Indian Smoke Range, Nevada, and the
+Ambition has been a dividend payer almost from the start. Hazelton owns
+another third of the mine."
+
+"Eh?" gasped Mr. Bascomb, plainly taken aback.
+
+"Oh, we're not millionaires," Tom laughed easily. "Yet I fancy Hazelton
+and I could raise enough money to fight any breach-of-contract case in
+court. With a steady-paying mine, you know, we could even discount to
+some extent the earnings of future years."
+
+"Oh, well, we don't want hard feelings," urged Mr. Bascomb, his manner
+becoming more peaceable. "The plain truth is, Reade, that we're utterly
+dissatisfied with your way of managing things here. When you know how the
+Melliston Company feels toward you, you don't want to be impudent enough to
+insist on hanging on, do you?"
+
+"I am certain that I speak for my partner, sir, when I state that we won't
+drop the contract until we have fulfilled it," Tom muttered, coolly, but
+with great firmness.
+
+"What's all this dispute about anyway, Bascomb?" a voice called cheerily
+from the hallway.
+
+"Oh, it's you, is it, Prenter?" asked Mr. Bascomb, turning and not looking
+overjoyed at the interruption.
+
+Simon F. Prenter was treasurer of the Melliston Company. Tom had met him
+at the time of signing the engineers' contract with the company. Now Reade
+sprang up to place a chair for the new arrival.
+
+"What was all the row about?" Mr. Prenter asked affably. He was a man of
+about forty-five, rather stout, with light blue eyes that looked at one
+with engaging candor.
+
+"I have been suggesting to Reade that he might resign," replied Mr.
+Bascomb, stiffly.
+
+"Why?" asked Prenter, opening his eyes wider.
+
+"Because he has raised the mischief on this breakwater job. He has all
+the men by their ears, and the camp in open mutiny."
+
+"So?" asked Mr. Prenter, looking astonished.
+
+"Exactly, and therefore I have called upon the young man to resign."
+
+"And he refuses?" queried the treasurer. "Most astounding obstinacy on the
+part of so young a man when dealing with his elder."
+
+"I'll try to explain to you, Mr. Prenter," volunteered Reade, "just what
+I've been trying to tell Mr. Bascomb."
+
+"I don't know that I need trouble you," replied Mr. Prenter, moving so that
+he stood more behind the irate president. "I overheard what you were
+telling him."
+
+Then the treasurer did a most unexpected thing. He winked broadly at the
+young engineer.
+
+"Yes, Prenter," Mr. Bascomb went on, "this camp is in a state of mutiny.
+The men are all at odds with their chief."
+
+"Strange," murmured the treasurer of the Melliston Company. "When I paused
+on the porch, before entering, I thought I caught sight of unusual
+activity down at the water front. Did you notice it, too, Bascomb?"
+
+"I noticed nothing of the sort," replied the president stiffly. "Am I to
+infer, Prenter, that you are going to follow your occasional tactics and
+try to laugh me out of my decision as president of the company?"
+
+"Oh, nothing of the sort, I assure you," hastily protested the treasurer.
+But he found chance to drive another wink Tom Reade's way. The young chief
+engineer could not but feel that an ally had suddenly come his way.
+
+"Now, what is the nature and extent of the mutiny?" asked Mr. Prenter.
+
+"First of all, eight thousand dollars' damage has been done to the
+retaining wall of the breakwater," replied Mr. Bascomb. "That is,
+according to Mr. Reade's figures, which very likely may prove to be too
+low. Also, Mr. Hazelton has been murdered."
+
+"Hazelton---killed?" gasped Mr. Prenter showing genuine concern. "Of
+course I know that the telegram to the office said that Hazelton was
+missing, but I didn't suppose it was anything as tragic as a killing."
+
+"Well, Hazelton can't be found, so I haven't a doubt he was killed as part
+of a general plan of mutiny and revenge on the part of the mixed crews of
+men working here," declared Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Oh, I sincerely hope that Hazelton hasn't lost his life here!" cried Mr.
+Prenter. "Reade, aren't you going to take us down to the water front and
+show us the extent of the damage?"
+
+"I shall be only too glad to do so, sir," Tom agreed.
+
+Even Mr. Bascomb consented at last to go. As they gained the porch
+Nicolas rushed up with the cigars for which the president had sent him.
+While Mr. Bascomb paused to light one, Mr. Prenter thrust an arm through
+Tom's and led that youth down the road.
+
+"Now, Mr. Reade," murmured the treasurer, earnestly, "Mr. Bascomb, of
+course, is our president, and I don't want you to treat him with the
+slightest disrespect. But Bascomb isn't the majority stockholder nor the
+whole board of directors, so I'll just drop this hint: When Bascomb talks
+of resignations don't attach too serious importance to it until you receive
+a resolution endorsing the same view and passed by the board of directors
+of the company."
+
+"Thank you. I have no intention of resigning," smiled Tom.
+
+"Now, let's go on," continued Mr. Prenter.
+
+Mr. Bascomb, having his cigar lighted, seemed to prefer strolling in the
+rear by himself.
+
+"Now, I don't want to give you any wrong impressions, Mr. Reade," went on
+Mr. Prenter. "Mr. Bascomb is the head of our company, but other directors
+represent more of the stock of the company than he does. I am one of them.
+Sometimes Mr. Bascomb gets a bit hard-headed, and he is inclined to give
+orders that others of us wouldn't approve. I judge that you and he were
+having some dispute when I happened along."
+
+"I didn't regard it as a dispute, sir," Reade rejoined. "In the first
+place, I had discharged, for incompetency and faithlessness, a foreman
+named Evarts.
+
+"And Evarts is a pet of Mr. Bascomb's," smiled Mr. Prenter. "I imagine
+that Evarts is even some sort of family connection who has to be looked
+after and kept in a good job."
+
+"Anyway," Tom continued, "I explained that Evarts was worse than useless
+here and that I couldn't have him in the camp or on the job."
+
+"Quite right, I fancy," nodded Mr. Prenter. "In the second place, Mr.
+Bascomb ordered me to stop my crusade against the gamblers who had tried
+to invade the camp and rob the men of their earnings. Hazelton and I had
+that sort of row once out in Arizona---and we won out."
+
+"You deserve to win out here, too," remarked Mr. Prenter. "I have no
+patience with anything but straight, uncompromising right. We can't
+control the men, if they see fit to leave the camp at night, but you have
+every right---and it's your duty---to see to it that no disorder is allowed
+within camp limits. I, too, have heard something about your trouble here,
+Mr. Reade, and I can promise you that the directors generally will sustain
+you. So Mr. Bascomb demanded your resignation?"
+
+"He did, sir."
+
+"Let it go at that," smiled Mr. Prenter. "You may even, sometime, if it
+will please Mr. Bascomb, hand him your resignation. I will see to it that
+it doesn't get past the board of directors. Mr. Bascomb is irritable, and
+sometimes he is a downright crank, but he is valuable to us just the same.
+We feel, too, Reade, that you and Hazelton are just the men we need to put
+this breakwater through in the best fashion."
+
+"Even though at least eight thousand dollars in damage was done last
+night?" queried Tom.
+
+"Yes, even in the face of that. I am certain that you will know how to
+forestall any more such spite work."
+
+"Now, I'm not altogether so sure of that, sir," Reade answered, quickly.
+"Of course we'll be eternally vigilant after this, but the trick was done
+last night so cleverly and mysteriously that we may be surprised again by
+the plotters. Speaking of mystery, could anything be stranger, or harder
+to explain, than what happened to poor Hazelton?"
+
+"There _was_ mystery for you!" nodded Mr. Prenter. "Have you any ideas
+whatever on the subject of Hazelton's disappearance?"
+
+"Not the slightest," groaned Tom. "I know all the indications are that he
+has been killed, and I ought to believe that such is the case. But I
+simply won't believe it. Why, if he were killed, what became of the body?"
+
+"It's a puzzle," sighed Mr. Prenter.
+
+They were now nearing the land end of the breakwater wall. Mr. Bascomb
+overtook them. Together the three strolled out along the wall, halting
+frequently, to observe what the men were doing. It was their plan to keep
+on until they came to the scene of the two explosions of the night before.
+
+"Just what are you doing here?" asked Mr. Bascomb, stopping and pointing to
+a gang of men at work on a scow moored against the wall.
+
+"I can tell you, after a fashion, sir," Reade answered. "Yet this was a
+part of Hazelton's performance. He had charge here, and knew ever so much
+about it. Poor old Harry!"
+
+Behind them, at the beginning of the wall, a long, loud whistle sounded.
+
+In a moment fully a hundred of the workmen stood up, waved their caps and
+cheered as though they had gone mad.
+
+Coming forward, with long strides, was Harry Hazelton, in the flesh!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+MR. PRENTER INVESTIGATES
+
+
+Tom suddenly felt dizzy. He wished to race back, to be the first to greet
+his chum and press his hand. But just then Reade felt strangely
+bewildered.
+
+"Of course I don't believe in ghosts!" Tom laughed nervously.
+
+"No!" chuckled Mr. Prenter. "This is real flesh and blood that is coming
+toward us."
+
+Now, for the first time, Tom Reade knew just how fully he had believed, in
+the inner temple of his soul, that Harry Hazelton had been actually killed.
+
+"Pulling my work to pieces, are you, Tom?" Harry called jovially.
+
+"P---p---pardon me for not coming to meet you, old fellow, b---b----but I'm
+dumbfounded at seeing you," Tom called back.
+
+Harry, too, looked rather unsteady in his gait by the time he joined them.
+The last few yards he tried to run along the wall. Tom thrust out an arm
+and caught him just in time.
+
+"You've been hurt, Harry!" gasped Tom.
+
+"Yes, and I guess I'm a bit weak, even now," Hazelton mumbled. "Hurt?
+Look at this."
+
+Hazelton uncovered his head, displaying a court-plaster bandage underneath
+which clotted blood showed.
+
+"Where in the world have you been?" Tom quivered.
+
+"At sea," Harry answered, with an attempt at banter.
+
+"What happened to you?"
+
+"Tom, you remember the big black man I imagined that I saw last night?"
+
+"Of course I do."
+
+"He was a reality," Harry went on soberly. "After you had gone he appeared
+again. We had it hot and heavy. I saw your boat coming, and I yelled---"
+
+"I heard you," Tom interposed. "We got along as speedily as we could."
+
+"And you didn't find me," finished Harry. "That brute hit me over the head
+with something. We clinched and rolled into the gulf together. That was
+the last that I remember clearly for some time. For a long time I had a
+dream that I was bobbing about in water, and that I had my arms around a
+floating log. By and by I came to sufficiently to discover that the dream
+was a reality. I was holding to the log in grim earnest. How I came to
+find the log I can't imagine. I think, while more than half unconscious,
+I must have been swimming straight out into the gulf. Then I must have
+touched the log and clung to it instinctively. Anyway, when I recovered
+more fully I knew that the 'long-shore lights looked thousands of miles
+away. I was too weak even to dream of trying to swim back, or to push
+the log before me. So I got a stout piece of cord out of one of my pockets
+and lashed myself to the log. I was afraid I might become unconscious
+again. A part of the time I was unconscious.
+
+"Well after daylight I saw a sloop headed my way. It didn't look as though
+it would go straight by either. So I waved my handkerchief---my hat was
+gone. After a while the skipper of the sloop saw me and headed in for me.
+It was a sloop that carries the mails to Hetherton, a village that has no
+rail connection.
+
+"The captain hauled me aboard, questioned me, looked as though he more than
+half doubted my yarn, and then put me to bed in the cabin of the sloop.
+He attended to me as best he could. When we reached Hetherton, about noon,
+a doctor patched me up. I had something to eat, bought this new hat, and
+hired a driver to take me ten miles to the railway. Then I came over here
+as soon as I could, and---pardon me, but I'm feeling weak. I'll sit down
+right here."
+
+Harry sat down heavily on the wall.
+
+"Why didn't you wire me?" asked Tom.
+
+"Why, you didn't doubt but that I'd turn up as surely as any other bad
+egg, did you?" questioned Harry, looking up.
+
+"Chum, I wouldn't admit it, even to myself, but I feared you were dead.
+But we mustn't waste time talking. Describe that black man to me, and---"
+
+"And the company will hire detectives to start right on the trail of that
+negro," interjected Mr. Prenter.
+
+"If---if the expense is really warranted," ended Mr. Bascomb, cautiously.
+
+"Warranted?" retorted the treasurer of the Melliston Company. "Why, it
+is absolutely necessary to protect our work here! That big negro is the
+key to the mystery. We must catch him if it costs us a thousand dollars."
+
+"Oh, well," assented President Bascomb, reluctantly.
+
+"I---I guess I'm all right to start in to work now," Harry suggested,
+trying to rise.
+
+"Sit down---you're not!" replied Tom and Treasurer Prenter, in the same
+breath, as both pressed Harry back to the wall.
+
+"We don't need work so much to-day," Mr. Prenter continued. "What we want
+to do is to solve this mystery. You stay here, Hazelton. I'll go back
+alone and find a 'bus or a carriage. Then we'll go back to camp and hold
+a council of war. Something must be done, and we'll decide _how_ it's to
+be done."
+
+Mr. Prenter, though no longer a young man, proved that he carried both
+speed and agility in his feet. While he was gone Tom endeavored to get a
+few more particulars from Harry, but Hazelton simply didn't know anything
+that threw any more light on the dread mystery of the breakwater.
+
+"Then a million-dollar undertaking like this is to be constantly imperiled,
+just because of a senseless moral crusade that you two young men are trying
+to put through in the camp," declared Mr. Bascomb moodily.
+
+Tom covertly signaled his chum to pay no heed to this remark.
+
+Within a quarter of an hour Treasurer Prenter returned in a stage drawn by
+two sorry looking horses.
+
+"This will carry us up to the house, if the affair doesn't break down,"
+Mr. Prenter called cheerily. "Come along, folks."
+
+Soon afterwards the four were back on the porch. Nicolas came gliding out
+to see what he could do for their comfort.
+
+"Just circulate around and make sure that no one gets close enough to hear
+what we're talking about," Mr. Prenter directed. He had already ordered
+the driver of the stage to withdraw a few rods and await orders.
+
+"Now, then, Hazelton," continued the treasurer, "we're anxious to hear more
+of your strange story."
+
+"I've told you all there is to it," protested Harry.
+
+"Surely, there must be some more to it."
+
+"There isn't."
+
+"Then, for the tale of an engineer who was all but murdered, and a case
+enveloped in mystery from end to end," cried Mr. Prenter, "we have a most
+singular scarcity of details."
+
+"There are only two more details needed, as it appears to me," Tom remarked
+quietly.
+
+"Good! And what are they?" demanded the treasurer, wheeling around to look
+keenly at the young chief engineer.
+
+"The two details we now need," Reade continued, "are, first, who was the
+negro? Second, who was behind the negro in this rascally work?"
+
+"Only two points to be solved," suggested the treasurer mockingly, "but
+pretty big points. Of course, the first point is---"
+
+"To find that negro, and get him jailed," Tom declared incisively.
+
+"Good enough!" nodded Mr. Prenter. "The detectives will find the negro."
+
+"Will they?" Tom asked. "Then that will be something new, indeed. I've
+seen detectives employed a good deal, Mr. Prenter, and generally all they
+catch are severe colds and items to stick in on the expense account."
+
+"Oh, there are some real detectives in this country," contended Mr.
+Prenter. "We'll engage some of them, too."
+
+"The expense of hiring detectives will be very large," murmured Mr.
+Bascomb uneasily.
+
+"Yes, it will," agreed the treasurer with a laugh. "But never mind. It's
+always my task to find funds for the company, you know."
+
+"Harry," Tom broke in, "just what did that negro look like?"
+
+"About six-foot-three," answered Hazelton, slowly and thoughtfully. "He
+was broad of shoulder and comparatively slim at the waist. He must weigh
+from two hundred and twenty-five to thirty pounds. As to age, I couldn't
+tell you whether he was nearer thirty or forty years. From his agility I
+should place him in the thirty-year class."
+
+"Any beard?"
+
+"Smooth-faced."
+
+"Scars?"
+
+"I couldn't see that much in the dark."
+
+"Color of his clothes?"
+
+"Some darkish stuff---that's all I can say."
+
+"Could you pick him out of a crowd of negroes?"
+
+"Not if they were all of the same height and weight," Hazelton admitted.
+
+"Do you think you ever saw him before?" Reade pressed.
+
+"I'm sure that I never have," Harry replied.
+
+"Then he wasn't one of our men in this camp at any time?" Mr. Prenter
+interjected.
+
+"We have never had a man in the camp as large as this negro," Harry
+rejoined.
+
+"Such a very large black man ought not to be hard for the detectives to
+locate," Prenter continued.
+
+"Very good, sir. Then you can let the sleuths have a try at the matter,"
+Tom suggested.
+
+"Have you any telegraph blanks here?"
+
+Tom went inside, coming out with a pad of blanks. Mr. Prenter addressed a
+dispatch to the head of a detective agency in Mobile.
+
+"We'll get the 'bus driver to take this over to town," said Mr. Prenter,
+as he signed the dispatch.
+
+"You had better send your dispatch by Nicolas, who is so faithful that he
+can't be pumped, and he never talks about things that he shouldn't."
+
+The Mexican was accordingly sent away in the stage. When he returned
+Nicolas busied himself with getting supper and setting it on the table.
+Superintendent Renshaw returned from the work in time to join the others
+at table.
+
+"Mr. Reade, how are you going to protect the works to-night?" inquired the
+superintendent.
+
+"I'm going to order Foreman Corbett and twenty men to night duty," Tom
+answered. "The motor boat will also be out to-night. We'll have every
+bit of the wall watched by men with lanterns."
+
+"What you ought to do," suggested Treasurer Prenter, "is to light the
+breakwater up with electric lights. You have steam power enough here, and
+with a dynamo you could supply current to the lights."
+
+"There's the expense to be considered," mildly observed President Bascomb.
+
+"The expense is a good deal less than having the wall damaged by more
+explosions," said Prenter, rather sharply. "Reade, how long would it take
+you to get an electric light service going?"
+
+"It ought not to take more than three or four days, sir, if we can pick up
+a suitable dynamo in Mobile. But there's another point to be considered.
+We very likely would have to obtain the permission of the Washington
+authorities before we could run a line of lights out into the Gulf of
+Mexico. You see, sir, so many uncharted lights might confuse the
+navigators of passing ships."
+
+"Write Washington, then, and find out where you stand in the matter,"
+directed the treasurer.
+
+"Yes, sir; I'll do that," Reade agreed.
+
+"But don't order any electrical supplies until you've got an estimate of
+the cost and have it approved by me," hinted President Bascomb. This
+cautious direction made Mr. Prenter shrug his shoulders.
+
+Dinner finished, all hands went out to sit on the porch. Mr. Bascomb soon
+began to ask questions about the camp, the housing of the men, and about
+other details of the camp.
+
+"Although it is dark it's still early. Wouldn't you like to go over
+through the camp with us?" proposed Tom.
+
+Mr. Bascomb agreeing, the whole party set out, only Nicolas remaining
+behind to keep an eye over the house.
+
+Though he did not then suspect it Tom was on the threshold of more trouble
+in the camp.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+INVITED TO LEAVE CAMP
+
+
+Lanterns hung here and there on poles lighted the camp. Men who toil hard
+all day do not usually want a long evening. Many of the men were already
+inside their tents or shacks, preparing for bed.
+
+At least two hundred, however, were still stirring in the streets of the
+camp. Tom led his friends near one of the groups. A warning hiss was
+heard, and then a man in a remote group, urged by his comrades, rose and
+staggered toward a shack. Tom was at the man's side in an instant. He
+proved to be an Italian.
+
+"My man, you appear to be intoxicated," Tom remarked, quietly, as he
+gripped the Italian by the arm.
+
+"No spikka da English," hiccoughed the laborer. As he spoke he tried to
+free himself from the engineer's grasp. He staggered, and would have
+fallen, had not Tom prevented the fall.
+
+"Where's this man's gang-master?" Tom demanded, looking about him sharply,
+while he still held the drunken man.
+
+None of the Italians addressed appeared to know. For the most part they
+took refuge in the fact or the pretense that they didn't understand
+English.
+
+"Get an Italian gang-master, Harry," Tom murmured softly.
+
+Hazelton bolted away, but was soon back, followed by a dark-skinned man who
+came with apparent reluctance.
+
+"You're a gang-master?" Tom demanded, looking sharply at the man. "This
+fellow is intoxicated."
+
+"Is he?" asked the gang-master.
+
+"Yes, he is," Tom declared, bluntly. "Now, where did the man get the
+liquor."
+
+"I do not know," replied the gang-master, shrugging his shoulders.
+
+"Then it's your business to know---if he got his liquor in camp. We won't
+allow any of that stuff in camp, and you gang-masters all know that."
+
+"I can't stop a man from going to town to get liquor," argued the
+gang-master.
+
+"No; you can't," Tom admitted. "Neither can I. But it's your duty,
+gang-master, to see that no liquor is brought back into camp. This man
+hasn't been to town for the stuff either. He hasn't had time enough to go
+away over to Blixton and get enough liquor to make him drunk. Moreover,
+in his present condition, the fellow couldn't have walked back from town
+the same evening. This man got his liquor in camp, and it will have to be
+stopped. Now, put this man in his shack; see that he gets into bed. Then
+come back to me."
+
+The gang-master obeyed.
+
+"We'll see if we can't put a complete stop to this sort of thing," Reade
+muttered.
+
+"Now, do you think it's going to be well to interfere so much with the
+movements of the men?" asked President Bascomb, in an undertone. "I am
+afraid that you'll only start more dissatisfaction and more treachery among
+them."
+
+"This having liquor in camp is going to be stopped, sir," Tom insisted.
+"A keg of liquor will demoralize a whole campful of men like these. They
+are an excitable lot, and they go crazy when there's any liquor around. If
+we don't put a stop to it, then there'll be fights, and then a few murders
+are most likely to follow. I've had plenty of experience with men such as
+we have here, and the stopping of liquor in camp means our only safety, and
+our only chance to have our work well done. Come along; let the
+gang-master follow us."
+
+Tom went directly up to a group of workmen who had been looking curiously
+on. Most of them were Italians, but there were a few negroes present.
+
+"Now; men, gather around me," Tom requested. "I want to talk to you.
+Come close."
+
+As they did so Reade rested a hand on the shoulder of a negro.
+
+"My friend," said Tom, "you've been drinking to-night."
+
+"No, sah, boss! 'Deed I hasn't," replied the negro, earnestly.
+
+"Man, don't you think I have a nose?" Tom demanded, dryly. "Every time you
+open your mouth I smell the fumes of the stuff. There are other men in
+this group, too, who have been drinking. I want you all to realize that
+this sort of thing must stop in this camp. We don't want fights and
+killings, nor do we want men who wake up so seedy in the morning that they
+can't do a proper day's work. As I look about me I see at least eight men
+who have been drinking this evening. That shows me that some one has been
+bringing liquor into the camp."
+
+Other workmen were now approaching, curious to know what was in the air.
+
+Tom, glancing about him, suddenly, fastened his gaze on one man in
+particular. This was a lanky, sallow-looking chap of some thirty years.
+
+"See here, just what is your errand in this camp?" Reade demanded,
+confronting the man.
+
+"Is it any of your particular business?" demanded the fellow, with some
+insolence in his tone.
+
+"Yes; it is," Reade assured him, promptly. "I'm chief engineer in this
+camp, and I've asked you what you are doing here!"
+
+"Is it against any law for an outsider to come into camp?" argued the
+stranger.
+
+"Answer me," Tom insisted, stepping closer. "What are you doing in this
+camp?"
+
+"I won't tell you," came the surly retort.
+
+"You don't have to," Reade snapped, as he suddenly ran one hand over the
+sallow man's clothing. Out of the fellow's hip pocket Tom briskly brought
+a quart-bottle to light. It was about half-filled with some liquid.
+
+"Here, give that back to me!" growled the fellow. "It's mine."
+
+"I'm glad you admit it," rejoined Reade, drawing the cork and taking a
+sniff as Hazelton slipped in front of him to protect him. "This is liquor.
+So you're the bootlegger who is bringing this stuff into camp to sell to
+the men? You won't come here after to-night if I can find any way of
+keeping you out."
+
+Reade finished his remark by re-corking the bottle and throwing it down
+hard on the ground. The bottle was smashed to flinders, the liquor running
+over the ground.
+
+"Here, you! You had no right to do that!" roared the fellow. He made an
+effort to reach Tom, but Harry gave the fellow a shove that sent him
+spinning back. "You'll pay me for that stuff, Reade, since you destroyed
+it."
+
+"How much?" asked Tom, artlessly.
+
+"A dollar and a half," insisted the stranger, coming forward as Reade
+thrust one hand into trousers pocket.
+
+Tom withdrew the hand, laughing.
+
+"Much obliged, my friend," mocked the young chief engineer. "You've
+confessed all that I wanted to know. You've tried to charge me the price
+of a pint of liquor sold in single drinks. That confesses that you've been
+in camp to sell liquor to the men. I shall pay you nothing, for you're
+here against the law and against the camp regulations. You're engaged in
+selling liquor illegally. If I catch you in camp again on that business,
+my friend, I'll arrest you and hold you until the officers come over from
+Blixton and take you."
+
+Then, in the next moment, Tom suddenly shot out:
+
+"Harry, see to it that our friend doesn't run away just yet!"
+
+"What are you up to?" demanded the man, as Tom stepped close once more,
+while Harry rested a hand on his shoulder.
+
+"For a rather warm evening," Reade rejoined, "it strikes me that it's a bit
+odd for you to be wearing a long top-coat. I'm going to look you over a
+bit."
+
+"You get out and keep away from me!" blustered the man, raising one of his
+fists. But Harry caught at that arm and held it. Treasurer Prenter, who
+had been looking on with keen interest, seized the other arm.
+
+"You let go of me, or you'll run up against the law for assault!" warned
+the stranger.
+
+His captors, however, held him, while Tom rapidly ran his hands over the
+stranger's clothing. As a result, within less than a full minute, Tom had
+removed two full quart bottles and six smaller ones from the fellow's
+various pockets. All of these the young chief engineer threw on the
+ground, smashing them.
+
+From the crowd gathered about, which numbered more than sixty men of three
+different races, a howl went up. President Bascomb began to shiver.
+
+"I'll make you sweat for this!" raved the stranger.
+
+"Let go of the fellow, please," said Tom. Then, as Harry and Mr. Prenter
+stepped aside, Reade added, "I'll admit, Mr. Bootleg, that I've behaved in
+a rather high-handed fashion with you. But I'm justified in doing it. You
+have been breaking the law of the state, moving through this camp and
+selling liquor. You represent the scum of the otherwise decent population
+of Alabama. If you think you've any redress in the courts, my name is
+Reade and you can hire a lawyer and get after me as hard and as fast as
+you like."
+
+"I'll take personal satisfaction out of you!" stormed the fellow.
+
+"All right," Tom agreed laconically. "You may start now, if you feel like
+doing it. I'll agree that none of my friends or workmen shall take any
+part in anything you feel like starting. If you can thrash me then you
+shall be allowed to depart in peace after you've done it."
+
+Tom did not put up his hands, though he watched keenly to see whether the
+stranger meant to attack him. The stranger muttered unintelligible
+threats, then he turned to the laborers pressing about him.
+
+"Men," he demanded, "are you going to be free, or are you going to allow
+yourselves to be treated like a lot of slaves by this boy?"
+
+"If that's all you've got to say," Tom warned "you may as well start now."
+
+"Start?" scoffed the sallow-faced one. "Where to?"
+
+"Anywhere, outside of this camp," Tom informed him. "You can't stay here
+any longer, and you can't come here again. If I catch you, again, on this
+company's property, I'll see to it that you're arrested, and locked up for
+trespass."
+
+"That's the way to talk!" nodded Treasurer Prenter, approvingly.
+
+"I guess I'll go when I get good and ready," asserted the stranger.
+
+In the front ranks of the crowd pressing around them, Reade now discerned
+the face of the Italian gang-master with whom he had talked recently.
+
+"What's your name?" Tom demanded, turning about on the gang-master.
+
+"Scipio, sir."
+
+"Then, Scipio, take four men, and escort this fellow out of the camp.
+Don't use any force unless you have to, but see to it that this fellow
+leaves camp as quickly as he can walk---or be dragged. Start him now."
+
+Gang-master Scipio plainly didn't like the job, but he liked it better than
+he did the idea of being discharged. So he spoke to four Italians about
+him, and the five surrounded the man.
+
+"Hol' on dar, Boss Reade!" spoke up a negro. "Ef yo' carry dis matter too
+far, den dere's gwine to be a strike on dis wohk. Jess ez dis gemman sez,
+we ain't no slaves. Yo' try to stop all our pleasures ebenings, an' dar's
+gwine be a strike---shuah!"
+
+"You may strike right now, if you wish to," Tom retorted, facing the last
+speaker. "Mr. Renshaw will be prepared to pay you off within hour. Any
+other man in this camp who isn't content to get along without liquor and
+gambling may as well strike at the same time. Mr. Renshaw, it's half-past
+eight. At nine o'clock please be at the house ready to pay off any man who
+isn't satisfied to live and work in a camp where neither drinking nor
+gambling is allowed. Scipio, why haven't you started that fellow away from
+here?"
+
+"Too bigga crowd in front of us," replied the Italian gang-master,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+"Come on, Harry," Tom replied. "We'll see if we can't make a way through
+the crowd." The two young engineers placed themselves at the head of the
+squad, and succeeded quickly in opening up a passage through a crowd that
+seemed to be at least half hostile.
+
+Thus Tom found himself soon face to face with an American.
+
+"Evarts!" Reade cried, angrily. "What are you doing here?"
+
+"I'm here by permission," snarled the discharged foreman.
+
+"Whose permission?" Tom insisted, briskly.
+
+"Mr. Bascomb's," replied Evarts, with a leer so full of satisfaction that
+Reade didn't doubt the truth of the statement.
+
+"Mr. Bascomb," Tom called, "did you tell Evarts that he might visit this
+camp?"
+
+"Yes; I did," admitted the president of the company, stiffly.
+
+"Then I'm sorry to say that Evarts has been misinformed," Tom went on.
+"He _can't_ visit this camp. He's too much of a trouble-maker here."
+
+"Shut up your talk!" jeered Evarts roughly. "Don't try to give orders to
+the president of the company that hires and pays you."
+
+"Mr. Bascomb is the head of the company that employs me," Tom assented.
+"But I am in charge here, and am responsible, with Mr. Hazelton, for the
+good order of the camp and the success of the work. Therefore, Evarts,
+you'll leave camp now, and you won't come back again under pain of being
+punished for trespass."
+
+"Oh, now see here, Reade---" began Mr. Bascomb angrily, as he started
+forward. But Treasurer Prenter caught Bascomb by the arm, whispering in
+his ear.
+
+"Waiting for you, Mr. Bascomb," called Evarts.
+
+"I guess you'd better go," called the president, rather shamefacedly, after
+his talk with Mr. Prenter. "I guess maybe Reade is right. At all events
+his contract places him in charge of this camp."
+
+"Humph, Evarts, a lot of good you can do us here, can't you?" sneered the
+sallow-faced fellow.
+
+Tom looked first at one, and then at the other of the pair.
+
+"So," guessed Reade shrewdly, "Evarts has been at the head of this game of
+unlawful liquor selling in this camp. There are other vendors here, too,
+are there?"
+
+"You lie!" yelled the discharged foreman.
+
+"You may prove that, at your convenience," Reade replied, without even a
+heightening of his color. "For the present, though, you're going to get
+out of camp and stay out."
+
+"I called you a liar," sneered Evarts, "and you haven't the sand to fight
+about it."
+
+"Fighting with one of your stripe isn't worth the while," Tom retorted,
+shortly. "Come along, Evarts. I'll show you the way out of camp."
+
+As Reade spoke he took hold of the ex-foreman's arm gently.
+
+"Leggo of me!" raged the foreman, clenching and raising one of his fists.
+
+"Don't make the mistake of touching me," urged Tom, quietly, "but come
+along. This way out of camp!"
+
+Evarts swung suddenly, driving a fist straight at Reade's face. But the
+young chief engineer was always alert at such times. One of his feet moved
+in between Evarts's feet, and the ex-foreman flopped down on his back.
+
+"Come on, now!" commanded Tom, jerking the fallen foe to his feet. "This
+time you'll hurry out of camp."
+
+"Are you going to stand for it, men?" yelled Evarts, his face aflame with
+anger. "Come on---all of you! Show that you're not a pack of cowards and
+slaves!"
+
+From more than a hundred throats came an ominous yell. The crowd surged
+around Reade and Hazelton. Mr. Bascomb, seeing his chance, dodged and ran
+out of the crowd. But Mr. Prenter, with a spring, placed himself at Tom
+Reade's side.
+
+"Come on, men!" yelled the sallow-faced fellow.
+
+"Run dem w'ite slave-drivers outah camp!" yelled a score of negroes. Yells
+in Italian and Portuguese also filled the air.
+
+In an instant it was plain that Tom Reade had stirred up more than a
+hornet's nest.
+
+"Come on, Harry," spoke Tom, firmly. "Let's run this pair out of camp.
+Then we'll come back and look for more trouble-makers and trouble-hunters!
+Make way there, men!"
+
+One excitable Italian rushed through the crowd, brandishing a revolver. As
+alarmed men fell back, the Italian confronted Reade, holding the revolver
+almost in the latter's face and firing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE NIGHT IS NOT OVER
+
+
+Tom winced slightly, as the pistol was discharged, for some of the powder
+burned his face.
+
+Mr. Prenter, who stood beside him, had knocked up the barrel so that the
+bullet sped over the heads of the crowd.
+
+In a twinkling Tom had hold of the Italian's arm. He wrenched the pistol
+away, spraining the Italian's arm. Instantly Tom "broke" the weapon,
+dropping the cartridges out into his pocket. Then he hurled the weapon as
+far as he could throw it into the shadows of the night.
+
+"You breaka my arm!" snarled the Italian, showing his white teeth.
+
+"Your face is next!" Tom retorted, letting his fist drive. It caught the
+Italian on the nose, breaking that member.
+
+"Kill him! Kill Reade!" came the hoarse yell on the night air.
+
+"You'll find it a tough job, men!" Tom called, warningly. "I won't die
+easily, and I'll take a few men along with me when I go. Now, stand out
+of the way! I shall consider any man an enemy who blocks my path!"
+
+Tom hit resolutely out, at first. Soon the men crowding about him began
+to realize that they had taken a large contract on their hands in
+attempting to cow this young engineer.
+
+Then, too, another element entered into the fight. While there were some
+wild and troublesome men in camp, there were also many straightforward,
+excellent fellows among them. There were church-going negroes there,
+Italians who were thrifty and law-abiding, and Portuguese who loved nothing
+better than law and order.
+
+The better element among the men came thronging forward, willing and ready
+to fight under such excellent generalship as they knew they would find with
+Tom Reade.
+
+Other men, of both stripes, came pouring forth from shanties and tents.
+
+The yells and the shot had alarmed the foremen, who now came along on
+the run.
+
+"Dill, Johnson!" Tom called, as he saw some of the foremen trying to push
+or punch their way through the throng. "Help me to run Evarts and this
+other trouble-hunter out of the camp!"
+
+The menacing yells grew fewer and fainter as the cheers of loyal laborers
+rose.
+
+The foremen seized both trouble makers and began to run them along with
+more skill than gentleness.
+
+Tom ran along, keeping his glance on the enraged men of the camp, many of
+whom followed on the outskirts of the crowd. Harry Hazelton occupied
+himself in similar fashion.
+
+"Now, you get out of this---and stay out!" ordered Foreman Dill, giving
+Evarts a shove that sent him spinning across the boundary line of the
+company's property.
+
+"You, too!" growled Foreman Johnson, giving the bootlegger a kick that sent
+him staggering along in his efforts to keep on his feet.
+
+It was rough treatment, but Tom's course, all through, had been of the only
+sort that could break down the threatened riot.
+
+"Now, see if that Italian can be found who fired the shot in my face," Tom
+called. "I'll know him if I lay eyes on him."
+
+There was a prompt search, but the Italian could not be found.
+
+"If he has left camp, and keeps away, perhaps he'll be safe," Tom
+announced. "But, if I run across him again I'll seize him, hold him for
+the officers of the law, and see to it that he's sent to prison for
+attempted murder."
+
+"Here are two men we want!" called Hazelton.
+
+Tom ran to his chum, who was holding an American by the arm. Mr. Prenter
+had hold of another.
+
+"Two more of Evarts's bootleggers, eh?" muttered Reade. "Let me see."
+
+On one of the men he found a bottle of liquor. On the other no liquor was
+discovered.
+
+"Did Evarts pay you fellows a salary, or commission?" Tom demanded.
+
+"Commiss---" began one of the bootleggers, then stopped himself with a
+vocal jerk. "Evarts? I don't even know who he is."
+
+"Yes, you do," chuckled Tom Reade. "You were on the point, too, of telling
+us that he paid you a commission on your sales, instead of a weekly wage.
+Now, my men, I've looked you well over and shall know you again. If I find
+you in camp, hereafter, you'll be dealt with in a way that you don't like.
+Savvy? Comprenay? Understand? Now---git!"
+
+"Now, men, get back to your camp," shouted Tom. "To-morrow I'll try to
+find time for a good and sociable talk with all of you. Try to enjoy your
+few leisure hours all you can, but remember that the men who can't get
+along without liquor and gambling are the kind of men we don't want here.
+Any man who is dissatisfied can get his pay from Mr. Renshaw tonight or
+to-morrow morning. For those who stood by us I have every feeling of
+respect and gratitude. Those who thought to fight us---or some of
+them---will have better sense by tomorrow. We don't want to impose on
+any man here, but there are some things that we shall have to stop doing.
+Good night, men!"
+
+Engineers, superintendent and foremen now left the men, going towards their
+barracks.
+
+"I've a little job for you, Peters, if you don't mind going back into the
+camp," suggested Tom.
+
+"It's not to go back and fight, single-handed, is it?" Mr. Peters asked,
+with a smile.
+
+"Nothing like it," Tom laughed. "Peters, we have plenty of really good men
+among our laborers, haven't we?"
+
+"Scores and scores of 'em, sir---among all three kinds of the men, negroes,
+Italians and Portuguese."
+
+"I wish you would go back, then, and pick out two of each race---six men
+in all. They must be honest, staunch and able to hold their tongues."
+
+"Do you want them for fighting, sir?" asked Peters.
+
+"Not a bit of a fight in it. I want them to use their eyes and report
+to me."
+
+"Going to employ spotters on the camp?" asked Mr. Prenter, quickly.
+
+"Not a single spot!" Tom declared with emphasis. "I haven't any use for
+information turned in by spotters."
+
+"I'm glad to hear you say that, Reade," nodded the treasurer.
+
+"What I want the men for, Peters, is something honest and manly, and with
+no fighting in it," Tom continued. "I want information, and I'll pay the
+man well who can bring it to me. Now, go and get your six men. Bring them
+up to the house within half an hour."
+
+Nodding, Peters turned and strode back.
+
+When the others gained the house where the engineers and superintendent
+lived the foremen took leave of their chiefs.
+
+As Tom, Harry and Mr. Prenter went up the steps to the porch the front door
+opened to let out Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Is that revolting row all over?" demanded the president of the Melliston
+Company.
+
+"What row?" asked Mr. Prenter, innocently.
+
+"That riot back in camp," shivered Mr. Bascomb. "I simply abhor all
+fighting."
+
+"So I noticed," commented Mr. Prenter, dryly. "Yes; I believe the trouble
+is over, unless our young chief engineer intends to stir up something new
+before bedtime. Do you, Reade?"
+
+"I haven't anything in mind," Tom answered with a smile. "Gentlemen, I am
+afraid you may think I do things with a high hand. But I have been at this
+engineering business just long enough to know that I must banish all
+serious vices from a camp of laborers if I hope to get the best results in
+work out of the men. So I must tackle some problems rather stiffly, and
+use my fists when I'm driven to a corner."
+
+"I am not thoroughly satisfied of the wisdom of your course," said Mr.
+Bascomb slowly.
+
+"Sorry to disagree with you, Bascomb," broke in the treasurer, "but I've
+had some experience in handling what is called wild labor, and I believe
+that Reade goes at it in just the right way. I don't believe there are
+really fifty really wild or troublesome men in that camp. The few bad ones
+usually start trouble going, and then the good ones are driven into it.
+Let Reade stop the vices over yonder, in the way that he wants to, and the
+worst of the crowd will call for their time and leave camp. We shall then
+have a thoroughly good lot of men left, who'll do more and better work."
+
+"That is," almost whined President Bascomb, "if Reade, in doing what he
+wants, doesn't stir up so much enmity that we have the rest of our wall
+blown out into the gulf."
+
+"Mr. Bascomb," put in Tom, "while I must have control of the men and their
+camp I don't wish to do anything to cast reflection on yourself as the head
+of the company. May I therefore ask, sir, if there is any especial reason
+why Evarts should be allowed in this camp?"
+
+President Bascomb fidgeted in the porch chair on which he was sitting.
+
+"I---I don't know of any reason, Mr. Reade, why Evarts should be allowed
+in camp if his presence prevents you from keeping order as you wish."
+
+"Then you approve, sir, of my intention to keep him out?"
+
+"I---I won't question your right to handle the matter as you wish, Mr.
+Reade," was the president's evasive reply.
+
+"Thank you, sir."
+
+Peters was soon back with the six men---two each of the negroes, Italians
+and Portuguese. All of them understood English.
+
+Harry described the negro who had attacked him on the retaining wall, after
+which Tom asked:
+
+"Have any of you men ever seen that negro? Have you any idea who he is,
+and where he can be found?"
+
+None of the six admitted any knowledge of the mysterious black man.
+
+"Then I want you to keep his description in mind," continued Tom. "Keep
+your eyes open, at all times, for any chance glimpse of him. The man who
+brings me information leading to the capture of that big negro will
+receive a reward of one hundred dollars in gold." "Keep your eyes open,
+won't you? You may find him prowling around the wall at any time. He
+may walk out on the wall, or he may be found hiding near in a boat. Watch
+for him."
+
+All promised eagerly that they would do all in their power to earn the
+hundred dollars.
+
+"That's what I call good business!" cried Mr. Prenter approvingly, as
+soon as the foreman and the men had gone.
+
+"Does the hundred dollars come out of the company treasury, Reade, or from
+your own pocket?" inquired President Bascomb.
+
+"Really I hadn't thought of the matter," answered Tom.
+
+"The company can afford to pay its own bills," broke in Mr. Prenter, rather
+gruffly.
+
+"It's about time to turn in, isn't it?" asked Mr. Bascomb, striking a match
+and glancing at his watch.
+
+"I'm going to stay up a little longer, and talk with Reade about the dread
+mystery of our million dollar breakwater, if he'll let me," hinted Mr.
+Prenter.
+
+Mr. Bascomb rose as though to go into the house.
+
+"While we're talking about the matter, sir," suggested Tom, "wouldn't it
+be a good idea for us to stroll down to the beach and look out along the
+wall to see how Foreman Corbett and his gang are guarding the breakwater
+to-night?"
+
+"Fine idea," nodded the treasurer of the company.
+
+"Then, if you're all going away, and intend to leave the house alone, I
+think I may as well go with you," grunted Mr. Bascomb. "I don't exactly
+like the idea of staying here alone in such troublesome times."
+
+Harry walked beside Mr. Bascomb, while Tom led the way with the treasurer.
+Mr. Renshaw brought up the rear.
+
+As the party came in sight of the beach and glanced out seaward, they saw
+many a little, dancing light out on the retaining wall. Each light showed
+where a workman patrolled under the orders of Foreman Corbett. The latter
+was aboard the motor boat, "Morton," which ran up and down near the wall,
+throwing the searchlight over the scene.
+
+"Reade," remarked Mr. Prenter, "I don't see that the enemy have any chance
+to-night to run in and work harm to our property."
+
+Hardly had the treasurer spoken when Tom, looking out seaward, saw a
+sudden, bright flash of light upward. There was a brief pause---then the
+sullen boom of an explosion reached their ears.
+
+"Mystery of all mysteries!" choked Tom Reade. "There goes another section
+of the wall---blown up under our very eyes!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A MESSAGE FROM A COWARD
+
+
+"Now Reade," began President Bascomb, in a shaking voice, "what can you
+say---"
+
+Tom didn't wait to inform him. The young chief engineer was darting out on
+the wall as fast as he could go.
+
+Already the "Morton" had turned, and was chugging back to the scene of this
+latest outrage, the searchlight flashing back and forth, in the vain effort
+to detect any small craft stealing away from the vicinity.
+
+"I---I can't race on a narrow runway like that," faltered Mr. Bascomb,
+halting at the beginning of the narrow wall. "I---I'll wait here, Mr.
+Renshaw, will you keep me company?"
+
+"If you so direct, sir," replied the superintendent. "For that matter,
+what Reade and Hazelton can't find out, out yonder, will probably never be
+discovered."
+
+"Do you share Mr. Prenter's infatuation for those two young men?" asked
+the president of the Melliston Company.
+
+"I can't say about that, sir," Renshaw replied, with a puzzled air. "But
+this much I know---I never worked with two more capable men of any age.
+They always know what to do, and they never lose their heads."
+
+Mr. Bascomb compressed his lips tightly.
+
+In the meantime Tom, Harry and Treasurer Prenter covered nearly a quarter
+of a mile along the retaining wall when the motor boat, putting about,
+picked them up with the searchlight.
+
+Toot! toot! sounded the boat's pneumatic whistle.
+
+"Foreman Corbett is signaling to us to wait and he'll put in for us," said
+Tom, coming to a halt. Soon the motor craft chugged in alongside, coming
+close to the wall. Tom, Harry and Mr. Prenter jumped, landing safely
+aboard.
+
+"How did the enemy come to catch you napping, Corbett?" Tom inquired
+good-humoredly.
+
+"They didn't catch me napping, sir," protested Foreman Corbett. "It is the
+strangest thing, sir---that explosion. Why, I had had my light turned on
+that very part of the wall at least a dozen times in the last half-hour
+before the blow-out came. Our light didn't pick up a soul around there at
+any time. What do you suppose I did, Mr. Reade, as soon as the explosion
+sounded?"
+
+"I saw you turn about and use your search light a lot," Reade answered.
+
+"Did you notice, sir, that I turned the light right up at the sky,
+first-off?"
+
+"I believe I did notice that," Tom assented.
+
+"It seemed to me, sir, that nothing but an airship could plant a charge of
+high explosive on the wall in that fashion."
+
+"I don't believe the airship theory will explain it either," said Tom,
+shaking his head.
+
+"Then what theory can explain it?" asked Mr. Prenter, anxiously.
+
+"I'd pay a reward out of my own pocket for the right answer," Reade
+replied.
+
+"Then you haven't a theory?" asked the treasurer.
+
+"Not even an imitation of a theory," Tom laughed, shortly.
+
+All this time the motor boat was gliding out toward the scene of the wreck.
+
+"Now, you can see the damage that has been done," suggested Mr. Corbett,
+turning the light fully on the scene of the latest blow-out. "You see, a
+long strip of the wall has been cleaned out. Not a trace of the damaged
+part shows above water."
+
+"It wasn't as big an explosion as the other two, though," Reade declared.
+"Really, it looks as though the folks behind this found themselves running
+low on explosives."
+
+"There must be a trace or a clue left," urged Mr. Prenter.
+
+"High explosives don't leave many traces of anything with which they come
+in contact," muttered Harry. "If we _do_ find any traces, I guess it will
+have to be in broad daylight."
+
+"And I guess that's right," agreed Tom. "Mr. Corbett, did none of your men
+patrolling on the wall report any signs of strangers?"
+
+"No such report was made, sir."
+
+"At all events, we can be thankful that the explosion didn't blow one or
+two of our men into the other world," Tom went on.
+
+"Even that is bound to happen if there are many more of these explosions,"
+muttered Corbett, grimly.
+
+"Which is another reason," remarked Tom Reade, "why we're going to solve
+the mystery of said explosions at the earliest minute that we can."
+
+"One thing is certain," observed Mr. Prenter, with the nearest approach to
+gloom that he had yet shown. "If you don't soon penetrate this grim
+mystery, and find a way to stop these outrages, then the wall will be
+destroyed more rapidly than you can build it."
+
+"The outrages may cease after a while," suggested Harry.
+
+"No," answered Reade. "As long as the unknown enemy feels that he can
+harass us without much risk of being caught red-handed, just so long will
+he go on with his outrages---unless we give in."
+
+"Give in?" asked Mr. Prenter, with a rising inflection in his voice.
+
+"Unless we give in," supplied Tom promptly, "by allowing gambling and
+rum-selling to go on openly in our camp of workmen."
+
+"Have you any notion of giving in to that extent?" asked Mr. Prenter.
+
+"Not an idea!" retorted Tom Reade promptly. "It wouldn't be my way to
+surrender to the Devil. I'll fight to the last ditch---unless your
+company really prefers to have Hazelton and myself cancel our contract and
+get out of this work. Do you?"
+
+"_I_ don't want you to quit," replied Mr. Prenter positively. "I admire
+fighting grit, and I want to see you keep hammering away at the work until
+you win and the job is finished. The board of directors will stand with me
+on that, if I can sway them. As for Mr. Bascomb, you mustn't take him too
+seriously. He's a first rate fellow in a lot of ways, but there's no fight
+in him, and he's a bit close-fisted, too. As for me, Reade, and as far as
+I can speak for my fellow directors, go ahead, just the way you've started.
+If you can find any way to hammer camp vice harder than you've been
+hammering it, then go ahead and do some harder work with your little
+hammer."
+
+"I'll do it," promised Tom. "Now, Mr. Prenter, I don't believe anything
+more will happen here to-night---perhaps not for two or three nights. So
+I think the wisest thing for you to do will be to get back to the house and
+get some sleep. The same for you, Harry!"
+
+"What are you going to do?" Hazelton wanted to know.
+
+"I?" repeated Reade. "For to-night I'm going to remain up, and be out here
+around this threatened wall."
+
+"Then that ought to be good enough for me, also," Harry suggested.
+
+"Not much, chum. I'm going to take the night trick for the present, and
+put on you the burden of all the day work. So you'll need your sleep."
+
+"I can swing the day work easily enough," laughed Hazelton. "It will be
+all the more easy as the next few days will be taken up simply with
+repairing the breaks that have been made."
+
+"Swing the boat in toward land, Mr. Corbett," Tom directed the foreman.
+
+At the little landing Hazelton and Mr. Prenter joined the waiting president
+and superintendent.
+
+"Did you really find out anything?" called Mr. Bascomb eagerly.
+
+"It's as big a mystery as ever."
+
+"There's just one thing we'll have to do," sighed Mr. Bascomb, "and that
+will be to stop running the camp on a basis of old Puritan laws."
+
+"You talk Reade into it, if you can," chuckled Treasurer Prenter. "You
+won't find him easy to convince, either."
+
+Tom didn't wait to discuss the matter. Instead, he signaled to Foreman
+Corbett to run the craft out again.
+
+"If you want to, Corbett," suggested Tom, with a laugh, as the boat moved
+over the salt waters again, "you might go ashore and go to bed. You can
+easily claim that you engaged with us as a foreman, and that being captain
+of a motor boat amounts to breach of contract."
+
+"I'm not fussing," smiled the foreman. "As long as I can sleep daytimes
+running this motor boat is easier than working."
+
+"It probably will be," nodded Reade, "unless the enemy go in for a new
+line of tactics."
+
+"Such as what, sir?" asked Corbett.
+
+"If this boat hampers them too much they may decide to send it to the
+bottom with a torpedo."
+
+"Let 'em try, then," grunted the foreman, giving the steering wheel a turn.
+
+Though Reade remained up until broad daylight no further sign of the
+unknown enemies was seen. Through the night, had it not been for the
+patrols walking up and down the line of wall with lanterns, it would have
+been hard to realize that the big breakwater was haunted by any such
+desperately practical group of "ghosts."
+
+"I guess we've heard the last of the rascals," suggested Harry Hazelton one
+night at supper. Messrs. Bascomb and Prenter had returned to Mobile, so
+that the young engineers and their superintendent were the only men at
+table.
+
+"My guess is about the same," drawled Mr. Renshaw.
+
+"Yes?" queried Reade. "Guess again!"
+
+"Oh, I believe they've quit," argued Mr. Renshaw. "For one thing, the
+scoundrels probably have discovered that detectives from Mobile are down
+here trying to run 'em to earth. That has scared the rascals away."
+
+"What are the detectives doing, anyway?" asked Harry.
+
+"Blessed if I know," Tom yawned. "I believe there are three of them here
+or over in Blixton, but I wouldn't know one of them, if I fell over him.
+The detectives came, secured their orders from Mr. Prenter, and went to
+work---or pretended to go to work. I'm glad that I'm not responsible for
+the detectives."
+
+Nicolas entered, an envelope in his hand.
+
+"Par-rdon, Senor Reade," begged the Mexican. "I would not interrupt, but
+on the porch I found thees letter. It is address to you."
+
+Tom took the envelope and scanned it, saying:
+
+"The address is printed---probably because the writer didn't want to run
+the risk of having his writing identified. Probably the letter, also, is
+printed. Pardon me, gentlemen, while I open this communication . . . Yes;
+the letter is printed, and unsigned---a further sign of cowardice on the
+part of the writer. And now let me see what it says."
+
+Tom spent a few moments in going through the communication. A white line
+formed around his mouth as he read. Then he passed the letter to Harry,
+who read it aloud, as follows:
+
+_"You have had a week of peace. Is peace better than war? You may have
+all the peace you wish, and go on working and prospering if you will let
+others do the same. Stop interfering with the right of your men to amuse
+themselves and all will be well. Try any of your former tricks in the
+camp, and then you will have good cause to 'Beware!'"_
+
+"Is that a declaration of war?" asked Harry, looking up.
+
+"I think so," nodded Tom.
+
+"Then how are you going to meet it?"
+
+"There's only one way," Tom returned. "A declaration of war must be met
+with a fight. Unless I'm very greatly in error the gamblers and
+bootleggers will try to start up matters again to-night in camp."
+
+"And you'll throw them down harder than before?" queried Mr. Renshaw,
+gazing keenly at the young chief.
+
+"If it be possible," Tom declared. "Nicolas, be kind enough to go over
+and ask the foremen to report here at 8:20 promptly. At 8:30 we will
+enter camp and see what is going on."
+
+"I miss my guess, then," chuckled Mr. Renshaw, quietly, "if our arrival
+isn't followed by war in earnest."
+
+"War is never so bad," retorted Tom Reade, his jaws setting, "as a
+disgraceful peace!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+AN ENGINEER'S FIGHTING BLOOD
+
+
+Just at half-past eight that evening Tom, Harry, the superintendent and the
+foremen entered camp.
