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+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.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68182 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68182)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The quest of the Silver Swan, by W.
-Bert Foster
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The quest of the Silver Swan
- A land and sea tale for boys
-
-Author: W. Bert Foster
-
-Release Date: May 26, 2022 [eBook #68182]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by the
- Library of Congress)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEST OF THE SILVER
-SWAN ***
-
-
-[Illustration: “WELL, SHIPMATE, OUT GUNNING?”]
-
-
-
-
- THE QUEST OF THE
- SILVER SWAN
-
- A Land and Sea Tale for Boys
-
- BY
- W. BERT FOSTER
-
- Author of “In Alaskan Waters,” “With Washington at
- Valley Forge,” “The Lost Galleon,” “The Treasure
- of Southlake Farm,” etc.
-
- _ILLUSTRATED_
-
- NEW YORK
- CHATTERTON-PECK COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
-GOOD BOOKS FOR BOYS
-
-
- The Young Builders of Swiftdale. By Allen Chapman. Cloth. Price, 60
- cents.
-
- Andy the Acrobat. By Peter T. Harkness. Cloth. Illustrated. Price, 60
- cents.
-
- Canoe Boys and Camp Fires. By William Murray Graydon. Cloth. Price,
- $1.00.
-
- From Office Boy to Reporter. By Howard R. Garis. Cloth. Illustrated.
- Price, $1.00.
-
- With Axe and Flintlock. By George Waldo Browne. Cloth. Illustrated.
- Price, $1.00.
-
- The Crimson Banner. By William D. Moffat. Cloth. Price, $1.00.
-
- The Quest of the Silver Swan. By W. Bert Foster. Cloth. Price, 75
- cents.
-
-
- Copyright, by Frank A. Munsey Co., 1894 and 1895, as a serial.
-
- Copyright, 1907, by Chatterton-Peck Company.
-
- THE QUEST OF THE SILVER SWAN.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. THE RAFT AT SEA 9
-
- II. INTRODUCING BRANDON TARR AND UNCLE ARAD 21
-
- III. AN ACCOUNT OF THE WRECK OF THE SILVER SWAN 34
-
- IV. BRANDON COMES TO A DECISION 40
-
- V. UNCLE ARAD HAS RECOURSE TO LEGAL FORCE 45
-
- VI. RELATING A MEETING BETWEEN UNCLE ARAD AND THE SAILOR 51
-
- VII. INTRODUCING “SQUARE” HOLT AND HIS OPINIONS 59
-
- VIII. SOMETHING ABOUT LEAVING THE FARM 66
-
- IX. ANOTHER LETTER FROM NEW YORK 72
-
- X. BRANDON’S ARRIVAL AT THE METROPOLIS 79
-
- XI. THE FIRM OF ADONIRAM PEPPER & CO. 85
-
- XII. IN WHICH BRANDON VENTURES INTO RATHER DISREPUTABLE
- SOCIETY 90
-
- XIII. THE OLD SAILOR WITH THE WOODEN LEG 98
-
- XIV. THE OLD SAILOR’S EXCITEMENT 103
-
- XV. CALEB RECEIVES A STARTLING COMMUNICATION 110
-
- XVI. TELLING HOW BRANDON BEARDED THE LION IN HIS LAIR 116
-
- XVII. HOW THE OMNIPRESENT WEEKS PROVES HIS RIGHT TO THE
- TERM 123
-
- XVIII. BRANDON LISTENS TO A SHORT FAMILY HISTORY 130
-
- XIX. TELLING A GREAT DEAL ABOUT DERELICTS IN GENERAL 137
-
- XX. THE CONTENTS OF SEVERAL INTERESTING DOCUMENTS 144
-
- XXI. IN WHICH MR. PEPPER MAKES A PROPOSITION TO CALEB
- AND DON 151
-
- XXII. INTO BAD COMPANY 156
-
- XXIII. MR. ALFRED WEEKS AT A CERTAIN CONFERENCE 163
-
- XXIV. HOW A NEFARIOUS COMPACT WAS FORMED 171
-
- XXV. UNCLE ARAD MAKES AN ANNOUNCEMENT 176
-
- XXVI. CALEB WETHERBEE OBSTRUCTS THE COURSE OF THE LAW 183
-
- XXVII. WHEREIN BRANDON TARR CONCEALS HIMSELF 188
-
- XXVIII. THE DEPARTURE OF THE WHALEBACK, NUMBER THREE 197
-
- XXIX. THE STOWAWAY ABOARD THE SUCCESS 208
-
- XXX. SHOWING WHAT MISS MILLY DOES FOR BRANDON 217
-
- XXXI. WHEREIN NUMBER THREE APPROACHES THE SUPPOSED
- VICINITY OF THE SILVER SWAN 224
-
- XXXII. RELATING HOW THE SILVER SWAN WAS HEARD FROM 229
-
- XXXIII. IN WHICH COMRADES IN COURAGE LAUNCH THEMSELVES
- UPON THE DEEP 234
-
- XXXIV. THE INCIDENTS OF A NIGHT OF PERIL 240
-
- XXXV. SHOWING HOW CALEB APPEARED ON THE SCENE JUST
- TOO LATE 250
-
- XXXVI. THE CASTAWAYS ON THE BRIG SUCCESS 257
-
- XXXVII. LEFT IN DOUBT 264
-
- XXXVIII. HOW THE ENEMY APPEARED 270
-
- XXXIX. SHOWING HOW MR. WEEKS MADE HIS LAST MOVE 278
-
- XL. IN WHICH THE ENEMY IS DEFEATED AND THE QUEST OF
- THE SILVER SWAN IS ENDED 286
-
-
-
-
-THE QUEST OF THE SILVER SWAN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE RAFT AT SEA
-
-
-THE sun, whose upper edge had just appeared above the horizon, cast its
-first red beams aslant a deserted wilderness of heaving billows.