+
+They went, first, to a shack which they knew to be occupied by orderly,
+respectable blacks.
+
+"Come, men," said Tom, halting in the doorway. "I've an idea we may need
+you."
+
+Six negroes rose and came forward.
+
+"There are gambling and bootlegging going on in this camp to-night, aren't
+there?" Reade inquired.
+
+"Ah doan' rightly know, boss," replied one of the negroes cautiously.
+
+"But you suspect it, don't you?" Tom pressed.
+
+"Yes; Ah done 'spec so, boss," grinned the negro.
+
+"And I do, too," rejoined Tom. "Come along. We may need a little help."
+
+With this reinforcement---the negroes were wanted for work rather than for
+fighting---Tom now stepped off briskly through the camp.
+
+Nor did he have to guess in which way to go through the darkened streets
+of this little village of toilers. Shouts of laughter and the click of
+ivory dice and celluloid chips signaled the direction.
+
+The largest shack in the village was closed tightly as to door and window,
+though light came out through the chinks. Tom stepped over there boldly,
+not turning to see whether his following were close behind him.
+
+Stepping up to the closed door the young chief engineer placed his shoulder
+against it. He gave a sturdy push, and the barrier flew open.
+
+There were about fifty of his men crowded into one large room. A half
+dozen gambling games were in full blast. At two tables stood bootleggers,
+each with a bottle of liquor and glasses.
+
+Tom stalked boldly in, still without turning to look at his own following.
+Reade's face bore such a mild look that the leader of the visiting
+gamblers was wholly deceived as he glanced up.
+
+"The chief!" called one workman, in dismay, and a dozen men made a break
+for the door. But Harry and the others prevented their getting out.
+
+"Oh, it's all right," cheerily announced the leader of the gamblers. "Mr.
+Reade has just come here to look on and make sure that everything is being
+conducted above board and on the square. Isn't that so, Reade?"
+
+"Yes," Tom assented, pausing near the central table at which gambling was
+going on.
+
+At that assurance the panic-stricken gamblers breathed more easily.
+Several men who had jumped up from their seats went back to their chairs.
+
+"Reade is a good friend of ours," called the leader of the gamblers,
+mockingly. "He isn't going to interfere with any amusements that are
+properly carried on---eh, Reade?"
+
+The fellow stared boldly into Tom's eyes, a look of insolent mockery on
+his features.
+
+"Certainly I'm not going to interfere with any proper amusements in this
+camp," Tom nodded, easily.
+
+"What did I tell you, boys?" laughed the leader of the gamblers. "Go on
+with your play, boys!"
+
+"But gambling isn't a proper amusement for poor men, who have to toil and
+sweat for every five-cent piece they get," Tom Reade continued calmly.
+"Neither is the trade of bootlegging a decent one, or one that provides
+decent amusement. I have already warned you that gambling and liquor
+selling are things of the past in this camp."
+
+There was another stir in the room. The leader of the gamblers rose,
+fixing his gaze on Tom's eyes and trying to stare the young engineer out
+of countenance.
+
+"What do you mean, Reade?" he demanded.
+
+"Isn't my meaning clear enough?" Tom insisted, with a chilly smile.
+
+"Man, haven't you come to your senses yet?" snarled the gambler.
+
+"Do you mean to ask whether I was scared by the cowardly, unsigned letter
+that I received this evening?" Tom fired back at the fellow, with another
+taunting smile.
+
+"I don't know anything about any letter," muttered the gambler sullenly,
+"but I heard that you had come to your senses."
+
+"Whether I have or not," retorted Tom, "you are pretty sure to come to your
+proper senses to-night. Men---I mean workmen, not gamblers or
+bootleggers---you are at liberty to pass out of this building."
+
+"Don't you go," shouted the gambler, as some two dozen men started toward
+the doorway where Harry and the rest were on guard.
+
+Some of them halted.
+
+"I must have made a mistake in calling some of you 'men,' since you take
+orders from such disreputable characters as these gamblers and
+bootleggers," Tom taunted them mildly. "Now, all I will say is that those
+of you who wish to do so may pass outside. The rest may remain here,
+though they'll be sorry, afterwards, that they stayed. All who want to
+get outside must do so at once."
+
+"Don't you do anything of the sort," shouted the gamblers' leader. "Stay
+here like men and assert your rights! Come on! I'll lead you, and show
+you how to throw these meddlers out."
+
+"You'll do it---just like this, eh?" demanded Tom Reade.
+
+He made a leap for the leader of the gamblers, catching the fellow by the
+throat and waist. Lifting him, Tom hurled the fellow a dozen feet. The
+gambler fell on one side, but was up in a moment, his right hand traveling
+toward a hip pocket.
+
+"Don't draw," mocked Tom, with another smile. "Probably you haven't a
+pistol there. If you have, you can never make me believe that you have
+sand enough to draw and shoot before as many witnesses as I have on hand."
+
+"I've a good mind to drill you with lead!" scowled the gambler, still
+resting his hand behind him.
+
+"But you're a wise man," mocked Reade, "and wise men often change their
+minds."
+
+However, the very move of the gambler to draw a pistol had had one effect
+that Tom ardently desired. Most of the workmen present were now in
+frantic haste to get out before any shooting began. The two bootleggers
+also sought to make their escape.
+
+"Get back there! You fellows can't get out!" Harry shouted, himself
+seizing and hurling the bootleggers back into the room. They rose, glaring
+sullenly at Hazelton. But they didn't know how many more men he might have
+behind him out there in the dark.
+
+Tom Reade now had the six gamblers and the two bootleggers in the room
+with him.
+
+"You're a nice crew, aren't you?" he jeered, gazing at them scornfully.
+
+"We're making our living," retorted the leader of the gamblers, with what
+he meant to be a fine tone of scorn.
+
+"Making your living off of human beings! You're some of the parasites
+that infest honest workingmen. I've drummed you out of this camp before,
+and you have the cheek to come back. Now, I'll try to teach you another
+lesson. Harry, send in our workmen, will you?"
+
+Hazelton stepped aside, to let in the half dozen honest negroes they had
+brought along with them. These men entered, then stood looking at their
+young chief.
+
+"Get hold of those cards, chips and dice!" ordered Tom.
+
+"Here, what are you trying to do?" demanded the leader of the gamblers.
+
+"You have the advantage of me," responded Tom. "I don't know your name."
+
+"Hawkins is my name," replied the chief of the gamblers.
+
+"Hawkins is a fine name," admitted Tom. "It will do as well as any other.
+I won't annoy you, Hawkins, by asking you what your name used to be in
+prouder and happier days."
+
+"What are these men doing with our outfit?" insisted Hawkins, as the
+negroes began industriously to clear the surfaces of the tables.
+
+"You can see what they're doing," Tom rejoined.
+
+"You blacks get out and leave our property alone," warned Hawkins, darting
+among them.
+
+The negroes drew back, in some alarm, for the gambler looked dangerous with
+one hand at his hip pocket.
+
+"Go get on with your work, men," counseled Tom. "I'm here to back you up."
+
+"As for you, sir---" snarled Hawkins, facing Tom.
+
+"Don't look at me like that," laughed Reade softly. "Save that face to
+frighten children with."
+
+The negroes had busied themselves until they had gathered up all the
+implements of gambling and had stuffed them into their pockets.
+
+Now Tom went up to the bootleggers. Both men he boldly searched, bringing
+forth from their pockets bottles of liquor. These he threw down hard on
+the floor of the cabin, smashing them.
+
+"I don't know why we allow you to do all this, Reade," fumed Hawkins, whose
+face was white with rage.
+
+"It's because you're afraid, and know that you can't help yourselves," Tom
+smiled.
+
+"I'll show you who's afraid!" yelled Hawkins, again throwing his right
+hand back to his hip pocket.
+
+This time Reade saw the unmistakable butt of a revolver. Without an
+instant's hesitation. Reade leaped at the fellow. In a moment Tom had
+the revolver, springing backwards.
+
+"Well---shoot!" jeered Hawkins. "You don't dare to."
+
+"You're right," assented Tom coolly. "I don't dare to. Assassination
+belongs to the lowest orders of human beings. An honest man seldom has
+any need of concealed deadly weapons."
+
+Tom stepped still farther back, breaking the revolver and dropping the
+cartridges into one hand. Hawkins made a move as though to spring upon
+him, but Harry leaped into the room, confronting the gambler.
+
+Thus shielded, Tom drew a combination tool-knife from one of his pockets,
+then coolly drew out the screw that held the trigger in place.
+
+Dropping the trigger into his own pocket, Tom tossed the weapon back.
+
+"Catch it, Hawkins," he called. "You may want this to frighten some
+children with over in Blixton. Now, Mr. Renshaw, I believe you know
+what you're to do."
+
+"Yes, sir," nodded the superintendent, from the doorway, and vanished.
+
+"We'll take our leave, now," sneered Hawkins, "unless you have some further
+humiliation in store for us."
+
+"Just one," Tom declared, "so you can't go just yet."
+
+"Oh, all right," Hawkins laughed fiercely. "You'll have to pay for this
+unlawful detention."
+
+"You can tell the officers all about that," Tom suggested tantalizingly.
+"Mr. Renshaw has just gone to telephone for them."
+
+"The officers? Police?" snarled Hawkins.
+
+"Yes. Did you imagine that you could keep on defying all the laws? You've
+just threatened me with a taste of the law. You may try a taste yourself,
+Professor Hawkins!"
+
+"Let us out of this place!" insisted Hawkins angrily. "Come on, friends!"
+
+He rallied his own force of seven men and started toward the door.
+
+"Of course you can try to get away," Reade warned the fellow. "But the
+effort will cost you all broken heads, to say the least. I have placed
+you all under arrest for breaking the laws of Alabama, and, before we'll
+let you go, we'll break a few bones for each of you."
+
+Outside the workmen of the camp were thronging by this time. Doubtless,
+had they dared, two or three score of these men would have fought in
+behalf of the gamblers and bootleggers, but far more than that number
+would have rallied under Tom Reade's banner, for it is human nature to
+flock to the banner of the leader who is resolute and unafraid. Besides,
+there were the foremen, all of them good, hard hitting men.
+
+"Oh, well," sneered Hawkins, "let it go at that, Reade. We'll have our
+day in court tomorrow, and then. I guess we'll find our innings."
+
+"Yes," chuckled Tom, "and when you get your innings you'll be wild to swap
+them for outings---for the innings will be in jail."
+
+"Don't push my temper too far," cautioned Hawkins with a scowl.
+
+"Let it go as far as you like, always being ready to take the
+consequences," Tom smiled genially.
+
+There followed a period of tense waiting. After nearly a half an hour of
+this a 'bus arrived, with four police officers from Blixton in it. Tom
+Reade preferred his charges against the gamblers and bootleggers. The
+officers had no choice but to take them, so the late troublemakers, now
+amid jeers and hoots from many of the workmen, were led outside and into
+the 'bus.
+
+"You'll hear from this!" hissed Hawkins, in the young chief engineer's ear.
+
+"I believe you," nodded Tom thoughtfully.
+
+After the police and their prisoners had gone Tom led his own party back
+to the house.
+
+"You'd better get to bed now, Harry," Reade advised his chum. "There can
+be no telling how soon I'll need to call you up, and you ought to have
+some sleep first."
+
+"You look for trouble to break to-night?" Harry asked.
+
+"Between now and daylight," said Tom simply.
+
+"Whee! I'd like to stay up with you."
+
+"You might find more fun that way, Harry, but the work to-morrow would
+suffer, and work is more important than mere fun," Tom answered.
+
+Nor was Tom to be disappointed in his expectation that the worst trouble
+yet experienced would break loose that night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+WISHING IT ON MR. SAMBO
+
+
+"Oho!" breathed young Reade, as he crouched low behind the fringe of
+bushes, peering toward the beach.
+
+It was now somewhat past midnight. For three hours Tom had been scouting
+stealthily along this shore section, well to the west of the breakwater.
+
+For, in pondering over the explosions, Tom had come to the conclusion that
+the blow-outs on the retaining wall, however accomplished, were controlled
+from a point to the westward of the sea wall.
+
+This conclusion had been rather a simple matter to a trained engineer.
+Tom had witnessed the flash of one explosion, and that, as he remembered,
+had sprung up at the west side of the wall. Moreover, the appearance and
+condition of the wall, at the point of each explosion, had shown that the
+attack in each case must have been made at the west side of the wall.
+
+And now, after nearly three hours of work, Tom Reade had come upon a real
+clue.
+
+"Another blow-out is arranged for to-night, just as I had expected," Reade
+muttered, with an angry thrill, as he glanced at a figure down on the
+beach. "Moreover, my guess that the huge negro is the fellow who touches
+off the blow-outs has proved to be the correct one."
+
+Down on the beach a big, black man was moving about stealthily. Though the
+spot was a lonely one, this scoundrel plainly intended to take no
+unnecessary risks of detection.
+
+Just at the present moment the negro was placing in the water a
+curious-looking little raft that he had brought on one shoulder from its
+place of concealment. It was something like a flat-bottomed scow, the
+sides being just high enough to prevent whatever cargo it carried, from
+rolling off into the water.
+
+The raft placed and secured to the shore, the negro crouched in his hiding
+place in a jungle of bushes. He soon reappeared, carrying four metal
+tubes.
+
+"The explosive is in the tubes," guessed Tom easily. "And at one end of
+each tube is a sharp metal point that permits of being driven into the
+crevices in the wall. Four, or more, of these tubes are thrust into the
+wall, I suppose, and connected in series, so that they can be fired by the
+same electric spark. These tubes and the wires are water-proofed. The
+negro is only the dastardly workman in this case. It was never he who
+invented the trick. But he must be an excellent workman, who ought to be
+employed in much more honest effort. I wonder if the fellow is going to
+use more than four tubes?"
+
+All of these thoughts ran through the mind of Tom as he crouched, peering
+eagerly at the negro.
+
+By this time the negro was taking to the water, towing his miniature scow
+and its explosive cargo as he swam.
+
+"He must be a good swimmer, and also a good diver," concluded Tom. "With
+my men patrolling the sea wall he must have to dive, some distance away,
+swim under water, and remain there until he has secured one of the tubes
+in place. Then he has to get back, out of range of the lanterns' rays, and
+get his breath before he goes back to the next job. But maybe I can
+interfere with his work to-night."
+
+Though he rose and moved away, Reade, despite the darkness of the night,
+was careful to keep himself concealed behind the bushes, so that he could
+not be observed from beach or water. Shortly the young engineer was over
+at the point in the jungle from which he had seen the negro emerge with
+scow and explosives.
+
+"The fellow must use a magneto, attached to wires running under the water,"
+concluded Tom. "At that rate, the first real job is to find the magneto.
+My, but Mr. Sambo Ebony may be wondering, to-night, why his blow-out
+doesn't work as easily as usual!"
+
+Simple as the search ought to have been, Tom Reade was soon on the point
+of despair.
+
+"If it isn't a magneto, or if I can't find it in time," Tom muttered
+uneasily, "the mystery may remain nearly as great as ever, and the
+explosion may be pulled off to-night, after all."
+
+Twenty minutes passed before Reade, with all his senses alert, stumbled
+on the concealed magneto. It had been so well hidden, under a mass of
+rocks, that it would not have been astonishing had Tom missed it
+altogether.
+
+Attached to the magneto was the wire that must connect, in some way, with
+the series of tubes that would soon be fastened in the retaining wall out
+yonder. Yet this wire ran into the ground, and then vanished.
+
+"Now, I've simply got to hustle!" sighed Tom Reade nervously. "If I don't
+succeed in raising the wire, and in a mighty short space of time, I may be
+to-night's fool yet. I'd really like to wish that on the black man, too!"
+
+By using his eyes and his reasoning powers Reade, after twenty minutes more
+of search, with some sly digging, unearthed a section of the wire some
+dozen feet from the magneto.
+
+"Now, it must be really the swiftest sort of work," murmured the young
+engineer, after a glance seaward. He seated himself with his face turned
+toward the Gulf, gathered the exposed section of wire up into his lap, then
+drew a pair of wire nippers from his pocket.
+
+Snip! Tom now had two ends of wire in his hands. That would have been
+enough, had Reade chosen to bury the ends and conceal all evidence of his
+work. However, he believed that a more workmanlike way could be found.
+
+From the same pocket Tom drew out a three inch piece of pure rubber cable,
+wrapped in water-proof tape. This he fastened to the severed ends of the
+wire, binding the whole as neatly as a lineman could have done.
+
+"Rubber is believed to be a pretty good insulator," chuckled Reade, as he
+finished. "I don't believe the spark is made that can jump three inches
+of rubber. Certainly magneto-power can't do it. Now, let me see what sort
+of a trail-concealer I am."
+
+Tom laid the wire back in the ground, covering it carefully with his hands.
+
+"I wish I dared strike a match, so that I could judge better just how my
+work looks," he sighed. "However, I don't believe Mr. Sambo Ebony will
+think it discreet to strike any matches either, so he won't find the place
+where I've been fooling with his work.
+
+"Now, I'll get back out of sight, where I belong," muttered Tom, rising
+cautiously. "I hope, though, I can find a place where I can see the look
+on that darkey's face when he tries his magneto and waits for the bing!
+from out yonder. Oh, Sambo, you simply can't have any idea of how I've
+been wishing it on you tonight!"
+
+As the bushes grew thickly hereabouts, and there were many hollows in the
+surface of the earth, Reade had little trouble in finding what he believed
+to be a satisfactory hiding place. It enabled him to hide his head within
+fifteen feet of the handle of the magneto.
+
+A soft, southerly wind blew in from the Gulf. As long as he could Reade
+fought drowsiness. Again and again he opened his eyes with a start.
+
+"I mustn't do this," Tom told himself angrily. "No gentleman will go to
+sleep at the switch---when it's his train that is coming!"
+
+Yet still he found himself nodding. Had he deemed it safe Tom would have
+sprung up and walked about briskly. But this, he knew, was to invite
+being discovered by the returning negro.
+
+So, at last, despite himself, Tom fell asleep.
+
+How much time had passed he never knew. At last, however, he awoke with a
+start. Reproachfully he rubbed his eyes.
+
+"Not a bit too soon!" he muttered, as his ears caught sound of an
+approaching step, and his eyes showed him the hulking form of the massive
+foe. "Here comes my black man!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE BLACK MAN'S TURN
+
+
+Closer to the earth Tom tried to burrow. As to a plan, Tom Reade had none
+now, save to watch, and, if possible, to learn something that he did not
+already know.
+
+Soft-footed, despite his great bulk, the negro approached with an air of
+little concern. Plainly, the wretch did not much fear discovery---still
+less interference.
+
+Humming an old plantation melody the negro reached his concealed magneto,
+then stood up for a brief moment, staring seaward in the direction from
+which he had just come. His garments dripped water; his whole appearance
+was bedraggled, yet there was something utterly shaggy, majestic, in this
+huge specimen of the human race.
+
+"Ah done reckon dem gemmen gwine lose some mo' of deir wall to-night,"
+chuckled the negro softly.
+
+"Go as far as you like, Mr. Sambo Ebony!" grinned Tom Reade, under his
+breath. "I've wished something else on you this time."
+
+Carelessly the negro bent over his magneto, seized the handle and gave a
+push.
+
+Then he straightened up, listening. Only the soft sighing of the southern
+wind came to his ears.
+
+"Yo' shuah done gotta use a mo' greasy elbow dan dat, chile," chuckled this
+imp of Satan aloud, though in a soft voice that seemed out of all
+proportion to his bulk.
+
+Then he gave a half dozen indolent though steady strokes to the handle of
+the magneto.
+
+"Whah am dat 'splosion?" he asked himself in wonderment. "Am mah eardrum
+done gone busted? Moke, yo' am plumb lazy this night!"
+
+This time the huge negro pumped at the handle of the magneto until he was
+all but out of breath. Several dozen shoves he had administered before
+he halted, let go of the magneto and raised himself to his full, majestic
+height.
+
+"Some black witch hab done gwine wish a big hoodoo on me!" grunted the
+negro suspiciously. "Dis am do fust time dat de magernetto gwine back
+on me like dis!"
+
+In his bewilderment the one whom Tom had named Sambo glared around him.
+His eyes gleamed with a phosphorescence like that which one sees on the
+water on a lowering night. What Reade did not know was that this black
+man possessed eyes that were a little keener in the dark than a bat's.
+
+With a sudden "Woof!" Sambo went up in the air, moved sideways, and came
+down on the startled Tom Reade with the force of a pile driver.
+
+"Wha' yo' doing heah?" demanded the negro, gripping Reade by the coat
+collar and dragging that hapless engineer to his feet.
+
+Tom did not answer. To save his life he couldn't have answered just then,
+his breath utterly gone.
+
+"Wha' yo' want heah, anyway?" insisted Sambo, giving the youth a vicious
+shake.
+
+There was blood before the negro's eyes, or he would sooner have
+recognized his victim. But at last he did see.
+
+"So, I'se gwine cotch Mistah Reade himself!" snorted Sambo. "An' Ah
+reckon I'se gwine foun' de differculty wid my magernetto at de same
+time! Huh?"
+
+Again he shook Tom, with an ease and yet a force that further drove the
+breath from the young engineer's body.
+
+"Why doan' yo' talk!" glared the negro, holding Tom out at arm's length
+with one hand.
+
+Tom could only groan. Yet that method of communication carried its own
+explanation to the big black.
+
+"Reckon yo' gwine talk w'en yo' get gale enough in yo' lungs," grinned the
+negro. "In dat case Ah gwine lay yo' down on de groun' to fin' yo' breff."
+
+Sambo's idea of laying Tom down was to give him a violent twist that
+brought the lad flat on the ground at his captor's feet. Then the negro
+sat on his captive to make sure that the latter did not escape.
+
+"Take yo' time---ah got plenty," grimaced the black man.
+
+Slowly the beaten-out breath came back to Tom Reade. Sambo, watching, knew
+finally that his quarry was at last able to talk.
+
+"Wha' yo' do to mah magernetto?" demanded Sambo.
+
+"Guess," breathed Tom.
+
+"Oh, take yo' time, boss. Ah got plenty ob dat accommerdation"
+
+"What magneto are you talking about?" Reade queried innocently.
+
+"Nebber heard ob it befo', eh, boss?"
+
+"I've heard of plenty of magnetos, of course," admitted Tom. "But what
+have you to do with one?"
+
+For a brief instant Sambo was almost inclined to believe that Reade did
+not fully know his secret. Finally it dawned on the brain of the big
+black man that he was being hoaxed.
+
+"Ef yo' doan wanter tell, yo' doan hab to, ob co'se," proposed Sambo. "It
+ain't mah way to be too persistency wid de w'ite quality gemmen. But Ah
+done thought maybe yo' know somethin' dat yo's burnin' to tell."
+
+"Who are you, and what are you doing around here?" asked Tom. "I'm certain
+you don't belong to my force of workmen---unless you just joined
+yesterday. Are you working on the breakwater job?"
+
+"Yessah," promptly answered Sambo with momentary gravity. Then his mood
+changed to a chuckle.
+
+"Dat am all right, Massa Reade," he allowed. "But yo' doan' fool dis
+nigger as easy as yo' maybe think. Ah know what yo' watchin' me fo',
+and Ah done know I'se been doin' jess w'at yo' think. So I guess we
+doan' need no mo' conversationin', unless yo' willing to talk right out
+and tell me w'at's w'at."
+
+"Sambo," said Reade solemnly, "I imagine I'm not very intelligent, after
+all. I listened to you attentively, but, for the life of me, I couldn't
+make out what you were talking about."
+
+"Kain't yo'?" the negro demanded, mockingly. "Den Ah done reckon Ah must
+be a good deal of a scholar, ef Ah can talk so dat er w'ite quality gemmen
+kain't undahstan' me."
+
+Mr. Sambo Ebony chuckled gleefully in appreciation of his own joke.
+
+"There's one thing I guess you can tell me, Sambo," Reade suggested
+hopefully.
+
+"W'at am dat, massa?"
+
+"When are you going to change your seat and stop making me feel like a
+very thin pancake?"
+
+"W'en Ah done get mah mind made up."
+
+"When you have your mind made up about---what?"
+
+"About w'at I'se gwine do wid yo', Massa Reade."
+
+"Well, what do you think you're going to do with me?" insisted Tom. "I'll
+admit, Sambo, that I'm about losing my patience. Unless you get up off
+of me soon, and move away to a respectful distance, I shall be obliged to
+do something on my own account."
+
+"Go as far as yo' like, massa," returned the negro, unmoved. "I'se boun'
+ter admit dat yo' done got me fo' curiosity. W'at yo' done think yo'
+_can_ do?"
+
+Plainly the negro meant to go on having sport with him. Tom decided that
+it would be of no use to try to deceive this great mountain of black
+flesh. So Reade, who had been doing some brisk thinking during the last
+few moments, gave a sudden heave---a trick that he retained from the old
+football days.
+
+Much to Sambo's surprise he found himself going. Yet the black man was as
+agile as he was big. He leaped to his feet, bounding one step sideways,
+while Tom, who had been watching for this very chance, sprang to his own
+feet.
+
+"Not so fas', massa!" mocked the big black, reaching out and taking a
+strong clutch on. Tom's coat collar.
+
+Reade would have squirmed out of his coat and placed more distance between
+them, but Mr. Ebony, with a stout twist, gathered the two ends of the coat
+collar, holding the young engineer as though in the noose of a halter.
+
+Quick as a flash Reade struck out with his right fist for the black man's
+belt-line. Had the blow landed even the huge Sambo would have gone down
+to earth. But the negro parried with his own disengaged fist, then gave
+a twist to the coat collar noose that made Reade turn black in the face
+from choking.
+
+"Ah might as well tell yo'," Sambo observed dryly, "dat yo' ain't done
+got no new fight tricks dat yo' can wish on me. Ah done seen all de
+tricks of fightin' dat any man done know, an' Ah nebber yet seen no man
+dat could put any kind oh a blow ober on me to hurt!"
+
+The negro spoke boastfully, yet there could be no doubt that he believed
+all he said.
+
+Tom Reade next schemed to land a hard kick against the negro's shins. Ere
+he had his foot well lifted, however, the watchful Sambo seemed to divine
+the intent. He gave a quick twist at the coat collar that made Reade's
+head swim. It was some time before the young engineer's head recovered
+from that sudden confusion and blackness.
+
+"Am' yo' gwine beliebe dat yo' kain't wish no kind oh a trick ober on me?"
+demanded the black man in an injured tone. "Ah nebber seen no odder w'ite
+man dat had such a ha'd time beliebing w'at Ah done tole him!"
+
+"I've got to land this wicked brute, some way, or I may as well conclude
+that the jig is danced through, as far as I am concerned," Reade thought
+ruefully.
+
+Panting, quivering, in dread of being choked again, and much harder, Tom
+tried to think fast in the effort to devise some new plan for worsting
+this terrible opponent.
+
+"I've been fooling myself all along," Tom told himself, with a sinking
+heart. "I've been up against several men who were too weak or too cowardly
+to fight, and I've somehow gained the opinion that I could fight. But
+this black fellow has taken all the conceit out of me. I was a fool ever
+to think that I could fight! I'm nothing but a piece of jelly---or putty!"
+
+Of a sudden Reade tried to wrench himself free at the collar, at the same
+time raising his right knee with a forceful jerk. He wanted to drive that
+knee into the black man's wind.
+
+But Sambo seemed to guess the plan without trouble. He gave a twist that
+choked Tom, once more, until all went black before him. Then the negro
+slammed his victim down hard on the ground, well-nigh stunning the young
+engineer.
+
+"Ah done see w'at Ah gotta do wid yo'," Sambo announced. "Ah gotta tie
+yo' up, load yo' pockets wid rocks, and den take yo' out in de Gulf ah'
+lose yo'! Dat's w'at Ah gotta do, an' Ah ain' gwine lose no time about
+it either."
+
+Sambo was in earnest, too. He had mapped out that very course!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+A DAVID FOR A GOLIATH
+
+
+From his pockets the big fellow brought out a coil of stout cord. Without
+much trouble he slipped a noose over one of Tom's wrists. Then began an
+active fight, the object of which, on the black man's part, was to make the
+other wrist secure.
+
+But here Tom developed an amount of agility and a skill in fighting that
+angered Sambo.
+
+"Doggone yo', ef yo' won't take it peaceable-like, den yo'll get it do
+odder way."
+
+With that, Sambo delivered a blow that made young Reade see stars. His
+head swam dizzily. Now, the black man secured the other wrist, making a
+turn and a knot that would have done credit to an expert.
+
+But about that time something else happened. Whack! A blow from a club
+landed across the negro's head.
+
+"Who doin' dat?" demanded the negro, blinking and half turning.
+
+"I did eet, you miser-r-r-rable black smoke, and I do eet again!" rang
+the voice of Nicolas, as that valiant Mexican circled around the negro.
+
+"Yo' blow away, yaller baby!" jeered Sambo, whose head had been not at
+all hurt by the blow.
+
+"I show you eel I run away!" bridled up Nicolas.
+
+Tom now began to recover enough to know that his faithful servant was on
+the scene.
+
+"Scoot, Nicolas!" urged Tom, in a gasping Voice. "Run for all you're
+worth. This fellow will eat you up. Run and bring help."
+
+"Senor, I can wheep him with one hand!" vaunted the little Mexican.
+
+"Run, I tell you, and get help. Be like a flash, man!"
+
+"As you say, Senor, but---"
+
+Nicolas turned, speeding away.
+
+His escape, however, would interfere, possibly, with the plans of Sambo.
+The big black leaped up, racing after Nicolas.
+
+As the Mexican was a little fellow, and short of leg, it was not long
+before the pursuer caught up with him.
+
+"Hol' on, yo' yaller rascal!" laughed Sambo, reaching out for the Mexican.
+Nicolas wheeled about, dancing out of reach of the negro's massive hands.
+
+"Stand still, yo' li'l' Greaser!" laughed Sambo.
+
+"Now you have insult me, and I show you what I do to you!" snarled Nicolas,
+his brown face aflame at the taunting word, "Greaser."
+
+"Come heah!" jeered Sambo, making a bound and reaching for the small man.
+
+Nicolas dodged, but he did not run away. Instead, he bobbed up inside of
+the negro's reach. The Mexican thrust out his slim, sinewy right-hand
+forefinger. A vicious poke he gave with it, landing sharply on a spot
+just about an inch and a quarter below the base of the negro's breast bone.
+
+"Woof!" panted Sambo, half doubling, for Nicolas had touched a tender spot.
+
+"You have insult me! You call me mean name!" raged Nicolas. "Stand steel,
+you big black smoke!"
+
+Again Nicolas ducked and rushed in. Once more he employed his forefinger
+tip in the same fashion, and with more power.
+
+"O-o-o-o-o-h! Wow!" gasped Sambo, this time doubling nearly to the ground.
+"Get away, chile! I doan' wan' no mo' ob yo'!"
+
+"You have insult," insisted Nicolas angrily, "and I do much more yet to
+you."
+
+This time the negro appeared almost helpless. Nicolas danced about,
+looking for an opening. In desperation Sambo struck out with his powerful
+left. It gave the Mexican the chance he wanted. Darting in, he repeated
+his trick for the third time.
+
+The bulky negro lay down, groaning. He had too little breath left to be
+dangerous.
+
+While this was going on Tom Reade had rolled over on his face. From this
+position he succeeded in getting to his knees. Then he rose and hastened
+toward the Mexican.
+
+"Nicolas, you're surely a little terror!" Reade admitted, admiringly.
+"Now, untie my hands and we'll take care of Sambo."
+
+"Wait---jus' one leetle moment, Senor," begged the Mexican. He turned
+back to Sambo, that forefinger ready for another jab.
+
+"Fo' de lub ob goodness---" gasped Sambo. But Nicolas was determined. He
+made the jab, and Sambo all but lost the little breath that was in him.
+
+"Now, Senor, we do it all in one second," proclaimed the Mexican. From
+his pocket he drew a knife, springing the blade open. Snip! snip! and the
+young engineer was free of his lashings.
+
+"There's plenty of this cord left," declared Tom. "We'll fix up our black
+friend."
+
+"Do not use that word, Senor," implored Nicolas. "He is _no_ good! He
+is scoundrel! He call me Greaser, an' I will keeck off his head for eet!"
+
+"Wait until we get him tied," Tom proposed.
+
+Sambo, by this time, had gained strength enough to sit up. He was
+wondering whether he could rise to his feet and sprint away from this
+dangerous little fury of a Mexican.
+
+"Wait, you black cloud!" cried Nicolas. "I will put you down again!"
+
+"Yo' get away from me---please do!" begged Sambo, recoiling in terror.
+
+"Sambo," laughed Tom, "Africa shouldn't have stirred up Mexico as you did.
+Now, lie down on your face, place your hands behind you, and I will
+persuade him to let you alone."
+
+Sambo hesitated.
+
+"Let me at him, Senor!" begged Nicolas, maneuvering forward, his right hand
+ready. "He is _no_ good, I tell you! But I feex him!"
+
+With a yell Sambo Ebony flopped over on his face, placing his hands behind
+his back.
+
+"Let him alone, Nicolas, as long as he minds," ordered Reade, catching the
+excited Mexican by the collar. "Only, if he shows signs of making trouble
+then sail into him fast."
+
+No sign of trouble, however, was there in Sambo. He lay as meek as a lamb
+while Tom used a lot of the spare cord in taking sundry hitches around the
+negro's wrists.
+
+"I don't believe he'll get out of that," said Reade grimly, "Now, we'll
+fix his feet."
+
+This, too, was done, and Sambo lay helpless on the ground.
+
+"You'll make a fine-looking jailbird, my friend," mocked Tom, looking down
+at the prisoner. "Nor did any man ever better deserve the striped suit
+that the State of Alabama will present you. Now, Nicolas, I'll stay and
+watch this black treasure while you run and find help."
+
+"Senor, you go yourself," begged the Mexican. "The men will obey you more
+queeckly than they would me."
+
+"Oh, you find some of the men and tell 'em to come here to get the fellow
+who has been blowing up the wall, and they'll come fast enough," smiled
+Tom.
+
+"But, Senor, suppose thees scoundrel free himself?"
+
+"I won't let him, Nicolas."
+
+"But eef he do?" persisted the Mexican. "Then, as I have shown you, Senor,
+I can take fine care of heem!"
+
+"There's something in that, too," laughed Tom. "Nicolas, I don't believe
+it will be risking you any if I leave you here. Besides, I won't have to
+be gone very long."
+
+"If this black scoundrel he get restless, Senor, I will amuse heem with my
+forefinger."
+
+Sambo groaned; Nicolas grinned.
+
+"All right," Tom Reade laughed. "I'll be back as soon as I can."
+
+Away he raced at a dog-trot, chuckling. The contrast between bulky Sambo
+and little Nicolas and the big negro's comic fear of the slim little
+fellow kept Reade laughing.
+
+"But where on earth did Nicolas learn that trick?" Tom wondered. "I shall
+have to get him to show it to me. Plainly that trick is worth more than
+all the muscle that I spent so many years in piling on."
+
+Tom headed his course for the shore end of the wall. Here he would find
+men in abundance. Moreover, now that the big black was a prisoner the men
+would hardly be needed on the wall.
+
+"I think I know just how Sambo worked it, too," the engineer reflected, as
+he ran. "He swam out into the Gulf, towing that little scow behind him.
+Neither his black head nor the little scow would be seen far on the water
+on a dark night. Sambo, when he got near enough, could take one of the
+metal tubes, swim in under water to some point where no watchman was near,
+and stick the tube fast into the wall. Then another tube, and
+another---all under water where they would not show to a passing watchman.
+
+"Then, when he had all in place, and while no patrolling watchman was too
+near, Sambo could begin to attach the wires. That would take but a few
+minutes. Whenever any one came too near Sambo had but to swim out a little
+way and tread water until he could return to his job. When, at last, all
+was complete, Sambo would attach a wire from the bombs to a wire moored at
+a stated point under water, and then swim in, work his magneto, and touch
+the whole thing off from a safe hiding place on shore. The explosion
+itself would shatter the last length of wire. Oh, but it was all slick
+and easy!"
+
+Not increasing his speed, but keeping steadily at the jog-trot, Tom was at
+last near enough to the wall to raise his voice and shout.
+
+"Hullo!" came back the answer.
+
+"This is Reade, the chief engineer," Tom answered, through the night.
+"We've caught the fellow that has been blowing up the wall. A half a
+dozen of you men hurry over here with your lanterns. Come on the run."
+
+The man who had answered summoned several of his comrades as quickly as he
+could. As the men had to come in from the wall, however, it took a little
+time. Then six men reported, almost breathless, to Reade. Still behind
+them came Corbett on the run, summoned from the boat.
+
+"What's this I hear, Mr. Reade?" puffed the foreman. "You've solved the
+mystery and caught the fellow who has been dynamiting the wall?"
+
+"Got him and he's tied up, waiting for his ride to jail," Tom chuckled.
+
+"How did it happen, sir?" asked Corbett, staring with his eyes very wide
+open.
+
+"I caught the fellow---a huge giant of a negro, the same fellow who got
+Hazelton the other night," replied Tom. "But before the fight was over the
+black 'got' me, instead, and had me tied up. Then Nicolas came along and
+put the negro out of the fight, and---"
+
+"Nicolas?" demanded Foreman Corbett incredulously.
+
+"Yes. Nicolas proved himself to be the most fiery little bunch of fighting
+material that I have ever seen," laughed Reade, as they walked rapidly
+along.
+
+"How could that Mexican wallop a giant?"
+
+"I'll ask Nicolas to show you, to-morrow," Tom laughed mischievously.
+"But, Corbett, I believe that four bombs are even now attached to some
+part of the retaining wall, ready to be set off.
+
+"Great Scott!"
+
+"They won't be set off, though," continued Reade. "I found the firing
+magneto, and had a chance to cut the wires."
+
+The foreman wanted to ask more questions, while the half dozen workmen
+trudged along close at their heels, eager to hear every word. Tom,
+however, suggested that they save their breath in the interest of speed,
+until they had Mr. Sambo Ebony in safe custody.
+
+"Here we come, Nicolas!" Tom called, as the party neared the spot where
+captor and captive had been left.
+
+There was no response.
+
+"Nicolas!" Tom called again, with a start.
+
+Still no answer.
+
+"I don't like the look of that," Reade uttered. "Let's get there on the
+sprint!"
+
+Tom himself caught at one of the lanterns, leading the way. Neither the
+negro nor the Mexican was where the young chief engineer had left them.
+
+Feverishly, Tom began to search the ground, holding his lantern close.
+
+"Hang the luck!" he quivered, pointing to fragments of cord on the sand.
+"That negro simply burst his bonds---and now where is he? Where is
+Nicolas, for that matter? I thought the little fellow, with his trick,
+could easily take care of the big black."
+
+But, though they spread out and searched, there was no sign of either the
+negro or the little brown man.
+
+"I can't understand what has happened," quivered Tom Reade, thinking more
+of the staunch little Mexican than of the loss of the prisoner.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A TEST OF REAL NERVE
+
+
+"What an idiot I was not to stop to consider that Sambo Ebony could snap
+those cords!" groaned Tom, staring disconcertedly about him. "Yet, if
+Nicolas were safe I wouldn't so much mind the escape of the black. I shall
+see him again, and I shall know him wherever I see him."
+
+"Let's look for the trail," proposed Foreman Corbett, holding one of the
+lanterns close to the ground.
+
+The trail, however, was easy neither to distinguish nor to follow.
+
+"We may as well leave here and search farther," concluded the young
+engineer. "Before we go, though, we'll get the magneto and take it with
+us."
+
+Then the procession turned toward the land end of the retaining wall.
+
+"If Nicolas doesn't show up soon," Tom murmured to the foreman, "I shall
+notify the Blixton police and offer a reward for news of him. That little
+fellow is too faithful to be left to his fate."
+
+"What would the negro want of Nicolas?" queried the foreman.
+
+"Revenge," Tom replied. "It makes a big bully like him furious to be
+handled the way Nicolas treated him. But I can't understand how Nicolas
+failed to repeat his clever trick with the black."
+
+Arrived at the water front the magneto was dumped into the motor boat.
+
+"Seems to me I would smash that thing all to pieces," Suggested Foreman
+Corbett. "It has done harm enough around this wall."
+
+"I don't believe in destroying anything that is useful," Reade answered,
+shaking his head. "Besides, we are going to capture Sambo yet, and then
+we shall want that magneto for evidence."
+
+"What are you going to do to find Nicolas?" Corbett wanted to know.
+
+"I wish I had even an idea," Tom sighed. "Corbett, I wish you would hurry
+over to Blixton and rout out the police. I've an idea that Sambo may have
+a hiding place in the town. Nicolas, too, may have been taken that way.
+I'll sit down and write out a good description of the rascal."
+
+This Reade did, handing the paper to the foreman.
+
+"Who'll take charge here? Corbett asked.
+
+"I will, until you get back, but hurry."
+
+As soon as the foreman had gone Tom stepped into the motor boat, taking
+the wheel.
+
+"Tune up the engine, Conlon," Reade directed the engine tender. "I'm going
+to take a run around to the west side of the wall. I'm going to try to
+find the tubes of high explosive that I'm satisfied were planted in the
+wall."
+
+"That's a fine job for a dark night, sir," grumbled Conlon. "Suppose we
+run into the bombs, and they prove to be contact exploders, too?"
+
+"That's one of the risks of the business," Tom retorted grimly.
+
+Before the motor boat had gone far Tom called one of the men aboard to take
+the wheel. Then the young chief engineer began to experiment with the
+searchlight.
+
+"What's the idea, sir?" asked Conlon, looking on.
+
+"I want to depress the light, so that we can use it to look down into the
+water."
+
+"And try to find the bombs?"
+
+"Exactly," Reade nodded.
+
+"Lucky if we don't find the bombs with the keel of the boat," observed
+Conlon.
+
+Tom succeeded in rigging the light so that he could use it. By the time
+that the boat was around at the west side of the retaining wall Tom ordered
+the boat in close alongside. Then, with the depressed searchlight he
+discovered that he could see the sides of the wall to a depth of some eight
+feet under the surface.
+
+"That may be enough for our needs," Reade murmured. "Now, run the boat
+along, slowly and close. I want to scan every bit of the wall."
+
+Less than five minutes later Tom Reade, one hand controlling the
+searchlight and peering steadily into the water, sang out:
+
+"Stop! Back her---slowly. There, come back five feet. So! Hold her
+steady!"
+
+As the engine stopped Conlon stepped forward, kneeling by Reade's side.
+
+"There are the bombs, man!" cried Tom exultantly. "See them---the two
+upper ones?"
+
+"I see something that gleams," admitted Conlon.
+
+"Well, we'll have them up and aboard in a hurry. Then you'll see just
+what they are."
+
+"You're not going to try to raise the things with the boathook, are you?"
+queried the engine tender, a look of alarm in his eyes.
+
+"That might be risky," admitted Reade. "I'll go over the side after them
+and bring them up.
+
+"Don't, Mr. Reade!" urged Conlon with a shiver. "That'll be worse still.
+You're likely to blow yourself into the next world!"
+
+"I think not---hope not, anyway," answered Tom steadily. "Have you a pair
+of pliers in your tool box that'll cut small wires?"
+
+"Yes," replied Conlon.
+
+"Get them for me."
+
+Reade removed his coat, shoes and socks, then took the pliers.
+
+"Let one of the men jump ashore with the boathook and hold the boat
+steady," was Reade's next direction.
+
+This being done, Reade deflected the searchlight for one more look into the
+water. Then, the pliers in his right hand, he mounted to the rail of the
+boat.
+
+"Be careful, sir---do," begged Conlon. "What I'm afraid of is that the
+bombs are contact exploders."
+
+"It's likely," nodded Reade. "I'll be as careful as I can."
+
+Tom did not dive; the distance was too short. Instead, he let himself down
+into the water slowly. Then his head vanished beneath the surface of the
+water.
+
+"Whew! The nerve of that young fellow!", thought Conlon with shuddering
+admiration.
+
+"Ob co'se Massa Reade done got nerve," nodded the negro at the wheel.
+"Dat's one reason why, Misto Conlon, Massa Reade is boss."
+
+"There are other reasons why he's boss," grunted the engine tender. "Mr.
+Reade has nerve, but he also has brains in his head. Any man with brains
+and the sense to use 'em goes to the top, while I stay down a good deal
+lower, and you, Rastus, are still lower."
+
+"Ah reckon Ah got a two-bit hat on top o' only two cents' wo'th o' brains,
+Misto Conlon," grinned the darkey.
+
+Conlon was an Irishman, and naturally, therefore, no coward. Yet with the
+possibility that Tom would run afoul of a contact-exploding bomb and send
+them all skyward, the engine tender waited at the rail with drawn breath.
+
+Finally, there was a ripple on the water. Then Tom's head appeared; next
+his shoulders.
+
+"Conlon!"
+
+"Here, sir."
+
+"Here is one of the bombs. Handle it carefully."
+
+"Trust me, sir."
+
+Conlon drew the metal tube, with a piece of wire pendant from it, as
+carefully as though it had been a royal baby and heir to a throne. Into
+the boat the engine tender lifted the thing, and laid it carefully in a
+locker. By the time that Conlon was back at the rail Reade had gone below
+again.
+
+"Down dere, aftah mo' death!" grinned the darkey. A colored man can
+usually be brave when serving under a white leader in whom he has full
+confidence.
+
+Presently Tom came up with another metal tube, like the first.
+
+"I'll hang on and get my breath," Tom informed the men in the boat, as he
+rested one hand on the rail. "The other two bombs are about three feet
+lower, and it's going to be hard to work at the lower depth."
+
+"Be careful, won't you, sir?" urged Conlon, in a somewhat awed voice. "Mr.
+Reade, we can't afford to lose you until this job is completed. Men with
+all the nerve you show are scarce in the world."
+
+"I know where there are forty thousand men with at least as much nerve,
+many of them having several times as much as I," laughed Tom.
+
+"Where on earth are they?" demanded the Irishman.
+
+"In the United States Navy. If there were a battleship here the jackies
+would be fighting for the honor of going down after these bombs."
+
+Then Reade dropped out of sight, once more. Nor was it long before he
+had the third and the fourth bombs aboard the boat. Then he climbed in
+himself, dripping like a shaggy Newfoundland dog.
+
+"Put in at the dock now," the young chief ordered, and the boat started on
+its way.
+
+"Some one signaling from the wall lower down," Tom soon informed the negro
+pilot. "Put in where you see the signaling."
+
+"It is I, Corbett," called the foreman of that name. "Mr. Reade, these
+two men with me belong to the Blixton police."
+
+"Perhaps you had rather walk down to the dock, then, instead of getting
+into the boat," laughed Reade. "We have four bombs aboard, just taken
+out of the wall above here."
+
+Accordingly the three turned and walked. At the landing the policemen
+gazed curiously at the bombs.
+
+"Do you want to take charge of these?" Reade queried.
+
+"Not particular about it," replied the policeman, with a shrug. "We'd
+be scorched for endangering the town if we took those things into Blixton.
+Your foreman, Mr. Reade, called us out here to see if we could get trail
+of your missing Mexican servant."
+
+"That's a vastly more important thing to do," Tom replied with enthusiasm.
+"I want to find Nicolas before I do another thing."
+
+"Come here, Bill," called one of the officers.
+
+Out of the shadows near the shore came a youth leading a dog on a leash.
+
+"This dog is a bloodhound," announced one of the policemen with visible
+pride. "Take him to where the scent of the Mexican starts, and the dog
+will follow as long as there's any scent left. But, first, we'll have to
+have something that the Mexican has worn, so that the hound will know the
+true scent."
+
+"That will take but a few minutes," declared Reade energetically. "Come
+up to the house, and I'll find something that Nicolas has worn."
+
+Corbett remained behind to take care of the bombs. Tom led the officers
+and the youth with the hound on a brisk walk up to the house.
+
+"Wait out here," murmured Tom, "and I'll bring something out. If we all
+go into the house we'll wake my partner, Hazelton, and he has enough work
+to do in the daytime, without being kept up at night."
+
+While the others remained outside Tom stole into the house. There was a
+room in the rear, off the kitchen, where Nicolas slept. Into that room
+Reade stepped noiselessly.
+
+It was not necessary to strike a match, for, in the very faint light there,
+Tom espied an object on the foot of the bed that he recognized---one of
+the Mexican's white canvas shoes.
+
+Tom snatched it up quickly. Then, despite his steady nerves, he staggered
+back.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+TOM MAKES AN UNEXPECTED CAPTURE
+
+
+For an unearthly scream pierced the air. There was a wrench, a bounding
+figure---and then Tom Reade felt a jolt near his solar plexus that made
+him gasp.
+
+"Stop that!" gasped the young chief engineer.
+
+"You, Senor?" demanded an incredible, drowsy voice.
+
+"Yes; it's I---Reade."
+
+"A thousand pardons, Senor!"
+
+"So this is you, Nicolas?"
+
+"Yes, Senor."
+
+"What are you doing here?"
+
+"The negro got away from me."
+
+"I know that, but---"
+
+"I could not help it, Senor. I assure you I was not careless."
+
+"I never knew you to be careless, Nicolas."
+
+"Thank you, Senor. But I stood over that black scoundrel, watching for
+the slightest move on his part. I had my forefinger ready, and he did not
+dare move."
+
+"I can quite believe that," agreed Tom, dryly, "after the poke you just
+gave me."
+
+"Again a thousand pardons, Senor, but in the dark, and awaking so suddenly,
+I did not see you or know you."
+
+"I can quite believe that, Nicolas."
+
+"As I was saying, Senor, I was watching over the black man when some one
+came up behind me---so softly that I did not hear. But I felt. _Ah!_ What
+I felt! It was a fist that seemed to break in the top of my head. Down I
+went, and I heard a voice. I knew that voice, too. So would you have
+known it, Senor!"
+
+"Whose voice was it?" asked Tom, curiously.
+
+"The voice of Evarts."
+
+"The discharged foreman?"
+
+"Yes, Senor. But I am delaying my story. While Evarts was speaking I
+heard another sound. At one effort the negro snapped the cords that held
+him. Ah, he is a powerful brute."
+
+"He is," Tom affirmed solemnly.
+
+"I knew it was my task to keep the negro from getting away," continued the
+little Mexican excitedly. "So I leaped up, extended my forefinger and
+rushed at him. But thees Evarts---hees feest catch me between the eyes.
+I do not have to guess the spot where he struck me, Senor, for I can
+feel it yet. Down I went, and knew no more. When next I opened my
+eyes I found myself lying in the middle of a theecket of bushes. I theenk,
+perhaps, the scoundrels believed they had killed me, and so they hid my
+body. But I have fool' them. I am still alive---much alive!"
+
+"What did you do when you came to, Nicolas?"
+
+"Senor," protested the Mexican, "there was no more need of me. You had
+gone after men. Eef you came back, you have many men with you, so you do
+not need me. For that reason I come home."
+
+Even in the dark the young engineer could "feel" Nicolas's shudder. Tom
+could not repress a smile that threatened to become a chuckle.
+
+"I was varee sleepy," continued Nicolas, "and so I lay down. I forgot to
+undress, or even to take off my shoes. I fall asleep, and I dream much.
+I see the big negro again, and I dream that I have more fight with heem.
+Then, when you pull my foot, I wake up in one gr-rand sweat, for I theenk
+the big black attack me once more. I am glad---so glad that it is not
+true."
+
+"Nicolas," cried Tom, "you have done fighting enough for one night. Yet
+tell me, how did you happen to be at hand to-night in time to save me from
+Mr. Sambo Ebony?"
+
+"Because I see you start away to-night," replied Nicolas, "an' I see that
+you go alone. I know that you mos' likely run into trouble, an' so I
+follow you. Sure enough, Senor, you find trouble---and I heet heem with
+my finger!"
+
+"You surely did 'hit him with your finger,' Nicolas," laughed Tom, grasping
+the little Mexican's hand and wringing it. "But now come outside. I had
+sent for the police to find you, and now I must show them that you are
+already found."
+
+Together they went out on the porch. Tom explained the situation.
+
+"Then you don't need us, after all?" asked one of the policemen.
+
+"Not to find Nicolas," Tom Reade admitted. "But do you know Evarts?"
+
+"Used to be your foreman?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"We know him," nodded the policeman.
+
+"Then," Reade continued, "I wish you would search through Blixton for
+him. If you find him, be good enough to lock him up and notify me."
+
+"Is there a warrant out against him?" asked one of the policemen,
+cautiously.
+
+"You don't need one," Tom replied. "I will make a charge of felony
+against Evarts, to the effect that he is concerned in the outrages
+against our wall. On a felony charge you don't need a warrant. Then,
+too, try to find the big negro."
+
+"What's his name?"
+
+"I don't know his name," Tom answered. "I've dubbed him 'Sambo Ebony.'
+You have the description of him that I wrote out. Arrest Sambo, by all
+means, if you can find him, and I'll make a felony charge against him,
+too. The negro is the one who has been blowing up the sea wall."
+
+"We'll look for the pair all through the town, Mr. Reade," promised the
+officers.
+
+"Do! And, on behalf of the company, I'll offer a two-hundred dollar reward
+for the arrest of each man!"
+
+With that prospect to spur them on the policemen hastened away, followed
+by the young man with the bloodhound.
+
+"Now, Nicolas," pressed Reade, turning around at the faithful little brown
+man, "you tumble back into bed."
+
+"But you, Senor?"
+
+"Don't worry about me. I've probably done all I need to do to-night. I
+shall probably sit here on the porch and think until daylight. Then I'll
+call Hazelton, and go to bed for a few hours' sleep before I appear in
+court against the gamblers and the bootleggers. Go to bed, Nicolas, and
+sleep! That's an order, remember!"
+
+The Mexican therefore went to his bedroom without protest. Presently Reade
+became aware of the fact that his clothing had not by any means fully
+dried. He went to his room, took a vigorous rub-down, donned dry clothing,
+and then went out on the porch.
+
+Though the night was dark the air was delicious. The combined odors of
+many flowers came in on the faintly stirring breeze.
+
+Tom leaned back in a chair, his feet on the porch railing. His senses
+lulled by the quiet and repose of the night he was in danger of falling
+asleep.
+
+Of a sudden he came to with a start. Off among the trees to the eastward,
+near the road, a human being was stirring.
+
+Reade rose, moving swiftly back more into the shadow. Then he watched,
+every sense alert. Yes; some one was moving, out there amid the trees.
+What he could not see, Tom discovered by his acute sense of hearing.
+
+"I'll put a hot pebble in that fellow's bonnet, whoever he is!" Tom
+muttered vengefully. Entering the house, he left at the rear, then made
+a stealthy, roundabout trip that brought him at the farther edge of the
+litte grove of trees.
+
+Now the young engineer crouched close to the ground as he listened. Once
+more he heard that some one moving, not many yards away. It was
+pitch-black in there amid the trees. Guided by his ears, Tom moved closer
+and closer without making a betraying sound. Suddenly he found the tall
+figure looming up almost in his path.