-
-Here and there a flying fish, spurning its usual element, cut the air
-like a swift ray of light, falling back into the sea again after its
-short flight with a splash that sent myriad drops flashing in the
-sunlight.
-
-There were not a few triangular objects, dark in color, and looking
-like tiny sails, darting along the surface of the sea, first in this
-direction and then in that. There was a peculiar sinister motion
-to these fleshy sails, an appearance to make the beholder shudder
-involuntarily; for these objects were the dorsal fins of sharks, and
-there is nothing more bloodthirsty and cruel than these “tigers of the
-sea.”
-
-It was quite noticeable that these monsters had gathered about an
-object which, in comparison with the vast expanse of sea and sky, was
-but a speck. It labored heavily upon the surface of the sea, and
-seemed to possess a great attraction for the sharks.
-
-It was really a heavily built raft, more than twenty feet in length,
-and with a short, stumpy mast lashed upright amidships. Near each end
-was a long sea chest, both placed across the raft, and there were also
-a broken water butt and several empty cracker boxes lashed firmly (as
-were the chests) to the strongly built platform.
-
-At one end of this ungainly craft, behind one of the chests, lay two
-men; at the further side of the opposite chest reclined another.
-
-One might have thought the sea chests to be fortifications, for all
-three men were heavily armed, and each was extremely careful not to
-expose his person to the party behind the opposite chest.
-
-Between the two boxes lay the figure of a fourth man; but he was flat
-upon his face with his arms spread out in a most unnatural attitude. He
-was evidently dead.
-
-Of the two men who were at the forward end of the raft (or what was the
-forward end for the time being, the ocean currents having carried the
-craft in various directions during the several past days), of these
-two, I say, one was a person of imposing, if not handsome, presence,
-with curling brown hair streaked with gray, finely chiseled features,
-and skin bronzed by wind and weather; but now the features were most
-painfully emaciated, and a blood stained bandage was wrapped about his
-brow.
-
-His companion was a hearty looking old sea dog, well past the half
-century mark, but who had evidently stood the privations they had
-undergone far better than the first named.
-
-He was burned even darker than the other, was of massive figure and
-leonine head, and possessed a hand like a ham. One leg was bent up
-beneath him, but the other was stretched out stiffly, and it took only
-a casual glance to see that the old seaman had a wooden leg.
-
-Every few moments the latter individual raised his head carefully and
-peered over the chest, thus keeping a sharp watch on the movements of
-the single occupant of the space behind the other fortification.
-
-This person was a broad shouldered, deep chested man, seemingly quite
-as powerful as the wooden legged sailor. Privation and hardship had
-not improved his appearance, either, for his raven black beard and
-hair were matted and unkempt, and his bronzed face had that peculiar,
-pinched expression with which starvation marks its victims; and this
-look did not make his naturally villainous features less brutal.
-
-In truth, all three of these unfortunates were starving to death; the
-fourth man, who lay so still upon the rough boards between the two
-chests, was the first victim of the hardships they had suffered for the
-last ten days.
-
-These four men had been members of the ship’s company of the good brig
-Silver Swan, bound to Boston from Cape Town and Rio Janeiro. After
-leaving the latter port three weeks before, several severe storms had
-arisen and the brig was beaten terrifically by the elements for days
-and days.
-
-Finally, after having every stick wrenched from her and even the jury
-mast the crew had rigged, stripped bare, the brig, now being totally
-unmanageable, was blown upon a narrow and barren reef several leagues
-to the south and west of Cuba.
-
-The crew, who had ere this most faithfully obeyed the captain and mate,
-Caleb Wetherbee, now believing the vessel about to go to pieces, madly
-rushed to the boats, and lowering them into the heavy sea, lost their
-lives in their attempt to leave the brig.
-
-Captain Tarr and mate Wetherbee were able to save only two of the
-unfortunates--Paulo Montez, a Brazilian, and Jim Leroyd, the latter the
-least worthy of all the crew.
-
-These four had built the rude raft upon which they had now floated so
-long, and not daring to remain with the brig during another storm that
-seemed imminent, they set sail in the lumbering craft and left the well
-built and still seaworthy brig hard and fast upon the reef.
-
-This storm, which had frightened them from the Swan, was only severe
-enough to strip their rude mast of its sail and rigging and drive them
-seemingly far out of the course of other vessels, for not a sail had
-they sighted since setting out on the raft.
-
-Slowly their provisions had disappeared, while the now calmed sea
-carried them hither and thither as it listed; and at last the captain
-and mate had decided to put all hands upon still shorter allowance.
-
-At this, Leroyd, always an ugly and brutal fellow even aboard ship,
-had rebelled, and had tried to stir up his companion, Paulo, to mutiny
-against the two officers; but the Brazilian was already too far gone
-to join in any such scheme (in fact, he died the next forenoon), and
-Caleb Wetherbee had driven Leroyd to his present position behind the
-further chest, at the point of his pistol.
-
-Captain Tarr, who had received a heavy blow on the head from a falling
-block at the time of the brig’s wreck, was far less able to stand the
-hardship than either of his living companions, and, now that ten full
-days had expired since leaving the Silver Swan, he felt himself failing
-fast.
-
-Alone, he would have been unable to cope with Leroyd; but Caleb
-Wetherbee stood by him like a faithful dog and kept the villainous
-sailor in check. As Leroyd had demanded his share of the water and
-scanty store of provisions, the mate had, with careful exactness, given
-him his third and then made hint retire behind his chest again; for he
-could not trust the fellow an instant.
-
-“The scoundrel would put two inches o’ steel between both our ribs for
-the sake o’ gettin’ the whole o’ this grub,” declared Caleb, keeping a
-firm grip upon his pistol.
-
-“He’d only shorten my time a little, Cale,” gasped Captain Tarr, a
-paroxysm of pain weakening him terribly for the moment. “I can’t stand
-many such times as _that_,” he added, when the agony had passed.
-
-“Brace up, cap’n,” said the mate cheerfully. “You’ll pull through yet.”
-
-“Don’t deceive yourself, or try to deceive me, Caleb,” responded
-Captain Tarr gloomily. “I know my end is nigh, though I’m not an old
-man yet--younger than you, old trusty, by ten years. And my life’s
-been a failure, too,” he continued, more to himself than to his
-companion.
-
-“Tut! tut! don’t talk like that ’ere. Ye’ll have ter pull through for
-the sake o’ that boy o’ yourn, you know.”
-
-“I shall never see him again,” declared the injured man, with
-confidence. “And how can I die in peace when I know that I shall leave
-my son penniless?”
-
-“Penniless!” exclaimed Wetherbee. “Didn’t you own the brig, an’ ain’t
-you been makin’ v’y’ges in her for the past ten year?”
-
-“I _did_ own the Silver Swan, and I _have_ made paying voyages with
-her,” replied the captain weakly; “but, shame on me to have to say it,
-all my earnings have been swallowed up by a speculation which turned
-out to be utterly worthless. A sailor, Caleb, should stick by the sea,
-and keep his money in shipping; I went into a mine in Nevada and lost
-every cent I had saved.”
-
-“But there was the Swan,” said the dumfounded mate; “there’ll be the
-int’rest money on her--and a good bit it should be, too.”
-
-“Aye, _should_ be,” muttered Captain Tarr bitterly; “but the brig is on
-that reef and there’s not a cent of insurance on her.”
-
-“What! no insurance?” gasped Wetherbee.
-
-“No. When I left port last time my policy had run out, and I hadn’t a
-cent to pay for having it renewed. So, if the old brig’s bones whiten
-on that reef, poor Brandon will not get a cent.”
-
-“_If_ they do,” exclaimed the mate in wonder.
-
-“Yes, _if_ they do,” responded Captain Tarr, rising on his elbow and
-speaking lower, so that there could be no possibility of the man at the
-other end of the raft hearing his words; “for it’s my firm conviction,
-Caleb, that we’d done better to stick by the old Swan. This last storm
-drove hard from the west’ard. Suppose she’d slipped off again into
-deep water? She didn’t leak enough to keep her sweet, in spite of the
-terrific pounding she got from waves and rocks, and she might float
-for weeks--aye, for months--and you know she’d have plenty of company
-drifting up and down the Atlantic coast.”
-
-“But that ain’t probable, cap’n, though I’ll grant ye that we might
-have done better by stickin’ by her a while longer.”
-
-“Probable or not, Caleb, I _feel_ that it is true. You know, they say a
-dying man can see some things plainer than other folks.”
-
-Caleb was silenced by this, for he could not honestly aver that he did
-not believe his old commander to be near his end.
-
-“And we had a valuable cargo, too, you know--very valuable,” murmured
-Captain Tarr. “I put every cent I received from the sale of the goods
-we took to Cape Town into this cargo, and would have cleared a handsome
-profit--enough to have kept both Brandon and me in good circumstances
-for a year. And then, there is something else.”
-
-“Well, what is it?” Caleb asked, after taking a squint over the top of
-their breastwork to make sure that Leroyd had not ventured out.
-
-“If I’d got home with the Silver Swan, Caleb, I should have been rich
-for life, and _you_, old trusty, should have had the brig just as she
-stood, for the cost of makin’ out the papers.”
-
-“What?” exclaimed Caleb.
-
-He looked at his commander for several moments, and then shook his head
-slowly. He believed that the privation they had suffered had at length
-affected even Captain Horace Tarr’s brain.