+
+"Now, I've got you!" cried Tom exultantly, making a bound that should have
+carried his hands to the throat of the prowler.
+
+But the other, like a flash, went on the defensive. Tom felt himself
+parried, then clutched at. The next instant the prowler had the young
+engineer in a tackle that carried Tom Reade back to the good old high
+school days at home. The young engineer was dumped on the ground as though
+he had been a sack of flour.
+
+"Great Scott!" quivered Tom Reade. "No one but Dick Prescott ever had
+that tackle down fine!"
+
+"Well, you blithering idiot!" came the indignant answer. "That's who I
+am---Prescott!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE ARMY "ON THE JOB"
+
+
+"You, Dick?" gasped Tom, stumbling ruefully to his feet. Then he leaped
+at his late foe, throwing his arms around him. The two fairly hugged each
+other, Yes; here was Dick Prescott, not so many weeks a graduate of the
+Military Academy at West Point, and now, if you please, Second Lieutenant
+Richard Prescott, United States Army!
+
+"Well, of all the strange things that the Illinois Central Railroad brings
+into Alabama!" grunted Tom, now gripping Dick by the hand and holding on
+as though he never meant to let go.
+
+"If the Illinois Central had built its tracks through to Blixton I probably
+would have arrived at a civilized hour," laughed Dick. "As it was, I had
+to come in on a wood-burning, backwoods road and the train was only five
+hours and a half behind schedule. Then, from a sleepy policeman I got
+directions that enabled me to find this place after an hour's hard work."
+To what effect? Only to be pounced upon by you as though you had caught me
+in the act of stealing all the water in the Gulf of Mexico!"
+
+"Stop your roasting," laughed Tom joyfully. "But say, it _does_ seem good
+to set eyes on you again, after two years."
+
+All of our readers who have read the "_High School Boys Series_" and the
+"_West Point Series_" know all about Dick Prescott, the famous leader of
+Dick & Co.
+
+"What are you now?" Tom asked eagerly. "A general, or only a colonel?"
+
+"Nothing but a shavetail," laughed Dick. "Shavetail is the army nickname
+for a second lieutenant."
+
+"I've got to join my regiment, the Thirty-fourth Infantry, out in Colorado
+very soon," continued Prescott. "But I came down here to spend a few days
+with you, if you can stand me."
+
+"If we can stand you!" chuckled Tom, patting his old high school chum on
+the back. "Say, where's Greg?"
+
+Greg Holmes had been another member of Dick & Co., and Dick's chum and
+comrade at West Point.
+
+"Well, you see," laughed Lieutenant Prescott, "Greg has been falling in
+love with six girls a year regularly ever since he entered West Point.
+Now that he's in the army he has started in to increase the yearly
+average. He's visiting a Miss Deering, who lives near Chicago."
+
+"Greg's likely never to marry," wisely remarked Tom. "These fellows who
+catch a new love fever every few weeks always end up by finding that no
+girl wants them. But say, Dick you hardly look the soldier."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Well, one would expect to see an army officer in uniform, you know."
+
+"An officer rarely travels in uniform, unless on duty with troops,"
+explained Dick.
+
+"How did you like West Point?"
+
+"Fine!" said Dick, grimly. "It was like four years in prison, only more
+so. When I look back I shudder at the incessant grind I had to endure
+there. Yet I'm going to be happy, now I'm through, for I couldn't be happy
+anywhere except in the United States Army."
+
+"What crazy notions some folks have of happiness," murmured Tom, mockingly.
+"However, old fellow, we're not going to fight, are we? Now, hustle over
+to the house. Harry is sleeping at the present moment, but I won't let
+him have a wink more of sleep to-night. It's getting toward daylight,
+anyway, and too much sleep isn't good for a fellow. But don't talk above
+a whisper, Dick, when we get near the house. I don't want Harry, by any
+chance, to catch a sound of your voice until he comes out on the porch and
+runs into you."
+
+Chatting away in low tones the two old-time high school chums gained the
+porch.
+
+"Now, just stay here," whispered Tom, then strode into the house. He
+entered his partner's room, gripping the slumber-seized Hazelton with a
+strong clasp.
+
+"Oh, quit your fooling!" protested a sleepy voice from the pillow.
+
+"Time to get up, you slant-eyed rations stealer!" muttered Tom gruffly.
+"Come on. You're needed, and there's no time to be lost. Up with you!"
+
+Tom dragged his drowsy partner from the bed, seating him on the edge of it.
+
+"Now, shed your pajamas and pull on something decent," Reade commanded
+grimly. "Hustle! There's a conference going on outside, and you're
+wanted. Hurry! Want me to dump the pitcher of water on you? I'll do it
+if you give your eyes another rub!"
+
+Hazelton was now fully convinced that something important was in the air.
+If not, he knew that his chum never would have hauled him out of bed in the
+darkest hours of the night.
+
+"If you throw any water I'll shave you with the bread-knife," retorted
+Harry. "But you can keep on talking to me, so that I won't fall asleep
+while I'm trying to dress."
+
+Slowly, at first, then more rapidly, Hazelton got his clothes on. Pouring
+water into the basin he sopped a towel in it, then liberally applied it to
+his face. The water waked him rapidly.
+
+"Now, lead me forth to where duty calls," mimicked Harry.
+
+"Run along out on to the porch," ordered Tom. "I'll be there in a moment."
+
+Still yawning, Hazelton groped his way out into the hall, along the dark
+passage, and thence out into the night. Some one stood there, and Harry
+walked curiously toward him.
+
+"Howdy, whoever you are," was Hazelton's greeting.
+
+"Halloo, Harry, old chum," came Dick Prescott's laughing answer.
+
+"Dick Prescott!" gasped Harry delightedly.
+
+"I suppose you think I might have waited until daylight," laughed Dick,
+as their hands met.
+
+"I'm heartily glad you didn't wait," said Harry. "How long can you stay
+with us?"
+
+"Not as long as I'd like to, for I'm due at Fort Clowdry in a very few
+days."
+
+"And Greg?"
+
+Lieutenant Prescott gave the same explanation he had furnished Tom.
+
+"How does it seem to be an army officer?" Harry continued.
+
+"I believe it to be the finest career on earth," Prescott answered.
+"Still, as you can guess, I'm utterly without experience so far. After a
+few days more I shall have my first day as an officer on duty with troops.
+But do you and Tom continue to find engineering the grandest career on
+earth?"
+
+"We certainly do," affirmed Hazelton.
+
+"It must be very interesting," agreed Dick. "Still, I imagine there is
+yet enough of the primitive savage in the average man to make him enjoy a
+real fight once in a while. That's an experience you're denied in your
+calling, but an army officer may always look forward to the chance of
+seeing a little fighting."
+
+Hazelton glanced humorously at his partner before he replied:
+
+"At present there's a very good chance of a fight right here at this camp."
+
+"So?" Dick Prescott asked, sitting up with a look of interest.
+
+"Not so much chance as there was," said Tom gravely. "The fight came off
+to-night. Harry, I met the big black---caught him redhanded."
+
+"You did?" cried Hazelton, leaping up. "And you never called me?"
+
+"There wasn't any chance," Tom assured him. "The meeting and the fight
+didn't take place on this porch."
+
+Tom now had two very interested auditors. For Prescott's benefit Reade
+first sketched a brief outline of the troubles that had led up to the
+present, including an account of the wrecking of substantial portions of
+the retaining wall. Then he came down to the events of the night.
+
+"Oh, and I had to miss it," sighed Harry, disappointedly. "I'd have missed
+a week of sleep just to have been in to-night's doings. And, if I had been
+with you, Tom, we'd now have Mr. Sambo Ebony in jail."
+
+"I think we've blocked the black rascal's game on the wall, anyway," said
+Tom.
+
+"There's just a fair chance that you haven't yet blocked it," remarked the
+young army officer thoughtfully. "Of course this Sambo of yours merely
+represents a well-organized gang. This gang may have more ways than one
+of damaging the property of the Melliston Company. From all I can see, Tom
+and Harry, you're likely to need to be more vigilant than ever. Whew! But
+I'm glad that I can be with you a few days. I'm likely to come in for a
+choice lot of excitement. Also, I may very likely be able to help out a
+lot."
+
+"We wouldn't put you to that trouble, Dick," protested Tom. "You're to be
+our guest---not our policeman."
+
+"Are you going to try to keep me out of all the excitement and fun?"
+Lieutenant Dick demanded, indignantly. "Sleep? Can't I get enough of that
+when I go aboard a Pullman again and am riding out to Colorado? Of course
+I'm going to help---and I'm going to have my share of all the opportunities
+for excitement here---or else I'm going to cut your acquaintance."
+
+"Why, of course we'll be delighted to have your help, Dick, if you want to
+stand the racket," Reade made haste to say. "It will surely seem like
+doubling---or trebling---our forces, to have Dick Prescott working hand in
+hand with us."
+
+"Then that's settled," cried Dick, with an air of satisfaction.
+
+"You haven't had any sleep lately, have you, Dick?" inquired Tom, after
+they had chatted a little longer.
+
+"No; I haven't."
+
+"Then you must turn in and get a few hours," proposed Reade. "I must have
+a little myself, as I shall have to be up and go into court during the
+coming forenoon."
+
+"I'm wide awake now," said Harry. "So I'll sit right here on the porch
+and dream of Dick and Greg, and good old Dave Darrin and Danny Dalzell,
+and the good times we had in old Gridley. What time do you want to be up,
+Tom?"
+
+"Not later than eight," Reade answered.
+
+"Trust me," said Harry promptly. Harry went to his own bedroom, pulled his
+bed apart, remade it with fresh linen, and with a final grip of Dick's
+hand, he left the army officer to turn in there.
+
+At eight o'clock Hazelton called both Tom and Dick. They turned out
+promptly, to find that Nicolas had laid an appetizing breakfast on the
+porch.
+
+Then Tom had to hurry over to Blixton, Dick going with him, while Hazelton
+went down to the breakwater to superintend the day's work there.
+
+Only a little time had to be spent in the justice's stuffy court. Hawkins
+and his fellow gamblers and bootleggers were arraigned and held in one
+thousand dollars' bail each for trial. As none of them had the money the
+eight men were sent to the county jail pending trial.
+
+"That's queer," mused Tom, aloud, as he and Dick walked back to camp.
+"You'd think that professional gamblers would have money enough to put up
+small bail."
+
+"Not if they're working for other people," suggested Dick. "These men may
+be merely the agents of some larger crowd."
+
+"Meaning that the larger crowd may be a sort of vice trust, operating in
+many fields at the same time?" queried Reade.
+
+"Something of the sort," replied the young army officer. "To-day nearly
+everything has been capitalized on a large scale of combined capital. Why
+shouldn't vice be?"
+
+"I begin to think you're more than half right in your guess," Tom admitted.
+"Your explanation is about the only way to account for a fellow like
+Hawkins not having a thousand at his instant disposal. However, if these
+fellows represent a vice trust, then I suppose it will be a question of
+only a little time when the trust sends down money enough to put up the
+needed bail."
+
+"That will undoubtedly happen," nodded Dick. "And then you'll have to look
+out for that fellow, Hawkins, and all the men he can command. Hawkins
+looked at you, in court, as though he'd enjoy pulverizing you."
+
+"I'm ready, when he is," laughed Tom. "If he'd only fight in the open I
+wouldn't be at all afraid of him."
+
+Tom now led the way down to the retaining wall. Prescott gazed with great
+interest at the signs of activity. On a closer inspection he was even
+more interested. He was capable of understanding very fully what was being
+done here, for every graduate of the United States Military Academy is
+supposed to be a capable engineer.
+
+"You've a difficult task on hand, but your basic principle is sound, and
+you're doing the work finely and economically," Dick declared with
+emphasis.
+
+Harry came in from the outer end of the wall and joined them. He listened
+with pride to the praises that the army officer showered on the engineers.
+
+"I wish Mr. Bascomb, the president of the company, could hear you," said
+Harry. "He isn't altogether sure that we know what we're about in anything
+that we're doing."
+
+"Then I've a very good mental picture of Bascomb," declared Dick, bluntly.
+"Bascomb is something of a chump. By the way, if you want to get square
+with Mr. Bascomb, why don't you coax him down here to help you look out for
+the evil-doers who are combined against you?"
+
+"He wouldn't be much use," sighed Tom. "He's an impossible sort of chap.
+He wanted us to stop our crusade against camp vice. Said it was hurting
+business."
+
+"What craft is that?" inquired Dick, looking toward a sailboat that was
+moving lazily along about a half-mile to the eastward.
+
+"I don't know," Tom answered, after a look. "Never saw the boat before.
+Regular cabin cruiser, isn't she, about forty feet long?"
+
+"About that," nodded Dick. "What interested me in her was the fact that a
+fellow on board has been watching us with a marine glass. I caught the
+glint of the sun on the lenses."
+
+"Why should he want to be watching us?" demanded Hazelton.
+
+"That's just what made me curious," replied Prescott. "As an army officer,
+if this were a fort that I commanded in troublous times, I'd want to look
+into any strange craft that I caught cruising lazily in the offing and
+holding a marine glass on us."
+
+"I wonder if that boat can be in the service of those who are annoying us?"
+Tom muttered.
+
+"It's an even chance that it is a 'hostile ship,'" Prescott suggested.
+"You have a motor boat here. I'm inclined to think you ought to use it in
+overhauling that suspicious craft. Of course you'd have no right unless
+there was a police officer along. Can you get one?"
+
+"The authorities in Blixton would send a policeman on request."
+
+"Then send a messenger to request them to send over a policeman in
+citizen's clothes," proposed Dick.
+
+Tom promptly despatched Foreman Dill on that errand.
+
+"Now don't let the men on the boat see that you're paying any more
+attention," Prescott advised. "Leave it to me, and I'll contrive to keep
+the boat and its people under observation without looking too plainly in
+their direction."
+
+In due time the plain clothes policeman arrived. He, the young engineers
+and the army lieutenant boarded the "Morton," which put out from the
+landing as though on a trip of inspection of the wall.
+
+"Don't anyone look over at the sloop," Prescott urged. "I'll do the
+watching. A fellow on that craft is holding the glasses on us right now.
+Officer, do you demand the assistance of all present in any police duty
+that may come up?"
+
+"I do," replied the Blixton policeman, a man named Carnes, returning
+Prescott's wink.
+
+"All right, then," laughed Dick. "That demand makes policemen of us all.
+Tom, you can turn, now, when ready, and put on full speed in going after
+that craft."
+
+Reade gave the order for full speed, then took the steering wheel himself.
+
+"Guilty conscience!" laughed Prescott. "There's the sloop putting about at
+once and heading away from us."
+
+"They can't get away from us, in this light wind," chuckled the young chief
+engineer.
+
+A few minutes later the "Morton" came up within easy hailing distance of
+the sloop, aboard which only one man now appeared.
+
+"Sloop ahoy!" called the policeman. "What are you doing in these waters?"
+
+"Looking for a good fishing ground," answered the dark-faced man at the
+tiller.
+
+"Then you're too far in by some three miles," answered the policeman.
+
+"Thank you, cap'n," acknowledged the sailing master of the sloop.
+
+"You're welcome," the policeman continued, "but ease off your sheet and
+lay to. We want to come aboard."
+
+"You can't!" flatly retorted the skipper.
+
+"You're wrong there," retorted the policeman. "This is a police party,
+and I tell you that we are coming aboard. Lay to, or we shall have to
+start a lot of trouble for you."
+
+In the policeman's hand suddenly glistened a revolver. Tom ran the motor
+boat close alongside. With a snarl the man left off his sheet. The
+policeman and Dick Prescott leaped aboard the craft, Tom and Harry
+following.
+
+"This is a cheeky outrage!" snarled the skipper, scowling at the invaders.
+
+"Then keep the change, and welcome," laughed the policeman, taking his
+stand close to the skipper.
+
+Dick Prescott made a dive at the cabin door, which was closed.
+
+"Open this door!" he summoned.
+
+As the door did not open Dick placed his shoulder against it.
+
+"Open the door, or I'll break it down," Dick insisted.
+
+There was still no answer. Thereupon Prescott proceeded to put his threat
+into execution. Harry bounded forward to help. Under their combined
+assault the door gave way.
+
+Lieutenant Prescott was the first to enter the dark little cabin. Poor as
+the light was his eyes caught sight of something that made him gasp.
+
+"This is the big capture of the season!" cried Dick jubilantly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A NEW MYSTERY PEEPS IN
+
+
+"Get out of here, or you'll get something you don't want," roared an ugly
+voice at the farther end of the cabin.
+
+At sound of that voice Tom Reade started. He thrust his head in the open
+doorway.
+
+"Hullo, Evarts!" called the young chief engineer.
+
+"Get out of here!" came the furious order.
+
+"So you've openly joined the enemy, Evarts?" demanded Tom, as his eyes
+fell upon the object that had first claimed Lieutenant Dick Prescott's
+attention.
+
+"You've no business here! Get out, or I'll shoot," cried Evarts,
+defiantly.
+
+"Don't be too quick on the shoot," warned the Blixton policeman, who still
+had his own revolver in his hand. "This is a police party, and you're
+under arrest. Start any shooting trouble, and the air will be full of it."
+
+"Clear out, and I'll come outside and talk with you," proposed Evarts, for
+it really was the discharged foreman.
+
+"All right," nodded the policeman. "Gentlemen, let him step outside."
+
+The others left the entrance to the cabin, As Evarts, his pistol now back
+in his pocket, stepped sullenly outside, Harry Hazelton dropped back into
+the doorway.
+
+"Glad to meet you, Mr. Evarts," grinned the police officer, deftly slipping
+handcuffs on the fellow's wrists.
+
+"This is treachery!" stormed the prisoner. "I didn't surrender to you.
+I only came out to talk with you."
+
+"If you didn't surrender, then excuse me, and go ahead and put up a fight,"
+laughed the policeman, handily removing Evarts's revolver from a hip
+pocket.
+
+"Now, look in here, Tom," urged Dick. "Do you see what caught my eye?"
+
+Prescott pointed to a sharp-nosed cylinder, some eight feet long. Just as
+it lay the propeller at the other end was invisible to one at the doorway
+of the cabin.
+
+"It's a home-made imitation of a Whitehead torpedo," Lieutenant Dick went
+on, in explanation. "If it proves to be charged with explosives then the
+mere having of it aboard this sloop will prove embarrassing to these two
+prisoners to explain in court. If it isn't loaded, that will be almost as
+bad, as such a torpedo can be rather easily loaded, and then set in
+operation by clock-work machinery that will control the propeller."
+
+"Young man, you seem to think you know a good deal about torpedoes,"
+sneered Evarts.
+
+"He ought to," Harry retorted quietly. "He's a West Point man and an army
+officer. Therefore, he's a specialist in some kinds of explosives."
+
+Evarts's face turned somewhat paler at this information of having an army
+officer on hand as a witness.
+
+"Do you call me a prisoner, too?" asked the man at the tiller uneasily.
+
+"Something like it, I guess," nodded Dick.
+
+"Say, but that's a pretty rank deal against an honest man," protested the
+skipper hoarsely. "I hired this boat out to that man, the one you call
+Evarts, but I didn't know what he was up to."
+
+"You didn't know that torpedoes are used for wicked work either, eh?"
+pressed Lieutenant Dick.
+
+"I'll swear that I didn't know what it was that he brought on board," cried
+the skipper. "Evarts said it was a new device for killing fish at
+wholesale."
+
+"You may be telling the truth," Tom broke in.
+
+"I am," declared the skipper eagerly.
+
+"Then explain it to the court," Reade continued. "If you can prove to a
+judge and a jury that you're an honest man, and always have been one, you
+may get off on the charge that will be made against you."
+
+"Then you don't believe me?" asked the skipper anxiously.
+
+"It isn't for me to say," Tom replied crisply. "It's a job for a judge
+and a jury."
+
+"Then I'm to be a prisoner?"
+
+"That's for the policeman here to say."
+
+"You're a prisoner, my man," nodded the policeman. "Now, sail your boat
+into the landing over yonder."
+
+"Some one else will sail it," retorted the skipper, angrily, as he
+abandoned his tiller.
+
+"I'll take the tiller," Harry suggested, and did so. He hauled in the
+sheet, brought the boat around and headed for the landing with the skill
+of an old sailor.
+
+"My man, since you don't want to sail the boat you'll have to go as a real
+prisoner," announced the policeman. He produced a pair of handcuffs,
+snapping them over the man's wrists.
+
+In a short time Harry brought the sailboat up to the landing. The motor
+boat had followed, but did not come all the way in. After the sail had
+been lowered and made snug the party took up its way, on foot, to the
+nearby town of Blixton.
+
+Justice Sampson was found, and consented to open court immediately.
+Officer Carnes brought his prisoners forward, stating the charge. The
+young engineers and the army officer gave their testimony.
+
+"The prisoners are held for trial, and bail fixed at five thousand dollars
+in each case," decided the court.
+
+The torpedo had been left on the sloop, in charge of a foreman. The
+justice now ordered two officers to go back and bring over the torpedo,
+which was to be held until a chemist could examine and take samples of
+whatever explosive might be found inside.
+
+As Dick was a United States Army officer, under orders to proceed to his
+post within the next few days, the court reduced his testimony to writing,
+and permitted Prescott to sign this under oath.
+
+It had been a busy forenoon. Now it was time for luncheon, and the three
+chums returned to the house to eat. In the afternoon they visited the
+wall, remaining there until four o'clock. On their return to the house
+Tom and Harry were greeted by Mr. Prenter, who had been waiting for them.
+
+"I heard the news of last night's doings, and to-day's, and came right
+down," explained the treasurer of the Melliston Company. "Reade, I'm
+glad to be able to say that you appear to have brought us to the end of
+the explosion troubles."
+
+"Or else we're just starting with that trouble," Reade smiled wistfully.
+"Mr. Prenter, I must say that there appears to be no end to the surprises
+with which our enemies are capable of supplying us."
+
+Tom then nodded to Dick to come forward and presented him to the treasurer.
+
+"An army officer?" asked Mr. Prenter eagerly. "Then I'm doubly glad to
+meet you, Mr. Prescott. You've seen the breakwater work? As an army
+officer and an engineer what do you think of it?"
+
+"It's great!" said Dick, though he added laughingly: "Reade and Hazelton
+are such dear old friends of mine that any testimony in their favor is
+likely to be charged to friendship."
+
+"I'll believe what an army officer says, even in praise of his best
+friends," smiled Mr. Prenter.
+
+Foreman Johnson, who had been over in town, now came along. He halted
+some distance away, beckoning to Reade.
+
+"Mr. Reade," murmured the foreman, in an undertone, "over in Blixton I
+just heard some news that I thought would interest you. Evarts is out on
+bail."
+
+"He furnished a five thousand surety?" queried Tom.
+
+"Yes, sir, and who do you suppose went on his bond?"
+
+"I can't imagine who the idiot is."
+
+"The man who signed Evarts's bond," continued Foreman Johnson solemnly,
+"was Mr. Bascomb, president of this company!"
+
+"Whew!" muttered Tom aghast. "And that's all I've got to say on this
+subject."
+
+"I thought you'd like to know the news," remarked Johnson, "and so I came
+to tell you."
+
+"Please accept my thanks," Tom answered. Then, as the foreman passed
+along, Reade went back to his friends.
+
+"You seem staggered about something," remarked Mr. Prenter, eyeing him
+keenly.
+
+"Possibly I am," admitted Tom. "Evarts is out on bail."
+
+"Now, what fool or rogue could have signed that fellow's bail bond?"
+demanded Mr. Prenter in exasperation.
+
+"Careful, sir!" warned Tom smilingly. "I've just been informed that the
+bail bond was signed by Mr. Bascomb, president of the Melliston Company."
+
+"Well, of all the crazy notions!" gasped Mr. Prenter. "But there! I won't
+say more. Bascomb is a queer fellow in some things, but he's a good fellow
+in lots of things, and a square, honest man in all things. If he signed
+Evarts's bond, there was a reason, and not a dishonest one."
+
+"But Evarts won't behave," predicted Harry dismally. "After all our
+trouble we shall still have to remain on guard night and day."
+
+"It'll be an airship next," laughed Dick Prescott.
+
+"Unless Sambo Ebony comes forward once more, and finds out how to lay wires
+by a new submarine route," retorted Tom Reade.
+
+All the present company felt unaccountably gloomy just at this moment.
+There could be no guessing what would occur next to hamper or destroy the
+fruits of their hard labor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+A SECRET IN SIGHT
+
+
+"Mr. Prenter," asked Tom suddenly, "is there anything about which you wish
+to see me just now?"
+
+"Not particularly," replied the treasurer. "Only, in view of late
+developments I'm going to remain about for the next few days, unless you
+order me out of the house. I want to be close to the trouble."
+
+"Then, if I'm not needed," gaped Reade, "I'm going to turn in and steal a
+little sleep. I need rest."
+
+"As I'm going to stay up to-night, Tom, and keep you company through the
+dark hours, I'm for the bale of lint, too," announced Lieutenant Prescott.
+
+"At what hour shall I call you?" asked Harry.
+
+"At eight o'clock to-night," answered Tom.
+
+Refreshed by a few hours' sleep Tom and Dick were called, to find their
+supper ready. Nicolas stood behind their chairs, attentive to their needs.
+
+Mr. Prenter remained out on the porch, but Harry sat at table with his
+friends.
+
+"Has Mr. Bascomb put in an appearance here?" Tom inquired.
+
+"No," said Hazelton briefly.
+
+"He certainly has wound up my curiosity," murmured Tom. "Why on earth
+should he bail out Evarts?"
+
+"Probably because Evarts asked him to," suggested Dick.
+
+"But why should he want to please Evarts in such a matter?"
+
+"Well, you know," hinted Harry, "we've heard that Evarts is some sort of
+relative to Mr. Bascomb."
+
+"But the rascal has been working to ruin this company," Tom protested,
+"and Mr. Bascomb is the trusted president of the company."
+
+"Yet _is_ Mr. Bascomb really fit to be trusted?" Prescott propounded.
+
+"Mr. Prenter seems to think so, and he is a capable judge of men," Tom
+rejoined. "It is the combination of all these circumstances taken together
+that makes me so curious over Mr. Bascomb's being willing to bail the
+fellow."
+
+"Oh, well, it's too much of a puzzle for us," said Harry, shrugging his
+shoulders. "All we've got to do is to keep our eyes open and faithfully
+guard the property that is entrusted to our care. However, I'm growing
+sour and sore. Here I've got to go to bed presently, and you and Dick are
+going to be prowling about all night. You'll have all the excitement,
+while I'll be in bed."
+
+"You seem to forget," Tom reminded him, "that the last big excitement took
+place in the daytime, during your shift. Dick and I may have a lazy night,
+and you may have the air full of wreckage to-morrow in broad daylight."
+
+They chatted a little while with Mr. Prenter, outside, and then Dick rose
+at Tom's signal.
+
+"We must be starting," said Reade. "I don't know just what we're going
+to do to-night, but we have miles to cover I'm afraid."
+
+"Being an army officer, Dick, you've got a pistol, of course," suggested
+Harry hopefully.
+
+"I've a brace of them," nodded the army man.
+
+"Good!" cheered Harry.
+
+"But both of them, unloaded at that, are in my trunks at Mobile," laughed
+Dick, whereat Tom chuckled. Harry Hazelton was much inclined to want to
+carry a pistol in times of danger, but Tom didn't believe in any such
+habit.
+
+"I thought soldiers went armed," muttered Hazelton ruefully.
+
+"Only when on duty," Dick informed him.
+
+Nicolas wistfully watched Reade out of sight. The Mexican had been ordered
+to remain at home to-night, and on no account to think of following his
+employer. That didn't at all agree with the faithful fellow's wishes.
+
+"They'll be sure to get into some trouble, Senor Hazelton," Nicolas
+said mournfully. "I should be on their flank, watching over them."
+
+"You don't know Gridley boys," laughed Harry, "if you don't understand
+that Dick Prescott and Tom Reade, together, are a hard team to beat."
+
+In the meantime Tom led the way down to the camp of workmen. Reade
+stopped to speak with one of his reliable negroes, whom he found softly
+strumming a banjo under a tree.
+
+"Are there any visitors in camp to-night who shouldn't be here?" asked Tom.
+
+"I doan' beliebe so, boss," replied the colored man. "Dem gamblers an'
+bootleggers ain' done got bail yet, has they, sah?"
+
+"I don't believe they have," replied Tom. "There are no others of their
+kind here, then?"
+
+"I doan' beliebe so, sah."
+
+Tom and Dick strolled through the camp, but all was quiet there. Many of
+the men were outside their shacks or tents, smoking and waiting for
+turning-in time to come.
+
+"Looks as orderly as a camp-meeting," declared Lieutenant Prescott. "I'm
+glad to see, Tom, that you're for the decent camp every time."
+
+"The decent camp is the only kind that contains efficient workmen for
+engineering jobs," Reade answered dryly.
+
+Presently they strolled out of camp, on the farther side. This was what
+the young engineer really wanted to do---to vanish suddenly, in a fashion
+that would not be likely to be noted by hostile eyes. Now Reade and his
+army chum proceeded softly, and without words. Through the deep woods Tom
+was heading for the spot where he had found the magneto.
+
+Sambo Ebony was at large, and Tom believed that other things than the
+magneto had been concealed at this spot. If Sambo intended any further
+assaults on the retaining wall he would be quite likely to come this way.
+So here Tom Reade was resolved to remain and watch, even if he had to put
+in most of the night there.
+
+Behind some bushes he and Dick found a hiding place looking out upon the
+scene of the late conflict with "Mr. Ebony."
+
+Without even whispered conversation time dragged slowly. More than an hour
+dragged by, and both watchers were beginning to feel decidedly bored.
+
+At last, however, footsteps came that way. Both watchers crouched lower
+and waited.
+
+The new-comer approached the place rather uncertainly. At last, however,
+he stood revealed. Tom Reade felt like yelling in his utter astonishment.
+
+For President Bascomb, of the Melliston Company, now stood before them.
+After a glance about Mr. Bascomb walked slowly up and down, as though he
+were waiting for some one.
+
+Dick, of course, did not know Mr. Bascomb. However, as Tom kept silent
+the young soldier did the same.
+
+"What on earth can Bascomb be doing here?" Tom wondered. "Is he, too, one
+of the conspirators? It is unbelievable! Yet with what speed he obeyed
+Evarts's summons to come and bail him out! It makes me feel like a sneak
+to be here spying on the president of the company that employs me---and yet
+there's something here that certainly must be looked into!"
+
+Fifteen minutes more dragged by, with Mr. Bascomb walking impatiently back
+and forth, occasionally heaving a deep sigh or catching at his breath.
+
+"Our worthy president is much excited, at any rate," Reade said to himself.
+
+Finally steps were heard, both by Bascomb and by the pair who watched him.
+Then another man came upon the scene.
+
+"Evarts, why on earth did you send for me?" demanded Mr. Bascomb, as the
+discharged foreman came up.
+
+"Because I knew you'd be here---you don't dare do otherwise," was the
+sneering reply.
+
+"Try not to be impudent about it," advised Mr. Bascomb mildly. "As you
+may remember, I've had to stand a lot from you."
+
+"And not as much as you might have to stand, either, if I took it into my
+head to make matters lively for you," jeered Evarts harshly. "Remember,
+man, you'll do as I want you to do."
+
+"I'm willing to do what I can for you," replied the president. "But---"
+
+"Now, don't throw any of your 'buts' at me," broke in the discharged
+foreman, roughly. "You failed me in one thing---you didn't make Reade take
+me back on the job, as I told you to do."
+
+"I couldn't," pleaded Mr. Bascomb. "Prenter stood with Reade and was
+against me."
+
+"You're the president of the company, aren't you?" Evarts demanded
+sullenly.
+
+"Yes; but Prenter is a bigger man in the company, and he has more influence
+with the board of directors. If Prenter came out against me, and persuaded
+the other directors that I was a bad asset for the company, they'd act on
+Prenter's suggestion and remove me from the presidency."
+
+"Humph!" jeered Evarts. "Then what would your directors do if they knew
+that---."
+
+"Stop!" begged Mr. Bascomb hoarsely, "Don't say a word further, man!
+Sometimes even the leaves on the trees have ears. Don't breathe a word of
+what you were going to say just now."
+
+Even in the dark the two concealed watchers could see that Bascomb was
+glancing about him nervously.
+
+"Now, what is up?" gasped Tom inwardly. "What part has Mr. Bascomb been
+playing in this mystery that he's so afraid of having become public?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+EVARTS HEARS A NOISE
+
+
+"I won't shut up," proclaimed Evarts.
+
+"I don't care who hears me."
+
+"But I care," protested the president, in a trembling voice.
+
+"Then you'll have to reward me for whatever silence you want," snarled the
+wretch.
+
+"Is this blackmail never to cease?" groaned Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Yes, when you've used me right," declared Evarts harshly.
+
+"Didn't I come forward promptly on your bail?" demanded Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Sure, for you didn't dare do otherwise. But that only gave me liberty.
+It didn't put any money in my pocket."
+
+"Are you going to jump your bail, and leave me to pay the bond?" asked
+Bascomb.
+
+"Perhaps," said Evarts lightly. "You can stand losing the money."
+
+"I suppose so."
+
+"But when I jump," continued Evarts, "I'll have to stay out of the country
+after that. It'll take money---and you'll have to furnish me with it."
+
+"How much?"
+
+"Well," continued the foreman, craftily, "I wouldn't leave the country with
+less than enough to set me up elsewhere. I'd need---well, let me see. I
+couldn't start in a new country on less than ten thousand dollars."
+
+"That would make fifteen thousand dollars, in all." Mr. Bascomb finished
+his remark with a groan.
+
+"Well, what are you howling about?" demanded Evarts unfeelingly. "You've
+got the money."
+
+"It will lower my holdings in the Melliston Company," complained Mr.
+Bascomb bitterly "I'm not a rich man, and I haven't any too much stock
+in the company at the present moment."
+
+"You'd have to sell it all out, if I gave the directors a chance to find
+out that you're a jailbird---that you did time as a younger man," sneered
+Evarts.
+
+"For goodness' sake hold your tongue, man!" gasped Mr. Bascomb in accents
+of terror.
+
+"Just think," grinned Evarts heartlessly, "how delighted your directors
+would be to know that you had done time in prison."
+
+"Silence, man!" implored Bascomb. "It wasn't altogether my fault, as you
+know. And the governor of the state discovered that I wasn't as bad as
+the jury thought me. It all came through trying to help a worthless
+friend. Why, man, the governor pardoned me, when I had yet two years to
+serve and restored me to liberty."
+
+"But you're a jailbird, just the same," jeered the discharged foreman.
+"Let the directors find _that_ out, and how quickly they'd drop you from
+your office!"
+
+Mr. Bascomb buried his face in his hands and sobbed aloud.
+
+"So," continued Evarts, "I'll give you forty-eight hours to raise the ten
+thousand dollars---in good cash, mind you---no checks! Then I'll call on
+you to hand the money over to me. If you don't, I'll write a note to the
+directors, telling them to look up your name in the court records at
+Logville, Minnesota. Now, do you understand?"
+
+"Yes," nodded Mr. Bascomb brokenly.
+
+"And you'll have the money?"
+
+"I---I'll try."
+
+"You'll have the money---by day after tomorrow!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Now clear out---fast!"
+
+"Eh?" inquired Mr. Bascomb, looking wildly at the wretch.
+
+"Get out! Go back to the hotel in Blixton, and don't try to slip away from
+me at any point in the game. Start---now!"
+
+"Good night!" said President Bascomb in a choking voice.
+
+"Oh, cut out the civilities!" grunted Evarts turning on his heel.
+
+Mr. Bascomb then silently left the spot. His footfalls made so little
+noise that their sound was soon lost to Dick and Tom.
+
+Evarts appeared in no hurry to leave. On the contrary he drew out a pipe,
+filled it and lighted it. Then he threw himself down on the ground,
+puffing slowly.
+
+"From the fact that he sent Mr. Bascomb away, and is himself remaining,"
+thought Tom Reade, "it is rather plain that this scoundrel, Evarts, is
+awaiting some one else."
+
+The same thought had occurred to Dick Prescott, though, as they lay within
+thirty feet of where Evarts reclined on the ground, the chums did not deem
+it wise to exchange even whispers.
+
+After another half-hour Dick pressed Tom's arm. Other footsteps were now
+near. Then Mr. Sambo Ebony slouched on to the scene.
+
+"Hullo, Tar!" was the ex-foreman's careless greeting.
+
+"Now, doan' get too prescrumptious wid me," warned the black man, with an
+evil grin that displayed his big, white teeth. "Yo' an' me hab done been
+good frien's, an' pulled togedder. But Ah want yo' to undahstan', Mr.
+White Man, dat I doan' allow yo' to call me Tar Baby."
+
+"Oh, come, now, don't get huffy," yawned Evarts, who had not taken the
+trouble to rise. "I'm not afraid of you, Tar."
+
+"Stop dat!" cried the black angrily. "Yo's takin' big chances, yo' is."
+
+"You're big and powerful, I know that," grinned Evarts. "But I have
+something with me that makes me just the same size as you are, or perhaps
+a little bigger. See this!"
+
+The ex-foreman drew from one of his pockets a formidable-looking automatic
+revolver.
+
+"Huh!" grunted the negro, producing a similar pistol, "yo' ain' no bettah
+fixed dan Ah be."
+
+"We're quits," laughed Evarts easily, returning his weapon to his pocket.
+"Put up your rain-maker."
+
+"Den yo' won't call me Tar Baby no mo?"
+
+"No more."
+
+"All right, den." Ebony put up his weapon.
+
+"Now, what's the programme?" asked Evarts. "You've seen the leader?"
+
+"Yah. Ah's done see de right man. De orders am simple."
+
+"What are they?"
+
+"Misto Reade am to be killed de fust time he show himself," declared Sambo
+Ebony. "He to be shot down ez soon ez Ah can lay eyes on him. Maybe Ah
+have to shoot from ambush, but in any case he must be daid befo' de sun go
+down to-morrow. Our big men am tired to def dat Massa Reade stop do men
+from havin' a little liquor and playin' cairds evenin's."
+
+"Fine!" thought Tom, with a start. "If Sambo knew how close I am he'd
+carry out his orders right now! He has his pistol with him."
+
+"An' den, if dey's any fuss made," the black went on, "Misto Hazelton, he
+done gottah go nex'. Maybe Ah get cotch' w'en I do fo' Misto Reade. Ef
+dat happen, den dere's anodder man ready to do fo' Misto Hazelton."
+
+"And maybe the second man will get caught, too," suggested Evarts. "Then
+there'll be two of you with nooses around your necks."
+
+"We maybe get cotch', an' put in de jail," smirked Sambo Ebony, "but
+doan' yo' beliebe nothin' worse happen. Dere ain' many guards at de jail,
+an' do gang is on de way. De jail guards done be shot up, an' ouah folks
+turn' loose. Den we all strike out fo' new place, an' begin all ober
+again. Den a new gang come in heah and operate to get de money away from
+de breakwatah gangs. Dere's so much money in dat camp yondah dat ouah
+folks done gottah hab it ef a dozen men has to be kill'."
+
+"For cold-blooded, systematic villainy I believe I am listening to the
+limit!" quivered Lieutenant Dick Prescott under his breath.
+
+"They're insane, these people," was Tom's inward comment. "Let this crowd
+of scoundrels shoot up the jail guards, and do they think the citizens
+would ever allow the gang to operate in camp? There'd be more likelihood
+of the known members of the gang being lynched!"
+
+"I won't go back to jail if I can help it," laughed Evarts, speaking to
+the negro. "As soon as I even up one or two grudges I'm going to slip
+away."
+
+"Break yo' bail?" asked the negro, showing his teeth.
+
+"That's about the size of it," nodded Evarts.
+
+"Den de w'ite gemman who done fu'nish yo' bond will be feelin' bad, won't
+he?"
+
+"Let him---he's no friend of mine," grunted the discharged foreman.
+
+"Maybe yo'd like de job ob tendin' to Boss Reade yo'so'f?" hinted Sambo
+darkly.
+
+"Oh, I'm going to settle with Reade in some fashion," boasted Evarts with
+a leer. "I don't know that I want to kill him. I'd rather cripple him
+and let him live a life of misery."
+
+"Thank you!" thought Tom from his hiding place.
+
+"There's another chap we'll have to deal with, too, I'm thinking," Evarts
+went on. "Reade and Hazelton have a friend of theirs here, and he's
+likely to make some trouble for us. He's an army officer."
+
+"I done heah'd ob him," nodded Sambo. "We can settle wid him, too."
+
+"We ought to, for he helped arrest me, and he's to be a witness on the
+torpedo matter."
+
+"W'ate's his name---de ahmy man's?" inquired Sambo.
+
+"Prescott. He's---"
+
+The speaker stopped suddenly, looking about him.
+
+"What was that, Tar?" Evarts demanded.
+
+"W'at yo' talkin' 'bout?"
+
+"I heard a noise, and it was right over there," replied Evarts, pointing
+to where Tom and Dick lay hidden.
+
+"I didn't heah nuffin'."
+
+"I did, I tell you, and it will have to be looked into," insisted the
+ex-foreman, drawing his automatic revolver.
+
+"Go ahaid, den," encouraged Sambo, also drawing his weapon. "Ef anybody
+been a-lis'enin', den shoot him full ob holes!"
+
+Evarts darted at the bushes ahead of his companion. Then an exultant yell
+came from him.
+
+"Hustle, Tar---and shoot straight! Here are the very people we want---I
+caught sight of them!"
+
+"Den watch me!" chuckled Sambo Ebony, flourishing his weapon and dashing
+forward in the tracks of Evarts.
+
+There was no time for the chums to rise and dart away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+MR. BASCOMB HEARS BAD NEWS
+
+
+When Evarts used the word "people" he employed it only in a general sense.
+He had seen no one but Tom Reade, but Tom was the one person in the world
+whom the ex-foreman wanted most to 'see' at a disadvantage.
+
+"Now, I have you!" Evarts croaked hoarsely, rushing in, flourishing his
+weapon, then letting the muzzle drop to the position of aim.
+
+Dick Prescott, unseen, stirred almost under the fellow's feet.
+
+Flop! Bump! Caught by the legs, by that famous football player, Dick
+Prescott, Evarts simply had to go down on his back.
+
+In the same instant Reade leaped, then bent over the prostrate foe.
+
+Evarts was too much dazed to resist much. Tom snatched the revolver out
+of his hand.
+
+Sambo, beholding this much, came to a dismayed stop for an instant.
+
+"Dick, it's your trade to know how to handle this tool better than I can,"
+Tom cried, passing the captured revolver to Prescott, who swiftly received
+it as he rose. "I'm afraid," continued the young engineer, "that it's
+going to be necessary to kill the negro."
+
+"Wow! Woof!" uttered Sambo Ebony. It didn't take that villain an instant
+to decide on flight. Bending low, the black man ran off with frantic
+speed.
+
+Dick took a step forward---only one, for Evarts furiously gripped at one
+of the young army officer's ankles, bringing him down to his knees.
+
+"Hang you, you hound!" ground out Tom, in a rage, as he threw himself
+athwart of the ex-foreman. Within the next thirty seconds Evarts received
+a swift, fearful pummeling.
+
+"Let up, Mr. Reade! Let up!" cried the wretch. "I'll behave myself."
+
+"I'll wager you will," retorted the young engineer grimly, as he gripped
+Evarts by the coat collar and drew him to his feet.
+
+Dick was up and had run ahead some distance. But the time that had been
+gained for the black man had proved sufficient. Sambo, was now out of
+sight, nor did he send back any sound to guide his pursuers.
+
+"It may have to be a long hunt for the negro," remarked Tom Reade when
+Lieutenant Dick stepped back to state the case. "Stand by me and shoot
+this fellow down in his tracks if he tries to get away."
+
+"Why, what are you going to do to me?" quaked the ex-foreman.
+
+"It's back to jail for yours," Tom informed him crisply.
+
+"Then the laugh will be on you," jeered Evarts. "I'm out on bail---all in
+regular form."
+
+"You're not on bail on the latest charge against you---attempted murderous
+assault," Reade rejoined. "Nor will any court allow you out on bail again
+when Mr. Prescott and I testify to hearing you tell the negro that you
+were going to jump your bail."
+
+"Humph! That was all a joke," blustered Evarts.
+
+"All right," nodded Tom. "Explain the joke to the judge, if you can find
+a judge who's a good and willing listener. What you'll find, at this time,
+is that a hundred thousand dollars' worth of bail won't get you out of
+jail. Start along with you," Tom wound up, shaking Evarts by the arm that
+he gripped. "If this sneak tries to get away, Dick, bring him down with a
+bullet."
+
+"I'm ready enough to do it," Prescott agreed.
+
+A sudden great change came over the ex-foreman. At first he threatened.
+Then he begged to be turned loose, promising nothing but the best behavior
+in the future.
+
+"Stop all your nonsense," ordered Reade finally. "There's only one proper
+place on earth for you, Evarts, and that's behind the bars. Now, move
+right along, or I'll give you a worse walloping every time you stop or
+argue."
+
+Finding that nothing would avail with these determined captors the
+ex-foreman relapsed into sulks. However, he kept walking straight ahead,
+obeying every order addressed to him.
+
+Tom stopped briefly at the cottage. Mr. Prenter was not there, and
+Harry Hazelton had turned in. Nicolas was lying on a blanket on the
+porch.
+
+"You'll have to keep awake until I get back, anyway, Nicolas, and keep
+your eyes open," Tom informed the Mexican. "Sambo is at large again, and
+I'm afraid he may turn up here."
+
+"I shall know how to take care of him, Senor," grinned the Mexican holding
+up his right forefinger.
+
+"That wouldn't help you, this time," Tom retorted dryly. "Mr. Sambo Ebony
+has a revolver with him. Don't let him get a shot at you; he'd be only
+too glad to even the score. Now, Dick, I guess we'd better get Evarts over
+to the jail."
+
+Away started the chums and their prisoner while Nicolas went inside to
+warn Harry.
+
+Not so very much later Tom and Dick turned Evarts over to the police in
+Blixton. Evarts was locked up on the new charge. The revolver taken from
+him was turned over to the police as evidence. The chums also gave their
+information that they had overheard the ex-foreman tell the negro that he
+intended to jump bail. But the greatest of all was the news of the plot to
+rescue the gambler prisoners now in jail.
+
+Then the chums started back to camp.
+
+"I noticed," said Lieutenant Prescott, in a low tone, "that you didn't
+mention the conversation between Bascomb and Evarts."
+
+"I hadn't any right to," Tom said simply. "If Mr. Bascomb once had trouble
+in his life, but is living honestly now, it would be criminal of me to
+expose such a secret that he wouldn't want known. Mr. Bascomb's past is
+none of my business."
+
+"I'm mighty glad to hear you talk that way about it," said Prescott,
+resting a hand on Reade's shoulder.
+
+"Why?" demanded Tom rather bluntly. "Did you think that I could feel any
+other way about it?"
+
+"But Evarts is pretty sure to talk a lot about Bascomb, now," hinted the
+young army officer.
+
+"If he does," sighed Tom, "I don't know that I can think of any way to
+stop the fellow."
+
+"Then you don't believe that Mr. Bascomb's evil record of past years
+affects his honesty now?" Dick went on after a long pause.
+
+"I don't believe it," Tom answered with unusual emphasis. "If I did it
+would be as much as if I said that a fellow who once makes a wrong step
+must never hope to get back into the right path again. Mr. Prenter, I am
+certain, is an honest man and an unusually keen one. He is satisfied to
+trust Mr. Bascomb as president of the company. But, if Evarts is some
+sort of family connection of Bascomb's, and if he has often threatened to
+tell all about Mr. Bascomb's past history, you can imagine the terror that
+poor Mr. Bascomb has lived in for years."
+
+"If I were in Bascomb's place," Dick declared positively, "I would go
+before the board of directors and tell them the whole story. Then no one
+else could ever hold any power over me."
+
+"I guess that's the way all of us think we would act if we'd meet a
+blackmailer," nodded Reade. "Yet I guess most of the victims, when there's
+a sad, true story that could be told about them, pay the blackmailer and
+so secure silence."
+
+"Which may be another way," mused the young army officer, "of saying that
+most men are cowards. Or, maybe, it's another way, after all, of saying
+that the man who does anything very wrong or crooked is generally such a
+coward at heart that he'll spend his savings in keeping his secret from the
+world."
+
+"Yet Bascomb must have shown considerable bravery in meeting Evarts's
+demands," suddenly suggested Reade. "Otherwise, Mr. Bascomb would now be
+a poor man and Evarts would have spent all of Bascomb's money. Heretofore,
+I imagine, Evarts hasn't been able to blackmail his relative for anything
+much more substantial than a good job. I hear that Evarts has been drawing
+good pay from the Melliston Company for something more than four
+years---and Evarts isn't a very useful man, at that."
+
+"Then, after four years of easy berths, no wonder Evarts hates you, Tom,
+for having bounced him out," smiled Dick Prescott.
+
+"I'm afraid I'm going to do worse than bounce the fellow out of a job,"
+sighed Reade. "I'm afraid I've helped head him for prison for a term of
+a good many long years."
+
+"Evarts did that much for himself," Prescott argued. "I wouldn't waste
+much worry over the fellow."
+
+"I suppose it's my way to worry over a dog with a sore paw," answered Reade
+thoughtfully, "Certainly Evarts has done some mean things against me, and
+without any just cause; but I don't like the thought of his having to be
+locked up, away from sunlight, joy and life, for so many years as I'm
+afraid are coming to him."
+
+Arrived at camp, Tom found Mr. Bascomb walking back and forth on the porch
+of the engineers' house.
+
+"You're up late, sir," was Tom's friendly greeting to the president.
+
+"Yes, Reade; I can't sleep to-night," said Mr. Bascomb wearily. "I came
+over here to talk with Prenter. Where is he?"
+
+"Asleep, I imagine, sir," Tom answered.
+
+"Wrong," replied President Bascomb. "I've already been inside, but
+Prenter isn't in the house."
+
+"Then perhaps he thought it too lively around here," laughed Reade, "and
+went over to Blixton to sleep at the hotel."
+
+Mr. Bascomb didn't reply to this, but puffed hard at the black cigar he
+was smoking and sending up clouds of smoke.
+
+But the president of the Melliston Company became instantly more distracted
+when Tom Reade began an account of the capture of Evarts, and his jailing,
+and the escape of Mr. Sambo Ebony.
+
+Presently Bascomb began to puff harder than ever at his cigar.
+
+"Reade," he finally blurted out, "how long were you hiding there before
+Evarts found you there?"
+
+"Some little time," Tom admitted vaguely.
+
+More clouds of cigar smoke ascended; then, shaking, and his face a sickly
+white and green, the president inquired:
+
+"Reade, were you there---you and Mr. Prescott---at the time when I talked
+with Evarts on that very spot to-night?"
+
+There was no use in evading the question, so engineer Reade answered in a
+straightforward manner:
+
+"Yes, sir. Mr. Prescott and I were there."
+
+"Then---then---y-y-you heard all of my talk with Evarts?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Bascomb's teeth began to chatter so that he was forced to steady his jaws.
+Tom and Dick looked aside, pitying the man for his evident anguish of mind.
+
+At last the president steadied himself enough to speak.
+
+"Reade, I know I haven't been a very good friend of yours, and I even
+tried to work you out of this contract altogether. Now, you know my
+secret, and I'm in your power!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+EBONY SAYS "THUMBS UP"
+
+
+Tom Reade stared in frank amazement at the trembling man.
+
+"Do you mean to insult me, Mr. Bascomb?" demanded the young engineer
+bluntly.
+
+"Insult you? The fates forbid," replied Bascomb with a sickly grin.
+"Reade, I don't dare offend you in any way."
+
+"But you do insult me, sir, in believing that it would be possible for me
+to make any hostile use of whatever unpleasant knowledge I may possess
+against you."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you wouldn't use the knowledge?" demanded the
+president of the Melliston Company.
+
+"You're insulting me again, sir. Perhaps you are to be pardoned, Mr.
+Bascomb. You have been so long dancing to the fiddling of an Evarts that
+you don't realize how impossible it is for a gentleman to do a dishonorable
+thing."
+
+"Then---then I---I can rely upon your silence?" demanded Mr. Bascomb,
+eagerly.
+
+"I am sorry, sir, to think that you even think it necessary to ask me such
+a question," rejoined Reade gravely.
+
+"Reade! Reade! You can't imagine how grateful you'll find me if I really
+can rely upon you to forget what you overheard to-night!" cried the
+humiliated man. "And you, Mr. Prescott---may I depend upon you, also,
+to preserve silence?"
+
+"I'm afraid, sir, you're putting me in Reade's class as an insulted man,"
+Dick smiled grimly. "My friend, the people of this country, in the person
+of their President, have issued to me a commission certifying that I am
+worthy to wear the shoulder-straps of an army officer. The shoulder-straps
+stand for the strictest sense of honor in all things. If I depart, ever
+so little, from the laws of honor, I prove my unfitness to wear
+shoulder-straps. Have I answered you."
+
+There was silence for a few moments. Then, Mr. Bascomb, having smoked his
+cigar out, tossed the butt away.
+
+"I'd like to offer you a little advice, Mr. Bascomb, if you won't think
+I'm too forward."
+
+"What is it?" asked the president, turning briskly upon the young chief
+engineer.
+
+"Just as long as you both live, Mr. Bascomb, Evarts is likely to bother
+you, in one way or another. Even if he goes to prison himself he'll find
+a way to bother you from the other side of the grated door. Mr. Bascomb,
+why don't you yourself disclose this little affair in your past history
+to the board of directors? Then it would be past any blackmailer's power
+to harm you."
+
+"I could tell the directors in only one way," Mr. Bascomb answered, his
+face growing sallow. "That would be to tell my story and hand in my
+resignation in the same breath. Reade, you don't realize how much the
+presidency of the Melliston Company means to me! To resign, or to be
+kicked out, would end my career in the business world."
+
+In the near darkness a step sounded on the gravel. Then Mr. Prenter came
+briskly forward.
+
+"Bascomb," said the treasurer of the company, "Reade's advice was good,
+though wholly unnecessary. There is no need to tell the directors the
+story of your past misfortune. Most of them know it already."
+
+The president's face grew grayish as he listened in torment.
+
+"Moreover," Mr. Prenter continued, "most of us have known all about the
+matter since just before you were elected president."
+
+"And yet you allowed me to be elected!" cried Mr. Bascomb hoarsely.
+
+"Yes; because we looked up your life and your conduct since---well, ever
+since you left the past behind and came out into business life again.
+Our investigation showed that you had been living for years as an honest
+man. The rest of us on the board are men---or think we are---and we voted,
+informally, not to allow one misstep of yours to outweigh years of the most
+upright living since."