-
-“I’m not crazy, Caleb,” said the captain faintly. “I tell you I should
-have been immensely wealthy. Brandon should have never wanted for
-anything as long as he lived, nor should I; and I had already decided
-to give the brig to you.”
-
-“What--what d’ye mean if ye _ain’t_ crazy?” cried Caleb, in
-bewilderment.
-
-“Do you remember the man who came aboard the brig at Cape Town, just
-before we sailed?” asked Captain Tarr, in a whisper, evidently saving
-his strength as much as possible for his story. “He was a friend of my
-brother Anson.”
-
-“Anson!” interjected Caleb. “Why, I supposed _he_ was dead.”
-
-“He is now,” replied the captain; “but instead of dying several years
-ago, as we supposed, he had been living in the interior of Cape Colony,
-and just before he actually did die he gave a package (papers, this
-man supposed them to be) to an acquaintance, to be delivered to me.
-I happened to touch at Cape Town before the friend of my brother had
-tried to communicate with me by mail, and he brought the package aboard
-the brig himself.
-
-“He did not know what he was carrying--he never would have dared do it
-had he known--for with a letter from Anson was a package, done up in
-oil silk, of--diamonds of the purest water!”
-
-“Diamonds!” repeated Caleb.
-
-“Yes, diamonds--thousands of dollars’ worth--enough to make one man,
-at least, fabulously rich!” The captain slowly rolled his head from
-side to side. “After all these years the luck of the Tarrs had changed,
-Caleb. Fortune has ever played us false, and even now, just when wealth
-was in our grasp, it was snatched from us again.
-
-“After wandering up and down the earth for forty years, Anson finally
-‘struck it rich,’ and am I, who was to profit by his good fortune, and
-the son whom I love more than I do anything else on earth, to lose this
-treasure after all?”
-
-He fell back upon the raft, and the exertion set the wound in his head
-to bleeding again. A dark stream appeared beneath the bandage and
-trickled down his forehead, while he lay, gasping for breath, upon the
-bit of sailcloth which served him for a bed.
-
-“What did you do with the diamonds?” the mate asked, when the dying man
-had again become calm.
-
-“I--I have written a letter to Brandon, telling him all about it,”
-gasped the captain. “That is what I wrote the second day we were on the
-raft. I dared not take them with me from the brig, and they are hidden
-in the cabin. I know now that we made a grave mistake in leaving the
-Silver Swan at all, for she may hold together for months.
-
-“Take--take the papers from my pocket, Cale,” he added, feebly
-unbuttoning his coat, “and keep them. If you are saved I charge you to
-give them to Brandon with your own hands, and I can trust you to assist
-him in every possible way to recover his fortune, should such a thing
-be possible.”
-
-The mate bent over the unfortunate owner of the Silver Swan, and with
-trembling hands removed several thick documents from his pocket and
-thrust them into the breast of his flannel shirt.
-
-As he did so and turned again, he saw the scowling visage of Jim Leroyd
-peering at them above his chest. Quick as a flash he seized his pistol
-and aimed it at the sailor; but Leroyd dodged out of view at once.
-Without doubt, however, he had seen the papers passed from the captain
-to mate Wetherbee.
-
-“Take good care of them, Cale,” whispered Captain Tarr. “And let nobody
-else see them. I believe that Leroyd suspected something back there at
-Cape Town, for he came into the cabin on an errand just as that friend
-of poor Anson gave the package into my hands, and I caught him snooping
-about the companionway several times afterward. It was he I feared most
-when we left the brig, and therefore dared not take the diamonds with
-me.”
-
-“I’ll shoot him yet,” muttered the old seaman fiercely, with his
-weather eye cocked over the top of the chest. “I hated the sight o’
-that fellow when he first boarded the brig at New York. His face is
-enough to bring bad luck to any ship.”
-
-But the captain was not listening to him. He had floated away into a
-restless slumber, from which he only awoke once to whisper, “Remember,
-Cale!” and then passed into a dreamless sleep from which there could
-be no awakening in this world.
-
-Caleb Wetherbee closed the captain’s eyes tenderly, wrapped him in the
-bit of sailcloth which had served as his bed, and fastened his lifeless
-body so that no unexpected roll of the raft would precipitate it into
-the water. Then he took the scant share of food left of the captain’s
-hoard, and religiously divided it into two equal portions.
-
-“Jim!” he said, when this was done, allowing himself but a moment to
-gloat over the pitifully meager supply which he laid on the chest lid.
-
-“Aye, aye, sir!” responded the sailor gruffly, cautiously raising his
-head from behind his fortification.
-
-“Captain Tarr is dead, Jim, and I have divided _his_ share o’ the grub.
-Put down your weapons and come forward to the chest and take your part.
-Remember, no slippery business or I’ll bore a hole in ye! Step out now.”
-
-Suddenly the sailor arose, his ungainly, dwarfish proportions being
-more manifest now that he was on his feet, and approached his officer,
-stepping over the body of Paulo without a glance at it.
-
-His fierce eyes lighted eagerly as he saw the little supply of food (he
-had already consumed all his own), and he seized it at once. While he
-did so he looked at the wooden legged sailor with a crafty smile.
-
-“Wot was it the old man give ye, Caleb?” he asked familiarly.
-
-The mate scowled fiercely at him, and did not reply.
-
-“Oh, ye needn’t act so onery,” went on Leroyd. “_I_ knowed there was
-somethin’--money I bet--that was given to the old man at the Cape.
-He’s acted like a new man ever since, and if there’s anything in it,
-I’m goin’ ter hev my share, jest like this share o’ the grub, now I
-tell ye!”
-
-“You take that food and git back to your place!” roared Caleb, pointing
-the huge “bull dog,” which had a bore like a rifle, at the fellow’s
-head. “An’ let me tell you that I shall be on the watch, I shall, an’
-it’ll be a long say afore you catch Caleb Wetherbee asleep. Ef I ain’t
-saved, _you_ won’t be, let me tell you, for ef I feel myself a-goin’ to
-Davy Jones, _you’ll go along with me_!”
-
-Leroyd sneaked back to his place again, and crouched behind the chest.
-In that position he could not see the movements of Caleb, who, after a
-few moments’ thought, deposited the packet of papers where he believed
-no one would think of looking for them.
-
-“There!” he muttered grimly. “If I _do_ foller Cap’n Tarr, I reckon
-these papers’ll never do that scoundrel any good, an’ he can throw this
-old hulk to the sharks and welcome. If the cap’n’s boy don’t profit by
-’em, _nobody_ shall.”
-
-Then he folded his arms, the pistol still in his grasp, and continued
-his task of watching for the rescuing sail, which it seemed would never
-come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-INTRODUCING BRANDON TARR AND UNCLE ARAD
-
-
-LEADING from the village of Rockland, Rhode Island, a wide, dusty
-country road, deeply rutted here and there, winds up to the summit of a
-long ridge, the highest land in that portion of the State, which past
-generations have named Chopmist.
-
-It is a drizzly, chilly spring day, the showers pattering down in true
-April style, the sun promising to show his face every few minutes,
-and then, when you are expecting his warming rays, down falls another
-shower and Sol hides his face in despair.
-
-Near the highest part of the ridge, on the easterly side of the road,
-stood an old, gambrel roofed, weather beaten house, its end facing the
-road and its front door at the side as though it, like its present
-owner, had turned sourly away from the world, refusing even to look out
-upon the highway which passed socially near it.
-
-The rain dripped steadily into the moss covered water butt at the
-corner of the house, and a bedraggled chicken, who seemed not to
-possess enough energy to get under better cover, sat humped up in a
-most dismal manner under the lilac bush at the other corner of the
-house.
-
-It was well nigh as dismal inside the house as out. A miserable little
-fire of green wood sputtered and hissed in an even more miserable
-stove, and the faded yellow cambric curtain at the little window, did
-its best (with the aid of the dirt, which was considerable) to keep the
-light from penetrating the panes.
-
-At one end of the kitchen was a square deal table littered with soiled
-dishes left from the morning meal; the two or three chairs about the
-room were in a state of great dilapidation; and even the old clock on
-the mantel shelf ticked with a sort of rasping groan, as though every
-stroke put its rheumatic old wheels and springs in agony.
-
-Before the stove, in a sadly abused, wooden bottomed armchair, and
-with his back humped up a good deal like the chicken under the lilac
-bush outside, sat an old man with weazened, wrinkled face, eyes like a
-hawk’s, a beak-like nose, and a sparse settlement of gray hairs on his
-crown and chin.
-
-He leaned forward in his seat, and both claw-like hands clutching the
-arms of the chair, seemed to be all that kept him from falling upon the
-stove.
-
-At the window, just where the light fell best upon the book in his
-hand, sat a youth of sixteen years--a well made, robust boy, whose
-brown hair curled about his broad forehead, and whose face was not
-without marks of real beauty.
-
-Just now his brows were knit in a slight frown, and there was a flash
-of anger in his clear eyes.
-
-“I dunno what’s comin’ of ev’rything,” the old man was saying, in a
-querulous tone. “Here ’tis the first o’ April, an’ ’tain’t been weather
-fit ter plow a furrer, or plant a seed, yit.”
-
-“Well, I don’t see as it’s _my_ fault, Uncle Arad,” responded the boy
-by the window. “_I_ don’t make the weather.”
-
-“I dunno whether ye do or not,” the old man declared, after staring
-across at him for an instant. “I begin ter believe yer a regular
-Jonah--jest as yer Uncle Anson was, an’ yer pa, too.”
-
-The boy turned away and looked out of the window at this mention of his
-parent, and a close observer might have seen his broad young shoulders
-tremble with sudden emotion as he strove to check the sobs which all
-but choked him.
-
-Whether the old man was a close enough observer to see this or not, he
-nevertheless kept on in the same strain.
-
-“One thing there is erbout it,” he remarked; “Anson knew _he_ was born
-ter ill luck, an’ he cleared out an’ never dragged nobody else down ter
-poverty with him. But your pa had ter marry--an’ see what come of it!”
-
-“I don’t know as it affected _you_ any,” rejoined the boy, bitterly.
-
-“Yes, ’t’as, too! Ain’t I got you on my hands, a-eatin’ of your head
-off, when there ain’t a sign of a chance o’ gittin’ any work aout o’
-ye?”