+
+"Knowing it all, you elected me to be president of the company!" gasped
+Mr. Bascomb, as though he could not believe his ears or his senses.
+
+"Now, let us hear no more about it," urged Mr. Prenter, cordially. "If I
+listened just now---if I played the part of the eavesdropper, allow me to
+explain my conduct by saying that I, too, was present to-night when you
+talked with Evarts. I heard, and I knew that Reade and his friend heard.
+I listened, just now, in order that I might make sure that Thomas Reade,
+engineer, is a man of honor at all times. And now, let no one say a word
+more."
+
+Some one else was coming. All on the porch turned and waited to see who it
+was. Out of the shadows came a hang-dog looking sort of fellow.
+
+"Is Mr. Bascomb here?" asked the newcomer.
+
+"I am Mr. Bascomb," spoke the president.
+
+"Here's a note for you," said the man, handing over an envelope.
+
+Tom stepped inside, got a lantern and lighted it, placing it upon the porch
+table. With the aid of this illumination Mr. Bascomb read the brief note
+directed to him.
+
+"It's from Evarts," said the president, looking up with a quiet laugh.
+"He commands me to come to him at once, in his cell, and to arrange some
+way of getting out. My man," turning to the messenger, "are you going back
+to Evarts?"
+
+"Yes," nodded the messenger, shifting his weight from one foot to another.
+
+"Go back to Evarts, then, and tell him that he'll have to threaten some one
+else this time. Tell him that I am through with him."
+
+"Huh!" growled the hang-dog messenger. "I believe Evarts said that, if old
+Bascomb wasn't quick, he'd make trouble for some one."
+
+"Tell Evarts," said Mr. Prenter, "that he can't make trouble for any one
+but himself, and that he had better save his breath for the next time he
+needs it."
+
+"Evarts will be awful mad, if I go back to him with any talk like that,"
+insinuated the messenger meaningly.
+
+"See here, fellow," interjected. Tom Reade, stepping forward quickly, "I'm
+rather tired and out of condition to-night, but if you don't leave here as
+fast as you can go, I'll kick you every step of the way for the first
+half-mile back to Blixton! Do you think you understand me?"
+
+"I---I reckon I do," admitted the fellow.
+
+"Then start before you tempt my right foot! I'll give you five seconds
+to get off."
+
+There could be no mistaking that order. The messenger started off, nor
+did he glance backward as long as he was in sight.
+
+"You see how easily a chap like Evarts can be disposed of," smiled Mr.
+Prenter.
+
+"He'll send back again for another try, within an hour," prophesied Mr.
+Bascomb, wearily.
+
+"If he does," laughed Dick Prescott, shortly, "his second appeal won't
+come by the same messenger."
+
+"Then you were near us, Mr. Prenter, when Evarts and the negro charged us?"
+Tom inquired.
+
+"I was," smiled the treasurer. "That convicts me of cowardice, doesn't it,
+in not having come to your aid at the moment of attack? I wasn't quite as
+big a coward as I would seem, though. The truth is, I was behind you. Had
+I jumped in in that exciting moment, you would have thought other enemies
+were attacking from behind. You would have been confused and would have
+lost the fight."
+
+"By Jove, sir, but that was quick thinking and shrewdness on your part!"
+ejaculated Dick Prescott.
+
+"Then you acquit me of cowardice?"
+
+"No," smiled the young army officer, "for I hadn't thought of accusing you
+of lack of courage."
+
+"I am glad you didn't," sighed the treasurer. "I would rather be suspected
+of almost anything than of lacking manly courage. Afterwards I didn't make
+my presence known to you, for, at that time, I didn't want you to know that
+I had overheard a certain conversation."
+
+"My cowardice has made a dreadful mess of things in a lot of ways, hasn't
+it?" demanded Mr. Bascomb bitterly.
+
+"That's all past now, so it doesn't matter," spoke up Tom Reade. "We have
+just one move more to make in this baffling game, and then I fancy we shall
+have won. When Mr. Sambo Ebony, as I have nicknamed him, is safely jailed
+I think we shall find ourselves undisturbed in the future. We shall then
+be permitted to go ahead and finish the million-dollar breakwater as a work
+and a triumph of peace."
+
+"Every time that one of us opens his mouth," laughed Mr. Prenter, "I am
+expecting to hear a big bang down by the breakwater to punctuate the
+speaker's sentence. I wonder whether the scoundrels back of Sambo have
+any more novel ways for setting off their big firecrackers around our
+wall?"
+
+"It might not be a bad idea for me to get out on the watch again," Tom
+suggested, rising. "If I get in more trouble than I can handle I'll just
+yell 'Mr. Prenter,' for I shall know that he'll be within easy hearing
+distance."
+
+The treasurer laughed, as he, too, rose.
+
+"My being so near you before, Reade, was just accident. I was prowling
+about on my own account, when you and your army friend passed me in the
+deep woods. I had an idea that you were out for some definite purpose,
+and so I just trailed along at your rear in order to be near any excitement
+that you might turn up."
+
+"And I suppose you're going to follow us this time, too," smiled Tom Reade.
+
+"Prenter," suggested the president of the company, "what do you say if you
+and I prowl in some other direction? I've been such a miserable coward all
+through this affair that now I'd like to go with you. If we run into any
+trouble I'll try to show you that I'm not all coward."
+
+"Come along, Bascomb," agreed the treasurer cordially. "Reade, I give you
+my word that we won't intentionally follow on your trail."
+
+At a nod from Tom, Dick was at his side. The two high school chums started
+off with brisk steps.
+
+"Which way are you going?" whispered Dick.
+
+"Let's go down to the breakwater," suggested Tom. "I really ought to visit
+it once in the night, despite the fact that Corbett is a wholly reliable
+foreman, and that he has his own pick of workmen on patrol duty there."
+
+As the chums stepped out from under the trees in full view of the
+breakwater site they beheld the lanterns of the patrol, like so many
+fireflies, twinkling and bobbing here and there along the narrow-topped
+retaining wall.
+
+Tom and Dick went out on the wall until they encountered the first workman
+on patrol. Tom took this man's lantern and signaled the motor boat as it
+stood in shore.
+
+"All going right, Corbett?" the young engineer hailed, as soon as the
+"Morton" had come up alongside.
+
+"As far as I can see, Mr. Reade, there's not a sign of the enemy to-night.
+But of course you know, sir, that we've been just as sure on other nights,
+only to have a large part of the wall blown clean out of the water."
+
+"All I can say," Tom nodded, "is to go on keeping your eyes and ears open."
+
+"Yes, sir; you may be sure I'll do that," nodded the foreman.
+
+Then Reade and his army chum returned to the shore.
+
+"I guess it will be a wholly blind hunt," Tom laughed, "but I've a notion
+for returning to the spot where we encountered Sambo Ebony before this
+night."
+
+After they had left the beach well behind, the chums strolled in under the
+trees of a rather sparse grove.
+
+Well in toward the center of the grove stood one tree larger than the rest.
+
+From behind this Sambo Ebony swiftly appeared, just at the right instant
+for surprise. In each hand the negro held a huge automatic revolver.
+
+"Gemmen," chuckled the negro coolly, "Ah jess be nacherally obliged to yo'
+both if yo'll stick yo' hands ez high up in de air ez yo' can h'ist 'em.
+It am a long worm dat nebber turns, an' Ah'se done reckon dat Ah'se de
+tu'ning worm to-night! Thumbs up, gemmen!"
+
+Despite Sambo's bantering tone there could be no doubt that to fail to obey
+him would be to invite a swift fusillade.
+
+Reluctantly Tom Reade thrust his hands up skyward. Nor did Dick Prescott
+hesitate to follow so prompt an example.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+"Now Ah reckon Ah'se done got yo'," laughed the big negro, insolently. "It
+am a question ob w'ich one Ah wantah pick off fust!"
+
+In his wicked joy over having both the young engineer and the army officer
+wholly at his mercy Sambo, his mouth open and his massive teeth showing
+white in his grin, advanced nearer.
+
+Yet he did not fail to keep each of his enemies covered. He was watching
+most alertly for any sign of rebellion on the part of his victims.
+
+Nor was there any doubt in the mind of either young man that the black,
+after playing with them, meant to dispose of them as his possession of
+pistols indicated.
+
+He would torment them first, then ruthlessly "shoot them up."
+
+"How long are we to keep our hands up?" asked Tom banteringly.
+
+It would be foolish to say that Reade was not afraid, but he was determined
+to keep Ebony from discovering the fact.
+
+"Yo's to keep yo' hands up longer dan yo' can keep yo' moufs shut!" scowled
+the black man, his ugly streak showing once more.
+
+"It makes me think of the way we used to play football," laughed Reade,
+though there was not much mirth in his chuckle.
+
+"Shut yo' mouf, or Ah done gib yo' plenty to think erbout!" ordered Sambo
+angrily.
+
+That word "football" set Dick Prescott to tingling. He knew there was some
+hidden meaning in what Tom had said.
+
+"Are you trying to signal us, Sambo?" queried the army officer.
+
+That word "signal" was intended only for Tom's ear, for Lieutenant Prescott
+was beginning to guess at the truth.
+
+"On the gridiron, on the gridiron!" hummed Tom, audibly, as he tried
+clumsily to fit the words to the refrain of a popular song.
+
+Dick Prescott was "getting warm" on the scent of the hidden meaning.
+
+"Shut yo' mouf!" gruffly commanded the lack. "Ah doan' wantah tell yo' dat
+again, neider."
+
+"Right foot---high foot!" chanted Tom.
+
+Mentally Dick Prescott jumped as though he had been shot. "Right
+foot---high foot" had been one of their old kicking signals on the Gridley
+High School eleven!
+
+Lieutenant Dick Prescott fairly throbbed as he now understood the covered
+signal.
+
+"Now!" left Reade's lips with explosive energy, though the word was
+low-spoken.
+
+At "right foot---high foot" and "now" each youth suddenly shot his right
+foot up into the air.
+
+Tom's landed against Sambo's right wrist, kicking the automatic revolver
+completely out of the negro's hands.
+
+Dick's kick landed against the black man's left wrist. The pistol held
+in Sambo's left hand was discharged, though the muzzle had been driven up
+at such an angle that the bullet passed harmlessly over Prescott's head.
+
+In a twinkling Ebony had been disarmed.
+
+Darting low, Tom grappled with the negro's legs. Then Reade rose swiftly,
+toppling Sambo over backward.
+
+Dick Prescott bounded upon the prostrate foe, beating him with both fists.
+Tom also threw himself into the melee.
+
+While the black might have thrashed either youth alone he was not equal to
+handling both at the same time.
+
+"I've got him, now, and he'll behave, I guess," panted Tom Reade, at last.
+"Slip off, Dick, and gather in the pistols."
+
+As Prescott did so Sambo made the last few efforts of which he was capable.
+He had been hammered so hard, however, that Tom did not have extreme
+difficulty in holding him down.
+
+"Now, lie still and take orders," warned Dick, pressing one of the pistols
+against the black man's temple, "or I'll get excited and send you out of
+this world for keeps!"
+
+Sambo Ebony thereupon dropped into sullen muttering, but did not offer to
+resist. Prescott, as a soldier, had a businesslike way of handling weapons
+that cowed the black man.
+
+Tom got up leisurely from the prostrate foe.
+
+"Now, you can stand a little farther off, Dick," he suggested, "and then
+the fellow won't get a chance to tip you over with any trick. If he tries
+to get up before he's told you can easily bring him to earth again, for
+you've been taught the exact use of firearms."
+
+"Good idea," nodded Lieutenant Prescott, backing away a few feet. "Are you
+going to run for assistance now, Tom?"
+
+"No," retorted Reade. "You're going to shoot for it."
+
+"Eh?"
+
+"Fire a shot into the air from each revolver. That, with the accidental
+discharge of a moment go, will show any listener that there's trouble going
+on over here. I miss my guess if the shots don't bring help very shortly."
+
+Bang! Bang!
+
+Nor was Reade's guess a wrong one. Not much time passed before steps were
+heard hurrying in their direction.
+
+"Here! This way!" summoned Tom.
+
+"Are you hurt?" sounded Mr. Prenter's voice.
+
+"No; but we have Sambo Ebony here, and he's going to be hurt if he tries
+to stir."
+
+President and treasurer of the Melliston Company raced to the spot. Barely
+sixty seconds afterward Foreman Corbett, with four negroes and one Italian
+laborer, also came up.
+
+"Corbett, you have the handcuffs I gave you the other night, haven't you?"
+Tom asked.
+
+"Yes, sir. Here they are."
+
+Tom took the steel bracelets, ordering Mr. Sambo Ebony to turn over and
+lie face downward, with his hands behind his back. Then the handcuffs were
+slipped over the black wrists.
+
+"Now, Sambo," called Tom laughingly, "we'll set you on your feet and
+whistle the rogues' march for you all the way."
+
+"Yah, yah, yah!" jeered one of the negroes who had come up with Foreman
+Corbett, as he gazed contemptuously up and down the bulky figure of Mr.
+Ebony. "Yo' done been tellin' us 'spectable cullud fo'ks dat de great way
+to injye life was to be tough an' smaht, lak yo'se'f. How ye' feel erbout
+it now? Doan' yo' wish yo' been mo' 'spectable yo'se'f? Doan' ye' done
+wish dat ye' had been to camp-meeting a few times in yo' life? Doan' yo'
+wish ye' been honest most er de time, an' been a hahd-wo'kin',
+pay-ye'-bills niggah lak some ob de rest oh us? Yo' fool lump er tar,
+yo' boun' ter go de way ob all de wicked---down to ye' grave in misery an'
+sorrow. It's de way oh all ob yo' lazy, ugly, wuthless kind!"
+
+"I've heard philosophers talk," laughed Dick, in an aside to Tom Reade,
+"but I can't say that I ever yet listened to a trained philosopher who had
+the truth of life down any more pat than the negro workman who just now
+gave his views."
+
+"On all matters of good behavior wise men of all degrees hold about the
+same views," nodded Reade, "even though they may express their thoughts in
+differing grades of speech. This good negro knows just where the bad negro
+has failed in life."
+
+Mr. Sambo Ebony was marched off to jail. Even up to the minute when he
+was sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment the big black stubbornly
+refused to give his real name. He was therefore taken away to prison
+under the name "Sambo Ebony."
+
+Evarts got off with eight years and four months in prison. He is still
+serving that sentence.
+
+Hawkins and his crew of gamblers and bootleggers were sentenced to two
+years apiece, as only misdemeanor charges could be preferred against them.
+
+From the foregoing it will be inferred that the proposed jail delivery by
+other members of the gang from elsewhere did not come off according to
+plan. The truth was that the citizens of Blixton, when appealed to,
+organized a strong guard which was thrown around the jail. Doubtless the
+gang-members were warned in time, and so did not attempt to commit
+wholesale suicide by running against a citizens' posse.
+
+Mr. Bascomb is still president of the Melliston Company, and he is holding
+up his head. No further fear of blackmailers oppresses him.
+
+Dick Prescott was able to remain several days longer---long enough, in
+fact, to see the more substantial structure of the million-dollar
+breakwater begin to go up just inside the completed retaining wall.
+
+Then Lieutenant Dick was obliged to resume his journey on to Fort Clowdry,
+Colorado. What happened to Prescott, after joining the army as an officer,
+is told in "_Uncle Sam's Boys on Field Duty_," the second volume in the
+"_Boys of the Army Series_."
+
+Though Harry Hazelton was disappointed in missing some of the excitement at
+Blixton, he had no occasion to complain in that respect when he and Tom
+entered upon the next great undertaking of the young engineer pair.
+
+After the disappearance of the big black from the scene there was no
+further trouble at the breakwater.
+
+Blixton is now an important though artificial harbor. With the completion
+of the breakwater, and the building of a lighthouse, the next work
+undertaken was the building of stone docks at which the steamships of the
+Melliston Line now dock.
+
+The next adventures that befell Tom and Harry were destined to be the most
+wonderful and exciting of all. These adventures must be reserved for
+complete telling in the next volume in this series, which is published
+under the title, "_The Young Engineers In The Lead; Or, The stroke That
+Made Them Masters of Their Field_."
+
+It is a story of almost incredible efforts, backed by strong ambition, of
+two American youths who had both the desire and the will to toil
+unceasingly and at last reach their goal.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Young Engineers on the Gulf
+by H. Irving Hancock
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14369 ***
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dfc652c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14369 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14369)
diff --git a/old/14369.txt b/old/14369.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..653a749
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/14369.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7036 @@
+Project Gutenberg's The Young Engineers on the Gulf, by H. Irving Hancock
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Young Engineers on the Gulf
+ The Dread Mystery of the Million Dollar Breakwater
+
+Author: H. Irving Hancock
+
+Release Date: December 16, 2004 [EBook #14369]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YOUNG ENGINEERS ON THE GULF ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jim Ludwig
+
+
+
+
+
+The Young Engineers on the Gulf
+or
+The Dread Mystery of the Million Dollar Breakwater
+
+By H. Irving Hancock
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTERS
+ I. The Mystery of a Black Night
+ II. The Call of One in Trouble
+ III. Vanishing into Thin Air
+ IV. Some One Calls Again
+ V. Wanted---Daylight and Divers
+ VI. Mr. Bascomb is Peevish
+ VII. Tom Isn't as Easy as He Looks
+ VIII. Mr. Prenter Investigates
+ IX. Invited To Leave Camp
+ X. The Night is Not Over
+ XI. A Message from a Coward
+ XII. An Engineer's Fighting Blood
+ XIII. Wishing It on Mr. Sambo
+ XIV. The Black Man's Turn
+ XV. A David for a Goliath
+ XVI. A Test of Real Nerve
+ XVII. Tom Makes an Unexpected Capture
+XVIII. The Army "On the Job"
+ XIX. A New Mystery Peeps In
+ XX. A Secret in Sight
+ XXI. Evarts Hears a Noise
+ XXII. Mr. Bascomb Hears Bad News
+XXIII. Ebony Says "Thumbs Up"
+ XXIV. Conclusion
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MYSTERY OF A BLACK NIGHT
+
+
+"I wish I had brought my electric flash out here with me," muttered Harry
+Hazelton uneasily.
+
+"I told you that you'd better do it," chuckled Tom Reade.
+
+"But how could I know that the night would be pitch dark?" Harry demanded.
+"I don't know this gulf weather yet, and fifteen minutes ago the stars were
+out in full force. Now look at them!"
+
+"How can I look at them?" demanded Tom, halting. "My flashlight won't
+pierce the clouds."
+
+Reade halted on his dark, dangerous footway, and Harry, just behind him,
+uttered a sigh of relief and halted also.
+
+"I never was in such a place as this before."
+
+"You've been in many a worse place, though," rejoined Tom. "I never heard
+you make half as much fuss, either."
+
+"I think something must be wrong with my head," ventured Harry.
+
+"Undoubtedly," Tom Reade agreed cheerily.
+
+"Hear that water," Harry went on, in a voice scarcely less disconsolate
+than before.
+
+"Of course," nodded Tom. "But the water can hardly be termed a surprise.
+We both knew that the Gulf of Mexico is here. We saw it several times
+to-day."
+
+The two young men stood on a narrow ledge of stone that jutted out of the
+water. This wall of stone was the first, outer or retaining wall of
+masonry---the first work of constructing a great breakwater. At high tide,
+this ledge was just fourteen inches above the level surface of the Gulf of
+Mexico, and at the time of the above conversation it was within twenty
+minutes of high tide. The top of this wall of masonry was thirty inches
+wide, which made but a narrow footway for the two youths who, on a pitch
+black night, were more than half a mile out from shore.
+
+On a pleasant night, for a young man with a steady head, the top of this
+breakwater wall did not offer a troublesome footpath. In broad daylight
+hundreds of laborers and masons swarmed over it, working side by side, or
+on scows and dredges alongside.
+
+"Wait, and I'll show a light," volunteered Tom raising his foot-long
+flashlight.
+
+Some seventy-five yards behind them a crawling snake-like figure flattened
+itself out on the top of the rock wall.
+
+"Don't show the light just yet," pleaded Harry. "It might only make me
+more dizzy."
+
+The flattened figure behind them wriggled noiselessly along.
+
+"Just listen to the water," continued Hazelton. "Tom, I'm half-inclined to
+think that the water is roughening."
+
+"I believe it is," agreed Tom.
+
+"Fine time we'll have getting back, if a gale springs up from the
+southward," muttered Harry.
+
+"See here, old fellow," interposed Tom vigorously, "you're not up to
+concert pitch to-night. Now, I'll tell you what I'll do---first of all,
+what _you'll_ do. You sit right down flat on the top of the wall. Then
+I'll move on up forward and see what has been happening out there that
+should boom shoreward with such a racket. You stay right here, and I'll
+be back as soon as I've looked into the face of the mystery."
+
+"What do you take me for?" Harry asked almost fiercely. "A baby? Or a
+cold-foot?"
+
+"Nothing like it," answered Tom Reade with reassuring positiveness.
+"You're out of sorts, to-night. Your head, or your nerves, or some thing,
+has gone back on you, and you walk through this blackness with half a
+notion that you're going to walk over a precipice, or drop head-first into
+some danger. With such a feeling it would be cruelty to let you go
+forward, chum, and I'm not going to do it. I'll go alone."
+
+The crouching figure to the rear of the young engineers quivered as though
+this separation of the two engineers on this black night was a thing
+devoutly to be desired.
+
+"You're not going to do anything of the sort," retorted Harry Hazelton.
+"I'm going forward with you. I'm going to stick to you. All I wanted was
+a minute in which to brace myself. I've had that minute. Now get forward
+with you. I'm on your heels!"
+
+Tom Reade shrugged his shoulders slightly. However, he did not object or
+argue, for he realized that his chum was sensitive over any circumstance
+that seemed to point to sudden failure of his courage.
+
+"Come along, then," urged Tom. "Wait just a second, though. I'll flash
+the light ahead along the wall, to show you that it's all there, and just
+where it lies."
+
+A narrow beam of light shot ahead as Tom pressed the spring of his pocket
+flash lamp.
+
+A weird enough scene the night betrayed. In perspective the wall ahead
+narrowed, until the two sides seemed to come to a point. Back of all was
+the thick curtain of black that had settled down over the gulf. A little
+farther out, too, the water seemed rougher. There would seem to be hardly
+a doubt that a gale was brewing.
+
+"Shut that light off!" Hazelton commanded, fighting to repress a shudder.
+"I can do better in the darkness. Now, go ahead, and I'll follow."
+
+Tom started, but he went slowly now, feeling that this pace was more suited
+to the condition of his chum's nerves. Harry followed resolutely, though
+none but himself knew how much effort it took for him to keep on in the
+face of such a nameless yet terrible dread as now assailed him.
+
+To the rear a bulky, hulking figure rose and stood erect. With the softest
+of steps this apparition of the night followed after them, until it stole
+along, ghost-like, just behind Hazelton. Then a huge arm was raised,
+threateningly, over Harry's head.
+
+At that particular moment, as though insensibly warned, Hazelton stopped,
+half-wheeling. In the next second Harry bounded back just out of reach of
+the descending arm, the hand of which held something. But in that backward
+spring Harry, in order to save himself from pitching into the water, was
+oblige to turn toward Reade.
+
+"Tom!" exploded the young engineer. "Flash the light here quickly!"
+
+In the instant, however, that Harry had sprung backward the figure had
+slipped noiselessly into the water to the left. As Reade wheeled about,
+throwing on the light, he let the ray fall in the water to the right of the
+wall. But no sign of the intruder appeared; the water had closed
+noiselessly over the now vanished figure.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Reade, as he stood looking, then finally flashed
+his light over to the other side of the wall.
+
+"I saw---" began Hazelton. Then changed to: "I thought---er---I
+saw---oh, nonsense! You'll josh the life out of me!"
+
+"Not I," Tom affirmed gravely, as a thrill of pity, for what he deemed his
+friend's unfortunate "nervous condition," shook him. "Tell me what you
+saw, Harry."
+
+"Why, I thought I saw a big fellow---a black man, too---right behind me,
+arm upraised, just ready to strike me."
+
+"Well, where is he?" Tom demanded blankly, flashing the light on either
+side of the narrow wall-top. "See him anywhere now, chum?"
+
+Harry didn't. In fact, he hardly more than pretended to look. The thing
+that had been so real a moment before was now utterly invisible. Hazelton
+began to share his chum's suspicion as to the utter breakdown of his nerves
+and powers of vision.
+
+"It was nothing, of course," said Harry, shamefacedly, but Tom vigorously
+took the other side of the question.
+
+"See here, Harry, it must have been something," insisted Reade. "You're
+not dreaming, and you're not crazy. It would take either one of those
+conditions to make you see something that didn't really exist. No mere
+nervous tremor is going to make you see something as tall as a man,
+standing right over you, when no such thing exists."
+
+"Well, then, where is the fellow?" Harry Hazelton demanded, helplessly, as
+he stared about. "There isn't any human being but ourselves in sight,
+either on the wall or in the water. Your light shows that."
+
+The light did not quite show that, and could not, since the huge prowler
+was now swimming gently under water, some seven or eight feet from the
+surface.
+
+"We'll have to solve the question before we leave here," declared Tom.
+"We can't have folks following us up in a ticklish place like this.
+Besides, Harry, I'm willing to wager that your vision---whatever it
+was---has some real connection with the mystery that we're going out
+yonder to investigate. So we'll solve the puzzle that's right here before
+we go forward to look at the bigger riddle that the dark now hides from us
+out yonder. Use your eyes, lad, an I'll do the same with mine!"
+
+Neither Tom Reade nor Harry Hazelton are strangers to the readers of this
+series, nor of the series that have preceded the present one.
+
+Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton, now engineers in charge of a big breakwater
+job on the Alabama gulf coast, were first introduced to our readers in the
+"_Grammar School Boys Series_." There we met them as members of that
+immortal band of American schoolboys known as Dick & Co. Back in the old
+school days Dick Prescott had been the leader of Dick & Co., though, as all
+our readers know, Prescott was not the sole genius of Dick & Co. Greg
+Holmes, Dave Darrin, Dan Dalzell and Tom and Harry had been the other
+members of that famous sextette of schoolboy athletes.
+
+After reading of the doings of Dick & Co. in the "_Grammar School Boys
+Series_," our readers again followed them, through the events recorded in
+the four volumes of the "_High School Boys Series_". Here their really
+brilliant work Boys Series athletes was stirringly chronicled, as along
+with scores of non-athletic adventures that befell them.
+
+At the close of the high school course Dick Prescott and Greg Holmes
+secured appointments as cadets at the United States Military Academy at
+West Point. All that befell them there is duly set forth in the "_West
+Point Series_." Dave Darrin and Dan Dalzell were fortunate enough to
+secure appointments as midshipmen in the United States Naval Academy at
+Annapolis, and their doings there are set forth in the "_Annapolis
+Series_."
+
+Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton, on the other hand, had felt no call to
+military glory. For their work in life they longed to become part of the
+great constructive force wielded by modern civil engineers. During the
+latter part of their high school work they had studied hard with ambition
+to become surveyors and civil engineers. In their school vacations they
+had sought training and experience in the offices of an engineering firm
+in their home town of Gridley. After being graduated from the Gridley High
+School, Tom and Harry had done more work in the same offices. Then, in a
+sudden desire for advancement, and possessed by the longing for a wider
+field of endeavor, Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton had secured positions as
+"cub engineers" on the construction work that was being done to rush a new
+railway, system over the Rocky Mountains in Colorado. The stern, hard work
+that lay before them, the many adventures in a rough wilderness, and the
+chain of circumstances that at last placed Tom Reade in charge of the
+railroad building, with Harry as first assistant engineer, are all told in
+the first volume of this present series, "_The Young Engineers In
+Colorado_."
+
+That great feat finished satisfactorily, the ambition of our young
+engineers led them further afield, as told in "_The Young Engineers in
+Arizona_." A great, man-killing quicksand had to be filled in and
+effectively stopped from shifting. Reade & Hazelton undertook the task.
+Incidentally Tom came into serious, dangerous conflict with gamblers and
+other human birds-of-prey, who had heretofore fattened on the earnings of
+the railway laborers. It was a tremendously exciting time that the young
+engineers had in Arizona, but they at last got away with their lives and
+were at the same time immensely successful in their undertaking.
+
+In "_The Young Engineers In Nevada_" we found our young friends under
+changed conditions. While at work in Colorado and in Arizona Tom and
+Harry had studied the occurrence of precious ores, and also the methods
+of assaying and extracting ores. Having their time wholly to themselves
+after finishing in Arizona the dauntless young pair went to Nevada, there
+to study mining at first hand. In time they located a mining claim, though
+there were other claimants, and around this latter fact hung an extremely
+exciting story. Both young engineers nearly lost their lives in Nevada,
+and met with many strenuous situations. Their sole idea in pushing their
+mine forward to success was that the money so earned would enable them to
+further their greatest ambition; they longed to have their own engineering
+offices. In the end, their mine, which the young engineers had named "The
+Ambition," proved a success. Thereupon they left their mining partner, Jim
+Ferrers, in charge and went east to open their offices.
+
+We next found the young engineers engaged to the south of the United States
+border. These adventures were fully set forth in the preceding volume in
+this series, entitled "_The Young Engineers in Mexico_." Tom and Harry,
+engaged to solve some problems in a great Mexican mine, found themselves
+the intended tools of a pair of mine swindlers of wealth and influence.
+From their first realization of the swindle Tom and Harry, even in the face
+of threats of assured death, held out for an honest course. How they
+struggled to save a syndicate of American investors from being swindled out
+of millions of dollars was splendidly told in that fourth volume.
+
+And now we find our young friends down at the gulf coast town of Blixton,
+Alabama. Here they are engaged in a kind of engineering work wholly unlike
+any they had hitherto undertaken. The owners of the Melliston Steamship
+Line, with a fleet of twenty-two freight steamships engaged in the West
+Indian and Central American trade, had looked in vain for suitable dock
+accommodations for their vessels, worth a total of more than six million
+dollars. In their efforts to improve their service the Melliston owners
+had found at Blixton a harbor that would have suited them excellently, but
+for one objection. The bay at Blixton was too open to shelter vessels from
+the severity of some of the winter gales. Up to the present time Blixton
+had not been used for harbor purposes. But the Melliston owners had
+conceived the idea that a great breakwater could be so built as to shelter
+the waters of the bay. They had quietly bought up most of the shore front
+of the little town, which had railway connection. Then they had searched
+about for engineers capable of building the needed breakwater. Reade &
+Hazelton, hearing of the project, had applied for the work. As the young
+men furnished most excellent recommendations from former employers they had
+finally secured the opportunity.
+
+By no means was the task an easy one, as will presently be shown. It was
+a work that would have to be carried on in the very teeth of jealous
+Nature. Tom and Harry were fully aware of the great difficulties that lay
+before them. What they did not know was that they would presently have to
+contend, also, with forces set loose by wicked human minds. What started
+these untoward forces in operation, and how the forces worked out, will
+soon be seen.
+
+Captain of a queer crew was Tom Reade, and Harry was his lieutenant. Of
+the laborers, seven hundred in number, some four hundred were negroes;
+there were also two hundred Italians and about a hundred Portuguese. Many,
+of each race, were skilled masons; others were but unskilled laborers.
+There were six foremen, all Americans, and a superintendent, also American.
+There were a few more Americans and two or three Scotchmen, employed as
+stationary engineers and in similar lines of work.
+
+A touch of the old Arizona trouble had invaded the camp. There had
+recently been a pay-day, and gamblers had descended upon the camp of tents
+and shanties. Once more Reade had driven off the gamblers, though this
+time with less trouble than in Arizona. At Blixton, Tom had merely sent
+for the four peace officers in the town of Blixton, and had had the
+gamblers warned out of camp. They had gone, but there had been wrathful
+mutterings among many of the workmen.
+
+The camp was a half mile back from the water's edge, on a low hillside.
+Here the men of the outfit were settled. There had been mutinous
+mutterings among some of the men, but so far there had been no open revolt.
+
+Tom, however, who had had considerable experience in such matters, looked
+for some form of trouble before the smouldering excitement quieted. So did
+Harry.
+
+On this dark night Tom had proposed that he and his chum take a stroll down
+to the shore front to see whether all were well there. Soon after leaving
+camp behind, the young engineers had started on a jog-trot. Just before
+they reached the water's edge the wind had borne to their ears the faint
+report of what must have been an explosion out over the waters of the gulf.
+
+"Trouble!" Tom whispered in his chum's ear. "Most likely some of the
+rascals that we drove out of camp have been trying to set back our work
+with dynamite. If they have done so we'll teach 'em a lesson if we can
+catch them!"
+
+So the young engineers had started out over their narrow retaining wall.
+We have seen how they had walked most of the distance when Harry had had
+his sudden warning of the hostile arm uplifted over his head.
+
+"What could it have been?" demanded Tom in a low voice, as he continued to
+cast the light from his flash lamp out over the waters on either side of
+the wall.
+
+"It must have been my nervous imagination," admitted Harry. "Whew! But
+it _did_ seem mighty real for the moment."
+
+"Then you're inclined, now, to believe that it was purely imagination?"
+pursued Tom.
+
+"Ye---e---es, it must have been," assented Harry reluctantly.
+
+Tom made some final casts with the light.
+
+While they were conversing, well past the short radius of the flash lamp's
+glare, a massive black head bobbed up and down with the waves. Out there
+the huge negro who had swiftly vanished from the wall, and who had swum
+under water for a long distance, was indolently treading water. Wholly at
+home in the gulf, the man's black head blended with the darkness of the
+water and the blackness of the night.
+
+"Oh, then," suggested Reade, "we may as well go along on our way. Plainly
+there's nothing human around here to look at but ourselves."
+
+So they started slowly forward over the wall. Leisurely the black man swam
+to the wall, taking up the dogged trail again in the darkness behind the
+pair of young engineers.
+
+Several minutes more of cautious walking brought Tom Reade to a startled
+halt.
+
+"Look there, Harry!" uttered Reade, stopping and throwing the light ahead.
+
+Out beyond them, not far from the end of the wall, some hundred feet of the
+top had been torn away. For all the young engineers could see, the
+foundations might have gone with the superstructure.
+
+"Dynamite!" Tom muttered grimly. "So this is the way our newly-found
+enemies will fight us?"
+
+"It won't be such a big job to repair this gap," muttered Harry calmly.
+
+"No; but it'll take a good many dollars to pay the bills," retorted Tom.
+
+"Well, the expense can't be charged to us, anyway," maintained Harry. "We
+didn't do this vandal's work, and we didn't authorize its being done."
+
+"No; but you know why it was done, Harry," Tom continued. "It was because
+we drove the gamblers out of the camp, and thus made enemies for ourselves
+on both sides of the camp lines."
+
+"Anyway, the company's officers can't blame us for trying to maintain
+proper order in the camp," Hazelton insisted stoutly.
+
+"Not if we can stop the outrages with this one explosion, perhaps," replied
+Tom thoughtfully. "Yet, if there are many more tricks like this one played
+on the wall you'll find that the company's officers will be blaming us all
+the way up to the skies and down again. Big corporations are all right on
+enforcing morality until it hits their dividends too hard. Then you'll
+find that the directors will be urging us to let gambling go on again if
+the laborers insist on having it."
+
+"Well, we won't have gambling in the camp, anyway," Harry retorted
+stubbornly. "We're simply looking after the interests of the men
+themselves. I wonder why they can't see it, and act like men, not fools."
+
+"We're going to stop the gambling, and keep it stopped," Tom went on, his
+jaws setting firmly together. "But, Harry, we're going to have a big row
+on our hands, and various attempts against the company's property will be
+made."
+
+"If the company's officers order us to let up on the gambling," proposed
+Harry, "we can resign and get out of this business altogether."
+
+"We won't resign, and we won't knuckle down to any lot of swindlers either,
+Harry!" cried Tom. "Some one is fighting us, and this wreck of a sea-wall
+is the first proof. All right! If any one wants to fight us he shall find
+that we know how to fight back, and that we can hit hard. Harry, from this
+minute on we're after those crooks, and we'll make them realize that
+there's some sting to us!"
+
+"Good enough!" cheered Hazelton. "I like that old-time fight talk! But
+are you going to do anything to protect the wall to-night, Tom?"
+
+"I am," announced the young chief engineer.
+
+"What's the plan?"
+
+"Let me think," urged Reade. "Now, I believe, I have it. We'll send one
+of the motor boats out here, with a foreman and four laborers. They can
+arm themselves with clubs and patrol the water on both sides of the wall.
+The 'Thomas Morton' has a small search-light on her that will be of use in
+keeping a close eye over the wall."
+
+"That ought to stop the nonsense," Harry nodded. "But I don't imagine that
+any further efforts to destroy the wall will be made tonight, anyway."
+
+"We'll have the night patrol out _every_ night after this," Tom declared.
+"But I'm not so sure either, that another effort won't be made to-night, if
+we don't put a watch on to stop this wicked business. Harry, do you mind
+remaining out here while I run back and get the boat out?"
+
+"Why should I mind?" Hazelton wanted to know.
+
+"Well, I didn't know whether you would, or not---after seeing that
+imaginary something behind you."
+
+"Don't laugh at me! I may have had a start, but you ought to be the first
+to know, Tom, that I haven't frozen feet."
+
+"I do know it, Harry. You've been through too many perils to be suspected
+of cowardice. Well, then, I'll run back."
+
+Tom Reade had really intended to leave the flash lamp with his chum, but
+he forgot to do so, and, as he jogged steadily along over the wall he threw
+the light ahead of him. As he got nearer shore Tom increased his jog to a
+brisk run.
+
+Once, on the way, he passed the prowling negro without knowing it. That
+huge fellow, seeing the ray of light come steadily near him, hesitated for
+a few moments, then took to the water, swimming well out. After Reade had
+passed, the fellow swam in toward the wall.
+
+Up on the wall climbed the negro. For a few minutes he crouched there,
+shaking the water from his garments. Then, cautiously, he began to crawl
+forward.
+
+"Boss Reade, he done gone in," muttered the prowler. "Boss Hazelton, Ah
+reckon he's mah poultry!"
+
+Harry, keeping his lone vigil away out on the narrow retaining wall, was
+growing sleepy. He had nearly forgotten his scare. Indeed, he was
+inclined to look upon it as a trick of his own brain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE CALL OF ONE IN TROUBLE
+
+
+Once Tom Reade reached the solid land he let his long legs out into a brisk
+run.
+
+With his years of practice on the Gridley High School athletic team he was
+not one to lose his wind readily.
+
+So he made his way at the same speed all the way up to the camp.
+
+"Who dar?" called a negro watchman, as Tom raced up to the outskirts of
+the camp.
+
+"Reade, chief engineer," Tom called, then wheeled and made off to the
+right, where the more substantial barracks of the foremen stood.
+Superintendent Renshaw lived in a two-story barrack still farther to the
+right, as the guest of the young engineers.
+
+"_Quien vive_?" (who's there?) hailed another voice, between the two
+barracks buildings.
+
+"So, Nicolas, you rascal, you haven't gone to bed?" demanded Tom, halting.
+"What did I tell you about earlier hours?"
+
+Nicolas was the young Mexican servant whom Tom and Harry had brought back
+with them from Mexico. Readers of the previous volume know all about this
+faithful fellow.
+
+"You and Senor Hazelton, you waire not in bed," replied Nicolas stolidly.
+
+"You're not expected to stay up and watch over us as if we were babies,
+Nicolas," spoke Tom, in a gentler voice. "You'd better turn in now."
+
+"Senor Hazelton, where is he?" insisted Nicolas, anxiously.
+
+"Oh, bother! Never mind where he is," Tom rejoined. "We won't either of
+us be in for a little while yet. But you turn in now---at
+once---instanter!"
+
+Then Tom bounded over to the little porch before the foremen's barracks,
+where he pounded lustily on the door.
+
+"Who's there? What's wanted?" demanded a sleepy voice from the inside.
+
+"Is that you, Evarts?" called Reade.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Get on your duds and turn out as quickly as you can."
+
+"You want me?" yawned Evarts.
+
+"Now, see here, my man, if I didn't want you why on earth would I call you
+out in the middle of the night?"
+
+"It's late," complained Evarts.
+
+"I know it. That's why I want you to get behind yourself and push
+yourself," retorted the young chief engineer energetically. "Hustle!"
+
+Twice, while he waited impatiently, Tom kicked the toe of one boot against
+the door to emphasize the need of haste. Other drowsy voices remonstrated.
+
+"Hang a man who has to sleep _all_ the time!" grunted Tom Reade.
+
+After several minutes the door opened, and a lanky, loose-jointed,
+lantern-jawed man of some forty-odd years stepped out.
+
+"Well, what's up, Mr. Reade?" questioned the foreman, hiding a yawn behind
+a bony, hairy hand.
+
+"You are, at last, thank goodness!" Tom exclaimed. "Evarts, I want you to
+rout out four good men. Lift 'em to their feet and begin to throw the
+clothes on 'em!"
+
+"It's pretty late to call men out of their beds, sir," mildly objected the
+foreman.
+
+"No---it's early, but it can't be helped," Tom Reade retorted. "Hustle
+'em out!"
+
+"Black or white?" sleepily inquired Evarts.
+
+"White, and Americans at that," Tom retorted. "Put none but Americans
+on guard tonight, Evarts! What do you suppose has happened?"
+
+"Can't guess."
+
+"No! You're still too sleepy. Evarts, some scoundrels have blown out a
+good part of our wall yonder."
+
+"Are you joking, Mr. Reade?"
+
+"No, sir; I am not. Dynamite must have been used. Hazelton and I heard
+the noise of the blast, but of course we got out there too late to catch
+any miscreant at the job."
+
+Evarts, at first, was inclined to regard the news with mild disbelief, but
+he soon realized that something must have happened very nearly as the young
+chief engineer had described.
+
+"Well, what are you standing there for?" Tom demanded, impatiently. "Are
+you going to wait for daylight? Get the four men out---all Americans, mind
+you. _Hustle_, man!"
+
+Evarts started away; toward the camp over to the left of them. As he did
+so Tom darted in another direction. Two minutes later Tom was back,
+piloting by one arm a man who was still engaged in rubbing the sleep out of
+his eyes. This was Conlon, engineer of the motor boat, "Morton."
+
+"Where's Evarts?" Reade queried, impatiently. "Oh, Evarts! Where are you,
+and what are you doing?"
+
+"Trying to get four men awake," bawled back the voice of the foreman, from
+the distance. "As soon as I get one man on his feet the other three have
+sunk back to sleep."
+
+"Wait until I get over there then!" called Tom, striding forward. "Come
+along, Conlon! Don't you lag on me."
+
+"There! Do you fellows reckon you want Mr. Reade to bump in here and shake
+you out?" sounded the warning voice of Evarts.
+
+As Tom and the motor boat's engine tender reached the little, box-like
+shack from which Evarts's tones proceeded, four men, seated on the floor,
+were seen to be lacing their shoes by the dim light of a lantern.
+
+"A nice lot you are!" called Tom crisply. "How many hours does it take you
+to get awake when you're called in the middle of the night?"
+
+"This overtime warn't in the agreement," sleepily retorted one of the men.
+
+"You're wrong there," Reade informed him, vehemently. "Overtime _is_ in
+the agreement for every man in this camp when it's wanted of him---from
+the chief engineer all along the line. Now, you men oblige me by hustling.
+I don't want to wait more than sixty seconds for the last man of you."
+
+"I've a good mind to crawl back into my bunk," growled another of the men.
+
+"All right," retorted Tom Reade, with suspicious cheerfulness. "Try it and
+see what kind of fireworks I carry concealed on my person. Or, just lag a
+little bit on me, and you'll see the same thing. Men, do you realize that
+there's foul play afoot out on the retaining wall? We've got to go out
+there in time to stop anything more happening. Now, you've got your shoes
+on; grab the rest of your clothing and hustle it on as we make for the
+beach. Come along!"
+
+Tom fairly got behind the men and pushed them outside. They would have
+liked to complain, but they didn't. Some of them were larger and heavier
+than the chief engineer, but they knew quite well that, at sign of any
+trifling mutiny to-night, Reade would thrash them all.
+
+"If any one is trying to blow up the wall, Mr. Reade, it's all your fault,
+anyway," ventured Evarts, as the little party started at a brisk walk for
+the beach. "When you've got a mixed crowd of men working for you, you
+shouldn't interfere too much with their amusements. Yet you would have the
+gamblers run out of camp just when our boys were getting ready to have some
+pleasant evenings."
+
+"I'll run out any one else who attempts to bring disorderly doings into
+this camp," Tom retorted quietly.
+
+"Then there'll be some more of your seawalls blown up," Evarts warned him
+gloomily.
+
+"If such a thing happens again there'll be some men hurt, and some others
+breaking into prison," Tom answered with spirit. "Any evildoers that try
+to set themselves up in business around here will soon wish they had kept
+away---that's all."
+
+"It's a bad business," insisted Evarts, wagging his head. "When you have
+a mixed crowd of workmen---"
+
+"I think you've said that before," Tom broke in coolly. "To-night we're
+in too much of a hurry to listen to the same thing twice. Come on, men.
+You can go a little faster than a walk. Jog a bit---I'll show you how."
+
+"This is pretty hard on men in the middle of the night," hinted Evarts,
+after the jogging had gone on for a full minute. "It ain't right to-----"
+
+"Stop it, Evarts!" Tom cut in crisply. "I don't mind a little grumbling
+at the right time, and I often do a bit myself, but not when I'm as rushed
+as I am to-night. There's the dock ahead, men---a little faster spurt
+now!"
+
+Tom urged his men along to the dock. With no loss of time they tumbled
+aboard the "Morton," a broad, somewhat shallow, forty-foot motor boat of
+open construction.
+
+"Get up and take the wheel, Evarts," Tom. directed. "Get at work on your
+spark, Conlon, and I'll throw the drive-wheel over for you. Some of you
+men cast, off!"
+
+In a very short time the "Morton" was going "put-put-put" away from the
+dock.
+
+Tom, after seeing that everything was moving satisfactorily, turned around
+to look at the four men huddled astern.
+
+"Don't any of you go to sleep," he urged. "A good part of our success
+depends on how well you all keep awake and use your eyes and ears."
+
+That said, Tom Reade hastened forward, stationing himself close to Evarts,
+who had the steering wheel.
+
+Some of the men astern began to talk.
+
+"Silence, if you please," Tom called softly. "Don't talk except on matters
+of business. We want to be able to use our ears. Conlon, make your engine
+a little less noisy if you can."
+
+Now Reade had leisure to wonder how matters had gone with Harry Hazelton.
+
+"Of course that threatening figure Harry saw behind him was an imaginary
+one," Tom said to himself, but he felt uneasy nevertheless.
+
+A few moments later Reade clutched at one of Evarts's arms.
+
+"Did you hear that, man?" the young engineer demanded.
+
+"Hear what?" Evarts wanted to know.
+
+"It sounded like a yell out there yonder," Tom rejoined.
+
+"Didn't hear it, Mr. Reade."
+
+"There it goes again!" cried Tom, leaping up. "Some one is calling my
+name. It must be Harry Hazelton, and he must want help. Conlon, slam it
+to that engine of yours!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+VANISHING INTO THIN AIR
+
+
+Left by himself Harry had stood, at first, motionless, or nearly so. He
+strained his hearing in trying to detect any unusual sound of the night,
+since it was so dark that vision would not aid him much.
+
+There was nothing, however, but the mournful sighing of the wind and the
+lapping of the waves. It seemed to Hazelton that the wind was growing
+gradually more brisk and the waves larger, but he was not sure of that
+until the water commenced splashing across his shoes. The footway on the
+masonry became more slippery in consequence.
+
+"With these rocks well wet down I wouldn't care much about having to run
+back to the land," muttered Harry, dryly. "However, I won't have to go
+back on my own feet. Tom will have the boat out here, and undoubtedly he
+will plan to have us both taken back to shore after we get through cruising
+around here. We should have brought the boat out in the first place."
+
+A night bird screamed, then flapped its wings close to Harry's face in its
+flight past him. The young engineer saw the moving wings for an instant;
+then they vanished into the black beyond.
+
+Farther out some other kind of bird screamed. The whole situation was a
+weird one, but Harry was no coward, though a less courageous youth would
+have found the situation hard on his nerves.
+
+Still another night bird screamed, of some species with which Hazelton was
+wholly unacquainted. The cry was answered by some sort of strange call
+from the shore.
+
+"It's a fine thing that I'm not superstitious," laughed the young engineer
+to himself, "or I'd surely feel cold chills chasing each other up and down
+my spine."
+
+As it was, Harry shivered slightly, though not from fear. With the
+increasing wind it was growing chilly out there for one who could not warm
+himself with exercise.
+
+"It's a long time, or it seems so," muttered the young engineer presently.
+"Yet I'll wager that Tom is hustling himself and others on the very jump."
+
+Again the call of a night bird, and once more a sound from shore seemed
+to answer it.
+
+"Real birds?" wondered Hazelton, with a start of sudden curiosity. "Or
+have I been listening to human signals? If so, the signals can't cover
+any good or honest purpose."
+
+That train of thought set him to listening more acutely than before. Yet,
+as no more calls reached his ears the attention of the young engineer soon
+began to flag.
+
+The monotonous lapping of the waves against the stone wall, the constant
+splashing of water over the rocks and the steady blowing of the wind all
+tended to make the watcher feel drowsy.
+
+"What on earth can be keeping good old Tom?" Harry wondered, more than
+once.
+
+It would have been well, indeed, had Harry kept his eyes turned oftener
+toward the shore end of the wall. In that case he might more speedily
+have detected the wriggling, snake-like movement of the big negro moving
+toward him.
+
+With great caution the huge prowler came onward, raising his head a few
+inches every now and then and listening. The black man's nostrils moved
+feverishly. He was using them, as a dog would have done, to scent any
+signs of alarm on the part of the human quarry that he was after.
+
+At last Harry Hazelton turned sharply, for his own ears were attuned to
+the stillnesses of the western forests and his hearing was unusually acute.
+He had just heard a sound on the wall, not far away. Instantly the young
+engineer was on the alert.
+
+Then his eyes, piercing the darkness, made out the crawling, dark form,
+which did not appear to be more than fifty feet away from him.
+
+For a second or two Harry stared. But he knew there could be no snake as
+broad as this crawling figure appeared to be.
+
+"Who's there?" Hazelton called quickly.
+
+The writhing mass became still, flattening itself against the bed of rock.
+Hazelton was not to be deceived, however.
+
+"Who's there?" Harry repeated. "You had better talk up, my man!"
+
+Still no sound. Harry started forward to investigate. His foot touched
+against a good sized fragment of rock left there by one of the masons.
+
+Without delay Harry reached down, picking up the rock, which was rather
+more than half as large as his head.
+
+Holding this in his right hand Harry advanced with still more confidence,
+for he felt himself to be armed. Hazelton had been a clever pitcher in
+his high school days and knew that he could make this fragment of rock
+land pretty close to where he wanted it to go.
+
+"Who are you?" demanded Hazelton, once more, as he stepped cautiously
+forward. "No use in your keeping silent, my man. I see you and know that
+you're there. Moreover, I'm going to drag the truth out of you as to what
+you're doing out here on the wall at this hour of the night---and to-night
+of all nights."
+
+Still no answer; Harry went steadily forward, until he was within a dozen
+feet of the head of the flattened brute in human guise. Hazelton could now
+see every line of his adversary plainly, though he could not make out the
+fellow's face.
+
+"You'd better get up and talk," warned Harry, poising the rock fragment
+for a throw. "If you don't you'll cast all the more suspicion upon
+yourself. For the last time, my man, who are you and what are you doing
+here?"
+
+The huge black figure might have been a log for all the answer that came
+forth.
+
+"All right, then; it's your own fault," Harry Hazelton continued calmly.
+"As you won't speak I'm going to crack the nut for myself. Your head will
+be the nut, and this rock I have in my hand shall be the hammer. I'm going
+to slam this rock on your head with all the force I've got, and I'm a good,
+straight thrower."
+
+Yet, though Hazelton spoke with such confidence, he was far from meaning
+all he said. In the first place, he had no legal right, under the
+circumstances, to go as close to murder as it might be for him to throw the
+rock at the rascal's head. Moreover, Harry would hardly have exercised
+such a legal right, had he possessed it, without the strongest provocation.
+
+From the black prowler came a sudden, fierce snort. It sounded altogether
+like defiance.
+
+"Ho---ho! You're finding your voice, are you, my man?" Hazelton jeered.
+"Then talk up in time to save yourself!"
+
+Instead the huge black man began to writhe forward.
+
+"Stop that!" ordered Harry dangerously. He did not retreat from the
+writhing human thing, but he took better aim, noting that the black man was
+hatless and that his head offered a fair mark. "You're going to get hurt
+in just about a second more," he added.
+
+Uttering another snort the bulky black sprang to his feet with surprising
+agility in one of his great size.
+
+Harry now let his right hand fall back quickly. He was poising for the
+throw in earnest, for there could no longer be any doubt that the stranger
+was planning a deadly assault.
+
+"Take it, then, since you want it!" snapped out Harry Hazelton. The
+fragment of rock left his hand, propelled with force and directed with
+accurate aim at the negro's face.
+
+But the crafty black dodged just in time, at the same instant throwing up
+his hands.
+
+Harry gasped as he saw his unknown assailant deftly catch the rock
+fragment as though it had been a base ball.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!" jeered the black, in a hoarse, rumbling voice.
+
+He threw back his hand, gathering impetus for the cast. Hazelton could do
+nothing but throw himself on the defensive, planning to duplicate the black
+man's catch.
+
+Then the stone came---but it did not go high, instead, by a jerk of his
+wrist, the negro hurled it at Harry's right foot.
+
+That granite-like fragment struck Hazelton's foot with full force.
+
+"You---you scoundrel!" groaned Harry, in an all but admiring gasp.
+
+Like a flash he bent over, snatching up the fragment for his own use.
+
+"Now, I'll slam you into the middle of the Gulf of Mexico!" cried the young
+engineer, vengefully, as he tried to straighten up.
+
+A groan escaped him. His injured foot was paining him more than he had
+expected.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!" harshly jeered this mysterious, evil creature. The
+black man had halted as Harry prepared to throw, but he showed no sign of
+hesitation. Though he stood still, he thrust his repulsive, leering face
+forward, as though to offer that face as the best mark.
+
+Harry found that he could not stand straight---the pain in his injured foot
+was now too intense.
+
+"Get back with you!" ordered Harry. "Get back if you don't want a heap
+worse than you gave me."
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!" came the sneering laugh. Then the stranger reached out
+his hands as though to seize the youth.
+
+"I guess I'll have to do it---though not because I really want to hurt
+you!" muttered Harry ruefully.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!"
+
+There could be no question that the unknown was merely playing with him.
+Little as he liked to make the ugly throw Harry knew that he had to do it.
+When Hazelton had anything to do he believed in doing it well. So, putting
+all possible force into his throw, Harry let the rock fragment fly, and
+this time he was sure that his enemy would not be able to dodge in time.