-
-“I reckon I’ve paid for my keep for more’n _one_ year,” the other
-declared vehemently; “and up to the last time father went away he
-always paid you for my board--he told me so himself.”
-
-“He did, did he?” exclaimed Uncle Arad, in anger. “Well, he----”
-
-“Don’t you say my father lied!” cried the boy, his eyes flashing and
-his fists clenched threateningly. “If you do, you’ll wish you hadn’t.”
-
-“Well--I ain’t said so, hev I?” whined Uncle Arad, fairly routed by
-this vehemence. “Ain’t you a pretty boy to threaten an old man like me,
-Brandon Tarr?”
-
-Brandon relapsed into sullen silence, and the old man went on:
-
-“Mebbe Horace _thought_ he paid your board, but the little money he
-ever give me never more’n ha’f covered the expense ye’ve been ter me,
-Don.”
-
-His hearer sniffed contemptuously at this. He knew well enough that
-he had done a man’s work about the Tarr place in summer, and all the
-chores during winter before and after school hours, for the better part
-of three years, and had amply repaid any outlay the old man had made.
-
-Old Arad Tarr was reckoned as a miser by his townsmen, and they were
-very nearly correct. By inheritance the farm never belonged to him,
-for he was the youngest son of old Abram Tarr, and had been started in
-business by his father when he was a young man, while his brother Ezra
-had the old homestead, as the eldest son should.
-
-But reverses came to Ezra, of which the younger brother, being
-successful in money matters, took advantage, and when Ezra died at last
-(worked to death, the neighbors said) the property came into Arad’s
-hands. There was little enough left for the widow, who soon followed
-her husband to the grave, and for the two boys, Anson and Horace.
-
-Anson was of a roving, restless disposition, and he soon became
-disgusted with the grinding methods of old Arad, who sought to get
-double work out of his two nephews. So he left the farm, and, allured
-by visions of sudden wealth which led him all over the world, he
-followed from one scheme to another, never returning to the old place
-again, though his brother, Horace, heard from him occasionally.
-
-The younger lad was not long in following his brother’s footsteps (in
-leaving home, at least), and went to sea, where he rose rapidly from
-the ranks of the common sailor to the post of commander.
-
-He married a girl whom he had known in his boyhood, and Brandon, the
-boy who was now left to the tender mercies of the great uncle, was
-their only child.
-
-By patient frugality Captain Tarr had amassed sufficient money to
-purchase a brig called the Silver Swan, and made several exceptionally
-fortunate voyages to South and West African ports, and to Oceanica.
-
-But after his wife’s death (she was always a delicate woman) his only
-wish seemed to be to gain a fortune that he might retire from the sea
-and live with his son, in whom his whole heart was now bound. There was
-a trace of the same visionary spirit in Horace Tarr’s nature that had
-been the _motif_ of his brother Anson’s life, and hoping to gain great
-wealth by a sudden turning of the wheel of fortune, he speculated with
-his savings.
-
-Like many other men, he trusted too much in appearances and was wofully
-deceived, and every penny of his earnings for a number of voyages in
-the brig was swept away.
-
-His last voyage had been to Cape Town, and on the return passage the
-good Silver Swan had struck on a rock somewhere off Cuba, and was a
-total loss, for neither the vessel itself, nor the valuable cargo, was
-insured for a penny’s worth.
-
-This had occurred nearly two months before, and the first news Brandon
-and Uncle Arad had received of the disaster was through the newspaper
-reports. Two surviving members of the crew were picked up by a New York
-bound steamship, from a raft which had been afloat nearly two weeks,
-and but one of the men was in a condition to give an intelligible
-account of the wreck.
-
-From his story there could be but little doubt of the total destruction
-of the Silver Swan and the loss of every creature on board, excepting
-himself and the mate, Caleb Wetherbee, who was so exhausted that he had
-been taken at once to the marine hospital. Captain Tarr had died on the
-raft, from hunger and a wound in the head received during the wrecking
-of his vessel.
-
-It was little wonder, then, with these painful facts so fresh in his
-mind, that young Brandon Tarr found it so hard to stifle his emotion
-while his great uncle had been speaking. In fact, when presently the
-crabbed old man opened his lips to speak again, he arose hastily, threw
-down his book, and seized his hat and coat.
-
-“I’m going out to see if I can pick off that flock of crows I saw
-around this morning,” he said hastily. “If you _do_ get a chance to
-plant anything this spring, they’ll pull it up as fast as you cover the
-seed.”
-
-“We kin put up scarecrows,” said Arad, with a scowl, his dissertation
-on the “shiftlessness” of Don’s father thus rudely broken off. “_I_
-can’t afford you powder an’ shot ter throw away at them birds.”
-
-“Nobody asked you to pay for it,” returned the boy gruffly, and
-buttoning the old coat about him, and seizing his rifle from the hooks
-above the door, he went out into the damp outside world, which, despite
-its unpleasantness, was more bearable than the atmosphere of the farm
-house kitchen.
-
-The farm which had come into Arad Tarr’s possession in what he termed a
-“business way,” contained quite one hundred acres of cultivated fields,
-rocky pastures, and forest land.
-
-It was a productive farm and turned its owner a pretty penny every
-year, but judging from the appearance of the interior of the house and
-the dilapidated condition of the barn and other outbuildings, one would
-not have believed it.
-
-There was sufficient work on the farm every year to keep six hired
-hands beside Brandon and the old man, himself, “on the jump” every
-minute during the spring, summer, and fall.
-
-In the winter they two alone managed to do the chores, and old Arad
-even discharged the woman who cooked for the men during the working
-season.
-
-As soon as the season opened, however, and the old man was obliged
-to hire help, the woman (who was a widow and lived during the winter
-with a married sister in the neighborhood) was established again in
-the Tarr house, and until the next winter they lived in a manner that
-Brandon termed “like Christians,” for she was a good cook and a neat
-housekeeper; but left to their own devices during the cold weather, he
-and his great uncle made sorry work of it.
-
-“The frost is pretty much out of the ground now,” Brandon muttered as
-he crossed the littered barnyard, “and this drizzle will mellow up the
-earth in great shape. As soon as it stops, Uncle Arad will dig right in
-and work to make up for lost time, I s’pose.”
-
-He climbed the rail fence and jumped down into the sodden field beyond,
-the tattered old army coat (left by some hired hand and used by him in
-wet weather) flapping dismally about his boots.
-
-“I wonder what’ll become of me now,” he continued, still addressing
-himself, as he plodded across the field, sinking ankle deep in the wet
-soil. “Now that father’s gone there’s nothing left for me to do but to
-shift for myself and earn my own living. Poor father wanted me to get
-an education first before I went into anything, but there’ll be no more
-chance for that here. I can see plainly that Uncle Arad means to shut
-down on school altogether now.
-
-“I’ll never get ahead any as long as I stay here and slave for him,” he
-pursued. “He’ll be more exacting than ever, now that father is gone--he
-didn’t dare treat me _too_ meanly before. He’ll make it up now, I
-reckon, if I stay, and I just _won’t_!”
-
-He had been steadily approaching the woods and at this juncture there
-was a rush of wings and a sudden “caw! caw!”
-
-Crows are generally considered to be endowed with a faculty for knowing
-when a gun is brought within range, but this particular band must have
-been asleep, for Brandon was quite within shooting distance as the
-great birds labored heavily across the lots.
-
-The rifle, the lock of which he had kept dry beneath his armpit, was
-at his shoulder in a twinkling, there was a sharp report, and one of
-the birds fell heavily to the ground, while its frightened companions
-wheeled with loud outcry and were quickly out of view behind the woods.
-
-Brandon walked on and picked up the fallen bird.
-
-“Shot his head pretty nearly off,” he muttered. “I believe I’ll go
-West. Knowing how to shoot might come in handy there,” and he laughed
-grimly.
-
-Then, with the bird in his hand, he continued his previous course, and
-penetrated beneath the dripping branches of the trees.
-
-Pushing his way through the brush for a rod or two he reached a plainly
-defined path which, cutting obliquely across the wood lot, connected
-the road on which the Tarr house stood with the “pike” which led to the
-city, fourteen miles away.
-
-Entering this path, he strolled leisurely on, his mind intent upon the
-situation in which his father’s death had placed him.
-
-“I haven’t a dollar, or not much more than that sum,” he thought, “nor
-a friend, either. I can’t expect anything but the toughest sort of a
-pull, wherever I go or whatever I take up; but it can’t be worse than
-’twould be here, working for Uncle Arad.”
-
-After traversing the path for some distance, Don reached a spot where
-a rock cropped up beside the way, and he rested himself on this, still
-studying on the problem which had been so fully occupying his mind for
-several weeks past.
-
-As he sat there, idly pulling handfuls of glossy black feathers from
-the dead crow, the noise of a footstep on the path in his rear caused
-him to spring up and look in that direction.
-
-A man was coming down the path--a sinister faced, heavily bearded man,
-who slouched along so awkwardly that Brandon at first thought him lame.
-But the boy had seen a few sailors, besides his father, in his life,
-and quickly perceived that the stranger’s gait was caused simply by a
-long experience of treading the deck of a vessel at sea.
-
-He was a solidly built man, not below the medium height, yet his head
-was set so low between his shoulders, and thrust forward in such a way
-that it gave him a dwarfed appearance. His hands were rammed deeply
-into his pockets, an old felt hat was drawn down over his eyes, and his
-aspect was generally seedy and not altogether trustworthy.
-
-He started suddenly upon seeing the boy, and gazed at him intently as
-he approached.
-
-“Well, shipmate, out gunning?” he demanded, in a tone which was
-intended to be pleasant.
-
-“A little,” responded Brandon, kicking the body of the dead crow into
-the bushes. “We’re always gunning for those fellows up this way.”
-
-“Crows, eh?” said the man, stopping beside the boy, who had rested
-himself on the rock again. “They’re great chaps for pullin’
-corn--faster’n you farmers can plant it, eh?”
-
-Brandon nodded curtly, and wondered why the tramp (as he supposed him)
-did not go along.