+
+Nor did the black man make any seeming effort to dodge.
+
+Bump! Squarely in the black face the rock landed. Harry heard the sound
+and felt ill within himself. Yet the black man did not stagger. With a
+contemptuous snort he kicked the fragment of rock into the water as it
+landed at his feet.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!"
+
+For the first time Harry Hazelton felt positively dismayed. He saw the
+long, massive arms moving, looking like a powerful ape's arms. There could
+be no doubt that the unknown was ready for a spring.
+
+Harry did not retreat. Where could he run to? Only a few yards could he
+go out towards the end of the wall. Then, if he wished to continue his
+flight he could only take to the water.
+
+Only a glance was needed at the bulky, powerful frame of the unknown to
+make it appear certain that the latter could swim two rods to the young
+engineer's one.
+
+Harry decided instantly to stand his ground and to make the most valiant
+fight possible on so slippery a footing as that presented by the top of
+the retaining wall.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!"
+
+It was as though the black unknown sought to terrify his intended victim
+with his repetitions of that harsh, discordant laugh. Harry braced himself
+and waited.
+
+Then, off shoreward, came the sound of "put-put-put." The motor boat,
+"Morton," was putting out at last.
+
+"If I can keep this fellow busy for a few minutes, I can have all the help
+I want," flashed through Hazelton's mind. So he opened his mouth, raising
+his voice in a long, pent-up hail.
+
+"R e---e---e a d e! To---o---o---om R e a d e! Quick! Hazelton!"
+
+"Ha, ha!" jeered the unknown black.
+
+Then, suddenly, he leaped---not unexpectedly, however, for Harry had been
+watching, cat-like.
+
+The unknown threw out his arms, seeking to wrap them around Hazelton.
+
+Not in vain had Harry been trained, season after season, on the athletic
+ground of one of the best high school elevens in the United States.
+
+As the fellow leaped at him Harry crouched lower and went straight at his
+opponent.
+
+Powerful as the stranger was he was no football player. Harry "tackled"
+him in the neatest possible way, then strove to rise with this great
+human being.
+
+In the first instant it seemed to the young engineer as though he were
+trying to lift a mountain. His back felt as though it were snapping under
+a giant's task. Yet, but for one fact, Hazelton would have risen with his
+man, and would have hurled the mysterious one over into the waters of the
+gulf.
+
+Just in the instant of victory Harry's injured right foot gave out under
+him. With a stifled groan he sank down just as he threw his opponent.
+
+The black, instead of going into the water, landed hard on his back on the
+top of the wall. He was up again, however, before Hazelton could repress
+the pain in his foot and leap at the wretch.
+
+"Ha, ha! Ho, ho!" came the tantalizing challenge.
+
+"Put-put-put!" sounded over the water, coming nearer all the time.
+
+"Re---e---e---e a d e! T o m R e a d e! Help---quick!" yelled Harry,
+lustily.
+
+This, doubtless, was the first call that Tom, at the bow of the motor boat,
+thought he heard.
+
+Uttering a snort, this time, instead of the laugh, the black sprang at his
+intended prey. Their heads met, with considerable force. Then, with a
+wild chuckle, the black wound his apelike arms around the young engineer.
+
+"Reade! Tom Reade! Reade!" bellowed Hazelton lustily, as he tried
+desperately to free himself from the crushing embrace of the other.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Over the waters came the penetrating beam of a small search-light. The
+"Morton" was coming nearer all the time, but the ray did not yet reach with
+any great clearness the point where Harry Hazelton had been fighting for
+his life against his strange foe in the black night.
+
+"Keep parallel with the wall, Evarts," Tom ordered, crisply. "Conlon, are
+you pushing the engines for all it's worth?"
+
+"Yes, sir," came from the engine-tender. "This old craft isn't good for
+quite seven miles' an hour, anyway."
+
+"There! Now I've picked up the part of the wall where there isn't any wall
+in sight just now," said Tom, wincing over his own bull. "Hazelton ought
+to be just this side of there."
+
+"There's no one near the breach," replied Evarts.
+
+"So I see," Reade admitted, in a tone of worriment. "Oh, well, Harry isn't
+such an infant as to be wiped out all in one moment."
+
+"Where is Mr. Hazelton then?" inquired Evarts, as Tom swung the arc of the
+searchlight in broad curves.
+
+"Great Scott! I wish I knew!" gasped Reade, his perplexity and his anxiety
+growing with every second. "There appears to be no one on top of the
+wall."
+
+Evarts ran in within a few feet of the wall, on the shore-side of the
+breach.
+
+"Shall I land you there, sir?" questioned the foreman.
+
+"Presently," Tom nodded. "But now, back out a few feet and swing the
+boat's nose around so that I can make a search with this light." Evarts
+obeyed the order. Despite the smallness of the light, Reade was able to
+send the searching beam of light back nearly one-half of the way to shore.
+Nowhere was there any human being visible on the wall.
+
+"Harry! Hazelton!" bawled Tom, with all the power in his lungs.
+
+There was no answer.
+
+"Jupiter! You'll have to land me, I reckon," quaked Tom Reade. "Drive
+her nose in---gently. I'll be ready to jump."
+
+"Be careful how you _do_ jump," warned Evarts. "It's mighty slippery on
+that wall tonight."
+
+Tom poised himself as the boat moved in close. Then he took a light
+leap, landing safely.
+
+Here the young chief engineer again brought his pocket flash lamp into
+play. Closely he scanned the top of the wall all around where he knew he
+had left his chum.
+
+But Harry was nowhere to be seen, nor, on the wet wall, could Tom find
+any signs of a scuffle, or any other sign that gave him a clue.
+
+"Evarts, this is mighty mysterious!" groaned the young chief.
+
+"Unless---" hinted the foreman.
+
+"Unless what?"
+
+"Perhaps Mr. Hazelton ran along the walltop to the shore."
+
+"He'd have hailed us, then, in passing, wouldn't he?" choked Tom Reade.
+"Besides, I had the light playing on this wall most of the way. If he
+had run back we would have seen him, even if he hadn't hailed. And he
+couldn't have run farther out to seaward. Evarts, I'm downright worried."
+
+Tom Reade might indeed well be worried over the grewsome mysteries of this
+night of evil deeds.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+SOME ONE CALLS AGAIN
+
+
+Half an hour later Tom Reade leaped ashore at the little pier.
+
+"My orders, Mr. Reade."
+
+"They're brief and concise," Tom rejoined. "You're to cruise the length
+of the wall, especially farther out from shore. Use your searchlight
+freely. Keep the wall so guarded that no rascal can slip out there, either
+over the wall or by boat, and do any damage. Mr. Evarts, the safety of
+the wall until daylight is your whole charge."
+
+"Very good, sir. But I'm sure that nothing more will happen to the wall."
+
+"If anything does it will be up to you, Mr. Evarts," Tom assured him
+grimly. "I'll hold you responsible."
+
+"I won't let anything happen, Mr. Reade. And I hope you find Mr. Hazelton
+all right."
+
+"He may be up at camp," Tom answered, though in his heart he did not
+believe it.
+
+Had Harry escaped whatever danger had menaced him, Tom knew very well that
+his chum, after appealing for help, would by some means have signaled his
+subsequent safety.
+
+However, Tom started toward camp at a run. He was wholly mystified. The
+search in the neighborhood of the breach in the wall had been continued
+until its hopelessness had been fully demonstrated. The search had also
+been continued over the water, for a possible clue to the mystery.
+
+Though Tom ran, he felt himself choking, stifling. Despite all his efforts
+to cheer himself the young chief engineer felt certain that his chum had
+mysteriously met his fate, and that brave, dependable Harry Hazelton was no
+more.
+
+Yet how could he have vanished so completely, and what possibly could have
+happened to his assailant or assailants?
+
+"It'll be an awful night, until daylight," Tom groaned inwardly, as he
+ran. "At daylight, of course, we can make a far better search, especially
+over the water. But in the hours that must elapse---! It's going to be a
+tough period of waiting!"
+
+Arrived at camp, Tom made straight for his own barracks, letting himself
+in with a latch-key as soon as he could control his shaking hand
+sufficiently to use the key.
+
+Tom bounded straight for the bed-room of the superintendent, at the rear
+of the little building.
+
+"Mr. Renshaw!" shouted the young chief, throwing open the bed-room door.
+
+The barrack was lighted by electricity. Tom threw on the light, then
+wheeled toward the bed, to find the superintendent sitting up, revolver
+in hand.
+
+"Oh, it's you, is it?" gasped the superintendent. "Mr. Reade, in my
+stupor from being aroused I was just on the point of shooting you for a
+burglar. It's awful!"
+
+"You ought to throw that revolver to the bottom of the gulf," Tom rasped
+out.
+
+"Not much!" retorted the superintendent. "Handling as mixed a crew as we
+have on this work I wouldn't think of going about unarmed. And you ought
+to go armed, too, Mr. Reade."
+
+"Bosh!" uttered Tom. He had a well-known objection to carrying a pistol.
+Reade always maintained that a pistol-carrying man was a coward. A coward
+is one who is afraid, and the man who is not afraid has no reason to carry
+a weapon.
+
+"Renshaw," added Tom, "there's just one circumstance in which I would
+carry a pistol---and that is, if I were carrying large sums of other
+people's money. If I were a pay-master, or a bank messenger, I'd carry
+a pistol, but under no other circumstances, outside of military service,
+would I carry a weapon. But---are you thoroughly awake, now?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Then, Mr. Renshaw, get up and hide that pistol somewhere. While you're
+about it, listen to me. Some scoundrel has blown out a large portion of
+our retaining wall to-night. I left Hazelton on guard at the point and
+came ashore to get out the motor boat, 'Morton.' Before I could return
+I heard Hazelton's call for help, and---he has disappeared! There's
+wicked work on hand to-night. You'll have to get up and help me. Be quick
+with your dressing. We've work to do to-night, and all of it is man's
+work."
+
+Tom hastily added such other particulars as were needed. Renshaw, while
+he dressed hurriedly, listened with a horror that he took no pains to
+conceal.
+
+"Evarts claims that it's revenge work, on the part of some of our men,
+because Hazelton and I stopped gambling in the camp," Tom continued.
+
+"It might be," Renshaw admitted thoughtfully. "But to me it seems that
+there must be a lot more behind the whole terrible matter."
+
+"That's the way it strikes me, too," Tom nodded. "However, you're dressed,
+so now we can hurry out and get busy."
+
+"What shall we do first?" Superintendent Renshaw inquired.
+
+"That's what I've been thinking over while you were dressing," Tom replied.
+"Of course the one thing of real importance is to find Hazelton."
+
+"Killed, beyond a doubt," replied the older man.
+
+"I refuse to believe it," Tom retorted. "There's a mystery in his fate,
+but I simply won't believe that Harry has been killed."
+
+"Then why didn't you hear from him further?"
+
+"That's the mystery."
+
+Tom had shaped their course for the barracks occupied by the foremen. He
+bounded upon the little porch and began to hammer on the door with both
+fists.
+
+"Turn out, everybody!" Tom bellowed. "Every foreman is on duty to-night.
+Show a light, and let us in as soon as you can."
+
+Some one was heard stirring. Then Dill, one of the foremen, admitted the
+callers.
+
+"Are all the others up?" Reade asked, sharply.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Good! Tell your associates to finish dressing as quickly as possible and
+to meet me in the office."
+
+"The office" was a little room just inside the entrance to the building.
+It was a room where the foremen sat and chatted in the evenings.
+
+"Put a double-hustle on, everyone," Tom called after Dill.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Barely three minutes had passed when all of the six remaining foremen had
+assembled. Tom plunged instantly into a brief account of what had
+happened.
+
+"It seems to me, sir---" Dill began.
+
+"Keep it to yourself, then, if you please," Tom interrupted him gently.
+"We haven't any time for opinions to-night. What we want is swift,
+intelligent work, and a lot of it."
+
+Tom thereupon gave each man his directions.
+
+"Now, each of you go to your own gangs in the camp," he added. "Wake what
+men you need and put 'em to work. If any of the men object to being taken
+from their cots in the night, just lift them out. Don't stand any
+nonsense. Let each foreman make it his business to know just what the men
+under him are doing."
+
+One foreman was to take men with lanterns and go out carefully over every
+foot of the seawall. Another was to organize a beach patrol. Still
+another, with but two men, was to go into the town of Blixton and see if
+any tidings of Hazelton could be obtained there. To one foreman fell the
+task of searching carefully through camp before going to other work
+assigned to him.
+
+"Now, get to work, all of you," Tom ordered. "As an extra inducement you
+can tell your men that the one who finds Hazelton, whether dead or alive,
+shall have a reward of one hundred dollars. Remember the watchword for
+to-night, which is, 'hustle!'"
+
+In all, some sixty men were pulled from their cots. Tom, having given the
+orders, walked down to the beach with his superintendent.
+
+"You've covered everything that's possible, I think, Mr. Reade," commented
+the foreman.
+
+"I think I have. But there won't be any rest for any one until we have
+found Hazelton."
+
+"Are you going to have the water dragged?"
+
+"Not before daylight---perhaps not then," Reade replied. "I can't bring
+myself to believe that Harry was thrown into the water and that he drowned
+there."
+
+"It'll take the chief a day or two to realize that," sighed the
+superintendent to himself. "Yet that is exactly what has happened. The
+chief won't believe it, though, until the body is found."
+
+Down on the beach there was really nothing for Tom and his head man to do
+after the arrival of the foremen and their gangs. Everything went ahead in
+an orderly manner.
+
+"I don't suppose you could get any rest, under the circumstances, Mr.
+Reade," hinted the superintendent, "yet that is just what you are going
+to need."
+
+"Rest?" echoed Tom, gazing at the man, in a strange, wide-eyed way, while
+a grim smile flickered around the corners of his mouth. "What have rest
+and I to do with each other just now?"
+
+"Yet there's nothing you can do here."
+
+"I am here, anyway," Reade retorted. "I'm on the spot---that's something."
+
+"Let me run back to the house and get you some blankets," urged the
+superintendent. "Then you can lie down on the sand and rest. Of course
+I know you can't sleep at present."
+
+"It is not necessary go back," volunteered a voice behind them. "I have
+the blankets."
+
+"Nicolas!" gasped Tom, in surprise. "How did you know I was here?"
+
+"I wake up when you talk to Meester Renshaw," replied the Mexican simply.
+"I listen. I know, now---poor Senor Hazelton!"
+
+Nicolas's voice broke, and, as he stepped closer, Tom beheld some large
+tears trickling down the little Mexican's face.
+
+"Nicolas, you're a good fellow!" cried Tom, impulsively, "but I don't want
+the blankets. Spread them on the sand, then lie down on them yourself
+until I need you."
+
+"What---me? I lie down?" demanded Nicolas. "No, no! That impossible is.
+I must walk, walk! Me? I am like the caged panther to-night. I want
+nothing but find the enemy who have hurt Senor Hazelton. Then I jump on
+the back of that enemy!"
+
+Saying which Nicolas saluted, and, as became his position of servant, fell
+back some yards. But first he had dropped the blankets to the beach.
+
+The light of lanterns showed that the men of one gang were searching
+thoroughly all along the top of the wall. Once in a while a man belonging
+to the beach patrol passed the chief engineer and the superintendent,
+reporting only that no signs of Harry had been found.
+
+An hour thus passed. Then, from over the water, as the lantern-bearing
+searchers were returning, a dull explosion boomed across the water.
+
+"Great Scott!" quivered Tom. "There they go at it again, Mr. Renshaw!
+Another section of the retaining wall has gone---blown up!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+WANTED---DAYLIGHT AND DIVERS
+
+
+In a trice the foreman of the gang on the wall wheeled his men about,
+running them out seaward toward the scene of the latest explosion. That
+much was plain from the twinkling of the rapidly-moving lanterns.
+
+"Come on, Renshaw!" Tom shouted. "You, too, Nicolas. You can pull an
+oar."
+
+Reade was already racing out on to the small dock. He all but threw
+himself into a rowboat that lay tied alongside.
+
+"Cast off and get in," Tom ordered his companions, as he pushed out a pair
+of oars. "Nicolas, you're also good with a pair of oars. Mr. Renshaw,
+you take the tiller. Inform me instantly when you see the first gleam of
+the 'Morton's' search-light. Evarts ought to have caught the scoundrels
+this time. Evidently he's been cruising softly without showing a light."
+
+Mr. Renshaw gathered up the tiller ropes as Tom pushed off from the dock.
+Then the chief engineer addressed himself to the task of rowing. His firm
+muscles, working at their best, shot the little craft ahead. Nicolas, at
+the bow oars, did his best to keep up with his chief in the matter of
+rowing, though the Mexican was neither an oarsman nor an athlete.
+
+"Don't you make out the motor boat's lights yet?" Tom asked impatiently,
+after the first long spurt of rowing.
+
+"Not yet, sir," replied the superintendent. "I shan't miss the light when
+it shows."
+
+A few minutes later the superintendent announced in a low voice:
+
+"There's some craft, motionless, just a bit ahead."
+
+Tom, without stopping his work at the oars, turned enough to glance
+forward.
+
+"Why, it's---it's the 'Morton'!" he gasped.
+
+"I believe it is," declared the superintendent, staring keenly at the
+nearly shapeless black mass ahead.
+
+Tom, with his jaws set close, bent harder than ever at the oars.
+
+"Senor!" wailed Nicolas, gaspingly. "If you do not go more easily I shall
+expire for lack of breath. I cannot keep up with you."
+
+Reade fell into a slower, stronger stroke.
+
+"Drop the oars any time you want to, Nicolas," Reade urged. "There won't
+be much more rowing to do, anyway."
+
+Presently Tom himself rested on his oars, as the boat, moving under its
+own headway, approached the motor boat.
+
+"Going to board her on the quarter?" the superintendent asked.
+
+"No; by the bow," Tom answered. "Let go the tiller ropes. I'll pull
+alongside."
+
+As they started to pass the boat a sound reached them that made Reade grow
+wild with anger. Snore after snore, from five busy sleepers!
+
+Tom pulled softly up to the bow.
+
+"There's the anchor cable!" snorted Tom, Pointing to a rope that ran from
+the bow of the "Morton" down into the water. "Did you ever see more
+wicked neglect of important duty? And not even a lantern out to mark her
+berth! Get aboard, Mr. Renshaw, and go aft to start the engine. Nicolas,
+you take this boat astern and make fast. Don't wake the sleepers---poor,
+tired shirkers!"
+
+Tom, in utter disgust, leaped aboard the boat at the bow. There, behind
+the wheel, Evarts lay on the floor of the boat, his rolled-up coat serving
+as a pillow.
+
+Almost noiselessly Tom hauled up the light anchor. Then he stood by the
+wheel.
+
+"All ready at the engine, Mr. Reade!" called the superintendent, softly.
+
+"Let her go," Tom returned, "as soon as Nicolas boards."
+
+The Mexican was quickly aboard, after having made the rowboat's painter
+fast.
+
+"Headway!" announced Renshaw, throwing over the drive-wheel of the engine.
+
+"Put-put-put!" sputtered the motor. Then the "Morton" began really to
+move. With the first real throb of the engine the electric running lights
+gleamed out.
+
+Aft Conlon began to stir. Then he opened his eyes.
+
+"What---" he began.
+
+"Silence!" commanded Mr. Renshaw.
+
+"Tell me who's at the wheel?" Conlon begged.
+
+"Mr. Reade," replied the superintendent, dryly. "Now, keep still!"
+
+"Whew---ew---ew!" whistled Conlon, in dire dismay. Then he sank back,
+watching the engine with moody eyes. The other three men aft still slept.
+
+Presently Tom, in shifting his position, touched one foot lightly against
+the foreman's head. Evarts half-awoke, then realized that the boat was
+moving.
+
+"Who started this craft against my orders?" he drowsily demanded, as he
+sat up.
+
+"I did," Tom retorted witheringly, "though I didn't hear your orders to
+the contrary."
+
+"You---Mr. Reade?" gasped the foreman, leaping to his feet.
+
+"Yes---and a fine fellow you are to trust!" Tom rejoined. "I leave you
+with very definite orders, and you go to sleep. Then there's another
+explosion out on the wall and you sleep right along."
+
+"Another explosion?" blurted Evarts, rubbing his eyes with his fists.
+"Here, let me have that wheel, sir. I'll have you out there quick!"
+
+"You've nothing more to do here," Tom answered, dryly, without yielding
+the wheel.
+
+"What do you mean by that?" Evarts cried quickly.
+
+"Can't you guess?" wondered Reade.
+
+"Mr. Reade means," said Conlon, who had come forward, "that we're
+fired---discharged."
+
+"Nonsense!" protested Evarts.
+
+"Conlon has guessed rightly, as far as you're concerned," Tom continued.
+"To-morrow, Evarts, you go to Mr. Renshaw and get your pay. As for you,
+Conlon, you're not discharged this time. Evarts admitted himself that it
+was he who gave positive orders to tie the boat up at anchor. You were
+under his orders, so I can't hold you responsible. Are you wide awake,
+now?"
+
+"Yes, sir," answered Conlon meekly.
+
+"Then go back and attend to your engine. Look sharp for hail or bell."
+
+"I guess you'll find you can't quite get along without me," argued Evarts
+moodily. "You'll find that you need me to manage some of the men you've
+got."
+
+"You're through with this job, as I just did you the honor to inform you,"
+Tom responded quietly. "To-morrow Mr. Renshaw will pay you off up to
+date."
+
+"If I'm bounced, then you'll pay me for the balance of the month, anyway!"
+snarled the foreman defiantly. "You can't drop me without notice like
+that."
+
+"You'll be paid to date only," Tom retorted. "You've been discharged for
+wilful and serious neglect of duty, and you're not entitled to pay for the
+balance of the month."
+
+"All right, then," retorted the other hotly. "I'll collect my money
+through the courts. I'll show you!"
+
+"Just as you please," Reade replied indifferently. "But I imagine any
+court will consider seven dollars a day pretty large pay for a man who
+goes to sleep on duty."
+
+"See here, I'll---"
+
+"You'll keep quiet, Evarts, or you'll go overboard," Reade interrupted
+significantly. "I happen to know that you can swim, so I won't be
+bothered with you here if you insist on making a nuisance of yourself."
+
+Mr. Renshaw, having been relieved at the engine, now came forward.
+
+"Mr. Renshaw," directed the young chief engineer, "as soon after daylight
+as it is convenient for you you'll pay Evarts off in full to date and let
+him go. He threatens to sue if he is not paid to the end of the month, but
+if he wants to we'll let the courts do our worrying."
+
+"All right, sir," nodded the superintendent.
+
+Evarts had dropped into a seat just forward of the engine. He sat there,
+regarding Tom Reade with a baleful look of hate.
+
+"You're a success, all right, at one thing, and that's making enemies,"
+muttered the discharged foreman under his breath.
+
+Besides attending to the wheel Tom now reached out with one hand and
+switched on the search-light, which he manipulated with one hand. Shortly
+he found the spot where the portion of the wall had been blown away by the
+first explosion. A hundred and fifty yards farther out he beheld the work
+of the second explosion. Some seventy-five yards in length was the new
+open space, where at least as much of the retaining wall as was visible
+above the water had been blown out.
+
+"Slow down, Cordon," ordered Tom. "All we want is headway."
+
+"All right, sir."
+
+Tom drifted in within a few feet of the former site of the retaining wall.
+The "Morton" moved slowly by, Tom, by the aid of the searchlight, noting
+the extent of the disaster.
+
+"Get back aft, Evarts," ordered the young engineer, turning and beholding
+the late foreman. "We don't want you here."
+
+For a moment or two it looked as though Evarts would refuse. Then, with
+a growl, he rose and picked his way aft. By this time the other men who
+had been in his gang were awake. They regarded their former foreman with
+no great display of sympathy.
+
+"I'll confess I'm mystified," muttered Tom, watching the scene of the
+latest explosion for some minutes after the engine had been stopped.
+"When daylight comes and we can use the divers we ought to know a bit more
+about how such a big blast is worked in the dead of night when the
+scoundrels ought to make noise enough to be heard. It must have been a
+series of connected blasts, all touched off at the same moment, Mr.
+Renshaw, but even such a series is by no means easy to lay. And then the
+blasts have to be drilled for, and then tamped."
+
+"As you say, sir," replied the superintendent, "a much clearer idea can be
+formed when we have daylight and the divers."
+
+Tom held his watch to one side of the searchlight.
+
+"Nearly two hours yet until daylight, Mr. Renshaw," he announced. "And,
+of course, it will be two or three hours after daylight before we can get
+the divers at work. A fearful length of time to wait!"
+
+"You'd better go back to the shore, sir," urged the superintendent.
+
+"Not while this boat needs to be run," objected Reade. "For the rest of
+the night I want a man here whom I can trust."
+
+"Will you trust me with the boat?" proposed the superintendent.
+
+"Why, of course!"
+
+"Then let me run back to the dock and put you ashore, Mr. Reade. After
+that I'll come out here and patrol along the wall until broad daylight."
+
+That was accordingly done. The "Morton" lay alongside the dock, and
+Nicolas instantly busied himself with casting off the rowboat and making
+her fast to the pier instead.
+
+Evarts sullenly remained in the boat.
+
+"Come on, Evarts," spoke Tom quietly.
+
+"Mr. Reade," expostulated the late foreman, "I'm not going to be thrown
+out of my job like this."
+
+"Which especial way of being thrown out do you prefer then?" Tom queried,
+dryly.
+
+"I'm not going to be put out of my job until I've had at least one good
+talk with you," insisted the foreman.
+
+"I'm afraid the time has passed for talking with you," Reade responded,
+turning toward the shore. "You lost a great chance, to-night, to serve
+the company with distinction, and your negligence cost the company a lot
+of money through the second explosion. Are you coming out of that
+boat---or shall I come back after you?"
+
+Evarts rose, with a surly air. He stepped slowly ashore, after which one
+of the crew cast off. The engine began to move, and the "Morton" started
+back to her post.
+
+"Oh, you feel fine and important, just at this minute!" grumbled the
+discharged foreman, under his breath, glaring wickedly at the broad back
+of the young chief engineer. "But I'll do something to take the
+importance out of you before very long, Tom Reade!"
+
+Truth to tell, Tom, though he was still alert to the interests of his
+employers, felt anything but important. The thought of Harry Hazelton's
+unknown fate caused a great, choking lump in his throat as Reade stepped
+from the pier to land.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MR. BASCOMB IS PEEVISH
+
+
+At the first blush of dawn Tom despatched the tireless Nicolas to Blixton
+to notify the police of the explosions and of the disappearance of Harry
+Hazelton.
+
+Two men in blue, wearing stars on their coats, came over within an hour,
+walked about and looked wise until noon. They discovered nothing whatever,
+and their theories did not strike Reade as being worthy of attention.
+
+As soon as possible the divers were sent down at the two wrecked parts of
+the retaining wall. These men reported that the breaches extended ten
+feet beneath the surface at some points; only eight feet at other points.
+The foundations of the walls were reported as being secure. Then Tom,
+under the directions of two divers, put on a diver's suit and went down
+himself, for the first time in his life. After some two hours, with
+frequent ascents to the surface, the young chief engineer had satisfied
+himself that the foundations were secure. Then he did some rapid figuring.
+
+"The loss will not exceed eight thousand dollars---the cost of rebuilding
+the missing parts of the walls," Reade informed Superintendent Renshaw.
+
+"Only eight thousand dollars!" whistled the superintendent.
+
+"Well, that figure isn't anywhere nearly as high as I feared it might be,"
+Tom pursued.
+
+"But it will strike the directors of the Melliston Company as being pretty
+big for an extra bill," muttered Renshaw. "Especially, since---"
+
+The superintendent paused.
+
+"You were going to say," smiled Tom, wanly, "since the loss wouldn't have
+happened if I hadn't kicked the gamblers out of camp."
+
+"That's about the size of it, Mr. Reade," nodded Renshaw. "Directors of
+big companies are less interested in moral reforms than in dividends.
+They're likely to make a big kick over what your crusade has cost them
+already, even if it costs them no more."
+
+"We'll see to it that it doesn't cost them any more," Tom retorted.
+"Every night we'll watch that sea wall the way a mother does a sick baby.
+There'll be no more explosions. As to the directors kicking over the
+present expense, they'll have a prompt chance to do it. As soon as the
+telegraph office in Blixton was open this morning I wired the president of
+the company. Now, I'm going ashore. I can't do anything out here to help
+you, can I?"
+
+"Nothing," replied Renshaw. "If I didn't know how foolish the advice would
+sound, Mr. Reade, I'd urge you to take a nap."
+
+"I'll take a nap when I find it impossible to keep my eyes open any
+longer," Tom compromised. "For the next few hours---work and lots of it."
+
+As yet no effort had been made to repair the breaches in the wall. The
+different gangs were working that day in nearer shore. The divers,
+gathered on a scow, were now waiting for the "Morton" to convey them back
+to shore. Reade decided to go with them.
+
+"Twenty minutes to two," murmured Tom to himself, glancing at his watch as
+the "Morton" went laboriously back over the dancing, glinting waves.
+"There's a train due at Blixton at 1:30. By the time I get back to the
+house I ought to find one or more officials of the company impatiently
+waiting to jump on my devoted neck."
+
+Nor was Tom disappointed in this expectation. Pacing up and down on the
+porch of the house occupied by the engineers and superintendent was George
+C. Bascomb, president of the Melliston Company. Behind him stood Nicolas,
+respectfully eager to do anything he could for the comfort of the great
+man.
+
+"Ah, there you are, Reade," called President Bascomb in an irritated tone,
+as he caught sight of the young engineer striding forward. "Now, what's
+all this row that you wired us about?"
+
+"Will you come down to the water, and go out with me to look at the
+damage, sir?" asked Tom, as he took the president's reluctantly offered
+hand.
+
+"No," grunted Mr. Bascomb. "Let me hear the story first. Come inside
+and tell me about it."
+
+"Our friend is not quite so gracious as he has been on former meetings,"
+thought Tom, as he led the way inside. "I wonder if he is going to get
+cranky?"
+
+Inside was a little office room, as in the foremen's barracks.
+
+"Any decent cigars here?" questioned Mr. Bascomb, after exploring his own
+pockets and finding them innocent of tobacco.
+
+"No, sir," Tom answered. "No one here smokes."
+
+"I've got to have a cigar," the president of the company insisted.
+
+"Then, sir, if you'll give Nicolas your orders, he'll run over to Blixton
+and get you what you want."
+
+The Mexican departed in haste on the errand.
+
+"Now, first of all, Reade," began the president, "I am disgusted at
+learning of one fool mistake that you've made."
+
+"What is that, sir?" Tom asked, coloring.
+
+"I've just learned that you discharged Evarts---one of our best and most
+useful men."
+
+"I did discharge him, sir," Reade admitted.
+
+"Take him back, at once."
+
+"I'm sorry, sir, but I can't do it. He---"
+
+"I don't think you quite understand," broke in Mr. Bascomb coldly. "I
+directed you to take Mr. Evarts back on this work."
+
+"I was about to tell you, sir, why I can't do anything of the sort.
+I---"
+
+"Stop right there, Reade," ordered President Bascomb, in his most
+aggressive, bullying manner. "The first point that we have to settle is
+that Evarts must come back on the pay-roll and have his old position. Be
+good enough to let that proposition sink in before we take up the second."
+
+"I am very sorry, sir," Tom murmured respectfully, "but I can't and won't
+have Evarts back here. I won't have him around the work at all. Now what
+is the second proposition, sir?"
+
+As Tom spoke he looked straight into Mr. Bascomb's eyes. The other glared
+at him unbelievingly but angrily.
+
+"Young man, you don't appear to understand that I am president and head of
+the Melliston Company."
+
+"I quite understand it, sir," Reade answered. "At the same time I am chief
+engineer here, and I am committed to building the breakwater and dredging
+out the enclosed bay or harbor, all within a certain fixed appropriation.
+In order to keep my part of the bargain I must have men with me on whom I
+can depend to the fullest limit. Evarts isn't such a man and I won't have
+him on the work again."
+
+"He'll go on the pay-roll, anyway," snorted Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"I can't help what you may see fit to pay him, Mr. Bascomb, provided you
+pay him somewhere else. But the fellow can't go on the pay-roll here for
+the simple reason that he wouldn't be allowed to visit this construction
+camp for the purpose of getting his money. Mr. Bascomb, I am not trying to
+ride a high horse. I recognize that you are president of the company, and
+that I must take all reasonable orders from you and carry them out to the
+letter. Yet I can't take any orders that would simply hinder my work and
+damage my reputation as an engineer. Evarts can't come back into this camp
+as long as I am in charge here."
+
+"We'll take that up again presently," returned Mr. Bascomb, with an air of
+ruffled dignity. "Now, there's another matter that we must discuss. I
+know what has been done in the way of great damage to the retaining wall.
+I also know that this damage came through enmity that you stirred up by
+drumming certain parties out of this camp."
+
+"You refer, sir, I take it, to my act in having Blixton police officers
+come in here and chase out some gamblers who had come here for the purpose
+of winning the money of the workmen?"
+
+"That's it," nodded Bascomb. "In that matter you went too far---altogether
+too far!"
+
+"I'm afraid I don't understand you, sir."
+
+"You mean, Reade, that you don't want to understand me," snapped the
+president. "You admit having chased out the gamblers, don't you?"
+
+"Of course, I admit it, sir."
+
+"That was a bad move. In the future, Reade, you will not interfere with
+any forms of amusement that the men may select for themselves in their
+evening hours."
+
+Tom stared at the speaker in undisguised amazement.
+
+"But, Mr. Bascomb, the men are shamelessly robbed by the sharpers who come
+here to gamble with them."
+
+"That's the men's own affair," scoffed the president. "Anyway, they have
+a right to pitch away their wages if they want to. Reade, when you're as
+old as I am you will understand that workmen who throw away their money
+make the best workmen. They never have any savings, hence they must make
+every effort to keep their jobs. A workman with savings becomes too
+independent."
+
+"I am certain you have seen more of the world than I have, Mr. Bascomb,"
+Reade replied, respectfully. "At the same time I can't agree with you on
+the point you have just stated. A workman with a bank account has always
+a greater amount of self-respect, and a man who has self-respect is bound
+to make a good citizen and a good workman. But there are still other
+reasons why I had the gamblers chased out. Gambling here in the camp would
+always create a great deal of disorder. Disorder destroys discipline, and
+a camp like this, in order to give the best results in the way of work,
+must have discipline. Moreover, the men, when gambling, remain up until
+all hours of the night. A man who has been up most of the night can't give
+an honest day's work in return for his wages. Unless the men get their
+sleep and are kept in good condition we can't get the work out of them that
+we have a right to expect."
+
+"The right man can _drive_ workmen," declared Mr. Bascomb, with emphasis.
+"You'll have to drive your men. Get all the work out of them, but drop at
+once this foolish policy of interfering with what they do after the whistle
+blows. We can't have any more of this nonsense. It costs too much. By
+the way, how much will it cost to repair the damage to the retaining
+walls?"
+
+"About eight thousand dollars, sir, if my first figuring was correct," was
+Reade's answer.
+
+"Eight thousand dollars!" scowled President Bascomb. "Now, Reade, doesn't
+that amount of wanton, revengeful mischief teach you the folly of trying to
+regulate camp life outside of working hours?"
+
+"I'm afraid it doesn't, sir."
+
+"Then you must be a fool, Reade!"
+
+"Thank you, sir. I will add that you're not the first man who has
+suspected it."
+
+"You will, therefore, Reade," continued Mr. Bascomb, with his grandest air
+of authority, "cause it to become known throughout the camp that you are
+not going to interfere any further with any form of amusement that is
+brought to the camp evenings by outsiders."
+
+"Is that proposition number two, sir?" queried the young chief engineer.
+
+"It is."
+
+"Then please don't misunderstand me, sir," Reade begged, respectfully,
+"but it is declined, as is proposition number one."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you are going to go on with your fool way of
+doing things?"
+
+"Yes, sir---until I am convinced that it is a fool way."
+
+"But I've just told you that it is," snapped Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Then I say it very respectfully, sir, but pardon me for replying that I
+don't consider the evidence very convincing. I have shown you why I must
+have good order in the camp, and I have told you that I do not propose to
+allow gambling or any other disorderly conduct to go on within camp limits.
+I can't agree to these things, and then hope to win out by keeping the cost
+of the work within the appropriation."
+
+"Do you feel that you'll keep within the appropriation by making enemies
+who deliberately blow up our masonry?" glared Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"I doubt if there will be any more expense in that line, sir. I intend
+to have such a watch kept over the wall as to prevent any further mischief
+of the kind."
+
+"Watchmen are an item of expense, aren't they?" snorted the president.
+
+"Yes, sir; but next to nothing at all as compared with the mischief they
+can prevent."
+
+"I have already told you how to prevent the mischief, Reade. Stop all of
+your foolish nonsense and let the men have their old-time pastimes."
+
+"I can't do it, sir."
+
+"Have you paper, pen and ink here?" thundered Mr. Bascomb. "If so, bring
+them."
+
+Tom quietly obeyed.
+
+"Reade," again thundered the president of the Melliston Company, "I have
+had as much of your nonsense as I intend to stand. You are out of here,
+from this minute. Take that pen and sign your resignation!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+TOM ISN'T AS EASY AS HE LOOKS
+
+
+"I don't believe I'll do that, sir," murmured Tom, putting down the pen.
+
+"You don't, eh?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Oh, then you'd rather wait and be forced out?"
+
+"How about the contract, sir, between your company and Reade & Hazelton?
+Contracts can't be broken as lightly as your words imply."
+
+"I'll break that contract, if I set out to," declared Mr. Bascomb, purpling
+with half-suppressed rage. "I've every ground for breaking the contract.
+You're running things with a high hand here, and disorganizing all our
+efforts. No contract will stand on presentation of any such evidence as
+that before a court."
+
+"I am quite willing to leave that to a court, if I have to," Reade
+rejoined. His tones were decidedly cold. "Mr. Bascomb, even if I were
+inclined to forfeit the contract I would have no legal right to do so
+without the approval of my partner, Hazelton."
+
+"Humph! He's dead," snorted the president.
+
+"That yet remains to be proved, sir," Tom answered huskily, his voice
+breaking slightly at thought of Harry.
+
+"How on earth do you think you could defend a contract against a wealthy
+company like ours? Why, we could swamp you under our loose change alone.
+How much money have you in the world? Two or three thousand dollars,
+perhaps."
+
+"I've a little more than that," Tom Reade smiled. "For one thing, I'm a
+third owner in the Ambition mine, on Indian Smoke Range, Nevada, and the
+Ambition has been a dividend payer almost from the start. Hazelton owns
+another third of the mine."
+
+"Eh?" gasped Mr. Bascomb, plainly taken aback.
+
+"Oh, we're not millionaires," Tom laughed easily. "Yet I fancy Hazelton
+and I could raise enough money to fight any breach-of-contract case in
+court. With a steady-paying mine, you know, we could even discount to
+some extent the earnings of future years."
+
+"Oh, well, we don't want hard feelings," urged Mr. Bascomb, his manner
+becoming more peaceable. "The plain truth is, Reade, that we're utterly
+dissatisfied with your way of managing things here. When you know how the
+Melliston Company feels toward you, you don't want to be impudent enough to
+insist on hanging on, do you?"
+
+"I am certain that I speak for my partner, sir, when I state that we won't
+drop the contract until we have fulfilled it," Tom muttered, coolly, but
+with great firmness.
+
+"What's all this dispute about anyway, Bascomb?" a voice called cheerily
+from the hallway.
+
+"Oh, it's you, is it, Prenter?" asked Mr. Bascomb, turning and not looking
+overjoyed at the interruption.
+
+Simon F. Prenter was treasurer of the Melliston Company. Tom had met him
+at the time of signing the engineers' contract with the company. Now Reade
+sprang up to place a chair for the new arrival.
+
+"What was all the row about?" Mr. Prenter asked affably. He was a man of
+about forty-five, rather stout, with light blue eyes that looked at one
+with engaging candor.
+
+"I have been suggesting to Reade that he might resign," replied Mr.
+Bascomb, stiffly.
+
+"Why?" asked Prenter, opening his eyes wider.
+
+"Because he has raised the mischief on this breakwater job. He has all
+the men by their ears, and the camp in open mutiny."
+
+"So?" asked Mr. Prenter, looking astonished.
+
+"Exactly, and therefore I have called upon the young man to resign."
+
+"And he refuses?" queried the treasurer. "Most astounding obstinacy on the
+part of so young a man when dealing with his elder."
+
+"I'll try to explain to you, Mr. Prenter," volunteered Reade, "just what
+I've been trying to tell Mr. Bascomb."
+
+"I don't know that I need trouble you," replied Mr. Prenter, moving so that
+he stood more behind the irate president. "I overheard what you were
+telling him."
+
+Then the treasurer did a most unexpected thing. He winked broadly at the
+young engineer.
+
+"Yes, Prenter," Mr. Bascomb went on, "this camp is in a state of mutiny.
+The men are all at odds with their chief."
+
+"Strange," murmured the treasurer of the Melliston Company. "When I paused
+on the porch, before entering, I thought I caught sight of unusual
+activity down at the water front. Did you notice it, too, Bascomb?"
+
+"I noticed nothing of the sort," replied the president stiffly. "Am I to
+infer, Prenter, that you are going to follow your occasional tactics and
+try to laugh me out of my decision as president of the company?"
+
+"Oh, nothing of the sort, I assure you," hastily protested the treasurer.
+But he found chance to drive another wink Tom Reade's way. The young chief
+engineer could not but feel that an ally had suddenly come his way.
+
+"Now, what is the nature and extent of the mutiny?" asked Mr. Prenter.
+
+"First of all, eight thousand dollars' damage has been done to the
+retaining wall of the breakwater," replied Mr. Bascomb. "That is,
+according to Mr. Reade's figures, which very likely may prove to be too
+low. Also, Mr. Hazelton has been murdered."
+
+"Hazelton---killed?" gasped Mr. Prenter showing genuine concern. "Of
+course I know that the telegram to the office said that Hazelton was
+missing, but I didn't suppose it was anything as tragic as a killing."
+
+"Well, Hazelton can't be found, so I haven't a doubt he was killed as part
+of a general plan of mutiny and revenge on the part of the mixed crews of
+men working here," declared Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Oh, I sincerely hope that Hazelton hasn't lost his life here!" cried Mr.
+Prenter. "Reade, aren't you going to take us down to the water front and
+show us the extent of the damage?"
+
+"I shall be only too glad to do so, sir," Tom agreed.
+
+Even Mr. Bascomb consented at last to go. As they gained the porch
+Nicolas rushed up with the cigars for which the president had sent him.
+While Mr. Bascomb paused to light one, Mr. Prenter thrust an arm through
+Tom's and led that youth down the road.
+
+"Now, Mr. Reade," murmured the treasurer, earnestly, "Mr. Bascomb, of
+course, is our president, and I don't want you to treat him with the
+slightest disrespect. But Bascomb isn't the majority stockholder nor the
+whole board of directors, so I'll just drop this hint: When Bascomb talks
+of resignations don't attach too serious importance to it until you receive
+a resolution endorsing the same view and passed by the board of directors
+of the company."
+
+"Thank you. I have no intention of resigning," smiled Tom.
+
+"Now, let's go on," continued Mr. Prenter.
+
+Mr. Bascomb, having his cigar lighted, seemed to prefer strolling in the
+rear by himself.
+
+"Now, I don't want to give you any wrong impressions, Mr. Reade," went on
+Mr. Prenter. "Mr. Bascomb is the head of our company, but other directors
+represent more of the stock of the company than he does. I am one of them.
+Sometimes Mr. Bascomb gets a bit hard-headed, and he is inclined to give
+orders that others of us wouldn't approve. I judge that you and he were
+having some dispute when I happened along."
+
+"I didn't regard it as a dispute, sir," Reade rejoined. "In the first
+place, I had discharged, for incompetency and faithlessness, a foreman
+named Evarts.
+
+"And Evarts is a pet of Mr. Bascomb's," smiled Mr. Prenter. "I imagine
+that Evarts is even some sort of family connection who has to be looked
+after and kept in a good job."
+
+"Anyway," Tom continued, "I explained that Evarts was worse than useless
+here and that I couldn't have him in the camp or on the job."
+
+"Quite right, I fancy," nodded Mr. Prenter. "In the second place, Mr.
+Bascomb ordered me to stop my crusade against the gamblers who had tried
+to invade the camp and rob the men of their earnings. Hazelton and I had
+that sort of row once out in Arizona---and we won out."
+
+"You deserve to win out here, too," remarked Mr. Prenter. "I have no
+patience with anything but straight, uncompromising right. We can't
+control the men, if they see fit to leave the camp at night, but you have
+every right---and it's your duty---to see to it that no disorder is allowed
+within camp limits. I, too, have heard something about your trouble here,
+Mr. Reade, and I can promise you that the directors generally will sustain
+you. So Mr. Bascomb demanded your resignation?"
+
+"He did, sir."
+
+"Let it go at that," smiled Mr. Prenter. "You may even, sometime, if it
+will please Mr. Bascomb, hand him your resignation. I will see to it that
+it doesn't get past the board of directors. Mr. Bascomb is irritable, and
+sometimes he is a downright crank, but he is valuable to us just the same.
+We feel, too, Reade, that you and Hazelton are just the men we need to put
+this breakwater through in the best fashion."
+
+"Even though at least eight thousand dollars in damage was done last
+night?" queried Tom.
+
+"Yes, even in the face of that. I am certain that you will know how to
+forestall any more such spite work."
+
+"Now, I'm not altogether so sure of that, sir," Reade answered, quickly.
+"Of course we'll be eternally vigilant after this, but the trick was done
+last night so cleverly and mysteriously that we may be surprised again by
+the plotters. Speaking of mystery, could anything be stranger, or harder
+to explain, than what happened to poor Hazelton?"
+
+"There _was_ mystery for you!" nodded Mr. Prenter. "Have you any ideas
+whatever on the subject of Hazelton's disappearance?"
+
+"Not the slightest," groaned Tom. "I know all the indications are that he
+has been killed, and I ought to believe that such is the case. But I
+simply won't believe it. Why, if he were killed, what became of the body?"
+
+"It's a puzzle," sighed Mr. Prenter.
+
+They were now nearing the land end of the breakwater wall. Mr. Bascomb
+overtook them. Together the three strolled out along the wall, halting
+frequently, to observe what the men were doing. It was their plan to keep
+on until they came to the scene of the two explosions of the night before.
+
+"Just what are you doing here?" asked Mr. Bascomb, stopping and pointing to
+a gang of men at work on a scow moored against the wall.
+
+"I can tell you, after a fashion, sir," Reade answered. "Yet this was a
+part of Hazelton's performance. He had charge here, and knew ever so much
+about it. Poor old Harry!"
+
+Behind them, at the beginning of the wall, a long, loud whistle sounded.
+
+In a moment fully a hundred of the workmen stood up, waved their caps and
+cheered as though they had gone mad.
+
+Coming forward, with long strides, was Harry Hazelton, in the flesh!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+MR. PRENTER INVESTIGATES
+
+
+Tom suddenly felt dizzy. He wished to race back, to be the first to greet
+his chum and press his hand. But just then Reade felt strangely
+bewildered.
+
+"Of course I don't believe in ghosts!" Tom laughed nervously.
+
+"No!" chuckled Mr. Prenter. "This is real flesh and blood that is coming
+toward us."
+
+Now, for the first time, Tom Reade knew just how fully he had believed, in
+the inner temple of his soul, that Harry Hazelton had been actually killed.
+
+"Pulling my work to pieces, are you, Tom?" Harry called jovially.
+
+"P---p---pardon me for not coming to meet you, old fellow, b---b----but I'm
+dumbfounded at seeing you," Tom called back.
+
+Harry, too, looked rather unsteady in his gait by the time he joined them.
+The last few yards he tried to run along the wall. Tom thrust out an arm
+and caught him just in time.
+
+"You've been hurt, Harry!" gasped Tom.
+
+"Yes, and I guess I'm a bit weak, even now," Hazelton mumbled. "Hurt?
+Look at this."
+
+Hazelton uncovered his head, displaying a court-plaster bandage underneath
+which clotted blood showed.
+
+"Where in the world have you been?" Tom quivered.
+
+"At sea," Harry answered, with an attempt at banter.
+
+"What happened to you?"
+
+"Tom, you remember the big black man I imagined that I saw last night?"
+
+"Of course I do."
+
+"He was a reality," Harry went on soberly. "After you had gone he appeared
+again. We had it hot and heavy. I saw your boat coming, and I yelled---"
+
+"I heard you," Tom interposed. "We got along as speedily as we could."
+
+"And you didn't find me," finished Harry. "That brute hit me over the head
+with something. We clinched and rolled into the gulf together. That was
+the last that I remember clearly for some time. For a long time I had a
+dream that I was bobbing about in water, and that I had my arms around a
+floating log. By and by I came to sufficiently to discover that the dream
+was a reality. I was holding to the log in grim earnest. How I came to
+find the log I can't imagine. I think, while more than half unconscious,
+I must have been swimming straight out into the gulf. Then I must have
+touched the log and clung to it instinctively. Anyway, when I recovered
+more fully I knew that the 'long-shore lights looked thousands of miles
+away. I was too weak even to dream of trying to swim back, or to push
+the log before me. So I got a stout piece of cord out of one of my pockets
+and lashed myself to the log. I was afraid I might become unconscious
+again. A part of the time I was unconscious.
+
+"Well after daylight I saw a sloop headed my way. It didn't look as though
+it would go straight by either. So I waved my handkerchief---my hat was
+gone. After a while the skipper of the sloop saw me and headed in for me.
+It was a sloop that carries the mails to Hetherton, a village that has no
+rail connection.
+
+"The captain hauled me aboard, questioned me, looked as though he more than
+half doubted my yarn, and then put me to bed in the cabin of the sloop.
+He attended to me as best he could. When we reached Hetherton, about noon,
+a doctor patched me up. I had something to eat, bought this new hat, and
+hired a driver to take me ten miles to the railway. Then I came over here
+as soon as I could, and---pardon me, but I'm feeling weak. I'll sit down
+right here."
+
+Harry sat down heavily on the wall.
+
+"Why didn't you wire me?" asked Tom.
+
+"Why, you didn't doubt but that I'd turn up as surely as any other bad
+egg, did you?" questioned Harry, looking up.
+
+"Chum, I wouldn't admit it, even to myself, but I feared you were dead.
+But we mustn't waste time talking. Describe that black man to me, and---"
+
+"And the company will hire detectives to start right on the trail of that
+negro," interjected Mr. Prenter.
+
+"If---if the expense is really warranted," ended Mr. Bascomb, cautiously.
+
+"Warranted?" retorted the treasurer of the Melliston Company. "Why, it
+is absolutely necessary to protect our work here! That big negro is the
+key to the mystery. We must catch him if it costs us a thousand dollars."
+
+"Oh, well," assented President Bascomb, reluctantly.
+
+"I---I guess I'm all right to start in to work now," Harry suggested,
+trying to rise.
+
+"Sit down---you're not!" replied Tom and Treasurer Prenter, in the same
+breath, as both pressed Harry back to the wall.
+
+"We don't need work so much to-day," Mr. Prenter continued. "What we want
+to do is to solve this mystery. You stay here, Hazelton. I'll go back
+alone and find a 'bus or a carriage. Then we'll go back to camp and hold
+a council of war. Something must be done, and we'll decide _how_ it's to
+be done."
+
+Mr. Prenter, though no longer a young man, proved that he carried both
+speed and agility in his feet. While he was gone Tom endeavored to get a
+few more particulars from Harry, but Hazelton simply didn't know anything
+that threw any more light on the dread mystery of the breakwater.
+
+"Then a million-dollar undertaking like this is to be constantly imperiled,
+just because of a senseless moral crusade that you two young men are trying
+to put through in the camp," declared Mr. Bascomb moodily.
+
+Tom covertly signaled his chum to pay no heed to this remark.
+
+Within a quarter of an hour Treasurer Prenter returned in a stage drawn by
+two sorry looking horses.
+
+"This will carry us up to the house, if the affair doesn't break down,"
+Mr. Prenter called cheerily. "Come along, folks."
+
+Soon afterwards the four were back on the porch. Nicolas came gliding out
+to see what he could do for their comfort.
+
+"Just circulate around and make sure that no one gets close enough to hear
+what we're talking about," Mr. Prenter directed. He had already ordered
+the driver of the stage to withdraw a few rods and await orders.
+
+"Now, then, Hazelton," continued the treasurer, "we're anxious to hear more
+of your strange story."
+
+"I've told you all there is to it," protested Harry.
+
+"Surely, there must be some more to it."
+
+"There isn't."
+
+"Then, for the tale of an engineer who was all but murdered, and a case
+enveloped in mystery from end to end," cried Mr. Prenter, "we have a most
+singular scarcity of details."
+
+"There are only two more details needed, as it appears to me," Tom remarked
+quietly.
+
+"Good! And what are they?" demanded the treasurer, wheeling around to look
+keenly at the young chief engineer.
+
+"The two details we now need," Reade continued, "are, first, who was the
+negro? Second, who was behind the negro in this rascally work?"
+
+"Only two points to be solved," suggested the treasurer mockingly, "but
+pretty big points. Of course, the first point is---"
+
+"To find that negro, and get him jailed," Tom declared incisively.
+
+"Good enough!" nodded Mr. Prenter. "The detectives will find the negro."
+
+"Will they?" Tom asked. "Then that will be something new, indeed. I've
+seen detectives employed a good deal, Mr. Prenter, and generally all they
+catch are severe colds and items to stick in on the expense account."
+
+"Oh, there are some real detectives in this country," contended Mr.
+Prenter. "We'll engage some of them, too."
+
+"The expense of hiring detectives will be very large," murmured Mr.
+Bascomb uneasily.
+
+"Yes, it will," agreed the treasurer with a laugh. "But never mind. It's
+always my task to find funds for the company, you know."
+
+"Harry," Tom broke in, "just what did that negro look like?"
+
+"About six-foot-three," answered Hazelton, slowly and thoughtfully. "He
+was broad of shoulder and comparatively slim at the waist. He must weigh
+from two hundred and twenty-five to thirty pounds. As to age, I couldn't
+tell you whether he was nearer thirty or forty years. From his agility I
+should place him in the thirty-year class."
+
+"Any beard?"
+
+"Smooth-faced."
+
+"Scars?"
+
+"I couldn't see that much in the dark."
+
+"Color of his clothes?"
+
+"Some darkish stuff---that's all I can say."
+
+"Could you pick him out of a crowd of negroes?"
+
+"Not if they were all of the same height and weight," Hazelton admitted.
+
+"Do you think you ever saw him before?" Reade pressed.
+
+"I'm sure that I never have," Harry replied.
+
+"Then he wasn't one of our men in this camp at any time?" Mr. Prenter
+interjected.
+
+"We have never had a man in the camp as large as this negro," Harry
+rejoined.
+
+"Such a very large black man ought not to be hard for the detectives to
+locate," Prenter continued.
+
+"Very good, sir. Then you can let the sleuths have a try at the matter,"
+Tom suggested.
+
+"Have you any telegraph blanks here?"
+
+Tom went inside, coming out with a pad of blanks. Mr. Prenter addressed a
+dispatch to the head of a detective agency in Mobile.
+
+"We'll get the 'bus driver to take this over to town," said Mr. Prenter,
+as he signed the dispatch.
+
+"You had better send your dispatch by Nicolas, who is so faithful that he
+can't be pumped, and he never talks about things that he shouldn't."
+
+The Mexican was accordingly sent away in the stage. When he returned
+Nicolas busied himself with getting supper and setting it on the table.
+Superintendent Renshaw returned from the work in time to join the others
+at table.
+
+"Mr. Reade, how are you going to protect the works to-night?" inquired the
+superintendent.
+
+"I'm going to order Foreman Corbett and twenty men to night duty," Tom
+answered. "The motor boat will also be out to-night. We'll have every
+bit of the wall watched by men with lanterns."
+
+"What you ought to do," suggested Treasurer Prenter, "is to light the
+breakwater up with electric lights. You have steam power enough here, and
+with a dynamo you could supply current to the lights."
+
+"There's the expense to be considered," mildly observed President Bascomb.
+
+"The expense is a good deal less than having the wall damaged by more
+explosions," said Prenter, rather sharply. "Reade, how long would it take
+you to get an electric light service going?"
+
+"It ought not to take more than three or four days, sir, if we can pick up
+a suitable dynamo in Mobile. But there's another point to be considered.
+We very likely would have to obtain the permission of the Washington
+authorities before we could run a line of lights out into the Gulf of
+Mexico. You see, sir, so many uncharted lights might confuse the
+navigators of passing ships."
+
+"Write Washington, then, and find out where you stand in the matter,"
+directed the treasurer.
+
+"Yes, sir; I'll do that," Reade agreed.
+
+"But don't order any electrical supplies until you've got an estimate of
+the cost and have it approved by me," hinted President Bascomb. This
+cautious direction made Mr. Prenter shrug his shoulders.
+
+Dinner finished, all hands went out to sit on the porch. Mr. Bascomb soon
+began to ask questions about the camp, the housing of the men, and about
+other details of the camp.
+
+"Although it is dark it's still early. Wouldn't you like to go over
+through the camp with us?" proposed Tom.
+
+Mr. Bascomb agreeing, the whole party set out, only Nicolas remaining
+behind to keep an eye over the house.
+
+Though he did not then suspect it Tom was on the threshold of more trouble
+in the camp.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+INVITED TO LEAVE CAMP
+
+
+Lanterns hung here and there on poles lighted the camp. Men who toil hard
+all day do not usually want a long evening. Many of the men were already
+inside their tents or shacks, preparing for bed.
+
+At least two hundred, however, were still stirring in the streets of the
+camp. Tom led his friends near one of the groups. A warning hiss was
+heard, and then a man in a remote group, urged by his comrades, rose and
+staggered toward a shack. Tom was at the man's side in an instant. He
+proved to be an Italian.
+
+"My man, you appear to be intoxicated," Tom remarked, quietly, as he
+gripped the Italian by the arm.
+
+"No spikka da English," hiccoughed the laborer. As he spoke he tried to
+free himself from the engineer's grasp. He staggered, and would have
+fallen, had not Tom prevented the fall.
+
+"Where's this man's gang-master?" Tom demanded, looking about him sharply,
+while he still held the drunken man.
+
+None of the Italians addressed appeared to know. For the most part they
+took refuge in the fact or the pretense that they didn't understand
+English.
+
+"Get an Italian gang-master, Harry," Tom murmured softly.
+
+Hazelton bolted away, but was soon back, followed by a dark-skinned man who
+came with apparent reluctance.
+
+"You're a gang-master?" Tom demanded, looking sharply at the man. "This
+fellow is intoxicated."
+
+"Is he?" asked the gang-master.
+
+"Yes, he is," Tom declared, bluntly. "Now, where did the man get the
+liquor."
+
+"I do not know," replied the gang-master, shrugging his shoulders.
+
+"Then it's your business to know---if he got his liquor in camp. We won't
+allow any of that stuff in camp, and you gang-masters all know that."
+
+"I can't stop a man from going to town to get liquor," argued the
+gang-master.
+
+"No; you can't," Tom admitted. "Neither can I. But it's your duty,
+gang-master, to see that no liquor is brought back into camp. This man
+hasn't been to town for the stuff either. He hasn't had time enough to go
+away over to Blixton and get enough liquor to make him drunk. Moreover,
+in his present condition, the fellow couldn't have walked back from town
+the same evening. This man got his liquor in camp, and it will have to be
+stopped. Now, put this man in his shack; see that he gets into bed. Then
+come back to me."
+
+The gang-master obeyed.
+
+"We'll see if we can't put a complete stop to this sort of thing," Reade
+muttered.
+
+"Now, do you think it's going to be well to interfere so much with the
+movements of the men?" asked President Bascomb, in an undertone. "I am
+afraid that you'll only start more dissatisfaction and more treachery among
+them."
+
+"This having liquor in camp is going to be stopped, sir," Tom insisted.
+"A keg of liquor will demoralize a whole campful of men like these. They
+are an excitable lot, and they go crazy when there's any liquor around. If
+we don't put a stop to it, then there'll be fights, and then a few murders
+are most likely to follow. I've had plenty of experience with men such as
+we have here, and the stopping of liquor in camp means our only safety, and
+our only chance to have our work well done. Come along; let the
+gang-master follow us."
+
+Tom went directly up to a group of workmen who had been looking curiously
+on. Most of them were Italians, but there were a few negroes present.
+
+"Now; men, gather around me," Tom requested. "I want to talk to you.
+Come close."
+
+As they did so Reade rested a hand on the shoulder of a negro.
+
+"My friend," said Tom, "you've been drinking to-night."
+
+"No, sah, boss! 'Deed I hasn't," replied the negro, earnestly.
+
+"Man, don't you think I have a nose?" Tom demanded, dryly. "Every time you
+open your mouth I smell the fumes of the stuff. There are other men in
+this group, too, who have been drinking. I want you all to realize that
+this sort of thing must stop in this camp. We don't want fights and
+killings, nor do we want men who wake up so seedy in the morning that they
+can't do a proper day's work. As I look about me I see at least eight men
+who have been drinking this evening. That shows me that some one has been
+bringing liquor into the camp."
+
+Other workmen were now approaching, curious to know what was in the air.
+
+Tom, glancing about him, suddenly, fastened his gaze on one man in
+particular. This was a lanky, sallow-looking chap of some thirty years.
+
+"See here, just what is your errand in this camp?" Reade demanded,
+confronting the man.
+
+"Is it any of your particular business?" demanded the fellow, with some
+insolence in his tone.
+
+"Yes; it is," Reade assured him, promptly. "I'm chief engineer in this
+camp, and I've asked you what you are doing here!"
+
+"Is it against any law for an outsider to come into camp?" argued the
+stranger.
+
+"Answer me," Tom insisted, stepping closer. "What are you doing in this
+camp?"
+
+"I won't tell you," came the surly retort.
+
+"You don't have to," Reade snapped, as he suddenly ran one hand over the
+sallow man's clothing. Out of the fellow's hip pocket Tom briskly brought
+a quart-bottle to light. It was about half-filled with some liquid.
+
+"Here, give that back to me!" growled the fellow. "It's mine."
+
+"I'm glad you admit it," rejoined Reade, drawing the cork and taking a
+sniff as Hazelton slipped in front of him to protect him. "This is liquor.
+So you're the bootlegger who is bringing this stuff into camp to sell to
+the men? You won't come here after to-night if I can find any way of
+keeping you out."
+
+Reade finished his remark by re-corking the bottle and throwing it down
+hard on the ground. The bottle was smashed to flinders, the liquor running
+over the ground.
+
+"Here, you! You had no right to do that!" roared the fellow. He made an
+effort to reach Tom, but Harry gave the fellow a shove that sent him
+spinning back. "You'll pay me for that stuff, Reade, since you destroyed
+it."
+
+"How much?" asked Tom, artlessly.
+
+"A dollar and a half," insisted the stranger, coming forward as Reade
+thrust one hand into trousers pocket.
+
+Tom withdrew the hand, laughing.
+
+"Much obliged, my friend," mocked the young chief engineer. "You've
+confessed all that I wanted to know. You've tried to charge me the price
+of a pint of liquor sold in single drinks. That confesses that you've been
+in camp to sell liquor to the men. I shall pay you nothing, for you're
+here against the law and against the camp regulations. You're engaged in
+selling liquor illegally. If I catch you in camp again on that business,
+my friend, I'll arrest you and hold you until the officers come over from
+Blixton and take you."
+
+Then, in the next moment, Tom suddenly shot out:
+
+"Harry, see to it that our friend doesn't run away just yet!"
+
+"What are you up to?" demanded the man, as Tom stepped close once more,
+while Harry rested a hand on his shoulder.
+
+"For a rather warm evening," Reade rejoined, "it strikes me that it's a bit
+odd for you to be wearing a long top-coat. I'm going to look you over a
+bit."
+
+"You get out and keep away from me!" blustered the man, raising one of his
+fists. But Harry caught at that arm and held it. Treasurer Prenter, who
+had been looking on with keen interest, seized the other arm.
+
+"You let go of me, or you'll run up against the law for assault!" warned
+the stranger.
+
+His captors, however, held him, while Tom rapidly ran his hands over the
+stranger's clothing. As a result, within less than a full minute, Tom had
+removed two full quart bottles and six smaller ones from the fellow's
+various pockets. All of these the young chief engineer threw on the
+ground, smashing them.
+
+From the crowd gathered about, which numbered more than sixty men of three
+different races, a howl went up. President Bascomb began to shiver.
+
+"I'll make you sweat for this!" raved the stranger.
+
+"Let go of the fellow, please," said Tom. Then, as Harry and Mr. Prenter
+stepped aside, Reade added, "I'll admit, Mr. Bootleg, that I've behaved in
+a rather high-handed fashion with you. But I'm justified in doing it. You
+have been breaking the law of the state, moving through this camp and
+selling liquor. You represent the scum of the otherwise decent population
+of Alabama. If you think you've any redress in the courts, my name is
+Reade and you can hire a lawyer and get after me as hard and as fast as
+you like."
+
+"I'll take personal satisfaction out of you!" stormed the fellow.
+
+"All right," Tom agreed laconically. "You may start now, if you feel like
+doing it. I'll agree that none of my friends or workmen shall take any
+part in anything you feel like starting. If you can thrash me then you
+shall be allowed to depart in peace after you've done it."
+
+Tom did not put up his hands, though he watched keenly to see whether the
+stranger meant to attack him. The stranger muttered unintelligible
+threats, then he turned to the laborers pressing about him.
+
+"Men," he demanded, "are you going to be free, or are you going to allow
+yourselves to be treated like a lot of slaves by this boy?"
+
+"If that's all you've got to say," Tom warned "you may as well start now."
+
+"Start?" scoffed the sallow-faced one. "Where to?"
+
+"Anywhere, outside of this camp," Tom informed him. "You can't stay here
+any longer, and you can't come here again. If I catch you, again, on this
+company's property, I'll see to it that you're arrested, and locked up for
+trespass."
+
+"That's the way to talk!" nodded Treasurer Prenter, approvingly.
+
+"I guess I'll go when I get good and ready," asserted the stranger.
+
+In the front ranks of the crowd pressing around them, Reade now discerned
+the face of the Italian gang-master with whom he had talked recently.
+
+"What's your name?" Tom demanded, turning about on the gang-master.
+
+"Scipio, sir."
+
+"Then, Scipio, take four men, and escort this fellow out of the camp.
+Don't use any force unless you have to, but see to it that this fellow
+leaves camp as quickly as he can walk---or be dragged. Start him now."
+
+Gang-master Scipio plainly didn't like the job, but he liked it better than
+he did the idea of being discharged. So he spoke to four Italians about
+him, and the five surrounded the man.
+
+"Hol' on dar, Boss Reade!" spoke up a negro. "Ef yo' carry dis matter too
+far, den dere's gwine to be a strike on dis wohk. Jess ez dis gemman sez,
+we ain't no slaves. Yo' try to stop all our pleasures ebenings, an' dar's
+gwine be a strike---shuah!"
+
+"You may strike right now, if you wish to," Tom retorted, facing the last
+speaker. "Mr. Renshaw will be prepared to pay you off within hour. Any
+other man in this camp who isn't content to get along without liquor and
+gambling may as well strike at the same time. Mr. Renshaw, it's half-past
+eight. At nine o'clock please be at the house ready to pay off any man who
+isn't satisfied to live and work in a camp where neither drinking nor
+gambling is allowed. Scipio, why haven't you started that fellow away from
+here?"
+
+"Too bigga crowd in front of us," replied the Italian gang-master,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+"Come on, Harry," Tom replied. "We'll see if we can't make a way through
+the crowd." The two young engineers placed themselves at the head of the
+squad, and succeeded quickly in opening up a passage through a crowd that
+seemed to be at least half hostile.
+
+Thus Tom found himself soon face to face with an American.
+
+"Evarts!" Reade cried, angrily. "What are you doing here?"
+
+"I'm here by permission," snarled the discharged foreman.
+
+"Whose permission?" Tom insisted, briskly.
+
+"Mr. Bascomb's," replied Evarts, with a leer so full of satisfaction that
+Reade didn't doubt the truth of the statement.
+
+"Mr. Bascomb," Tom called, "did you tell Evarts that he might visit this
+camp?"
+
+"Yes; I did," admitted the president of the company, stiffly.
+
+"Then I'm sorry to say that Evarts has been misinformed," Tom went on.
+"He _can't_ visit this camp. He's too much of a trouble-maker here."
+
+"Shut up your talk!" jeered Evarts roughly. "Don't try to give orders to
+the president of the company that hires and pays you."
+
+"Mr. Bascomb is the head of the company that employs me," Tom assented.
+"But I am in charge here, and am responsible, with Mr. Hazelton, for the
+good order of the camp and the success of the work. Therefore, Evarts,
+you'll leave camp now, and you won't come back again under pain of being
+punished for trespass."
+
+"Oh, now see here, Reade---" began Mr. Bascomb angrily, as he started
+forward. But Treasurer Prenter caught Bascomb by the arm, whispering in
+his ear.
+
+"Waiting for you, Mr. Bascomb," called Evarts.
+
+"I guess you'd better go," called the president, rather shamefacedly, after
+his talk with Mr. Prenter. "I guess maybe Reade is right. At all events
+his contract places him in charge of this camp."
+
+"Humph, Evarts, a lot of good you can do us here, can't you?" sneered the
+sallow-faced fellow.
+
+Tom looked first at one, and then at the other of the pair.
+
+"So," guessed Reade shrewdly, "Evarts has been at the head of this game of
+unlawful liquor selling in this camp. There are other vendors here, too,
+are there?"
+
+"You lie!" yelled the discharged foreman.
+
+"You may prove that, at your convenience," Reade replied, without even a
+heightening of his color. "For the present, though, you're going to get
+out of camp and stay out."
+
+"I called you a liar," sneered Evarts, "and you haven't the sand to fight
+about it."
+
+"Fighting with one of your stripe isn't worth the while," Tom retorted,
+shortly. "Come along, Evarts. I'll show you the way out of camp."
+
+As Reade spoke he took hold of the ex-foreman's arm gently.
+
+"Leggo of me!" raged the foreman, clenching and raising one of his fists.
+
+"Don't make the mistake of touching me," urged Tom, quietly, "but come
+along. This way out of camp!"
+
+Evarts swung suddenly, driving a fist straight at Reade's face. But the
+young chief engineer was always alert at such times. One of his feet moved
+in between Evarts's feet, and the ex-foreman flopped down on his back.
+
+"Come on, now!" commanded Tom, jerking the fallen foe to his feet. "This
+time you'll hurry out of camp."
+
+"Are you going to stand for it, men?" yelled Evarts, his face aflame with
+anger. "Come on---all of you! Show that you're not a pack of cowards and
+slaves!"
+
+From more than a hundred throats came an ominous yell. The crowd surged
+around Reade and Hazelton. Mr. Bascomb, seeing his chance, dodged and ran
+out of the crowd. But Mr. Prenter, with a spring, placed himself at Tom
+Reade's side.
+
+"Come on, men!" yelled the sallow-faced fellow.
+
+"Run dem w'ite slave-drivers outah camp!" yelled a score of negroes. Yells
+in Italian and Portuguese also filled the air.
+
+In an instant it was plain that Tom Reade had stirred up more than a
+hornet's nest.
+
+"Come on, Harry," spoke Tom, firmly. "Let's run this pair out of camp.
+Then we'll come back and look for more trouble-makers and trouble-hunters!
+Make way there, men!"
+
+One excitable Italian rushed through the crowd, brandishing a revolver. As
+alarmed men fell back, the Italian confronted Reade, holding the revolver
+almost in the latter's face and firing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE NIGHT IS NOT OVER
+
+
+Tom winced slightly, as the pistol was discharged, for some of the powder
+burned his face.
+
+Mr. Prenter, who stood beside him, had knocked up the barrel so that the
+bullet sped over the heads of the crowd.
+
+In a twinkling Tom had hold of the Italian's arm. He wrenched the pistol
+away, spraining the Italian's arm. Instantly Tom "broke" the weapon,
+dropping the cartridges out into his pocket. Then he hurled the weapon as
+far as he could throw it into the shadows of the night.
+
+"You breaka my arm!" snarled the Italian, showing his white teeth.
+
+"Your face is next!" Tom retorted, letting his fist drive. It caught the
+Italian on the nose, breaking that member.
+
+"Kill him! Kill Reade!" came the hoarse yell on the night air.
+
+"You'll find it a tough job, men!" Tom called, warningly. "I won't die
+easily, and I'll take a few men along with me when I go. Now, stand out
+of the way! I shall consider any man an enemy who blocks my path!"
+
+Tom hit resolutely out, at first. Soon the men crowding about him began
+to realize that they had taken a large contract on their hands in
+attempting to cow this young engineer.
+
+Then, too, another element entered into the fight. While there were some
+wild and troublesome men in camp, there were also many straightforward,
+excellent fellows among them. There were church-going negroes there,
+Italians who were thrifty and law-abiding, and Portuguese who loved nothing
+better than law and order.
+
+The better element among the men came thronging forward, willing and ready
+to fight under such excellent generalship as they knew they would find with
+Tom Reade.
+
+Other men, of both stripes, came pouring forth from shanties and tents.
+
+The yells and the shot had alarmed the foremen, who now came along on
+the run.
+
+"Dill, Johnson!" Tom called, as he saw some of the foremen trying to push
+or punch their way through the throng. "Help me to run Evarts and this
+other trouble-hunter out of the camp!"
+
+The menacing yells grew fewer and fainter as the cheers of loyal laborers
+rose.
+
+The foremen seized both trouble makers and began to run them along with
+more skill than gentleness.
+
+Tom ran along, keeping his glance on the enraged men of the camp, many of
+whom followed on the outskirts of the crowd. Harry Hazelton occupied
+himself in similar fashion.
+
+"Now, you get out of this---and stay out!" ordered Foreman Dill, giving
+Evarts a shove that sent him spinning across the boundary line of the
+company's property.
+
+"You, too!" growled Foreman Johnson, giving the bootlegger a kick that sent
+him staggering along in his efforts to keep on his feet.
+
+It was rough treatment, but Tom's course, all through, had been of the only
+sort that could break down the threatened riot.
+
+"Now, see if that Italian can be found who fired the shot in my face," Tom
+called. "I'll know him if I lay eyes on him."
+
+There was a prompt search, but the Italian could not be found.
+
+"If he has left camp, and keeps away, perhaps he'll be safe," Tom
+announced. "But, if I run across him again I'll seize him, hold him for
+the officers of the law, and see to it that he's sent to prison for
+attempted murder."
+
+"Here are two men we want!" called Hazelton.
+
+Tom ran to his chum, who was holding an American by the arm. Mr. Prenter
+had hold of another.
+
+"Two more of Evarts's bootleggers, eh?" muttered Reade. "Let me see."
+
+On one of the men he found a bottle of liquor. On the other no liquor was
+discovered.
+
+"Did Evarts pay you fellows a salary, or commission?" Tom demanded.
+
+"Commiss---" began one of the bootleggers, then stopped himself with a
+vocal jerk. "Evarts? I don't even know who he is."
+
+"Yes, you do," chuckled Tom Reade. "You were on the point, too, of telling
+us that he paid you a commission on your sales, instead of a weekly wage.
+Now, my men, I've looked you well over and shall know you again. If I find
+you in camp, hereafter, you'll be dealt with in a way that you don't like.
+Savvy? Comprenay? Understand? Now---git!"
+
+"Now, men, get back to your camp," shouted Tom. "To-morrow I'll try to
+find time for a good and sociable talk with all of you. Try to enjoy your
+few leisure hours all you can, but remember that the men who can't get
+along without liquor and gambling are the kind of men we don't want here.
+Any man who is dissatisfied can get his pay from Mr. Renshaw tonight or
+to-morrow morning. For those who stood by us I have every feeling of
+respect and gratitude. Those who thought to fight us---or some of
+them---will have better sense by tomorrow. We don't want to impose on
+any man here, but there are some things that we shall have to stop doing.
+Good night, men!"
+
+Engineers, superintendent and foremen now left the men, going towards their
+barracks.
+
+"I've a little job for you, Peters, if you don't mind going back into the
+camp," suggested Tom.
+
+"It's not to go back and fight, single-handed, is it?" Mr. Peters asked,
+with a smile.
+
+"Nothing like it," Tom laughed. "Peters, we have plenty of really good men
+among our laborers, haven't we?"
+
+"Scores and scores of 'em, sir---among all three kinds of the men, negroes,
+Italians and Portuguese."
+
+"I wish you would go back, then, and pick out two of each race---six men
+in all. They must be honest, staunch and able to hold their tongues."
+
+"Do you want them for fighting, sir?" asked Peters.
+
+"Not a bit of a fight in it. I want them to use their eyes and report
+to me."
+
+"Going to employ spotters on the camp?" asked Mr. Prenter, quickly.
+
+"Not a single spot!" Tom declared with emphasis. "I haven't any use for
+information turned in by spotters."
+
+"I'm glad to hear you say that, Reade," nodded the treasurer.
+
+"What I want the men for, Peters, is something honest and manly, and with
+no fighting in it," Tom continued. "I want information, and I'll pay the
+man well who can bring it to me. Now, go and get your six men. Bring them
+up to the house within half an hour."
+
+Nodding, Peters turned and strode back.
+
+When the others gained the house where the engineers and superintendent
+lived the foremen took leave of their chiefs.
+
+As Tom, Harry and Mr. Prenter went up the steps to the porch the front door
+opened to let out Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Is that revolting row all over?" demanded the president of the Melliston
+Company.
+
+"What row?" asked Mr. Prenter, innocently.
+
+"That riot back in camp," shivered Mr. Bascomb. "I simply abhor all
+fighting."
+
+"So I noticed," commented Mr. Prenter, dryly. "Yes; I believe the trouble
+is over, unless our young chief engineer intends to stir up something new
+before bedtime. Do you, Reade?"
+
+"I haven't anything in mind," Tom answered with a smile. "Gentlemen, I am
+afraid you may think I do things with a high hand. But I have been at this
+engineering business just long enough to know that I must banish all
+serious vices from a camp of laborers if I hope to get the best results in
+work out of the men. So I must tackle some problems rather stiffly, and
+use my fists when I'm driven to a corner."
+
+"I am not thoroughly satisfied of the wisdom of your course," said Mr.
+Bascomb slowly.
+
+"Sorry to disagree with you, Bascomb," broke in the treasurer, "but I've
+had some experience in handling what is called wild labor, and I believe
+that Reade goes at it in just the right way. I don't believe there are
+really fifty really wild or troublesome men in that camp. The few bad ones
+usually start trouble going, and then the good ones are driven into it.
+Let Reade stop the vices over yonder, in the way that he wants to, and the
+worst of the crowd will call for their time and leave camp. We shall then
+have a thoroughly good lot of men left, who'll do more and better work."
+
+"That is," almost whined President Bascomb, "if Reade, in doing what he
+wants, doesn't stir up so much enmity that we have the rest of our wall
+blown out into the gulf."
+
+"Mr. Bascomb," put in Tom, "while I must have control of the men and their
+camp I don't wish to do anything to cast reflection on yourself as the head
+of the company. May I therefore ask, sir, if there is any especial reason
+why Evarts should be allowed in this camp?"
+
+President Bascomb fidgeted in the porch chair on which he was sitting.
+
+"I---I don't know of any reason, Mr. Reade, why Evarts should be allowed
+in camp if his presence prevents you from keeping order as you wish."
+
+"Then you approve, sir, of my intention to keep him out?"
+
+"I---I won't question your right to handle the matter as you wish, Mr.
+Reade," was the president's evasive reply.
+
+"Thank you, sir."
+
+Peters was soon back with the six men---two each of the negroes, Italians
+and Portuguese. All of them understood English.
+
+Harry described the negro who had attacked him on the retaining wall, after
+which Tom asked:
+
+"Have any of you men ever seen that negro? Have you any idea who he is,
+and where he can be found?"
+
+None of the six admitted any knowledge of the mysterious black man.
+
+"Then I want you to keep his description in mind," continued Tom. "Keep
+your eyes open, at all times, for any chance glimpse of him. The man who
+brings me information leading to the capture of that big negro will
+receive a reward of one hundred dollars in gold." "Keep your eyes open,
+won't you? You may find him prowling around the wall at any time. He
+may walk out on the wall, or he may be found hiding near in a boat. Watch
+for him."
+
+All promised eagerly that they would do all in their power to earn the
+hundred dollars.
+
+"That's what I call good business!" cried Mr. Prenter approvingly, as
+soon as the foreman and the men had gone.
+
+"Does the hundred dollars come out of the company treasury, Reade, or from
+your own pocket?" inquired President Bascomb.
+
+"Really I hadn't thought of the matter," answered Tom.
+
+"The company can afford to pay its own bills," broke in Mr. Prenter, rather
+gruffly.
+
+"It's about time to turn in, isn't it?" asked Mr. Bascomb, striking a match
+and glancing at his watch.
+
+"I'm going to stay up a little longer, and talk with Reade about the dread
+mystery of our million dollar breakwater, if he'll let me," hinted Mr.
+Prenter.
+
+Mr. Bascomb rose as though to go into the house.
+
+"While we're talking about the matter, sir," suggested Tom, "wouldn't it
+be a good idea for us to stroll down to the beach and look out along the
+wall to see how Foreman Corbett and his gang are guarding the breakwater
+to-night?"
+
+"Fine idea," nodded the treasurer of the company.
+
+"Then, if you're all going away, and intend to leave the house alone, I
+think I may as well go with you," grunted Mr. Bascomb. "I don't exactly
+like the idea of staying here alone in such troublesome times."
+
+Harry walked beside Mr. Bascomb, while Tom led the way with the treasurer.
+Mr. Renshaw brought up the rear.
+
+As the party came in sight of the beach and glanced out seaward, they saw
+many a little, dancing light out on the retaining wall. Each light showed
+where a workman patrolled under the orders of Foreman Corbett. The latter
+was aboard the motor boat, "Morton," which ran up and down near the wall,
+throwing the searchlight over the scene.
+
+"Reade," remarked Mr. Prenter, "I don't see that the enemy have any chance
+to-night to run in and work harm to our property."
+
+Hardly had the treasurer spoken when Tom, looking out seaward, saw a
+sudden, bright flash of light upward. There was a brief pause---then the
+sullen boom of an explosion reached their ears.
+
+"Mystery of all mysteries!" choked Tom Reade. "There goes another section
+of the wall---blown up under our very eyes!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A MESSAGE FROM A COWARD
+
+
+"Now Reade," began President Bascomb, in a shaking voice, "what can you
+say---"
+
+Tom didn't wait to inform him. The young chief engineer was darting out on
+the wall as fast as he could go.
+
+Already the "Morton" had turned, and was chugging back to the scene of this
+latest outrage, the searchlight flashing back and forth, in the vain effort
+to detect any small craft stealing away from the vicinity.
+
+"I---I can't race on a narrow runway like that," faltered Mr. Bascomb,
+halting at the beginning of the narrow wall. "I---I'll wait here, Mr.
+Renshaw, will you keep me company?"
+
+"If you so direct, sir," replied the superintendent. "For that matter,
+what Reade and Hazelton can't find out, out yonder, will probably never be
+discovered."
+
+"Do you share Mr. Prenter's infatuation for those two young men?" asked
+the president of the Melliston Company.
+
+"I can't say about that, sir," Renshaw replied, with a puzzled air. "But
+this much I know---I never worked with two more capable men of any age.
+They always know what to do, and they never lose their heads."
+
+Mr. Bascomb compressed his lips tightly.
+
+In the meantime Tom, Harry and Treasurer Prenter covered nearly a quarter
+of a mile along the retaining wall when the motor boat, putting about,
+picked them up with the searchlight.
+
+Toot! toot! sounded the boat's pneumatic whistle.
+
+"Foreman Corbett is signaling to us to wait and he'll put in for us," said
+Tom, coming to a halt. Soon the motor craft chugged in alongside, coming
+close to the wall. Tom, Harry and Mr. Prenter jumped, landing safely
+aboard.
+
+"How did the enemy come to catch you napping, Corbett?" Tom inquired
+good-humoredly.
+
+"They didn't catch me napping, sir," protested Foreman Corbett. "It is the
+strangest thing, sir---that explosion. Why, I had had my light turned on
+that very part of the wall at least a dozen times in the last half-hour
+before the blow-out came. Our light didn't pick up a soul around there at
+any time. What do you suppose I did, Mr. Reade, as soon as the explosion
+sounded?"
+
+"I saw you turn about and use your search light a lot," Reade answered.
+
+"Did you notice, sir, that I turned the light right up at the sky,
+first-off?"
+
+"I believe I did notice that," Tom assented.
+
+"It seemed to me, sir, that nothing but an airship could plant a charge of
+high explosive on the wall in that fashion."
+
+"I don't believe the airship theory will explain it either," said Tom,
+shaking his head.
+
+"Then what theory can explain it?" asked Mr. Prenter, anxiously.
+
+"I'd pay a reward out of my own pocket for the right answer," Reade
+replied.
+
+"Then you haven't a theory?" asked the treasurer.
+
+"Not even an imitation of a theory," Tom laughed, shortly.
+
+All this time the motor boat was gliding out toward the scene of the wreck.
+
+"Now, you can see the damage that has been done," suggested Mr. Corbett,
+turning the light fully on the scene of the latest blow-out. "You see, a
+long strip of the wall has been cleaned out. Not a trace of the damaged
+part shows above water."
+
+"It wasn't as big an explosion as the other two, though," Reade declared.
+"Really, it looks as though the folks behind this found themselves running
+low on explosives."
+
+"There must be a trace or a clue left," urged Mr. Prenter.
+
+"High explosives don't leave many traces of anything with which they come
+in contact," muttered Harry. "If we _do_ find any traces, I guess it will
+have to be in broad daylight."
+
+"And I guess that's right," agreed Tom. "Mr. Corbett, did none of your men
+patrolling on the wall report any signs of strangers?"
+
+"No such report was made, sir."
+
+"At all events, we can be thankful that the explosion didn't blow one or
+two of our men into the other world," Tom went on.
+
+"Even that is bound to happen if there are many more of these explosions,"
+muttered Corbett, grimly.
+
+"Which is another reason," remarked Tom Reade, "why we're going to solve
+the mystery of said explosions at the earliest minute that we can."
+
+"One thing is certain," observed Mr. Prenter, with the nearest approach to
+gloom that he had yet shown. "If you don't soon penetrate this grim
+mystery, and find a way to stop these outrages, then the wall will be
+destroyed more rapidly than you can build it."
+
+"The outrages may cease after a while," suggested Harry.
+
+"No," answered Reade. "As long as the unknown enemy feels that he can
+harass us without much risk of being caught red-handed, just so long will
+he go on with his outrages---unless we give in."
+
+"Give in?" asked Mr. Prenter, with a rising inflection in his voice.
+
+"Unless we give in," supplied Tom promptly, "by allowing gambling and
+rum-selling to go on openly in our camp of workmen."
+
+"Have you any notion of giving in to that extent?" asked Mr. Prenter.
+
+"Not an idea!" retorted Tom Reade promptly. "It wouldn't be my way to
+surrender to the Devil. I'll fight to the last ditch---unless your
+company really prefers to have Hazelton and myself cancel our contract and
+get out of this work. Do you?"
+
+"_I_ don't want you to quit," replied Mr. Prenter positively. "I admire
+fighting grit, and I want to see you keep hammering away at the work until
+you win and the job is finished. The board of directors will stand with me
+on that, if I can sway them. As for Mr. Bascomb, you mustn't take him too
+seriously. He's a first rate fellow in a lot of ways, but there's no fight
+in him, and he's a bit close-fisted, too. As for me, Reade, and as far as
+I can speak for my fellow directors, go ahead, just the way you've started.
+If you can find any way to hammer camp vice harder than you've been
+hammering it, then go ahead and do some harder work with your little
+hammer."
+
+"I'll do it," promised Tom. "Now, Mr. Prenter, I don't believe anything
+more will happen here to-night---perhaps not for two or three nights. So
+I think the wisest thing for you to do will be to get back to the house and
+get some sleep. The same for you, Harry!"
+
+"What are you going to do?" Hazelton wanted to know.
+
+"I?" repeated Reade. "For to-night I'm going to remain up, and be out here
+around this threatened wall."
+
+"Then that ought to be good enough for me, also," Harry suggested.
+
+"Not much, chum. I'm going to take the night trick for the present, and
+put on you the burden of all the day work. So you'll need your sleep."
+
+"I can swing the day work easily enough," laughed Hazelton. "It will be
+all the more easy as the next few days will be taken up simply with
+repairing the breaks that have been made."
+
+"Swing the boat in toward land, Mr. Corbett," Tom directed the foreman.
+
+At the little landing Hazelton and Mr. Prenter joined the waiting president
+and superintendent.
+
+"Did you really find out anything?" called Mr. Bascomb eagerly.
+
+"It's as big a mystery as ever."
+
+"There's just one thing we'll have to do," sighed Mr. Bascomb, "and that
+will be to stop running the camp on a basis of old Puritan laws."
+
+"You talk Reade into it, if you can," chuckled Treasurer Prenter. "You
+won't find him easy to convince, either."
+
+Tom didn't wait to discuss the matter. Instead, he signaled to Foreman
+Corbett to run the craft out again.
+
+"If you want to, Corbett," suggested Tom, with a laugh, as the boat moved
+over the salt waters again, "you might go ashore and go to bed. You can
+easily claim that you engaged with us as a foreman, and that being captain
+of a motor boat amounts to breach of contract."
+
+"I'm not fussing," smiled the foreman. "As long as I can sleep daytimes
+running this motor boat is easier than working."
+
+"It probably will be," nodded Reade, "unless the enemy go in for a new
+line of tactics."
+
+"Such as what, sir?" asked Corbett.
+
+"If this boat hampers them too much they may decide to send it to the
+bottom with a torpedo."
+
+"Let 'em try, then," grunted the foreman, giving the steering wheel a turn.
+
+Though Reade remained up until broad daylight no further sign of the
+unknown enemies was seen. Through the night, had it not been for the
+patrols walking up and down the line of wall with lanterns, it would have
+been hard to realize that the big breakwater was haunted by any such
+desperately practical group of "ghosts."
+
+"I guess we've heard the last of the rascals," suggested Harry Hazelton one
+night at supper. Messrs. Bascomb and Prenter had returned to Mobile, so
+that the young engineers and their superintendent were the only men at
+table.
+
+"My guess is about the same," drawled Mr. Renshaw.
+
+"Yes?" queried Reade. "Guess again!"
+
+"Oh, I believe they've quit," argued Mr. Renshaw. "For one thing, the
+scoundrels probably have discovered that detectives from Mobile are down
+here trying to run 'em to earth. That has scared the rascals away."
+
+"What are the detectives doing, anyway?" asked Harry.
+
+"Blessed if I know," Tom yawned. "I believe there are three of them here
+or over in Blixton, but I wouldn't know one of them, if I fell over him.
+The detectives came, secured their orders from Mr. Prenter, and went to
+work---or pretended to go to work. I'm glad that I'm not responsible for
+the detectives."
+
+Nicolas entered, an envelope in his hand.
+
+"Par-rdon, Senor Reade," begged the Mexican. "I would not interrupt, but
+on the porch I found thees letter. It is address to you."
+
+Tom took the envelope and scanned it, saying:
+
+"The address is printed---probably because the writer didn't want to run
+the risk of having his writing identified. Probably the letter, also, is
+printed. Pardon me, gentlemen, while I open this communication . . . Yes;
+the letter is printed, and unsigned---a further sign of cowardice on the
+part of the writer. And now let me see what it says."
+
+Tom spent a few moments in going through the communication. A white line
+formed around his mouth as he read. Then he passed the letter to Harry,
+who read it aloud, as follows:
+
+_"You have had a week of peace. Is peace better than war? You may have
+all the peace you wish, and go on working and prospering if you will let
+others do the same. Stop interfering with the right of your men to amuse
+themselves and all will be well. Try any of your former tricks in the
+camp, and then you will have good cause to 'Beware!'"_
+
+"Is that a declaration of war?" asked Harry, looking up.
+
+"I think so," nodded Tom.
+
+"Then how are you going to meet it?"
+
+"There's only one way," Tom returned. "A declaration of war must be met
+with a fight. Unless I'm very greatly in error the gamblers and
+bootleggers will try to start up matters again to-night in camp."
+
+"And you'll throw them down harder than before?" queried Mr. Renshaw,
+gazing keenly at the young chief.
+
+"If it be possible," Tom declared. "Nicolas, be kind enough to go over
+and ask the foremen to report here at 8:20 promptly. At 8:30 we will
+enter camp and see what is going on."
+
+"I miss my guess, then," chuckled Mr. Renshaw, quietly, "if our arrival
+isn't followed by war in earnest."
+
+"War is never so bad," retorted Tom Reade, his jaws setting, "as a
+disgraceful peace!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+AN ENGINEER'S FIGHTING BLOOD
+
+
+Just at half-past eight that evening Tom, Harry, the superintendent and the
+foremen entered camp.
+
+They went, first, to a shack which they knew to be occupied by orderly,
+respectable blacks.
+
+"Come, men," said Tom, halting in the doorway. "I've an idea we may need
+you."
+
+Six negroes rose and came forward.
+
+"There are gambling and bootlegging going on in this camp to-night, aren't
+there?" Reade inquired.
+
+"Ah doan' rightly know, boss," replied one of the negroes cautiously.
+
+"But you suspect it, don't you?" Tom pressed.
+
+"Yes; Ah done 'spec so, boss," grinned the negro.
+
+"And I do, too," rejoined Tom. "Come along. We may need a little help."
+
+With this reinforcement---the negroes were wanted for work rather than for
+fighting---Tom now stepped off briskly through the camp.
+
+Nor did he have to guess in which way to go through the darkened streets
+of this little village of toilers. Shouts of laughter and the click of
+ivory dice and celluloid chips signaled the direction.
+
+The largest shack in the village was closed tightly as to door and window,
+though light came out through the chinks. Tom stepped over there boldly,
+not turning to see whether his following were close behind him.
+
+Stepping up to the closed door the young chief engineer placed his shoulder
+against it. He gave a sturdy push, and the barrier flew open.
+
+There were about fifty of his men crowded into one large room. A half
+dozen gambling games were in full blast. At two tables stood bootleggers,
+each with a bottle of liquor and glasses.
+
+Tom stalked boldly in, still without turning to look at his own following.
+Reade's face bore such a mild look that the leader of the visiting
+gamblers was wholly deceived as he glanced up.
+
+"The chief!" called one workman, in dismay, and a dozen men made a break
+for the door. But Harry and the others prevented their getting out.
+
+"Oh, it's all right," cheerily announced the leader of the gamblers. "Mr.
+Reade has just come here to look on and make sure that everything is being
+conducted above board and on the square. Isn't that so, Reade?"
+
+"Yes," Tom assented, pausing near the central table at which gambling was
+going on.
+
+At that assurance the panic-stricken gamblers breathed more easily.
+Several men who had jumped up from their seats went back to their chairs.
+
+"Reade is a good friend of ours," called the leader of the gamblers,
+mockingly. "He isn't going to interfere with any amusements that are
+properly carried on---eh, Reade?"
+
+The fellow stared boldly into Tom's eyes, a look of insolent mockery on
+his features.
+
+"Certainly I'm not going to interfere with any proper amusements in this
+camp," Tom nodded, easily.
+
+"What did I tell you, boys?" laughed the leader of the gamblers. "Go on
+with your play, boys!"
+
+"But gambling isn't a proper amusement for poor men, who have to toil and
+sweat for every five-cent piece they get," Tom Reade continued calmly.
+"Neither is the trade of bootlegging a decent one, or one that provides
+decent amusement. I have already warned you that gambling and liquor
+selling are things of the past in this camp."
+
+There was another stir in the room. The leader of the gamblers rose,
+fixing his gaze on Tom's eyes and trying to stare the young engineer out
+of countenance.
+
+"What do you mean, Reade?" he demanded.
+
+"Isn't my meaning clear enough?" Tom insisted, with a chilly smile.
+
+"Man, haven't you come to your senses yet?" snarled the gambler.
+
+"Do you mean to ask whether I was scared by the cowardly, unsigned letter
+that I received this evening?" Tom fired back at the fellow, with another
+taunting smile.
+
+"I don't know anything about any letter," muttered the gambler sullenly,
+"but I heard that you had come to your senses."
+
+"Whether I have or not," retorted Tom, "you are pretty sure to come to your
+proper senses to-night. Men---I mean workmen, not gamblers or
+bootleggers---you are at liberty to pass out of this building."
+
+"Don't you go," shouted the gambler, as some two dozen men started toward
+the doorway where Harry and the rest were on guard.
+
+Some of them halted.
+
+"I must have made a mistake in calling some of you 'men,' since you take
+orders from such disreputable characters as these gamblers and
+bootleggers," Tom taunted them mildly. "Now, all I will say is that those
+of you who wish to do so may pass outside. The rest may remain here,
+though they'll be sorry, afterwards, that they stayed. All who want to
+get outside must do so at once."
+
+"Don't you do anything of the sort," shouted the gamblers' leader. "Stay
+here like men and assert your rights! Come on! I'll lead you, and show
+you how to throw these meddlers out."
+
+"You'll do it---just like this, eh?" demanded Tom Reade.
+
+He made a leap for the leader of the gamblers, catching the fellow by the
+throat and waist. Lifting him, Tom hurled the fellow a dozen feet. The
+gambler fell on one side, but was up in a moment, his right hand traveling
+toward a hip pocket.
+
+"Don't draw," mocked Tom, with another smile. "Probably you haven't a
+pistol there. If you have, you can never make me believe that you have
+sand enough to draw and shoot before as many witnesses as I have on hand."
+
+"I've a good mind to drill you with lead!" scowled the gambler, still
+resting his hand behind him.
+
+"But you're a wise man," mocked Reade, "and wise men often change their
+minds."
+
+However, the very move of the gambler to draw a pistol had had one effect
+that Tom ardently desired. Most of the workmen present were now in
+frantic haste to get out before any shooting began. The two bootleggers
+also sought to make their escape.
+
+"Get back there! You fellows can't get out!" Harry shouted, himself
+seizing and hurling the bootleggers back into the room. They rose, glaring
+sullenly at Hazelton. But they didn't know how many more men he might have
+behind him out there in the dark.
+
+Tom Reade now had the six gamblers and the two bootleggers in the room
+with him.
+
+"You're a nice crew, aren't you?" he jeered, gazing at them scornfully.
+
+"We're making our living," retorted the leader of the gamblers, with what
+he meant to be a fine tone of scorn.
+
+"Making your living off of human beings! You're some of the parasites
+that infest honest workingmen. I've drummed you out of this camp before,
+and you have the cheek to come back. Now, I'll try to teach you another
+lesson. Harry, send in our workmen, will you?"
+
+Hazelton stepped aside, to let in the half dozen honest negroes they had
+brought along with them. These men entered, then stood looking at their
+young chief.
+
+"Get hold of those cards, chips and dice!" ordered Tom.
+
+"Here, what are you trying to do?" demanded the leader of the gamblers.
+
+"You have the advantage of me," responded Tom. "I don't know your name."
+
+"Hawkins is my name," replied the chief of the gamblers.
+
+"Hawkins is a fine name," admitted Tom. "It will do as well as any other.
+I won't annoy you, Hawkins, by asking you what your name used to be in
+prouder and happier days."
+
+"What are these men doing with our outfit?" insisted Hawkins, as the
+negroes began industriously to clear the surfaces of the tables.
+
+"You can see what they're doing," Tom rejoined.
+
+"You blacks get out and leave our property alone," warned Hawkins, darting
+among them.
+
+The negroes drew back, in some alarm, for the gambler looked dangerous with
+one hand at his hip pocket.
+
+"Go get on with your work, men," counseled Tom. "I'm here to back you up."
+
+"As for you, sir---" snarled Hawkins, facing Tom.
+
+"Don't look at me like that," laughed Reade softly. "Save that face to
+frighten children with."
+
+The negroes had busied themselves until they had gathered up all the
+implements of gambling and had stuffed them into their pockets.
+
+Now Tom went up to the bootleggers. Both men he boldly searched, bringing
+forth from their pockets bottles of liquor. These he threw down hard on
+the floor of the cabin, smashing them.
+
+"I don't know why we allow you to do all this, Reade," fumed Hawkins, whose
+face was white with rage.
+
+"It's because you're afraid, and know that you can't help yourselves," Tom
+smiled.
+
+"I'll show you who's afraid!" yelled Hawkins, again throwing his right
+hand back to his hip pocket.
+
+This time Reade saw the unmistakable butt of a revolver. Without an
+instant's hesitation. Reade leaped at the fellow. In a moment Tom had
+the revolver, springing backwards.
+
+"Well---shoot!" jeered Hawkins. "You don't dare to."
+
+"You're right," assented Tom coolly. "I don't dare to. Assassination
+belongs to the lowest orders of human beings. An honest man seldom has
+any need of concealed deadly weapons."
+
+Tom stepped still farther back, breaking the revolver and dropping the
+cartridges into one hand. Hawkins made a move as though to spring upon
+him, but Harry leaped into the room, confronting the gambler.
+
+Thus shielded, Tom drew a combination tool-knife from one of his pockets,
+then coolly drew out the screw that held the trigger in place.
+
+Dropping the trigger into his own pocket, Tom tossed the weapon back.
+
+"Catch it, Hawkins," he called. "You may want this to frighten some
+children with over in Blixton. Now, Mr. Renshaw, I believe you know
+what you're to do."
+
+"Yes, sir," nodded the superintendent, from the doorway, and vanished.
+
+"We'll take our leave, now," sneered Hawkins, "unless you have some further
+humiliation in store for us."
+
+"Just one," Tom declared, "so you can't go just yet."
+
+"Oh, all right," Hawkins laughed fiercely. "You'll have to pay for this
+unlawful detention."
+
+"You can tell the officers all about that," Tom suggested tantalizingly.
+"Mr. Renshaw has just gone to telephone for them."
+
+"The officers? Police?" snarled Hawkins.
+
+"Yes. Did you imagine that you could keep on defying all the laws? You've
+just threatened me with a taste of the law. You may try a taste yourself,
+Professor Hawkins!"
+
+"Let us out of this place!" insisted Hawkins angrily. "Come on, friends!"
+
+He rallied his own force of seven men and started toward the door.
+
+"Of course you can try to get away," Reade warned the fellow. "But the
+effort will cost you all broken heads, to say the least. I have placed
+you all under arrest for breaking the laws of Alabama, and, before we'll
+let you go, we'll break a few bones for each of you."
+
+Outside the workmen of the camp were thronging by this time. Doubtless,
+had they dared, two or three score of these men would have fought in
+behalf of the gamblers and bootleggers, but far more than that number
+would have rallied under Tom Reade's banner, for it is human nature to
+flock to the banner of the leader who is resolute and unafraid. Besides,
+there were the foremen, all of them good, hard hitting men.
+
+"Oh, well," sneered Hawkins, "let it go at that, Reade. We'll have our
+day in court tomorrow, and then. I guess we'll find our innings."
+
+"Yes," chuckled Tom, "and when you get your innings you'll be wild to swap
+them for outings---for the innings will be in jail."
+
+"Don't push my temper too far," cautioned Hawkins with a scowl.
+
+"Let it go as far as you like, always being ready to take the
+consequences," Tom smiled genially.
+
+There followed a period of tense waiting. After nearly a half an hour of
+this a 'bus arrived, with four police officers from Blixton in it. Tom
+Reade preferred his charges against the gamblers and bootleggers. The
+officers had no choice but to take them, so the late troublemakers, now
+amid jeers and hoots from many of the workmen, were led outside and into
+the 'bus.
+
+"You'll hear from this!" hissed Hawkins, in the young chief engineer's ear.
+
+"I believe you," nodded Tom thoughtfully.
+
+After the police and their prisoners had gone Tom led his own party back
+to the house.
+
+"You'd better get to bed now, Harry," Reade advised his chum. "There can
+be no telling how soon I'll need to call you up, and you ought to have
+some sleep first."
+
+"You look for trouble to break to-night?" Harry asked.
+
+"Between now and daylight," said Tom simply.
+
+"Whee! I'd like to stay up with you."
+
+"You might find more fun that way, Harry, but the work to-morrow would
+suffer, and work is more important than mere fun," Tom answered.
+
+Nor was Tom to be disappointed in his expectation that the worst trouble
+yet experienced would break loose that night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+WISHING IT ON MR. SAMBO
+
+
+"Oho!" breathed young Reade, as he crouched low behind the fringe of
+bushes, peering toward the beach.
+
+It was now somewhat past midnight. For three hours Tom had been scouting
+stealthily along this shore section, well to the west of the breakwater.
+
+For, in pondering over the explosions, Tom had come to the conclusion that
+the blow-outs on the retaining wall, however accomplished, were controlled
+from a point to the westward of the sea wall.
+
+This conclusion had been rather a simple matter to a trained engineer.
+Tom had witnessed the flash of one explosion, and that, as he remembered,
+had sprung up at the west side of the wall. Moreover, the appearance and
+condition of the wall, at the point of each explosion, had shown that the
+attack in each case must have been made at the west side of the wall.
+
+And now, after nearly three hours of work, Tom Reade had come upon a real
+clue.
+
+"Another blow-out is arranged for to-night, just as I had expected," Reade
+muttered, with an angry thrill, as he glanced at a figure down on the
+beach. "Moreover, my guess that the huge negro is the fellow who touches
+off the blow-outs has proved to be the correct one."
+
+Down on the beach a big, black man was moving about stealthily. Though the
+spot was a lonely one, this scoundrel plainly intended to take no
+unnecessary risks of detection.
+
+Just at the present moment the negro was placing in the water a
+curious-looking little raft that he had brought on one shoulder from its
+place of concealment. It was something like a flat-bottomed scow, the
+sides being just high enough to prevent whatever cargo it carried, from
+rolling off into the water.
+
+The raft placed and secured to the shore, the negro crouched in his hiding
+place in a jungle of bushes. He soon reappeared, carrying four metal
+tubes.
+
+"The explosive is in the tubes," guessed Tom easily. "And at one end of
+each tube is a sharp metal point that permits of being driven into the
+crevices in the wall. Four, or more, of these tubes are thrust into the
+wall, I suppose, and connected in series, so that they can be fired by the
+same electric spark. These tubes and the wires are water-proofed. The
+negro is only the dastardly workman in this case. It was never he who
+invented the trick. But he must be an excellent workman, who ought to be
+employed in much more honest effort. I wonder if the fellow is going to
+use more than four tubes?"
+
+All of these thoughts ran through the mind of Tom as he crouched, peering
+eagerly at the negro.
+
+By this time the negro was taking to the water, towing his miniature scow
+and its explosive cargo as he swam.
+
+"He must be a good swimmer, and also a good diver," concluded Tom. "With
+my men patrolling the sea wall he must have to dive, some distance away,
+swim under water, and remain there until he has secured one of the tubes
+in place. Then he has to get back, out of range of the lanterns' rays, and
+get his breath before he goes back to the next job. But maybe I can
+interfere with his work to-night."
+
+Though he rose and moved away, Reade, despite the darkness of the night,
+was careful to keep himself concealed behind the bushes, so that he could
+not be observed from beach or water. Shortly the young engineer was over
+at the point in the jungle from which he had seen the negro emerge with
+scow and explosives.
+
+"The fellow must use a magneto, attached to wires running under the water,"
+concluded Tom. "At that rate, the first real job is to find the magneto.
+My, but Mr. Sambo Ebony may be wondering, to-night, why his blow-out
+doesn't work as easily as usual!"
+
+Simple as the search ought to have been, Tom Reade was soon on the point
+of despair.
+
+"If it isn't a magneto, or if I can't find it in time," Tom muttered
+uneasily, "the mystery may remain nearly as great as ever, and the
+explosion may be pulled off to-night, after all."
+
+Twenty minutes passed before Reade, with all his senses alert, stumbled
+on the concealed magneto. It had been so well hidden, under a mass of
+rocks, that it would not have been astonishing had Tom missed it
+altogether.
+
+Attached to the magneto was the wire that must connect, in some way, with
+the series of tubes that would soon be fastened in the retaining wall out
+yonder. Yet this wire ran into the ground, and then vanished.
+
+"Now, I've simply got to hustle!" sighed Tom Reade nervously. "If I don't
+succeed in raising the wire, and in a mighty short space of time, I may be
+to-night's fool yet. I'd really like to wish that on the black man, too!"
+
+By using his eyes and his reasoning powers Reade, after twenty minutes more
+of search, with some sly digging, unearthed a section of the wire some
+dozen feet from the magneto.
+
+"Now, it must be really the swiftest sort of work," murmured the young
+engineer, after a glance seaward. He seated himself with his face turned
+toward the Gulf, gathered the exposed section of wire up into his lap, then
+drew a pair of wire nippers from his pocket.
+
+Snip! Tom now had two ends of wire in his hands. That would have been
+enough, had Reade chosen to bury the ends and conceal all evidence of his
+work. However, he believed that a more workmanlike way could be found.
+
+From the same pocket Tom drew out a three inch piece of pure rubber cable,
+wrapped in water-proof tape. This he fastened to the severed ends of the
+wire, binding the whole as neatly as a lineman could have done.
+
+"Rubber is believed to be a pretty good insulator," chuckled Reade, as he
+finished. "I don't believe the spark is made that can jump three inches
+of rubber. Certainly magneto-power can't do it. Now, let me see what sort
+of a trail-concealer I am."
+
+Tom laid the wire back in the ground, covering it carefully with his hands.
+
+"I wish I dared strike a match, so that I could judge better just how my
+work looks," he sighed. "However, I don't believe Mr. Sambo Ebony will
+think it discreet to strike any matches either, so he won't find the place
+where I've been fooling with his work.
+
+"Now, I'll get back out of sight, where I belong," muttered Tom, rising
+cautiously. "I hope, though, I can find a place where I can see the look
+on that darkey's face when he tries his magneto and waits for the bing!
+from out yonder. Oh, Sambo, you simply can't have any idea of how I've
+been wishing it on you tonight!"
+
+As the bushes grew thickly hereabouts, and there were many hollows in the
+surface of the earth, Reade had little trouble in finding what he believed
+to be a satisfactory hiding place. It enabled him to hide his head within
+fifteen feet of the handle of the magneto.
+
+A soft, southerly wind blew in from the Gulf. As long as he could Reade
+fought drowsiness. Again and again he opened his eyes with a start.
+
+"I mustn't do this," Tom told himself angrily. "No gentleman will go to
+sleep at the switch---when it's his train that is coming!"
+
+Yet still he found himself nodding. Had he deemed it safe Tom would have
+sprung up and walked about briskly. But this, he knew, was to invite
+being discovered by the returning negro.
+
+So, at last, despite himself, Tom fell asleep.
+
+How much time had passed he never knew. At last, however, he awoke with a
+start. Reproachfully he rubbed his eyes.
+
+"Not a bit too soon!" he muttered, as his ears caught sound of an
+approaching step, and his eyes showed him the hulking form of the massive
+foe. "Here comes my black man!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE BLACK MAN'S TURN
+
+
+Closer to the earth Tom tried to burrow. As to a plan, Tom Reade had none
+now, save to watch, and, if possible, to learn something that he did not
+already know.
+
+Soft-footed, despite his great bulk, the negro approached with an air of
+little concern. Plainly, the wretch did not much fear discovery---still
+less interference.
+
+Humming an old plantation melody the negro reached his concealed magneto,
+then stood up for a brief moment, staring seaward in the direction from
+which he had just come. His garments dripped water; his whole appearance
+was bedraggled, yet there was something utterly shaggy, majestic, in this
+huge specimen of the human race.
+
+"Ah done reckon dem gemmen gwine lose some mo' of deir wall to-night,"
+chuckled the negro softly.
+
+"Go as far as you like, Mr. Sambo Ebony!" grinned Tom Reade, under his
+breath. "I've wished something else on you this time."
+
+Carelessly the negro bent over his magneto, seized the handle and gave a
+push.
+
+Then he straightened up, listening. Only the soft sighing of the southern
+wind came to his ears.
+
+"Yo' shuah done gotta use a mo' greasy elbow dan dat, chile," chuckled this
+imp of Satan aloud, though in a soft voice that seemed out of all
+proportion to his bulk.
+
+Then he gave a half dozen indolent though steady strokes to the handle of
+the magneto.
+
+"Whah am dat 'splosion?" he asked himself in wonderment. "Am mah eardrum
+done gone busted? Moke, yo' am plumb lazy this night!"
+
+This time the huge negro pumped at the handle of the magneto until he was
+all but out of breath. Several dozen shoves he had administered before
+he halted, let go of the magneto and raised himself to his full, majestic
+height.
+
+"Some black witch hab done gwine wish a big hoodoo on me!" grunted the
+negro suspiciously. "Dis am do fust time dat de magernetto gwine back
+on me like dis!"
+
+In his bewilderment the one whom Tom had named Sambo glared around him.
+His eyes gleamed with a phosphorescence like that which one sees on the
+water on a lowering night. What Reade did not know was that this black
+man possessed eyes that were a little keener in the dark than a bat's.
+
+With a sudden "Woof!" Sambo went up in the air, moved sideways, and came
+down on the startled Tom Reade with the force of a pile driver.
+
+"Wha' yo' doing heah?" demanded the negro, gripping Reade by the coat
+collar and dragging that hapless engineer to his feet.
+
+Tom did not answer. To save his life he couldn't have answered just then,
+his breath utterly gone.
+
+"Wha' yo' want heah, anyway?" insisted Sambo, giving the youth a vicious
+shake.
+
+There was blood before the negro's eyes, or he would sooner have
+recognized his victim. But at last he did see.
+
+"So, I'se gwine cotch Mistah Reade himself!" snorted Sambo. "An' Ah
+reckon I'se gwine foun' de differculty wid my magernetto at de same
+time! Huh?"
+
+Again he shook Tom, with an ease and yet a force that further drove the
+breath from the young engineer's body.
+
+"Why doan' yo' talk!" glared the negro, holding Tom out at arm's length
+with one hand.
+
+Tom could only groan. Yet that method of communication carried its own
+explanation to the big black.
+
+"Reckon yo' gwine talk w'en yo' get gale enough in yo' lungs," grinned the
+negro. "In dat case Ah gwine lay yo' down on de groun' to fin' yo' breff."
+
+Sambo's idea of laying Tom down was to give him a violent twist that
+brought the lad flat on the ground at his captor's feet. Then the negro
+sat on his captive to make sure that the latter did not escape.
+
+"Take yo' time---ah got plenty," grimaced the black man.
+
+Slowly the beaten-out breath came back to Tom Reade. Sambo, watching, knew
+finally that his quarry was at last able to talk.
+
+"Wha' yo' do to mah magernetto?" demanded Sambo.
+
+"Guess," breathed Tom.
+
+"Oh, take yo' time, boss. Ah got plenty ob dat accommerdation"
+
+"What magneto are you talking about?" Reade queried innocently.
+
+"Nebber heard ob it befo', eh, boss?"
+
+"I've heard of plenty of magnetos, of course," admitted Tom. "But what
+have you to do with one?"
+
+For a brief instant Sambo was almost inclined to believe that Reade did
+not fully know his secret. Finally it dawned on the brain of the big
+black man that he was being hoaxed.
+
+"Ef yo' doan wanter tell, yo' doan hab to, ob co'se," proposed Sambo. "It
+ain't mah way to be too persistency wid de w'ite quality gemmen. But Ah
+done thought maybe yo' know somethin' dat yo's burnin' to tell."
+
+"Who are you, and what are you doing around here?" asked Tom. "I'm certain
+you don't belong to my force of workmen---unless you just joined
+yesterday. Are you working on the breakwater job?"
+
+"Yessah," promptly answered Sambo with momentary gravity. Then his mood
+changed to a chuckle.
+
+"Dat am all right, Massa Reade," he allowed. "But yo' doan' fool dis
+nigger as easy as yo' maybe think. Ah know what yo' watchin' me fo',
+and Ah done know I'se been doin' jess w'at yo' think. So I guess we
+doan' need no mo' conversationin', unless yo' willing to talk right out
+and tell me w'at's w'at."
+
+"Sambo," said Reade solemnly, "I imagine I'm not very intelligent, after
+all. I listened to you attentively, but, for the life of me, I couldn't
+make out what you were talking about."
+
+"Kain't yo'?" the negro demanded, mockingly. "Den Ah done reckon Ah must
+be a good deal of a scholar, ef Ah can talk so dat er w'ite quality gemmen
+kain't undahstan' me."
+
+Mr. Sambo Ebony chuckled gleefully in appreciation of his own joke.
+
+"There's one thing I guess you can tell me, Sambo," Reade suggested
+hopefully.
+
+"W'at am dat, massa?"
+
+"When are you going to change your seat and stop making me feel like a
+very thin pancake?"
+
+"W'en Ah done get mah mind made up."
+
+"When you have your mind made up about---what?"
+
+"About w'at I'se gwine do wid yo', Massa Reade."
+
+"Well, what do you think you're going to do with me?" insisted Tom. "I'll
+admit, Sambo, that I'm about losing my patience. Unless you get up off
+of me soon, and move away to a respectful distance, I shall be obliged to
+do something on my own account."
+
+"Go as far as yo' like, massa," returned the negro, unmoved. "I'se boun'
+ter admit dat yo' done got me fo' curiosity. W'at yo' done think yo'
+_can_ do?"
+
+Plainly the negro meant to go on having sport with him. Tom decided that
+it would be of no use to try to deceive this great mountain of black
+flesh. So Reade, who had been doing some brisk thinking during the last
+few moments, gave a sudden heave---a trick that he retained from the old
+football days.
+
+Much to Sambo's surprise he found himself going. Yet the black man was as
+agile as he was big. He leaped to his feet, bounding one step sideways,
+while Tom, who had been watching for this very chance, sprang to his own
+feet.
+
+"Not so fas', massa!" mocked the big black, reaching out and taking a
+strong clutch on. Tom's coat collar.
+
+Reade would have squirmed out of his coat and placed more distance between
+them, but Mr. Ebony, with a stout twist, gathered the two ends of the coat
+collar, holding the young engineer as though in the noose of a halter.
+
+Quick as a flash Reade struck out with his right fist for the black man's
+belt-line. Had the blow landed even the huge Sambo would have gone down
+to earth. But the negro parried with his own disengaged fist, then gave
+a twist to the coat collar noose that made Reade turn black in the face
+from choking.
+
+"Ah might as well tell yo'," Sambo observed dryly, "dat yo' ain't done
+got no new fight tricks dat yo' can wish on me. Ah done seen all de
+tricks of fightin' dat any man done know, an' Ah nebber yet seen no man
+dat could put any kind oh a blow ober on me to hurt!"
+
+The negro spoke boastfully, yet there could be no doubt that he believed
+all he said.
+
+Tom Reade next schemed to land a hard kick against the negro's shins. Ere
+he had his foot well lifted, however, the watchful Sambo seemed to divine
+the intent. He gave a quick twist at the coat collar that made Reade's
+head swim. It was some time before the young engineer's head recovered
+from that sudden confusion and blackness.
+
+"Am' yo' gwine beliebe dat yo' kain't wish no kind oh a trick ober on me?"
+demanded the black man in an injured tone. "Ah nebber seen no odder w'ite
+man dat had such a ha'd time beliebing w'at Ah done tole him!"
+
+"I've got to land this wicked brute, some way, or I may as well conclude
+that the jig is danced through, as far as I am concerned," Reade thought
+ruefully.
+
+Panting, quivering, in dread of being choked again, and much harder, Tom
+tried to think fast in the effort to devise some new plan for worsting
+this terrible opponent.
+
+"I've been fooling myself all along," Tom told himself, with a sinking
+heart. "I've been up against several men who were too weak or too cowardly
+to fight, and I've somehow gained the opinion that I could fight. But
+this black fellow has taken all the conceit out of me. I was a fool ever
+to think that I could fight! I'm nothing but a piece of jelly---or putty!"
+
+Of a sudden Reade tried to wrench himself free at the collar, at the same
+time raising his right knee with a forceful jerk. He wanted to drive that
+knee into the black man's wind.
+
+But Sambo seemed to guess the plan without trouble. He gave a twist that
+choked Tom, once more, until all went black before him. Then the negro
+slammed his victim down hard on the ground, well-nigh stunning the young
+engineer.
+
+"Ah done see w'at Ah gotta do wid yo'," Sambo announced. "Ah gotta tie
+yo' up, load yo' pockets wid rocks, and den take yo' out in de Gulf ah'
+lose yo'! Dat's w'at Ah gotta do, an' Ah ain' gwine lose no time about
+it either."
+
+Sambo was in earnest, too. He had mapped out that very course!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+A DAVID FOR A GOLIATH
+
+
+From his pockets the big fellow brought out a coil of stout cord. Without
+much trouble he slipped a noose over one of Tom's wrists. Then began an
+active fight, the object of which, on the black man's part, was to make the
+other wrist secure.
+
+But here Tom developed an amount of agility and a skill in fighting that
+angered Sambo.
+
+"Doggone yo', ef yo' won't take it peaceable-like, den yo'll get it do
+odder way."
+
+With that, Sambo delivered a blow that made young Reade see stars. His
+head swam dizzily. Now, the black man secured the other wrist, making a
+turn and a knot that would have done credit to an expert.
+
+But about that time something else happened. Whack! A blow from a club
+landed across the negro's head.
+
+"Who doin' dat?" demanded the negro, blinking and half turning.
+
+"I did eet, you miser-r-r-rable black smoke, and I do eet again!" rang
+the voice of Nicolas, as that valiant Mexican circled around the negro.
+
+"Yo' blow away, yaller baby!" jeered Sambo, whose head had been not at
+all hurt by the blow.
+
+"I show you eel I run away!" bridled up Nicolas.
+
+Tom now began to recover enough to know that his faithful servant was on
+the scene.
+
+"Scoot, Nicolas!" urged Tom, in a gasping Voice. "Run for all you're
+worth. This fellow will eat you up. Run and bring help."
+
+"Senor, I can wheep him with one hand!" vaunted the little Mexican.
+
+"Run, I tell you, and get help. Be like a flash, man!"
+
+"As you say, Senor, but---"
+
+Nicolas turned, speeding away.
+
+His escape, however, would interfere, possibly, with the plans of Sambo.
+The big black leaped up, racing after Nicolas.
+
+As the Mexican was a little fellow, and short of leg, it was not long
+before the pursuer caught up with him.
+
+"Hol' on, yo' yaller rascal!" laughed Sambo, reaching out for the Mexican.
+Nicolas wheeled about, dancing out of reach of the negro's massive hands.
+
+"Stand still, yo' li'l' Greaser!" laughed Sambo.
+
+"Now you have insult me, and I show you what I do to you!" snarled Nicolas,
+his brown face aflame at the taunting word, "Greaser."
+
+"Come heah!" jeered Sambo, making a bound and reaching for the small man.
+
+Nicolas dodged, but he did not run away. Instead, he bobbed up inside of
+the negro's reach. The Mexican thrust out his slim, sinewy right-hand
+forefinger. A vicious poke he gave with it, landing sharply on a spot
+just about an inch and a quarter below the base of the negro's breast bone.
+
+"Woof!" panted Sambo, half doubling, for Nicolas had touched a tender spot.
+
+"You have insult me! You call me mean name!" raged Nicolas. "Stand steel,
+you big black smoke!"
+
+Again Nicolas ducked and rushed in. Once more he employed his forefinger
+tip in the same fashion, and with more power.
+
+"O-o-o-o-o-h! Wow!" gasped Sambo, this time doubling nearly to the ground.
+"Get away, chile! I doan' wan' no mo' ob yo'!"
+
+"You have insult," insisted Nicolas angrily, "and I do much more yet to
+you."
+
+This time the negro appeared almost helpless. Nicolas danced about,
+looking for an opening. In desperation Sambo struck out with his powerful
+left. It gave the Mexican the chance he wanted. Darting in, he repeated
+his trick for the third time.
+
+The bulky negro lay down, groaning. He had too little breath left to be
+dangerous.
+
+While this was going on Tom Reade had rolled over on his face. From this
+position he succeeded in getting to his knees. Then he rose and hastened
+toward the Mexican.
+
+"Nicolas, you're surely a little terror!" Reade admitted, admiringly.
+"Now, untie my hands and we'll take care of Sambo."
+
+"Wait---jus' one leetle moment, Senor," begged the Mexican. He turned
+back to Sambo, that forefinger ready for another jab.
+
+"Fo' de lub ob goodness---" gasped Sambo. But Nicolas was determined. He
+made the jab, and Sambo all but lost the little breath that was in him.
+
+"Now, Senor, we do it all in one second," proclaimed the Mexican. From
+his pocket he drew a knife, springing the blade open. Snip! snip! and the
+young engineer was free of his lashings.
+
+"There's plenty of this cord left," declared Tom. "We'll fix up our black
+friend."
+
+"Do not use that word, Senor," implored Nicolas. "He is _no_ good! He
+is scoundrel! He call me Greaser, an' I will keeck off his head for eet!"
+
+"Wait until we get him tied," Tom proposed.
+
+Sambo, by this time, had gained strength enough to sit up. He was
+wondering whether he could rise to his feet and sprint away from this
+dangerous little fury of a Mexican.
+
+"Wait, you black cloud!" cried Nicolas. "I will put you down again!"
+
+"Yo' get away from me---please do!" begged Sambo, recoiling in terror.
+
+"Sambo," laughed Tom, "Africa shouldn't have stirred up Mexico as you did.
+Now, lie down on your face, place your hands behind you, and I will
+persuade him to let you alone."
+
+Sambo hesitated.
+
+"Let me at him, Senor!" begged Nicolas, maneuvering forward, his right hand
+ready. "He is _no_ good, I tell you! But I feex him!"
+
+With a yell Sambo Ebony flopped over on his face, placing his hands behind
+his back.
+
+"Let him alone, Nicolas, as long as he minds," ordered Reade, catching the
+excited Mexican by the collar. "Only, if he shows signs of making trouble
+then sail into him fast."
+
+No sign of trouble, however, was there in Sambo. He lay as meek as a lamb
+while Tom used a lot of the spare cord in taking sundry hitches around the
+negro's wrists.
+
+"I don't believe he'll get out of that," said Reade grimly, "Now, we'll
+fix his feet."
+
+This, too, was done, and Sambo lay helpless on the ground.
+
+"You'll make a fine-looking jailbird, my friend," mocked Tom, looking down
+at the prisoner. "Nor did any man ever better deserve the striped suit
+that the State of Alabama will present you. Now, Nicolas, I'll stay and
+watch this black treasure while you run and find help."
+
+"Senor, you go yourself," begged the Mexican. "The men will obey you more
+queeckly than they would me."
+
+"Oh, you find some of the men and tell 'em to come here to get the fellow
+who has been blowing up the wall, and they'll come fast enough," smiled
+Tom.
+
+"But, Senor, suppose thees scoundrel free himself?"
+
+"I won't let him, Nicolas."
+
+"But eef he do?" persisted the Mexican. "Then, as I have shown you, Senor,
+I can take fine care of heem!"
+
+"There's something in that, too," laughed Tom. "Nicolas, I don't believe
+it will be risking you any if I leave you here. Besides, I won't have to
+be gone very long."
+
+"If this black scoundrel he get restless, Senor, I will amuse heem with my
+forefinger."
+
+Sambo groaned; Nicolas grinned.
+
+"All right," Tom Reade laughed. "I'll be back as soon as I can."
+
+Away he raced at a dog-trot, chuckling. The contrast between bulky Sambo
+and little Nicolas and the big negro's comic fear of the slim little
+fellow kept Reade laughing.
+
+"But where on earth did Nicolas learn that trick?" Tom wondered. "I shall
+have to get him to show it to me. Plainly that trick is worth more than
+all the muscle that I spent so many years in piling on."
+
+Tom headed his course for the shore end of the wall. Here he would find
+men in abundance. Moreover, now that the big black was a prisoner the men
+would hardly be needed on the wall.
+
+"I think I know just how Sambo worked it, too," the engineer reflected, as
+he ran. "He swam out into the Gulf, towing that little scow behind him.
+Neither his black head nor the little scow would be seen far on the water
+on a dark night. Sambo, when he got near enough, could take one of the
+metal tubes, swim in under water to some point where no watchman was near,
+and stick the tube fast into the wall. Then another tube, and
+another---all under water where they would not show to a passing watchman.
+
+"Then, when he had all in place, and while no patrolling watchman was too
+near, Sambo could begin to attach the wires. That would take but a few
+minutes. Whenever any one came too near Sambo had but to swim out a little
+way and tread water until he could return to his job. When, at last, all
+was complete, Sambo would attach a wire from the bombs to a wire moored at
+a stated point under water, and then swim in, work his magneto, and touch
+the whole thing off from a safe hiding place on shore. The explosion
+itself would shatter the last length of wire. Oh, but it was all slick
+and easy!"
+
+Not increasing his speed, but keeping steadily at the jog-trot, Tom was at
+last near enough to the wall to raise his voice and shout.
+
+"Hullo!" came back the answer.
+
+"This is Reade, the chief engineer," Tom answered, through the night.
+"We've caught the fellow that has been blowing up the wall. A half a
+dozen of you men hurry over here with your lanterns. Come on the run."
+
+The man who had answered summoned several of his comrades as quickly as he
+could. As the men had to come in from the wall, however, it took a little
+time. Then six men reported, almost breathless, to Reade. Still behind
+them came Corbett on the run, summoned from the boat.
+
+"What's this I hear, Mr. Reade?" puffed the foreman. "You've solved the
+mystery and caught the fellow who has been dynamiting the wall?"
+
+"Got him and he's tied up, waiting for his ride to jail," Tom chuckled.
+
+"How did it happen, sir?" asked Corbett, staring with his eyes very wide
+open.
+
+"I caught the fellow---a huge giant of a negro, the same fellow who got
+Hazelton the other night," replied Tom. "But before the fight was over the
+black 'got' me, instead, and had me tied up. Then Nicolas came along and
+put the negro out of the fight, and---"
+
+"Nicolas?" demanded Foreman Corbett incredulously.
+
+"Yes. Nicolas proved himself to be the most fiery little bunch of fighting
+material that I have ever seen," laughed Reade, as they walked rapidly
+along.
+
+"How could that Mexican wallop a giant?"
+
+"I'll ask Nicolas to show you, to-morrow," Tom laughed mischievously.
+"But, Corbett, I believe that four bombs are even now attached to some
+part of the retaining wall, ready to be set off.
+
+"Great Scott!"
+
+"They won't be set off, though," continued Reade. "I found the firing
+magneto, and had a chance to cut the wires."
+
+The foreman wanted to ask more questions, while the half dozen workmen
+trudged along close at their heels, eager to hear every word. Tom,
+however, suggested that they save their breath in the interest of speed,
+until they had Mr. Sambo Ebony in safe custody.
+
+"Here we come, Nicolas!" Tom called, as the party neared the spot where
+captor and captive had been left.
+
+There was no response.
+
+"Nicolas!" Tom called again, with a start.
+
+Still no answer.
+
+"I don't like the look of that," Reade uttered. "Let's get there on the
+sprint!"
+
+Tom himself caught at one of the lanterns, leading the way. Neither the
+negro nor the Mexican was where the young chief engineer had left them.
+
+Feverishly, Tom began to search the ground, holding his lantern close.
+
+"Hang the luck!" he quivered, pointing to fragments of cord on the sand.
+"That negro simply burst his bonds---and now where is he? Where is
+Nicolas, for that matter? I thought the little fellow, with his trick,
+could easily take care of the big black."
+
+But, though they spread out and searched, there was no sign of either the
+negro or the little brown man.
+
+"I can't understand what has happened," quivered Tom Reade, thinking more
+of the staunch little Mexican than of the loss of the prisoner.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A TEST OF REAL NERVE
+
+
+"What an idiot I was not to stop to consider that Sambo Ebony could snap
+those cords!" groaned Tom, staring disconcertedly about him. "Yet, if
+Nicolas were safe I wouldn't so much mind the escape of the black. I shall
+see him again, and I shall know him wherever I see him."
+
+"Let's look for the trail," proposed Foreman Corbett, holding one of the
+lanterns close to the ground.
+
+The trail, however, was easy neither to distinguish nor to follow.
+
+"We may as well leave here and search farther," concluded the young
+engineer. "Before we go, though, we'll get the magneto and take it with
+us."
+
+Then the procession turned toward the land end of the retaining wall.
+
+"If Nicolas doesn't show up soon," Tom murmured to the foreman, "I shall
+notify the Blixton police and offer a reward for news of him. That little
+fellow is too faithful to be left to his fate."
+
+"What would the negro want of Nicolas?" queried the foreman.
+
+"Revenge," Tom replied. "It makes a big bully like him furious to be
+handled the way Nicolas treated him. But I can't understand how Nicolas
+failed to repeat his clever trick with the black."
+
+Arrived at the water front the magneto was dumped into the motor boat.
+
+"Seems to me I would smash that thing all to pieces," Suggested Foreman
+Corbett. "It has done harm enough around this wall."
+
+"I don't believe in destroying anything that is useful," Reade answered,
+shaking his head. "Besides, we are going to capture Sambo yet, and then
+we shall want that magneto for evidence."
+
+"What are you going to do to find Nicolas?" Corbett wanted to know.
+
+"I wish I had even an idea," Tom sighed. "Corbett, I wish you would hurry
+over to Blixton and rout out the police. I've an idea that Sambo may have
+a hiding place in the town. Nicolas, too, may have been taken that way.
+I'll sit down and write out a good description of the rascal."
+
+This Reade did, handing the paper to the foreman.
+
+"Who'll take charge here? Corbett asked.
+
+"I will, until you get back, but hurry."
+
+As soon as the foreman had gone Tom stepped into the motor boat, taking
+the wheel.
+
+"Tune up the engine, Conlon," Reade directed the engine tender. "I'm going
+to take a run around to the west side of the wall. I'm going to try to
+find the tubes of high explosive that I'm satisfied were planted in the
+wall."
+
+"That's a fine job for a dark night, sir," grumbled Conlon. "Suppose we
+run into the bombs, and they prove to be contact exploders, too?"
+
+"That's one of the risks of the business," Tom retorted grimly.
+
+Before the motor boat had gone far Tom called one of the men aboard to take
+the wheel. Then the young chief engineer began to experiment with the
+searchlight.
+
+"What's the idea, sir?" asked Conlon, looking on.
+
+"I want to depress the light, so that we can use it to look down into the
+water."
+
+"And try to find the bombs?"
+
+"Exactly," Reade nodded.
+
+"Lucky if we don't find the bombs with the keel of the boat," observed
+Conlon.
+
+Tom succeeded in rigging the light so that he could use it. By the time
+that the boat was around at the west side of the retaining wall Tom ordered
+the boat in close alongside. Then, with the depressed searchlight he
+discovered that he could see the sides of the wall to a depth of some eight
+feet under the surface.
+
+"That may be enough for our needs," Reade murmured. "Now, run the boat
+along, slowly and close. I want to scan every bit of the wall."
+
+Less than five minutes later Tom Reade, one hand controlling the
+searchlight and peering steadily into the water, sang out:
+
+"Stop! Back her---slowly. There, come back five feet. So! Hold her
+steady!"
+
+As the engine stopped Conlon stepped forward, kneeling by Reade's side.
+
+"There are the bombs, man!" cried Tom exultantly. "See them---the two
+upper ones?"
+
+"I see something that gleams," admitted Conlon.
+
+"Well, we'll have them up and aboard in a hurry. Then you'll see just
+what they are."
+
+"You're not going to try to raise the things with the boathook, are you?"
+queried the engine tender, a look of alarm in his eyes.
+
+"That might be risky," admitted Reade. "I'll go over the side after them
+and bring them up.
+
+"Don't, Mr. Reade!" urged Conlon with a shiver. "That'll be worse still.
+You're likely to blow yourself into the next world!"
+
+"I think not---hope not, anyway," answered Tom steadily. "Have you a pair
+of pliers in your tool box that'll cut small wires?"
+
+"Yes," replied Conlon.
+
+"Get them for me."
+
+Reade removed his coat, shoes and socks, then took the pliers.
+
+"Let one of the men jump ashore with the boathook and hold the boat
+steady," was Reade's next direction.
+
+This being done, Reade deflected the searchlight for one more look into the
+water. Then, the pliers in his right hand, he mounted to the rail of the
+boat.
+
+"Be careful, sir---do," begged Conlon. "What I'm afraid of is that the
+bombs are contact exploders."
+
+"It's likely," nodded Reade. "I'll be as careful as I can."
+
+Tom did not dive; the distance was too short. Instead, he let himself down
+into the water slowly. Then his head vanished beneath the surface of the
+water.
+
+"Whew! The nerve of that young fellow!", thought Conlon with shuddering
+admiration.
+
+"Ob co'se Massa Reade done got nerve," nodded the negro at the wheel.
+"Dat's one reason why, Misto Conlon, Massa Reade is boss."
+
+"There are other reasons why he's boss," grunted the engine tender. "Mr.
+Reade has nerve, but he also has brains in his head. Any man with brains
+and the sense to use 'em goes to the top, while I stay down a good deal
+lower, and you, Rastus, are still lower."
+
+"Ah reckon Ah got a two-bit hat on top o' only two cents' wo'th o' brains,
+Misto Conlon," grinned the darkey.
+
+Conlon was an Irishman, and naturally, therefore, no coward. Yet with the
+possibility that Tom would run afoul of a contact-exploding bomb and send
+them all skyward, the engine tender waited at the rail with drawn breath.
+
+Finally, there was a ripple on the water. Then Tom's head appeared; next
+his shoulders.
+
+"Conlon!"
+
+"Here, sir."
+
+"Here is one of the bombs. Handle it carefully."
+
+"Trust me, sir."
+
+Conlon drew the metal tube, with a piece of wire pendant from it, as
+carefully as though it had been a royal baby and heir to a throne. Into
+the boat the engine tender lifted the thing, and laid it carefully in a
+locker. By the time that Conlon was back at the rail Reade had gone below
+again.
+
+"Down dere, aftah mo' death!" grinned the darkey. A colored man can
+usually be brave when serving under a white leader in whom he has full
+confidence.
+
+Presently Tom came up with another metal tube, like the first.
+
+"I'll hang on and get my breath," Tom informed the men in the boat, as he
+rested one hand on the rail. "The other two bombs are about three feet
+lower, and it's going to be hard to work at the lower depth."
+
+"Be careful, won't you, sir?" urged Conlon, in a somewhat awed voice. "Mr.
+Reade, we can't afford to lose you until this job is completed. Men with
+all the nerve you show are scarce in the world."
+
+"I know where there are forty thousand men with at least as much nerve,
+many of them having several times as much as I," laughed Tom.
+
+"Where on earth are they?" demanded the Irishman.
+
+"In the United States Navy. If there were a battleship here the jackies
+would be fighting for the honor of going down after these bombs."
+
+Then Reade dropped out of sight, once more. Nor was it long before he
+had the third and the fourth bombs aboard the boat. Then he climbed in
+himself, dripping like a shaggy Newfoundland dog.
+
+"Put in at the dock now," the young chief ordered, and the boat started on
+its way.
+
+"Some one signaling from the wall lower down," Tom soon informed the negro
+pilot. "Put in where you see the signaling."
+
+"It is I, Corbett," called the foreman of that name. "Mr. Reade, these
+two men with me belong to the Blixton police."
+
+"Perhaps you had rather walk down to the dock, then, instead of getting
+into the boat," laughed Reade. "We have four bombs aboard, just taken
+out of the wall above here."
+
+Accordingly the three turned and walked. At the landing the policemen
+gazed curiously at the bombs.
+
+"Do you want to take charge of these?" Reade queried.
+
+"Not particular about it," replied the policeman, with a shrug. "We'd
+be scorched for endangering the town if we took those things into Blixton.
+Your foreman, Mr. Reade, called us out here to see if we could get trail
+of your missing Mexican servant."
+
+"That's a vastly more important thing to do," Tom replied with enthusiasm.
+"I want to find Nicolas before I do another thing."
+
+"Come here, Bill," called one of the officers.
+
+Out of the shadows near the shore came a youth leading a dog on a leash.
+
+"This dog is a bloodhound," announced one of the policemen with visible
+pride. "Take him to where the scent of the Mexican starts, and the dog
+will follow as long as there's any scent left. But, first, we'll have to
+have something that the Mexican has worn, so that the hound will know the
+true scent."
+
+"That will take but a few minutes," declared Reade energetically. "Come
+up to the house, and I'll find something that Nicolas has worn."
+
+Corbett remained behind to take care of the bombs. Tom led the officers
+and the youth with the hound on a brisk walk up to the house.
+
+"Wait out here," murmured Tom, "and I'll bring something out. If we all
+go into the house we'll wake my partner, Hazelton, and he has enough work
+to do in the daytime, without being kept up at night."
+
+While the others remained outside Tom stole into the house. There was a
+room in the rear, off the kitchen, where Nicolas slept. Into that room
+Reade stepped noiselessly.
+
+It was not necessary to strike a match, for, in the very faint light there,
+Tom espied an object on the foot of the bed that he recognized---one of
+the Mexican's white canvas shoes.
+
+Tom snatched it up quickly. Then, despite his steady nerves, he staggered
+back.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+TOM MAKES AN UNEXPECTED CAPTURE
+
+
+For an unearthly scream pierced the air. There was a wrench, a bounding
+figure---and then Tom Reade felt a jolt near his solar plexus that made
+him gasp.
+
+"Stop that!" gasped the young chief engineer.
+
+"You, Senor?" demanded an incredible, drowsy voice.
+
+"Yes; it's I---Reade."
+
+"A thousand pardons, Senor!"
+
+"So this is you, Nicolas?"
+
+"Yes, Senor."
+
+"What are you doing here?"
+
+"The negro got away from me."
+
+"I know that, but---"
+
+"I could not help it, Senor. I assure you I was not careless."
+
+"I never knew you to be careless, Nicolas."
+
+"Thank you, Senor. But I stood over that black scoundrel, watching for
+the slightest move on his part. I had my forefinger ready, and he did not
+dare move."
+
+"I can quite believe that," agreed Tom, dryly, "after the poke you just
+gave me."
+
+"Again a thousand pardons, Senor, but in the dark, and awaking so suddenly,
+I did not see you or know you."
+
+"I can quite believe that, Nicolas."
+
+"As I was saying, Senor, I was watching over the black man when some one
+came up behind me---so softly that I did not hear. But I felt. _Ah!_ What
+I felt! It was a fist that seemed to break in the top of my head. Down I
+went, and I heard a voice. I knew that voice, too. So would you have
+known it, Senor!"
+
+"Whose voice was it?" asked Tom, curiously.
+
+"The voice of Evarts."
+
+"The discharged foreman?"
+
+"Yes, Senor. But I am delaying my story. While Evarts was speaking I
+heard another sound. At one effort the negro snapped the cords that held
+him. Ah, he is a powerful brute."
+
+"He is," Tom affirmed solemnly.
+
+"I knew it was my task to keep the negro from getting away," continued the
+little Mexican excitedly. "So I leaped up, extended my forefinger and
+rushed at him. But thees Evarts---hees feest catch me between the eyes.
+I do not have to guess the spot where he struck me, Senor, for I can
+feel it yet. Down I went, and knew no more. When next I opened my
+eyes I found myself lying in the middle of a theecket of bushes. I theenk,
+perhaps, the scoundrels believed they had killed me, and so they hid my
+body. But I have fool' them. I am still alive---much alive!"
+
+"What did you do when you came to, Nicolas?"
+
+"Senor," protested the Mexican, "there was no more need of me. You had
+gone after men. Eef you came back, you have many men with you, so you do
+not need me. For that reason I come home."
+
+Even in the dark the young engineer could "feel" Nicolas's shudder. Tom
+could not repress a smile that threatened to become a chuckle.
+
+"I was varee sleepy," continued Nicolas, "and so I lay down. I forgot to
+undress, or even to take off my shoes. I fall asleep, and I dream much.
+I see the big negro again, and I dream that I have more fight with heem.
+Then, when you pull my foot, I wake up in one gr-rand sweat, for I theenk
+the big black attack me once more. I am glad---so glad that it is not
+true."
+
+"Nicolas," cried Tom, "you have done fighting enough for one night. Yet
+tell me, how did you happen to be at hand to-night in time to save me from
+Mr. Sambo Ebony?"
+
+"Because I see you start away to-night," replied Nicolas, "an' I see that
+you go alone. I know that you mos' likely run into trouble, an' so I
+follow you. Sure enough, Senor, you find trouble---and I heet heem with
+my finger!"
+
+"You surely did 'hit him with your finger,' Nicolas," laughed Tom, grasping
+the little Mexican's hand and wringing it. "But now come outside. I had
+sent for the police to find you, and now I must show them that you are
+already found."
+
+Together they went out on the porch. Tom explained the situation.
+
+"Then you don't need us, after all?" asked one of the policemen.
+
+"Not to find Nicolas," Tom Reade admitted. "But do you know Evarts?"
+
+"Used to be your foreman?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"We know him," nodded the policeman.
+
+"Then," Reade continued, "I wish you would search through Blixton for
+him. If you find him, be good enough to lock him up and notify me."
+
+"Is there a warrant out against him?" asked one of the policemen,
+cautiously.
+
+"You don't need one," Tom replied. "I will make a charge of felony
+against Evarts, to the effect that he is concerned in the outrages
+against our wall. On a felony charge you don't need a warrant. Then,
+too, try to find the big negro."
+
+"What's his name?"
+
+"I don't know his name," Tom answered. "I've dubbed him 'Sambo Ebony.'
+You have the description of him that I wrote out. Arrest Sambo, by all
+means, if you can find him, and I'll make a felony charge against him,
+too. The negro is the one who has been blowing up the sea wall."
+
+"We'll look for the pair all through the town, Mr. Reade," promised the
+officers.
+
+"Do! And, on behalf of the company, I'll offer a two-hundred dollar reward
+for the arrest of each man!"
+
+With that prospect to spur them on the policemen hastened away, followed
+by the young man with the bloodhound.
+
+"Now, Nicolas," pressed Reade, turning around at the faithful little brown
+man, "you tumble back into bed."
+
+"But you, Senor?"
+
+"Don't worry about me. I've probably done all I need to do to-night. I
+shall probably sit here on the porch and think until daylight. Then I'll
+call Hazelton, and go to bed for a few hours' sleep before I appear in
+court against the gamblers and the bootleggers. Go to bed, Nicolas, and
+sleep! That's an order, remember!"
+
+The Mexican therefore went to his bedroom without protest. Presently Reade
+became aware of the fact that his clothing had not by any means fully
+dried. He went to his room, took a vigorous rub-down, donned dry clothing,
+and then went out on the porch.
+
+Though the night was dark the air was delicious. The combined odors of
+many flowers came in on the faintly stirring breeze.
+
+Tom leaned back in a chair, his feet on the porch railing. His senses
+lulled by the quiet and repose of the night he was in danger of falling
+asleep.
+
+Of a sudden he came to with a start. Off among the trees to the eastward,
+near the road, a human being was stirring.
+
+Reade rose, moving swiftly back more into the shadow. Then he watched,
+every sense alert. Yes; some one was moving, out there amid the trees.
+What he could not see, Tom discovered by his acute sense of hearing.
+
+"I'll put a hot pebble in that fellow's bonnet, whoever he is!" Tom
+muttered vengefully. Entering the house, he left at the rear, then made
+a stealthy, roundabout trip that brought him at the farther edge of the
+litte grove of trees.
+
+Now the young engineer crouched close to the ground as he listened. Once
+more he heard that some one moving, not many yards away. It was
+pitch-black in there amid the trees. Guided by his ears, Tom moved closer
+and closer without making a betraying sound. Suddenly he found the tall
+figure looming up almost in his path.
+
+"Now, I've got you!" cried Tom exultantly, making a bound that should have
+carried his hands to the throat of the prowler.
+
+But the other, like a flash, went on the defensive. Tom felt himself
+parried, then clutched at. The next instant the prowler had the young
+engineer in a tackle that carried Tom Reade back to the good old high
+school days at home. The young engineer was dumped on the ground as though
+he had been a sack of flour.
+
+"Great Scott!" quivered Tom Reade. "No one but Dick Prescott ever had
+that tackle down fine!"
+
+"Well, you blithering idiot!" came the indignant answer. "That's who I
+am---Prescott!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE ARMY "ON THE JOB"
+
+
+"You, Dick?" gasped Tom, stumbling ruefully to his feet. Then he leaped
+at his late foe, throwing his arms around him. The two fairly hugged each
+other, Yes; here was Dick Prescott, not so many weeks a graduate of the
+Military Academy at West Point, and now, if you please, Second Lieutenant
+Richard Prescott, United States Army!
+
+"Well, of all the strange things that the Illinois Central Railroad brings
+into Alabama!" grunted Tom, now gripping Dick by the hand and holding on
+as though he never meant to let go.
+
+"If the Illinois Central had built its tracks through to Blixton I probably
+would have arrived at a civilized hour," laughed Dick. "As it was, I had
+to come in on a wood-burning, backwoods road and the train was only five
+hours and a half behind schedule. Then, from a sleepy policeman I got
+directions that enabled me to find this place after an hour's hard work."
+To what effect? Only to be pounced upon by you as though you had caught me
+in the act of stealing all the water in the Gulf of Mexico!"
+
+"Stop your roasting," laughed Tom joyfully. "But say, it _does_ seem good
+to set eyes on you again, after two years."
+
+All of our readers who have read the "_High School Boys Series_" and the
+"_West Point Series_" know all about Dick Prescott, the famous leader of
+Dick & Co.
+
+"What are you now?" Tom asked eagerly. "A general, or only a colonel?"
+
+"Nothing but a shavetail," laughed Dick. "Shavetail is the army nickname
+for a second lieutenant."
+
+"I've got to join my regiment, the Thirty-fourth Infantry, out in Colorado
+very soon," continued Prescott. "But I came down here to spend a few days
+with you, if you can stand me."
+
+"If we can stand you!" chuckled Tom, patting his old high school chum on
+the back. "Say, where's Greg?"
+
+Greg Holmes had been another member of Dick & Co., and Dick's chum and
+comrade at West Point.
+
+"Well, you see," laughed Lieutenant Prescott, "Greg has been falling in
+love with six girls a year regularly ever since he entered West Point.
+Now that he's in the army he has started in to increase the yearly
+average. He's visiting a Miss Deering, who lives near Chicago."
+
+"Greg's likely never to marry," wisely remarked Tom. "These fellows who
+catch a new love fever every few weeks always end up by finding that no
+girl wants them. But say, Dick you hardly look the soldier."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Well, one would expect to see an army officer in uniform, you know."
+
+"An officer rarely travels in uniform, unless on duty with troops,"
+explained Dick.
+
+"How did you like West Point?"
+
+"Fine!" said Dick, grimly. "It was like four years in prison, only more
+so. When I look back I shudder at the incessant grind I had to endure
+there. Yet I'm going to be happy, now I'm through, for I couldn't be happy
+anywhere except in the United States Army."
+
+"What crazy notions some folks have of happiness," murmured Tom, mockingly.
+"However, old fellow, we're not going to fight, are we? Now, hustle over
+to the house. Harry is sleeping at the present moment, but I won't let
+him have a wink more of sleep to-night. It's getting toward daylight,
+anyway, and too much sleep isn't good for a fellow. But don't talk above
+a whisper, Dick, when we get near the house. I don't want Harry, by any
+chance, to catch a sound of your voice until he comes out on the porch and
+runs into you."
+
+Chatting away in low tones the two old-time high school chums gained the
+porch.
+
+"Now, just stay here," whispered Tom, then strode into the house. He
+entered his partner's room, gripping the slumber-seized Hazelton with a
+strong clasp.
+
+"Oh, quit your fooling!" protested a sleepy voice from the pillow.
+
+"Time to get up, you slant-eyed rations stealer!" muttered Tom gruffly.
+"Come on. You're needed, and there's no time to be lost. Up with you!"
+
+Tom dragged his drowsy partner from the bed, seating him on the edge of it.
+
+"Now, shed your pajamas and pull on something decent," Reade commanded
+grimly. "Hustle! There's a conference going on outside, and you're
+wanted. Hurry! Want me to dump the pitcher of water on you? I'll do it
+if you give your eyes another rub!"
+
+Hazelton was now fully convinced that something important was in the air.
+If not, he knew that his chum never would have hauled him out of bed in the
+darkest hours of the night.
+
+"If you throw any water I'll shave you with the bread-knife," retorted
+Harry. "But you can keep on talking to me, so that I won't fall asleep
+while I'm trying to dress."
+
+Slowly, at first, then more rapidly, Hazelton got his clothes on. Pouring
+water into the basin he sopped a towel in it, then liberally applied it to
+his face. The water waked him rapidly.
+
+"Now, lead me forth to where duty calls," mimicked Harry.
+
+"Run along out on to the porch," ordered Tom. "I'll be there in a moment."
+
+Still yawning, Hazelton groped his way out into the hall, along the dark
+passage, and thence out into the night. Some one stood there, and Harry
+walked curiously toward him.
+
+"Howdy, whoever you are," was Hazelton's greeting.
+
+"Halloo, Harry, old chum," came Dick Prescott's laughing answer.
+
+"Dick Prescott!" gasped Harry delightedly.
+
+"I suppose you think I might have waited until daylight," laughed Dick,
+as their hands met.
+
+"I'm heartily glad you didn't wait," said Harry. "How long can you stay
+with us?"
+
+"Not as long as I'd like to, for I'm due at Fort Clowdry in a very few
+days."
+
+"And Greg?"
+
+Lieutenant Prescott gave the same explanation he had furnished Tom.
+
+"How does it seem to be an army officer?" Harry continued.
+
+"I believe it to be the finest career on earth," Prescott answered.
+"Still, as you can guess, I'm utterly without experience so far. After a
+few days more I shall have my first day as an officer on duty with troops.
+But do you and Tom continue to find engineering the grandest career on
+earth?"
+
+"We certainly do," affirmed Hazelton.
+
+"It must be very interesting," agreed Dick. "Still, I imagine there is
+yet enough of the primitive savage in the average man to make him enjoy a
+real fight once in a while. That's an experience you're denied in your
+calling, but an army officer may always look forward to the chance of
+seeing a little fighting."
+
+Hazelton glanced humorously at his partner before he replied:
+
+"At present there's a very good chance of a fight right here at this camp."
+
+"So?" Dick Prescott asked, sitting up with a look of interest.
+
+"Not so much chance as there was," said Tom gravely. "The fight came off
+to-night. Harry, I met the big black---caught him redhanded."
+
+"You did?" cried Hazelton, leaping up. "And you never called me?"
+
+"There wasn't any chance," Tom assured him. "The meeting and the fight
+didn't take place on this porch."
+
+Tom now had two very interested auditors. For Prescott's benefit Reade
+first sketched a brief outline of the troubles that had led up to the
+present, including an account of the wrecking of substantial portions of
+the retaining wall. Then he came down to the events of the night.
+
+"Oh, and I had to miss it," sighed Harry, disappointedly. "I'd have missed
+a week of sleep just to have been in to-night's doings. And, if I had been
+with you, Tom, we'd now have Mr. Sambo Ebony in jail."
+
+"I think we've blocked the black rascal's game on the wall, anyway," said
+Tom.
+
+"There's just a fair chance that you haven't yet blocked it," remarked the
+young army officer thoughtfully. "Of course this Sambo of yours merely
+represents a well-organized gang. This gang may have more ways than one
+of damaging the property of the Melliston Company. From all I can see, Tom
+and Harry, you're likely to need to be more vigilant than ever. Whew! But
+I'm glad that I can be with you a few days. I'm likely to come in for a
+choice lot of excitement. Also, I may very likely be able to help out a
+lot."
+
+"We wouldn't put you to that trouble, Dick," protested Tom. "You're to be
+our guest---not our policeman."
+
+"Are you going to try to keep me out of all the excitement and fun?"
+Lieutenant Dick demanded, indignantly. "Sleep? Can't I get enough of that
+when I go aboard a Pullman again and am riding out to Colorado? Of course
+I'm going to help---and I'm going to have my share of all the opportunities
+for excitement here---or else I'm going to cut your acquaintance."
+
+"Why, of course we'll be delighted to have your help, Dick, if you want to
+stand the racket," Reade made haste to say. "It will surely seem like
+doubling---or trebling---our forces, to have Dick Prescott working hand in
+hand with us."
+
+"Then that's settled," cried Dick, with an air of satisfaction.
+
+"You haven't had any sleep lately, have you, Dick?" inquired Tom, after
+they had chatted a little longer.
+
+"No; I haven't."
+
+"Then you must turn in and get a few hours," proposed Reade. "I must have
+a little myself, as I shall have to be up and go into court during the
+coming forenoon."
+
+"I'm wide awake now," said Harry. "So I'll sit right here on the porch
+and dream of Dick and Greg, and good old Dave Darrin and Danny Dalzell,
+and the good times we had in old Gridley. What time do you want to be up,
+Tom?"
+
+"Not later than eight," Reade answered.
+
+"Trust me," said Harry promptly. Harry went to his own bedroom, pulled his
+bed apart, remade it with fresh linen, and with a final grip of Dick's
+hand, he left the army officer to turn in there.
+
+At eight o'clock Hazelton called both Tom and Dick. They turned out
+promptly, to find that Nicolas had laid an appetizing breakfast on the
+porch.
+
+Then Tom had to hurry over to Blixton, Dick going with him, while Hazelton
+went down to the breakwater to superintend the day's work there.
+
+Only a little time had to be spent in the justice's stuffy court. Hawkins
+and his fellow gamblers and bootleggers were arraigned and held in one
+thousand dollars' bail each for trial. As none of them had the money the
+eight men were sent to the county jail pending trial.
+
+"That's queer," mused Tom, aloud, as he and Dick walked back to camp.
+"You'd think that professional gamblers would have money enough to put up
+small bail."
+
+"Not if they're working for other people," suggested Dick. "These men may
+be merely the agents of some larger crowd."
+
+"Meaning that the larger crowd may be a sort of vice trust, operating in
+many fields at the same time?" queried Reade.
+
+"Something of the sort," replied the young army officer. "To-day nearly
+everything has been capitalized on a large scale of combined capital. Why
+shouldn't vice be?"
+
+"I begin to think you're more than half right in your guess," Tom admitted.
+"Your explanation is about the only way to account for a fellow like
+Hawkins not having a thousand at his instant disposal. However, if these
+fellows represent a vice trust, then I suppose it will be a question of
+only a little time when the trust sends down money enough to put up the
+needed bail."
+
+"That will undoubtedly happen," nodded Dick. "And then you'll have to look
+out for that fellow, Hawkins, and all the men he can command. Hawkins
+looked at you, in court, as though he'd enjoy pulverizing you."
+
+"I'm ready, when he is," laughed Tom. "If he'd only fight in the open I
+wouldn't be at all afraid of him."
+
+Tom now led the way down to the retaining wall. Prescott gazed with great
+interest at the signs of activity. On a closer inspection he was even
+more interested. He was capable of understanding very fully what was being
+done here, for every graduate of the United States Military Academy is
+supposed to be a capable engineer.
+
+"You've a difficult task on hand, but your basic principle is sound, and
+you're doing the work finely and economically," Dick declared with
+emphasis.
+
+Harry came in from the outer end of the wall and joined them. He listened
+with pride to the praises that the army officer showered on the engineers.
+
+"I wish Mr. Bascomb, the president of the company, could hear you," said
+Harry. "He isn't altogether sure that we know what we're about in anything
+that we're doing."
+
+"Then I've a very good mental picture of Bascomb," declared Dick, bluntly.
+"Bascomb is something of a chump. By the way, if you want to get square
+with Mr. Bascomb, why don't you coax him down here to help you look out for
+the evil-doers who are combined against you?"
+
+"He wouldn't be much use," sighed Tom. "He's an impossible sort of chap.
+He wanted us to stop our crusade against camp vice. Said it was hurting
+business."
+
+"What craft is that?" inquired Dick, looking toward a sailboat that was
+moving lazily along about a half-mile to the eastward.
+
+"I don't know," Tom answered, after a look. "Never saw the boat before.
+Regular cabin cruiser, isn't she, about forty feet long?"
+
+"About that," nodded Dick. "What interested me in her was the fact that a
+fellow on board has been watching us with a marine glass. I caught the
+glint of the sun on the lenses."
+
+"Why should he want to be watching us?" demanded Hazelton.
+
+"That's just what made me curious," replied Prescott. "As an army officer,
+if this were a fort that I commanded in troublous times, I'd want to look
+into any strange craft that I caught cruising lazily in the offing and
+holding a marine glass on us."
+
+"I wonder if that boat can be in the service of those who are annoying us?"
+Tom muttered.
+
+"It's an even chance that it is a 'hostile ship,'" Prescott suggested.
+"You have a motor boat here. I'm inclined to think you ought to use it in
+overhauling that suspicious craft. Of course you'd have no right unless
+there was a police officer along. Can you get one?"
+
+"The authorities in Blixton would send a policeman on request."
+
+"Then send a messenger to request them to send over a policeman in
+citizen's clothes," proposed Dick.
+
+Tom promptly despatched Foreman Dill on that errand.
+
+"Now don't let the men on the boat see that you're paying any more
+attention," Prescott advised. "Leave it to me, and I'll contrive to keep
+the boat and its people under observation without looking too plainly in
+their direction."
+
+In due time the plain clothes policeman arrived. He, the young engineers
+and the army lieutenant boarded the "Morton," which put out from the
+landing as though on a trip of inspection of the wall.
+
+"Don't anyone look over at the sloop," Prescott urged. "I'll do the
+watching. A fellow on that craft is holding the glasses on us right now.
+Officer, do you demand the assistance of all present in any police duty
+that may come up?"
+
+"I do," replied the Blixton policeman, a man named Carnes, returning
+Prescott's wink.
+
+"All right, then," laughed Dick. "That demand makes policemen of us all.
+Tom, you can turn, now, when ready, and put on full speed in going after
+that craft."
+
+Reade gave the order for full speed, then took the steering wheel himself.
+
+"Guilty conscience!" laughed Prescott. "There's the sloop putting about at
+once and heading away from us."
+
+"They can't get away from us, in this light wind," chuckled the young chief
+engineer.
+
+A few minutes later the "Morton" came up within easy hailing distance of
+the sloop, aboard which only one man now appeared.
+
+"Sloop ahoy!" called the policeman. "What are you doing in these waters?"
+
+"Looking for a good fishing ground," answered the dark-faced man at the
+tiller.
+
+"Then you're too far in by some three miles," answered the policeman.
+
+"Thank you, cap'n," acknowledged the sailing master of the sloop.
+
+"You're welcome," the policeman continued, "but ease off your sheet and
+lay to. We want to come aboard."
+
+"You can't!" flatly retorted the skipper.
+
+"You're wrong there," retorted the policeman. "This is a police party,
+and I tell you that we are coming aboard. Lay to, or we shall have to
+start a lot of trouble for you."
+
+In the policeman's hand suddenly glistened a revolver. Tom ran the motor
+boat close alongside. With a snarl the man left off his sheet. The
+policeman and Dick Prescott leaped aboard the craft, Tom and Harry
+following.
+
+"This is a cheeky outrage!" snarled the skipper, scowling at the invaders.
+
+"Then keep the change, and welcome," laughed the policeman, taking his
+stand close to the skipper.
+
+Dick Prescott made a dive at the cabin door, which was closed.
+
+"Open this door!" he summoned.
+
+As the door did not open Dick placed his shoulder against it.
+
+"Open the door, or I'll break it down," Dick insisted.
+
+There was still no answer. Thereupon Prescott proceeded to put his threat
+into execution. Harry bounded forward to help. Under their combined
+assault the door gave way.
+
+Lieutenant Prescott was the first to enter the dark little cabin. Poor as
+the light was his eyes caught sight of something that made him gasp.
+
+"This is the big capture of the season!" cried Dick jubilantly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A NEW MYSTERY PEEPS IN
+
+
+"Get out of here, or you'll get something you don't want," roared an ugly
+voice at the farther end of the cabin.
+
+At sound of that voice Tom Reade started. He thrust his head in the open
+doorway.
+
+"Hullo, Evarts!" called the young chief engineer.
+
+"Get out of here!" came the furious order.
+
+"So you've openly joined the enemy, Evarts?" demanded Tom, as his eyes
+fell upon the object that had first claimed Lieutenant Dick Prescott's
+attention.
+
+"You've no business here! Get out, or I'll shoot," cried Evarts,
+defiantly.
+
+"Don't be too quick on the shoot," warned the Blixton policeman, who still
+had his own revolver in his hand. "This is a police party, and you're
+under arrest. Start any shooting trouble, and the air will be full of it."
+
+"Clear out, and I'll come outside and talk with you," proposed Evarts, for
+it really was the discharged foreman.
+
+"All right," nodded the policeman. "Gentlemen, let him step outside."
+
+The others left the entrance to the cabin, As Evarts, his pistol now back
+in his pocket, stepped sullenly outside, Harry Hazelton dropped back into
+the doorway.
+
+"Glad to meet you, Mr. Evarts," grinned the police officer, deftly slipping
+handcuffs on the fellow's wrists.
+
+"This is treachery!" stormed the prisoner. "I didn't surrender to you.
+I only came out to talk with you."
+
+"If you didn't surrender, then excuse me, and go ahead and put up a fight,"
+laughed the policeman, handily removing Evarts's revolver from a hip
+pocket.
+
+"Now, look in here, Tom," urged Dick. "Do you see what caught my eye?"
+
+Prescott pointed to a sharp-nosed cylinder, some eight feet long. Just as
+it lay the propeller at the other end was invisible to one at the doorway
+of the cabin.
+
+"It's a home-made imitation of a Whitehead torpedo," Lieutenant Dick went
+on, in explanation. "If it proves to be charged with explosives then the
+mere having of it aboard this sloop will prove embarrassing to these two
+prisoners to explain in court. If it isn't loaded, that will be almost as
+bad, as such a torpedo can be rather easily loaded, and then set in
+operation by clock-work machinery that will control the propeller."
+
+"Young man, you seem to think you know a good deal about torpedoes,"
+sneered Evarts.
+
+"He ought to," Harry retorted quietly. "He's a West Point man and an army
+officer. Therefore, he's a specialist in some kinds of explosives."
+
+Evarts's face turned somewhat paler at this information of having an army
+officer on hand as a witness.
+
+"Do you call me a prisoner, too?" asked the man at the tiller uneasily.
+
+"Something like it, I guess," nodded Dick.
+
+"Say, but that's a pretty rank deal against an honest man," protested the
+skipper hoarsely. "I hired this boat out to that man, the one you call
+Evarts, but I didn't know what he was up to."
+
+"You didn't know that torpedoes are used for wicked work either, eh?"
+pressed Lieutenant Dick.
+
+"I'll swear that I didn't know what it was that he brought on board," cried
+the skipper. "Evarts said it was a new device for killing fish at
+wholesale."
+
+"You may be telling the truth," Tom broke in.
+
+"I am," declared the skipper eagerly.
+
+"Then explain it to the court," Reade continued. "If you can prove to a
+judge and a jury that you're an honest man, and always have been one, you
+may get off on the charge that will be made against you."
+
+"Then you don't believe me?" asked the skipper anxiously.
+
+"It isn't for me to say," Tom replied crisply. "It's a job for a judge
+and a jury."
+
+"Then I'm to be a prisoner?"
+
+"That's for the policeman here to say."
+
+"You're a prisoner, my man," nodded the policeman. "Now, sail your boat
+into the landing over yonder."
+
+"Some one else will sail it," retorted the skipper, angrily, as he
+abandoned his tiller.
+
+"I'll take the tiller," Harry suggested, and did so. He hauled in the
+sheet, brought the boat around and headed for the landing with the skill
+of an old sailor.
+
+"My man, since you don't want to sail the boat you'll have to go as a real
+prisoner," announced the policeman. He produced a pair of handcuffs,
+snapping them over the man's wrists.
+
+In a short time Harry brought the sailboat up to the landing. The motor
+boat had followed, but did not come all the way in. After the sail had
+been lowered and made snug the party took up its way, on foot, to the
+nearby town of Blixton.
+
+Justice Sampson was found, and consented to open court immediately.
+Officer Carnes brought his prisoners forward, stating the charge. The
+young engineers and the army officer gave their testimony.
+
+"The prisoners are held for trial, and bail fixed at five thousand dollars
+in each case," decided the court.
+
+The torpedo had been left on the sloop, in charge of a foreman. The
+justice now ordered two officers to go back and bring over the torpedo,
+which was to be held until a chemist could examine and take samples of
+whatever explosive might be found inside.
+
+As Dick was a United States Army officer, under orders to proceed to his
+post within the next few days, the court reduced his testimony to writing,
+and permitted Prescott to sign this under oath.
+
+It had been a busy forenoon. Now it was time for luncheon, and the three
+chums returned to the house to eat. In the afternoon they visited the
+wall, remaining there until four o'clock. On their return to the house
+Tom and Harry were greeted by Mr. Prenter, who had been waiting for them.
+
+"I heard the news of last night's doings, and to-day's, and came right
+down," explained the treasurer of the Melliston Company. "Reade, I'm
+glad to be able to say that you appear to have brought us to the end of
+the explosion troubles."
+
+"Or else we're just starting with that trouble," Reade smiled wistfully.
+"Mr. Prenter, I must say that there appears to be no end to the surprises
+with which our enemies are capable of supplying us."
+
+Tom then nodded to Dick to come forward and presented him to the treasurer.
+
+"An army officer?" asked Mr. Prenter eagerly. "Then I'm doubly glad to
+meet you, Mr. Prescott. You've seen the breakwater work? As an army
+officer and an engineer what do you think of it?"
+
+"It's great!" said Dick, though he added laughingly: "Reade and Hazelton
+are such dear old friends of mine that any testimony in their favor is
+likely to be charged to friendship."
+
+"I'll believe what an army officer says, even in praise of his best
+friends," smiled Mr. Prenter.
+
+Foreman Johnson, who had been over in town, now came along. He halted
+some distance away, beckoning to Reade.
+
+"Mr. Reade," murmured the foreman, in an undertone, "over in Blixton I
+just heard some news that I thought would interest you. Evarts is out on
+bail."
+
+"He furnished a five thousand surety?" queried Tom.
+
+"Yes, sir, and who do you suppose went on his bond?"
+
+"I can't imagine who the idiot is."
+
+"The man who signed Evarts's bond," continued Foreman Johnson solemnly,
+"was Mr. Bascomb, president of this company!"
+
+"Whew!" muttered Tom aghast. "And that's all I've got to say on this
+subject."
+
+"I thought you'd like to know the news," remarked Johnson, "and so I came
+to tell you."
+
+"Please accept my thanks," Tom answered. Then, as the foreman passed
+along, Reade went back to his friends.
+
+"You seem staggered about something," remarked Mr. Prenter, eyeing him
+keenly.
+
+"Possibly I am," admitted Tom. "Evarts is out on bail."
+
+"Now, what fool or rogue could have signed that fellow's bail bond?"
+demanded Mr. Prenter in exasperation.
+
+"Careful, sir!" warned Tom smilingly. "I've just been informed that the
+bail bond was signed by Mr. Bascomb, president of the Melliston Company."
+
+"Well, of all the crazy notions!" gasped Mr. Prenter. "But there! I won't
+say more. Bascomb is a queer fellow in some things, but he's a good fellow
+in lots of things, and a square, honest man in all things. If he signed
+Evarts's bond, there was a reason, and not a dishonest one."
+
+"But Evarts won't behave," predicted Harry dismally. "After all our
+trouble we shall still have to remain on guard night and day."
+
+"It'll be an airship next," laughed Dick Prescott.
+
+"Unless Sambo Ebony comes forward once more, and finds out how to lay wires
+by a new submarine route," retorted Tom Reade.
+
+All the present company felt unaccountably gloomy just at this moment.
+There could be no guessing what would occur next to hamper or destroy the
+fruits of their hard labor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+A SECRET IN SIGHT
+
+
+"Mr. Prenter," asked Tom suddenly, "is there anything about which you wish
+to see me just now?"
+
+"Not particularly," replied the treasurer. "Only, in view of late
+developments I'm going to remain about for the next few days, unless you
+order me out of the house. I want to be close to the trouble."
+
+"Then, if I'm not needed," gaped Reade, "I'm going to turn in and steal a
+little sleep. I need rest."
+
+"As I'm going to stay up to-night, Tom, and keep you company through the
+dark hours, I'm for the bale of lint, too," announced Lieutenant Prescott.
+
+"At what hour shall I call you?" asked Harry.
+
+"At eight o'clock to-night," answered Tom.
+
+Refreshed by a few hours' sleep Tom and Dick were called, to find their
+supper ready. Nicolas stood behind their chairs, attentive to their needs.
+
+Mr. Prenter remained out on the porch, but Harry sat at table with his
+friends.
+
+"Has Mr. Bascomb put in an appearance here?" Tom inquired.
+
+"No," said Hazelton briefly.
+
+"He certainly has wound up my curiosity," murmured Tom. "Why on earth
+should he bail out Evarts?"
+
+"Probably because Evarts asked him to," suggested Dick.
+
+"But why should he want to please Evarts in such a matter?"
+
+"Well, you know," hinted Harry, "we've heard that Evarts is some sort of
+relative to Mr. Bascomb."
+
+"But the rascal has been working to ruin this company," Tom protested,
+"and Mr. Bascomb is the trusted president of the company."
+
+"Yet _is_ Mr. Bascomb really fit to be trusted?" Prescott propounded.
+
+"Mr. Prenter seems to think so, and he is a capable judge of men," Tom
+rejoined. "It is the combination of all these circumstances taken together
+that makes me so curious over Mr. Bascomb's being willing to bail the
+fellow."
+
+"Oh, well, it's too much of a puzzle for us," said Harry, shrugging his
+shoulders. "All we've got to do is to keep our eyes open and faithfully
+guard the property that is entrusted to our care. However, I'm growing
+sour and sore. Here I've got to go to bed presently, and you and Dick are
+going to be prowling about all night. You'll have all the excitement,
+while I'll be in bed."
+
+"You seem to forget," Tom reminded him, "that the last big excitement took
+place in the daytime, during your shift. Dick and I may have a lazy night,
+and you may have the air full of wreckage to-morrow in broad daylight."
+
+They chatted a little while with Mr. Prenter, outside, and then Dick rose
+at Tom's signal.
+
+"We must be starting," said Reade. "I don't know just what we're going
+to do to-night, but we have miles to cover I'm afraid."
+
+"Being an army officer, Dick, you've got a pistol, of course," suggested
+Harry hopefully.
+
+"I've a brace of them," nodded the army man.
+
+"Good!" cheered Harry.
+
+"But both of them, unloaded at that, are in my trunks at Mobile," laughed
+Dick, whereat Tom chuckled. Harry Hazelton was much inclined to want to
+carry a pistol in times of danger, but Tom didn't believe in any such
+habit.
+
+"I thought soldiers went armed," muttered Hazelton ruefully.
+
+"Only when on duty," Dick informed him.
+
+Nicolas wistfully watched Reade out of sight. The Mexican had been ordered
+to remain at home to-night, and on no account to think of following his
+employer. That didn't at all agree with the faithful fellow's wishes.
+
+"They'll be sure to get into some trouble, Senor Hazelton," Nicolas
+said mournfully. "I should be on their flank, watching over them."
+
+"You don't know Gridley boys," laughed Harry, "if you don't understand
+that Dick Prescott and Tom Reade, together, are a hard team to beat."
+
+In the meantime Tom led the way down to the camp of workmen. Reade
+stopped to speak with one of his reliable negroes, whom he found softly
+strumming a banjo under a tree.
+
+"Are there any visitors in camp to-night who shouldn't be here?" asked Tom.
+
+"I doan' beliebe so, boss," replied the colored man. "Dem gamblers an'
+bootleggers ain' done got bail yet, has they, sah?"
+
+"I don't believe they have," replied Tom. "There are no others of their
+kind here, then?"
+
+"I doan' beliebe so, sah."
+
+Tom and Dick strolled through the camp, but all was quiet there. Many of
+the men were outside their shacks or tents, smoking and waiting for
+turning-in time to come.
+
+"Looks as orderly as a camp-meeting," declared Lieutenant Prescott. "I'm
+glad to see, Tom, that you're for the decent camp every time."
+
+"The decent camp is the only kind that contains efficient workmen for
+engineering jobs," Reade answered dryly.
+
+Presently they strolled out of camp, on the farther side. This was what
+the young engineer really wanted to do---to vanish suddenly, in a fashion
+that would not be likely to be noted by hostile eyes. Now Reade and his
+army chum proceeded softly, and without words. Through the deep woods Tom
+was heading for the spot where he had found the magneto.
+
+Sambo Ebony was at large, and Tom believed that other things than the
+magneto had been concealed at this spot. If Sambo intended any further
+assaults on the retaining wall he would be quite likely to come this way.
+So here Tom Reade was resolved to remain and watch, even if he had to put
+in most of the night there.
+
+Behind some bushes he and Dick found a hiding place looking out upon the
+scene of the late conflict with "Mr. Ebony."
+
+Without even whispered conversation time dragged slowly. More than an hour
+dragged by, and both watchers were beginning to feel decidedly bored.
+
+At last, however, footsteps came that way. Both watchers crouched lower
+and waited.
+
+The new-comer approached the place rather uncertainly. At last, however,
+he stood revealed. Tom Reade felt like yelling in his utter astonishment.
+
+For President Bascomb, of the Melliston Company, now stood before them.
+After a glance about Mr. Bascomb walked slowly up and down, as though he
+were waiting for some one.
+
+Dick, of course, did not know Mr. Bascomb. However, as Tom kept silent
+the young soldier did the same.
+
+"What on earth can Bascomb be doing here?" Tom wondered. "Is he, too, one
+of the conspirators? It is unbelievable! Yet with what speed he obeyed
+Evarts's summons to come and bail him out! It makes me feel like a sneak
+to be here spying on the president of the company that employs me---and yet
+there's something here that certainly must be looked into!"
+
+Fifteen minutes more dragged by, with Mr. Bascomb walking impatiently back
+and forth, occasionally heaving a deep sigh or catching at his breath.
+
+"Our worthy president is much excited, at any rate," Reade said to himself.
+
+Finally steps were heard, both by Bascomb and by the pair who watched him.
+Then another man came upon the scene.
+
+"Evarts, why on earth did you send for me?" demanded Mr. Bascomb, as the
+discharged foreman came up.
+
+"Because I knew you'd be here---you don't dare do otherwise," was the
+sneering reply.
+
+"Try not to be impudent about it," advised Mr. Bascomb mildly. "As you
+may remember, I've had to stand a lot from you."
+
+"And not as much as you might have to stand, either, if I took it into my
+head to make matters lively for you," jeered Evarts harshly. "Remember,
+man, you'll do as I want you to do."
+
+"I'm willing to do what I can for you," replied the president. "But---"
+
+"Now, don't throw any of your 'buts' at me," broke in the discharged
+foreman, roughly. "You failed me in one thing---you didn't make Reade take
+me back on the job, as I told you to do."
+
+"I couldn't," pleaded Mr. Bascomb. "Prenter stood with Reade and was
+against me."
+
+"You're the president of the company, aren't you?" Evarts demanded
+sullenly.
+
+"Yes; but Prenter is a bigger man in the company, and he has more influence
+with the board of directors. If Prenter came out against me, and persuaded
+the other directors that I was a bad asset for the company, they'd act on
+Prenter's suggestion and remove me from the presidency."
+
+"Humph!" jeered Evarts. "Then what would your directors do if they knew
+that---."
+
+"Stop!" begged Mr. Bascomb hoarsely, "Don't say a word further, man!
+Sometimes even the leaves on the trees have ears. Don't breathe a word of
+what you were going to say just now."
+
+Even in the dark the two concealed watchers could see that Bascomb was
+glancing about him nervously.
+
+"Now, what is up?" gasped Tom inwardly. "What part has Mr. Bascomb been
+playing in this mystery that he's so afraid of having become public?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+EVARTS HEARS A NOISE
+
+
+"I won't shut up," proclaimed Evarts.
+
+"I don't care who hears me."
+
+"But I care," protested the president, in a trembling voice.
+
+"Then you'll have to reward me for whatever silence you want," snarled the
+wretch.
+
+"Is this blackmail never to cease?" groaned Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Yes, when you've used me right," declared Evarts harshly.
+
+"Didn't I come forward promptly on your bail?" demanded Mr. Bascomb.
+
+"Sure, for you didn't dare do otherwise. But that only gave me liberty.
+It didn't put any money in my pocket."
+
+"Are you going to jump your bail, and leave me to pay the bond?" asked
+Bascomb.
+
+"Perhaps," said Evarts lightly. "You can stand losing the money."
+
+"I suppose so."
+
+"But when I jump," continued Evarts, "I'll have to stay out of the country
+after that. It'll take money---and you'll have to furnish me with it."
+
+"How much?"
+
+"Well," continued the foreman, craftily, "I wouldn't leave the country with
+less than enough to set me up elsewhere. I'd need---well, let me see. I
+couldn't start in a new country on less than ten thousand dollars."
+
+"That would make fifteen thousand dollars, in all." Mr. Bascomb finished
+his remark with a groan.
+
+"Well, what are you howling about?" demanded Evarts unfeelingly. "You've
+got the money."
+
+"It will lower my holdings in the Melliston Company," complained Mr.
+Bascomb bitterly "I'm not a rich man, and I haven't any too much stock
+in the company at the present moment."
+
+"You'd have to sell it all out, if I gave the directors a chance to find
+out that you're a jailbird---that you did time as a younger man," sneered
+Evarts.
+
+"For goodness' sake hold your tongue, man!" gasped Mr. Bascomb in accents
+of terror.
+
+"Just think," grinned Evarts heartlessly, "how delighted your directors
+would be to know that you had done time in prison."
+
+"Silence, man!" implored Bascomb. "It wasn't altogether my fault, as you
+know. And the governor of the state discovered that I wasn't as bad as
+the jury thought me. It all came through trying to help a worthless
+friend. Why, man, the governor pardoned me, when I had yet two years to
+serve and restored me to liberty."
+
+"But you're a jailbird, just the same," jeered the discharged foreman.
+"Let the directors find _that_ out, and how quickly they'd drop you from
+your office!"
+
+Mr. Bascomb buried his face in his hands and sobbed aloud.
+
+"So," continued Evarts, "I'll give you forty-eight hours to raise the ten
+thousand dollars---in good cash, mind you---no checks! Then I'll call on
+you to hand the money over to me. If you don't, I'll write a note to the
+directors, telling them to look up your name in the court records at
+Logville, Minnesota. Now, do you understand?"
+
+"Yes," nodded Mr. Bascomb brokenly.
+
+"And you'll have the money?"
+
+"I---I'll try."
+
+"You'll have the money---by day after tomorrow!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Now clear out---fast!"
+
+"Eh?" inquired Mr. Bascomb, looking wildly at the wretch.
+
+"Get out! Go back to the hotel in Blixton, and don't try to slip away from
+me at any point in the game. Start---now!"
+
+"Good night!" said President Bascomb in a choking voice.
+
+"Oh, cut out the civilities!" grunted Evarts turning on his heel.
+
+Mr. Bascomb then silently left the spot. His footfalls made so little
+noise that their sound was soon lost to Dick and Tom.
+
+Evarts appeared in no hurry to leave. On the contrary he drew out a pipe,
+filled it and lighted it. Then he threw himself down on the ground,
+puffing slowly.
+
+"From the fact that he sent Mr. Bascomb away, and is himself remaining,"
+thought Tom Reade, "it is rather plain that this scoundrel, Evarts, is
+awaiting some one else."
+
+The same thought had occurred to Dick Prescott, though, as they lay within
+thirty feet of where Evarts reclined on the ground, the chums did not deem
+it wise to exchange even whispers.
+
+After another half-hour Dick pressed Tom's arm. Other footsteps were now
+near. Then Mr. Sambo Ebony slouched on to the scene.
+
+"Hullo, Tar!" was the ex-foreman's careless greeting.
+
+"Now, doan' get too prescrumptious wid me," warned the black man, with an
+evil grin that displayed his big, white teeth. "Yo' an' me hab done been
+good frien's, an' pulled togedder. But Ah want yo' to undahstan', Mr.
+White Man, dat I doan' allow yo' to call me Tar Baby."
+
+"Oh, come, now, don't get huffy," yawned Evarts, who had not taken the
+trouble to rise. "I'm not afraid of you, Tar."
+
+"Stop dat!" cried the black angrily. "Yo's takin' big chances, yo' is."
+
+"You're big and powerful, I know that," grinned Evarts. "But I have
+something with me that makes me just the same size as you are, or perhaps
+a little bigger. See this!"
+
+The ex-foreman drew from one of his pockets a formidable-looking automatic
+revolver.
+
+"Huh!" grunted the negro, producing a similar pistol, "yo' ain' no bettah
+fixed dan Ah be."
+
+"We're quits," laughed Evarts easily, returning his weapon to his pocket.
+"Put up your rain-maker."
+
+"Den yo' won't call me Tar Baby no mo?"
+
+"No more."
+
+"All right, den." Ebony put up his weapon.
+
+"Now, what's the programme?" asked Evarts. "You've seen the leader?"
+
+"Yah. Ah's done see de right man. De orders am simple."
+
+"What are they?"
+
+"Misto Reade am to be killed de fust time he show himself," declared Sambo
+Ebony. "He to be shot down ez soon ez Ah can lay eyes on him. Maybe Ah
+have to shoot from ambush, but in any case he must be daid befo' de sun go
+down to-morrow. Our big men am tired to def dat Massa Reade stop do men
+from havin' a little liquor and playin' cairds evenin's."
+
+"Fine!" thought Tom, with a start. "If Sambo knew how close I am he'd
+carry out his orders right now! He has his pistol with him."
+
+"An' den, if dey's any fuss made," the black went on, "Misto Hazelton, he
+done gottah go nex'. Maybe Ah get cotch' w'en I do fo' Misto Reade. Ef
+dat happen, den dere's anodder man ready to do fo' Misto Hazelton."
+
+"And maybe the second man will get caught, too," suggested Evarts. "Then
+there'll be two of you with nooses around your necks."
+
+"We maybe get cotch', an' put in de jail," smirked Sambo Ebony, "but
+doan' yo' beliebe nothin' worse happen. Dere ain' many guards at de jail,
+an' do gang is on de way. De jail guards done be shot up, an' ouah folks
+turn' loose. Den we all strike out fo' new place, an' begin all ober
+again. Den a new gang come in heah and operate to get de money away from
+de breakwatah gangs. Dere's so much money in dat camp yondah dat ouah
+folks done gottah hab it ef a dozen men has to be kill'."
+
+"For cold-blooded, systematic villainy I believe I am listening to the
+limit!" quivered Lieutenant Dick Prescott under his breath.
+
+"They're insane, these people," was Tom's inward comment. "Let this crowd
+of scoundrels shoot up the jail guards, and do they think the citizens
+would ever allow the gang to operate in camp? There'd be more likelihood
+of the known members of the gang being lynched!"
+
+"I won't go back to jail if I can help it," laughed Evarts, speaking to
+the negro. "As soon as I even up one or two grudges I'm going to slip
+away."
+
+"Break yo' bail?" asked the negro, showing his teeth.
+
+"That's about the size of it," nodded Evarts.
+
+"Den de w'ite gemman who done fu'nish yo' bond will be feelin' bad, won't
+he?"
+
+"Let him---he's no friend of mine," grunted the discharged foreman.
+
+"Maybe yo'd like de job ob tendin' to Boss Reade yo'so'f?" hinted Sambo
+darkly.
+
+"Oh, I'm going to settle with Reade in some fashion," boasted Evarts with
+a leer. "I don't know that I want to kill him. I'd rather cripple him
+and let him live a life of misery."
+
+"Thank you!" thought Tom from his hiding place.
+
+"There's another chap we'll have to deal with, too, I'm thinking," Evarts
+went on. "Reade and Hazelton have a friend of theirs here, and he's
+likely to make some trouble for us. He's an army officer."
+
+"I done heah'd ob him," nodded Sambo. "We can settle wid him, too."
+
+"We ought to, for he helped arrest me, and he's to be a witness on the
+torpedo matter."
+
+"W'ate's his name---de ahmy man's?" inquired Sambo.
+
+"Prescott. He's---"
+
+The speaker stopped suddenly, looking about him.
+
+"What was that, Tar?" Evarts demanded.
+
+"W'at yo' talkin' 'bout?"
+
+"I heard a noise, and it was right over there," replied Evarts, pointing
+to where Tom and Dick lay hidden.
+
+"I didn't heah nuffin'."
+
+"I did, I tell you, and it will have to be looked into," insisted the
+ex-foreman, drawing his automatic revolver.
+
+"Go ahaid, den," encouraged Sambo, also drawing his weapon. "Ef anybody
+been a-lis'enin', den shoot him full ob holes!"
+
+Evarts darted at the bushes ahead of his companion. Then an exultant yell
+came from him.
+
+"Hustle, Tar---and shoot straight! Here are the very people we want---I
+caught sight of them!"
+
+"Den watch me!" chuckled Sambo Ebony, flourishing his weapon and dashing
+forward in the tracks of Evarts.
+
+There was no time for the chums to rise and dart away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+MR. BASCOMB HEARS BAD NEWS
+
+
+When Evarts used the word "people" he employed it only in a general sense.
+He had seen no one but Tom Reade, but Tom was the one person in the world
+whom the ex-foreman wanted most to 'see' at a disadvantage.
+
+"Now, I have you!" Evarts croaked hoarsely, rushing in, flourishing his
+weapon, then letting the muzzle drop to the position of aim.
+
+Dick Prescott, unseen, stirred almost under the fellow's feet.
+
+Flop! Bump! Caught by the legs, by that famous football player, Dick
+Prescott, Evarts simply had to go down on his back.
+
+In the same instant Reade leaped, then bent over the prostrate foe.
+
+Evarts was too much dazed to resist much. Tom snatched the revolver out
+of his hand.
+
+Sambo, beholding this much, came to a dismayed stop for an instant.
+
+"Dick, it's your trade to know how to handle this tool better than I can,"
+Tom cried, passing the captured revolver to Prescott, who swiftly received
+it as he rose. "I'm afraid," continued the young engineer, "that it's
+going to be necessary to kill the negro."
+
+"Wow! Woof!" uttered Sambo Ebony. It didn't take that villain an instant
+to decide on flight. Bending low, the black man ran off with frantic
+speed.
+
+Dick took a step forward---only one, for Evarts furiously gripped at one
+of the young army officer's ankles, bringing him down to his knees.
+
+"Hang you, you hound!" ground out Tom, in a rage, as he threw himself
+athwart of the ex-foreman. Within the next thirty seconds Evarts received
+a swift, fearful pummeling.
+
+"Let up, Mr. Reade! Let up!" cried the wretch. "I'll behave myself."
+
+"I'll wager you will," retorted the young engineer grimly, as he gripped
+Evarts by the coat collar and drew him to his feet.
+
+Dick was up and had run ahead some distance. But the time that had been
+gained for the black man had proved sufficient. Sambo, was now out of
+sight, nor did he send back any sound to guide his pursuers.
+
+"It may have to be a long hunt for the negro," remarked Tom Reade when
+Lieutenant Dick stepped back to state the case. "Stand by me and shoot
+this fellow down in his tracks if he tries to get away."
+
+"Why, what are you going to do to me?" quaked the ex-foreman.
+
+"It's back to jail for yours," Tom informed him crisply.
+
+"Then the laugh will be on you," jeered Evarts. "I'm out on bail---all in
+regular form."
+
+"You're not on bail on the latest charge against you---attempted murderous
+assault," Reade rejoined. "Nor will any court allow you out on bail again
+when Mr. Prescott and I testify to hearing you tell the negro that you
+were going to jump your bail."
+
+"Humph! That was all a joke," blustered Evarts.
+
+"All right," nodded Tom. "Explain the joke to the judge, if you can find
+a judge who's a good and willing listener. What you'll find, at this time,
+is that a hundred thousand dollars' worth of bail won't get you out of
+jail. Start along with you," Tom wound up, shaking Evarts by the arm that
+he gripped. "If this sneak tries to get away, Dick, bring him down with a
+bullet."
+
+"I'm ready enough to do it," Prescott agreed.
+
+A sudden great change came over the ex-foreman. At first he threatened.
+Then he begged to be turned loose, promising nothing but the best behavior
+in the future.
+
+"Stop all your nonsense," ordered Reade finally. "There's only one proper
+place on earth for you, Evarts, and that's behind the bars. Now, move
+right along, or I'll give you a worse walloping every time you stop or
+argue."
+
+Finding that nothing would avail with these determined captors the
+ex-foreman relapsed into sulks. However, he kept walking straight ahead,
+obeying every order addressed to him.
+
+Tom stopped briefly at the cottage. Mr. Prenter was not there, and
+Harry Hazelton had turned in. Nicolas was lying on a blanket on the
+porch.
+
+"You'll have to keep awake until I get back, anyway, Nicolas, and keep
+your eyes open," Tom informed the Mexican. "Sambo is at large again, and
+I'm afraid he may turn up here."
+
+"I shall know how to take care of him, Senor," grinned the Mexican holding
+up his right forefinger.
+
+"That wouldn't help you, this time," Tom retorted dryly. "Mr. Sambo Ebony
+has a revolver with him. Don't let him get a shot at you; he'd be only
+too glad to even the score. Now, Dick, I guess we'd better get Evarts over
+to the jail."
+
+Away started the chums and their prisoner while Nicolas went inside to
+warn Harry.
+
+Not so very much later Tom and Dick turned Evarts over to the police in
+Blixton. Evarts was locked up on the new charge. The revolver taken from
+him was turned over to the police as evidence. The chums also gave their
+information that they had overheard the ex-foreman tell the negro that he
+intended to jump bail. But the greatest of all was the news of the plot to
+rescue the gambler prisoners now in jail.
+
+Then the chums started back to camp.
+
+"I noticed," said Lieutenant Prescott, in a low tone, "that you didn't
+mention the conversation between Bascomb and Evarts."
+
+"I hadn't any right to," Tom said simply. "If Mr. Bascomb once had trouble
+in his life, but is living honestly now, it would be criminal of me to
+expose such a secret that he wouldn't want known. Mr. Bascomb's past is
+none of my business."
+
+"I'm mighty glad to hear you talk that way about it," said Prescott,
+resting a hand on Reade's shoulder.
+
+"Why?" demanded Tom rather bluntly. "Did you think that I could feel any
+other way about it?"
+
+"But Evarts is pretty sure to talk a lot about Bascomb, now," hinted the
+young army officer.
+
+"If he does," sighed Tom, "I don't know that I can think of any way to
+stop the fellow."
+
+"Then you don't believe that Mr. Bascomb's evil record of past years
+affects his honesty now?" Dick went on after a long pause.
+
+"I don't believe it," Tom answered with unusual emphasis. "If I did it
+would be as much as if I said that a fellow who once makes a wrong step
+must never hope to get back into the right path again. Mr. Prenter, I am
+certain, is an honest man and an unusually keen one. He is satisfied to
+trust Mr. Bascomb as president of the company. But, if Evarts is some
+sort of family connection of Bascomb's, and if he has often threatened to
+tell all about Mr. Bascomb's past history, you can imagine the terror that
+poor Mr. Bascomb has lived in for years."
+
+"If I were in Bascomb's place," Dick declared positively, "I would go
+before the board of directors and tell them the whole story. Then no one
+else could ever hold any power over me."
+
+"I guess that's the way all of us think we would act if we'd meet a
+blackmailer," nodded Reade. "Yet I guess most of the victims, when there's
+a sad, true story that could be told about them, pay the blackmailer and
+so secure silence."
+
+"Which may be another way," mused the young army officer, "of saying that
+most men are cowards. Or, maybe, it's another way, after all, of saying
+that the man who does anything very wrong or crooked is generally such a
+coward at heart that he'll spend his savings in keeping his secret from the
+world."
+
+"Yet Bascomb must have shown considerable bravery in meeting Evarts's
+demands," suddenly suggested Reade. "Otherwise, Mr. Bascomb would now be
+a poor man and Evarts would have spent all of Bascomb's money. Heretofore,
+I imagine, Evarts hasn't been able to blackmail his relative for anything
+much more substantial than a good job. I hear that Evarts has been drawing
+good pay from the Melliston Company for something more than four
+years---and Evarts isn't a very useful man, at that."
+
+"Then, after four years of easy berths, no wonder Evarts hates you, Tom,
+for having bounced him out," smiled Dick Prescott.
+
+"I'm afraid I'm going to do worse than bounce the fellow out of a job,"
+sighed Reade. "I'm afraid I've helped head him for prison for a term of
+a good many long years."
+
+"Evarts did that much for himself," Prescott argued. "I wouldn't waste
+much worry over the fellow."
+
+"I suppose it's my way to worry over a dog with a sore paw," answered Reade
+thoughtfully, "Certainly Evarts has done some mean things against me, and
+without any just cause; but I don't like the thought of his having to be
+locked up, away from sunlight, joy and life, for so many years as I'm
+afraid are coming to him."
+
+Arrived at camp, Tom found Mr. Bascomb walking back and forth on the porch
+of the engineers' house.
+
+"You're up late, sir," was Tom's friendly greeting to the president.
+
+"Yes, Reade; I can't sleep to-night," said Mr. Bascomb wearily. "I came
+over here to talk with Prenter. Where is he?"
+
+"Asleep, I imagine, sir," Tom answered.
+
+"Wrong," replied President Bascomb. "I've already been inside, but
+Prenter isn't in the house."
+
+"Then perhaps he thought it too lively around here," laughed Reade, "and
+went over to Blixton to sleep at the hotel."
+
+Mr. Bascomb didn't reply to this, but puffed hard at the black cigar he
+was smoking and sending up clouds of smoke.
+
+But the president of the Melliston Company became instantly more distracted
+when Tom Reade began an account of the capture of Evarts, and his jailing,
+and the escape of Mr. Sambo Ebony.
+
+Presently Bascomb began to puff harder than ever at his cigar.
+
+"Reade," he finally blurted out, "how long were you hiding there before
+Evarts found you there?"
+
+"Some little time," Tom admitted vaguely.
+
+More clouds of cigar smoke ascended; then, shaking, and his face a sickly
+white and green, the president inquired:
+
+"Reade, were you there---you and Mr. Prescott---at the time when I talked
+with Evarts on that very spot to-night?"
+
+There was no use in evading the question, so engineer Reade answered in a
+straightforward manner:
+
+"Yes, sir. Mr. Prescott and I were there."
+
+"Then---then---y-y-you heard all of my talk with Evarts?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Bascomb's teeth began to chatter so that he was forced to steady his jaws.
+Tom and Dick looked aside, pitying the man for his evident anguish of mind.
+
+At last the president steadied himself enough to speak.
+
+"Reade, I know I haven't been a very good friend of yours, and I even
+tried to work you out of this contract altogether. Now, you know my
+secret, and I'm in your power!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+EBONY SAYS "THUMBS UP"
+
+
+Tom Reade stared in frank amazement at the trembling man.
+
+"Do you mean to insult me, Mr. Bascomb?" demanded the young engineer
+bluntly.
+
+"Insult you? The fates forbid," replied Bascomb with a sickly grin.
+"Reade, I don't dare offend you in any way."
+
+"But you do insult me, sir, in believing that it would be possible for me
+to make any hostile use of whatever unpleasant knowledge I may possess
+against you."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you wouldn't use the knowledge?" demanded the
+president of the Melliston Company.
+
+"You're insulting me again, sir. Perhaps you are to be pardoned, Mr.
+Bascomb. You have been so long dancing to the fiddling of an Evarts that
+you don't realize how impossible it is for a gentleman to do a dishonorable
+thing."
+
+"Then---then I---I can rely upon your silence?" demanded Mr. Bascomb,
+eagerly.
+
+"I am sorry, sir, to think that you even think it necessary to ask me such
+a question," rejoined Reade gravely.
+
+"Reade! Reade! You can't imagine how grateful you'll find me if I really
+can rely upon you to forget what you overheard to-night!" cried the
+humiliated man. "And you, Mr. Prescott---may I depend upon you, also,
+to preserve silence?"
+
+"I'm afraid, sir, you're putting me in Reade's class as an insulted man,"
+Dick smiled grimly. "My friend, the people of this country, in the person
+of their President, have issued to me a commission certifying that I am
+worthy to wear the shoulder-straps of an army officer. The shoulder-straps
+stand for the strictest sense of honor in all things. If I depart, ever
+so little, from the laws of honor, I prove my unfitness to wear
+shoulder-straps. Have I answered you."
+
+There was silence for a few moments. Then, Mr. Bascomb, having smoked his
+cigar out, tossed the butt away.
+
+"I'd like to offer you a little advice, Mr. Bascomb, if you won't think
+I'm too forward."
+
+"What is it?" asked the president, turning briskly upon the young chief
+engineer.
+
+"Just as long as you both live, Mr. Bascomb, Evarts is likely to bother
+you, in one way or another. Even if he goes to prison himself he'll find
+a way to bother you from the other side of the grated door. Mr. Bascomb,
+why don't you yourself disclose this little affair in your past history
+to the board of directors? Then it would be past any blackmailer's power
+to harm you."
+
+"I could tell the directors in only one way," Mr. Bascomb answered, his
+face growing sallow. "That would be to tell my story and hand in my
+resignation in the same breath. Reade, you don't realize how much the
+presidency of the Melliston Company means to me! To resign, or to be
+kicked out, would end my career in the business world."
+
+In the near darkness a step sounded on the gravel. Then Mr. Prenter came
+briskly forward.
+
+"Bascomb," said the treasurer of the company, "Reade's advice was good,
+though wholly unnecessary. There is no need to tell the directors the
+story of your past misfortune. Most of them know it already."
+
+The president's face grew grayish as he listened in torment.
+
+"Moreover," Mr. Prenter continued, "most of us have known all about the
+matter since just before you were elected president."
+
+"And yet you allowed me to be elected!" cried Mr. Bascomb hoarsely.
+
+"Yes; because we looked up your life and your conduct since---well, ever
+since you left the past behind and came out into business life again.
+Our investigation showed that you had been living for years as an honest
+man. The rest of us on the board are men---or think we are---and we voted,
+informally, not to allow one misstep of yours to outweigh years of the most
+upright living since."
+
+"Knowing it all, you elected me to be president of the company!" gasped
+Mr. Bascomb, as though he could not believe his ears or his senses.
+
+"Now, let us hear no more about it," urged Mr. Prenter, cordially. "If I
+listened just now---if I played the part of the eavesdropper, allow me to
+explain my conduct by saying that I, too, was present to-night when you
+talked with Evarts. I heard, and I knew that Reade and his friend heard.
+I listened, just now, in order that I might make sure that Thomas Reade,
+engineer, is a man of honor at all times. And now, let no one say a word
+more."
+
+Some one else was coming. All on the porch turned and waited to see who it
+was. Out of the shadows came a hang-dog looking sort of fellow.
+
+"Is Mr. Bascomb here?" asked the newcomer.
+
+"I am Mr. Bascomb," spoke the president.
+
+"Here's a note for you," said the man, handing over an envelope.
+
+Tom stepped inside, got a lantern and lighted it, placing it upon the porch
+table. With the aid of this illumination Mr. Bascomb read the brief note
+directed to him.
+
+"It's from Evarts," said the president, looking up with a quiet laugh.
+"He commands me to come to him at once, in his cell, and to arrange some
+way of getting out. My man," turning to the messenger, "are you going back
+to Evarts?"
+
+"Yes," nodded the messenger, shifting his weight from one foot to another.
+
+"Go back to Evarts, then, and tell him that he'll have to threaten some one
+else this time. Tell him that I am through with him."
+
+"Huh!" growled the hang-dog messenger. "I believe Evarts said that, if old
+Bascomb wasn't quick, he'd make trouble for some one."
+
+"Tell Evarts," said Mr. Prenter, "that he can't make trouble for any one
+but himself, and that he had better save his breath for the next time he
+needs it."
+
+"Evarts will be awful mad, if I go back to him with any talk like that,"
+insinuated the messenger meaningly.
+
+"See here, fellow," interjected. Tom Reade, stepping forward quickly, "I'm
+rather tired and out of condition to-night, but if you don't leave here as
+fast as you can go, I'll kick you every step of the way for the first
+half-mile back to Blixton! Do you think you understand me?"
+
+"I---I reckon I do," admitted the fellow.
+
+"Then start before you tempt my right foot! I'll give you five seconds
+to get off."
+
+There could be no mistaking that order. The messenger started off, nor
+did he glance backward as long as he was in sight.
+
+"You see how easily a chap like Evarts can be disposed of," smiled Mr.
+Prenter.
+
+"He'll send back again for another try, within an hour," prophesied Mr.
+Bascomb, wearily.
+
+"If he does," laughed Dick Prescott, shortly, "his second appeal won't
+come by the same messenger."
+
+"Then you were near us, Mr. Prenter, when Evarts and the negro charged us?"
+Tom inquired.
+
+"I was," smiled the treasurer. "That convicts me of cowardice, doesn't it,
+in not having come to your aid at the moment of attack? I wasn't quite as
+big a coward as I would seem, though. The truth is, I was behind you. Had
+I jumped in in that exciting moment, you would have thought other enemies
+were attacking from behind. You would have been confused and would have
+lost the fight."
+
+"By Jove, sir, but that was quick thinking and shrewdness on your part!"
+ejaculated Dick Prescott.
+
+"Then you acquit me of cowardice?"
+
+"No," smiled the young army officer, "for I hadn't thought of accusing you
+of lack of courage."
+
+"I am glad you didn't," sighed the treasurer. "I would rather be suspected
+of almost anything than of lacking manly courage. Afterwards I didn't make
+my presence known to you, for, at that time, I didn't want you to know that
+I had overheard a certain conversation."
+
+"My cowardice has made a dreadful mess of things in a lot of ways, hasn't
+it?" demanded Mr. Bascomb bitterly.
+
+"That's all past now, so it doesn't matter," spoke up Tom Reade. "We have
+just one move more to make in this baffling game, and then I fancy we shall
+have won. When Mr. Sambo Ebony, as I have nicknamed him, is safely jailed
+I think we shall find ourselves undisturbed in the future. We shall then
+be permitted to go ahead and finish the million-dollar breakwater as a work
+and a triumph of peace."
+
+"Every time that one of us opens his mouth," laughed Mr. Prenter, "I am
+expecting to hear a big bang down by the breakwater to punctuate the
+speaker's sentence. I wonder whether the scoundrels back of Sambo have
+any more novel ways for setting off their big firecrackers around our
+wall?"
+
+"It might not be a bad idea for me to get out on the watch again," Tom
+suggested, rising. "If I get in more trouble than I can handle I'll just
+yell 'Mr. Prenter,' for I shall know that he'll be within easy hearing
+distance."
+
+The treasurer laughed, as he, too, rose.
+
+"My being so near you before, Reade, was just accident. I was prowling
+about on my own account, when you and your army friend passed me in the
+deep woods. I had an idea that you were out for some definite purpose,
+and so I just trailed along at your rear in order to be near any excitement
+that you might turn up."
+
+"And I suppose you're going to follow us this time, too," smiled Tom Reade.
+
+"Prenter," suggested the president of the company, "what do you say if you
+and I prowl in some other direction? I've been such a miserable coward all
+through this affair that now I'd like to go with you. If we run into any
+trouble I'll try to show you that I'm not all coward."
+
+"Come along, Bascomb," agreed the treasurer cordially. "Reade, I give you
+my word that we won't intentionally follow on your trail."
+
+At a nod from Tom, Dick was at his side. The two high school chums started
+off with brisk steps.
+
+"Which way are you going?" whispered Dick.
+
+"Let's go down to the breakwater," suggested Tom. "I really ought to visit
+it once in the night, despite the fact that Corbett is a wholly reliable
+foreman, and that he has his own pick of workmen on patrol duty there."
+
+As the chums stepped out from under the trees in full view of the
+breakwater site they beheld the lanterns of the patrol, like so many
+fireflies, twinkling and bobbing here and there along the narrow-topped
+retaining wall.
+
+Tom and Dick went out on the wall until they encountered the first workman
+on patrol. Tom took this man's lantern and signaled the motor boat as it
+stood in shore.
+
+"All going right, Corbett?" the young engineer hailed, as soon as the
+"Morton" had come up alongside.
+
+"As far as I can see, Mr. Reade, there's not a sign of the enemy to-night.
+But of course you know, sir, that we've been just as sure on other nights,
+only to have a large part of the wall blown clean out of the water."
+
+"All I can say," Tom nodded, "is to go on keeping your eyes and ears open."
+
+"Yes, sir; you may be sure I'll do that," nodded the foreman.
+
+Then Reade and his army chum returned to the shore.
+
+"I guess it will be a wholly blind hunt," Tom laughed, "but I've a notion
+for returning to the spot where we encountered Sambo Ebony before this
+night."
+
+After they had left the beach well behind, the chums strolled in under the
+trees of a rather sparse grove.
+
+Well in toward the center of the grove stood one tree larger than the rest.
+
+From behind this Sambo Ebony swiftly appeared, just at the right instant
+for surprise. In each hand the negro held a huge automatic revolver.
+
+"Gemmen," chuckled the negro coolly, "Ah jess be nacherally obliged to yo'
+both if yo'll stick yo' hands ez high up in de air ez yo' can h'ist 'em.
+It am a long worm dat nebber turns, an' Ah'se done reckon dat Ah'se de
+tu'ning worm to-night! Thumbs up, gemmen!"
+
+Despite Sambo's bantering tone there could be no doubt that to fail to obey
+him would be to invite a swift fusillade.
+
+Reluctantly Tom Reade thrust his hands up skyward. Nor did Dick Prescott
+hesitate to follow so prompt an example.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+"Now Ah reckon Ah'se done got yo'," laughed the big negro, insolently. "It
+am a question ob w'ich one Ah wantah pick off fust!"
+
+In his wicked joy over having both the young engineer and the army officer
+wholly at his mercy Sambo, his mouth open and his massive teeth showing
+white in his grin, advanced nearer.
+
+Yet he did not fail to keep each of his enemies covered. He was watching
+most alertly for any sign of rebellion on the part of his victims.
+
+Nor was there any doubt in the mind of either young man that the black,
+after playing with them, meant to dispose of them as his possession of
+pistols indicated.
+
+He would torment them first, then ruthlessly "shoot them up."
+
+"How long are we to keep our hands up?" asked Tom banteringly.
+
+It would be foolish to say that Reade was not afraid, but he was determined
+to keep Ebony from discovering the fact.
+
+"Yo's to keep yo' hands up longer dan yo' can keep yo' moufs shut!" scowled
+the black man, his ugly streak showing once more.
+
+"It makes me think of the way we used to play football," laughed Reade,
+though there was not much mirth in his chuckle.
+
+"Shut yo' mouf, or Ah done gib yo' plenty to think erbout!" ordered Sambo
+angrily.
+
+That word "football" set Dick Prescott to tingling. He knew there was some
+hidden meaning in what Tom had said.
+
+"Are you trying to signal us, Sambo?" queried the army officer.
+
+That word "signal" was intended only for Tom's ear, for Lieutenant Prescott
+was beginning to guess at the truth.
+
+"On the gridiron, on the gridiron!" hummed Tom, audibly, as he tried
+clumsily to fit the words to the refrain of a popular song.
+
+Dick Prescott was "getting warm" on the scent of the hidden meaning.
+
+"Shut yo' mouf!" gruffly commanded the lack. "Ah doan' wantah tell yo' dat
+again, neider."
+
+"Right foot---high foot!" chanted Tom.
+
+Mentally Dick Prescott jumped as though he had been shot. "Right
+foot---high foot" had been one of their old kicking signals on the Gridley
+High School eleven!
+
+Lieutenant Dick Prescott fairly throbbed as he now understood the covered
+signal.
+
+"Now!" left Reade's lips with explosive energy, though the word was
+low-spoken.
+
+At "right foot---high foot" and "now" each youth suddenly shot his right
+foot up into the air.
+
+Tom's landed against Sambo's right wrist, kicking the automatic revolver
+completely out of the negro's hands.
+
+Dick's kick landed against the black man's left wrist. The pistol held
+in Sambo's left hand was discharged, though the muzzle had been driven up
+at such an angle that the bullet passed harmlessly over Prescott's head.
+
+In a twinkling Ebony had been disarmed.
+
+Darting low, Tom grappled with the negro's legs. Then Reade rose swiftly,
+toppling Sambo over backward.
+
+Dick Prescott bounded upon the prostrate foe, beating him with both fists.
+Tom also threw himself into the melee.
+
+While the black might have thrashed either youth alone he was not equal to
+handling both at the same time.
+
+"I've got him, now, and he'll behave, I guess," panted Tom Reade, at last.
+"Slip off, Dick, and gather in the pistols."
+
+As Prescott did so Sambo made the last few efforts of which he was capable.
+He had been hammered so hard, however, that Tom did not have extreme
+difficulty in holding him down.
+
+"Now, lie still and take orders," warned Dick, pressing one of the pistols
+against the black man's temple, "or I'll get excited and send you out of
+this world for keeps!"
+
+Sambo Ebony thereupon dropped into sullen muttering, but did not offer to
+resist. Prescott, as a soldier, had a businesslike way of handling weapons
+that cowed the black man.
+
+Tom got up leisurely from the prostrate foe.
+
+"Now, you can stand a little farther off, Dick," he suggested, "and then
+the fellow won't get a chance to tip you over with any trick. If he tries
+to get up before he's told you can easily bring him to earth again, for
+you've been taught the exact use of firearms."
+
+"Good idea," nodded Lieutenant Prescott, backing away a few feet. "Are you
+going to run for assistance now, Tom?"
+
+"No," retorted Reade. "You're going to shoot for it."
+
+"Eh?"
+
+"Fire a shot into the air from each revolver. That, with the accidental
+discharge of a moment go, will show any listener that there's trouble going
+on over here. I miss my guess if the shots don't bring help very shortly."
+
+Bang! Bang!
+
+Nor was Reade's guess a wrong one. Not much time passed before steps were
+heard hurrying in their direction.
+
+"Here! This way!" summoned Tom.
+
+"Are you hurt?" sounded Mr. Prenter's voice.
+
+"No; but we have Sambo Ebony here, and he's going to be hurt if he tries
+to stir."
+
+President and treasurer of the Melliston Company raced to the spot. Barely
+sixty seconds afterward Foreman Corbett, with four negroes and one Italian
+laborer, also came up.
+
+"Corbett, you have the handcuffs I gave you the other night, haven't you?"
+Tom asked.
+
+"Yes, sir. Here they are."
+
+Tom took the steel bracelets, ordering Mr. Sambo Ebony to turn over and
+lie face downward, with his hands behind his back. Then the handcuffs were
+slipped over the black wrists.
+
+"Now, Sambo," called Tom laughingly, "we'll set you on your feet and
+whistle the rogues' march for you all the way."
+
+"Yah, yah, yah!" jeered one of the negroes who had come up with Foreman
+Corbett, as he gazed contemptuously up and down the bulky figure of Mr.
+Ebony. "Yo' done been tellin' us 'spectable cullud fo'ks dat de great way
+to injye life was to be tough an' smaht, lak yo'se'f. How ye' feel erbout
+it now? Doan' yo' wish yo' been mo' 'spectable yo'se'f? Doan' ye' done
+wish dat ye' had been to camp-meeting a few times in yo' life? Doan' yo'
+wish ye' been honest most er de time, an' been a hahd-wo'kin',
+pay-ye'-bills niggah lak some ob de rest oh us? Yo' fool lump er tar,
+yo' boun' ter go de way ob all de wicked---down to ye' grave in misery an'
+sorrow. It's de way oh all ob yo' lazy, ugly, wuthless kind!"
+
+"I've heard philosophers talk," laughed Dick, in an aside to Tom Reade,
+"but I can't say that I ever yet listened to a trained philosopher who had
+the truth of life down any more pat than the negro workman who just now
+gave his views."
+
+"On all matters of good behavior wise men of all degrees hold about the
+same views," nodded Reade, "even though they may express their thoughts in
+differing grades of speech. This good negro knows just where the bad negro
+has failed in life."
+
+Mr. Sambo Ebony was marched off to jail. Even up to the minute when he
+was sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment the big black stubbornly
+refused to give his real name. He was therefore taken away to prison
+under the name "Sambo Ebony."
+
+Evarts got off with eight years and four months in prison. He is still
+serving that sentence.
+
+Hawkins and his crew of gamblers and bootleggers were sentenced to two
+years apiece, as only misdemeanor charges could be preferred against them.
+
+From the foregoing it will be inferred that the proposed jail delivery by
+other members of the gang from elsewhere did not come off according to
+plan. The truth was that the citizens of Blixton, when appealed to,
+organized a strong guard which was thrown around the jail. Doubtless the
+gang-members were warned in time, and so did not attempt to commit
+wholesale suicide by running against a citizens' posse.
+
+Mr. Bascomb is still president of the Melliston Company, and he is holding
+up his head. No further fear of blackmailers oppresses him.
+
+Dick Prescott was able to remain several days longer---long enough, in
+fact, to see the more substantial structure of the million-dollar
+breakwater begin to go up just inside the completed retaining wall.
+
+Then Lieutenant Dick was obliged to resume his journey on to Fort Clowdry,
+Colorado. What happened to Prescott, after joining the army as an officer,
+is told in "_Uncle Sam's Boys on Field Duty_," the second volume in the
+"_Boys of the Army Series_."
+
+Though Harry Hazelton was disappointed in missing some of the excitement at
+Blixton, he had no occasion to complain in that respect when he and Tom
+entered upon the next great undertaking of the young engineer pair.
+
+After the disappearance of the big black from the scene there was no
+further trouble at the breakwater.
+
+Blixton is now an important though artificial harbor. With the completion
+of the breakwater, and the building of a lighthouse, the next work
+undertaken was the building of stone docks at which the steamships of the
+Melliston Line now dock.
+
+The next adventures that befell Tom and Harry were destined to be the most
+wonderful and exciting of all. These adventures must be reserved for
+complete telling in the next volume in this series, which is published
+under the title, "_The Young Engineers In The Lead; Or, The stroke That
+Made Them Masters of Their Field_."
+
+It is a story of almost incredible efforts, backed by strong ambition, of
+two American youths who had both the desire and the will to toil
+unceasingly and at last reach their goal.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Young Engineers on the Gulf
+by H. Irving Hancock
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YOUNG ENGINEERS ON THE GULF ***
+
+***** This file should be named 14369.txt or 14369.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/4/3/6/14369/
+
+Produced by Jim Ludwig
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/14369.zip b/old/14369.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a798148
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/14369.zip
Binary files differ