-
-“Look here, mate,” went on the man, after a moment, “I’m lookin’ for
-somebody as lives about here, by the name of Tarr----”
-
-“Why, you’re on the Tarr place now,” replied Brandon, with sudden
-interest. “That’s _my_ name, too.”
-
-“No, it isn’t now!” exclaimed the stranger, in surprise.
-
-A quick flash of eagerness came over his face as he spoke.
-
-“You’re not Brandon Tarr?” he added.
-
-“Yes, sir,” replied Don, in surprise.
-
-“Not Captain Horace Tarr’s son! God bless ye, my boy. Give us your
-hand!”
-
-The man seized the hand held out to him half doubtfully, and shook it
-warmly, at the same time seating himself beside the boy.
-
-“You knew my father?” asked Brandon, not very favorably impressed by
-the man’s appearance, yet knowing no real reason why he should not be
-friendly.
-
-“Knew him! Why, my boy, I was his best friend!” declared the sailor.
-“Didn’t you ever hear him speak of Cale Wetherbee?”
-
-“Caleb Wetherbee!” cried Don, with some pleasure.
-
-He had never seen his father’s mate, but he had heard the captain speak
-of him many times. This man did not quite come up to his expectation
-of what the mate of the Silver Swan should have been, but he knew
-that his father had trusted Caleb Wetherbee, and that appearances are
-sometimes deceitful.
-
-“Indeed I _have_ heard him speak of you many times,” and the boy’s
-voice trembled slightly as he offered his hand a second time far more
-warmly.
-
-“Yes, sir,” repeated the sailor, blowing his nose with ostentation,
-“I’m an old friend o’ your father’s. He--he died in my arms.”
-
-Brandon wiped his own eyes hastily. He had loved his father with all
-the strength of his nature, and his heart was too sore yet to be rudely
-touched.
-
-“Why, jest before he--he died, he give me them papers to send to ye, ye
-know.”
-
-As he said this the man flashed a quick, keen look at Brandon, but it
-was lost upon him.
-
-“What papers?” he asked with some interest.
-
-“What papers?” repeated the sailor, springing up. “D’ye mean ter say ye
-never got a package o’ papers from me a--a month ergo, I reckon ’twas?”
-
-“I haven’t received anything through the mail since the news came of
-the loss of the brig,” declared Don, rising also.
-
-“Then that mis’rable swab of an ’orspital fellow never sent ’em!”
-declared the man, with apparent anger. “Ye see, lad, I was laid up
-quite a spell in the ’orspital--our sufferings on that raft was jest
-orful--an’ I couldn’t help myself. But w’en your father died he left
-some papers with me ter be sent ter you, an’ I got the ’orspital nurse
-to send ’em. An’ you must hev got ’em--eh?”
-
-“Not a thing,” replied Brandon convincingly. “Were they of any value?”
-
-“Valible? I should say they was!” cried the sailor. “Werry valible,
-indeed. Why, boy, they’d er made our--I sh’d say _your_--fortune, an’
-no mistake!”
-
-Without doubt his father’s old friend was strangely moved by the
-intelligence he had received, and Don could not but be interested in
-the matter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-AN ACCOUNT OF THE WRECK OF THE SILVER SWAN
-
-
-“TO what did these papers bear reference?” Brandon asked. “Father met
-with heavy misfortunes in his investments last year, and every penny,
-excepting the Swan itself, was lost. How could these papers have
-benefited me?”
-
-“Well, that I don’t rightly know,” replied the sailor slowly.
-
-He looked at the boy for several seconds with knitted brows, evidently
-deep in thought. Brandon could not help thinking what a rough looking
-specimen he was, but remembering his father’s good opinion of Caleb
-Wetherbee, he banished the impression as ungenerous.
-
-“I b’lieve I’ll tell ye it jest as it happened,” said the man at
-length. “Sit down here again, boy, an’ I’ll spin my yarn.”
-
-He drew forth a short, black pipe, and was soon puffing away upon it,
-while comfortably seated beside Don upon the rock.
-
-“’Twere the werry night we sailed from the Cape,” he began, “that I
-was--er--in the cabin of the Silver Swan, lookin’ at a new chart the
-cap’n had got, when down comes a decently dressed chap--a landlubber,
-ev’ry inch o’ him--an’ asks if this were Cap’n Horace Tarr.
-
-“‘It is,’ says the cap’n.
-
-“‘Cap’n Horace Tarr, of Rhode Island, U. S. A.?’ says he.
-
-“‘That’s me,’ says the cap’n ag’in.
-
-“‘Well, Cap’n Tarr,’ says the stranger chap, a-lookin’ kinder squint
-eyed at me, ‘did you ever have a brother Anson?’
-
-“Th’ cap’n noticed his lookin’ at me an’ says, afore he answered the
-question:
-
-“‘Ye kin speak freely,’ says he, ‘this is my mate, Cale Wetherbee, an’
-there ain’t a squarer man, nor an honester, as walks the deck terday,’
-says he. ‘Yes, I had a brother Anson; but I persume he’s dead.’
-
-“‘Yes, he is dead,’ said the stranger. ‘He died up country, at a place
-they calls Kimberley, ’bout two months ago.’
-
-“That was surprisin’ ter the cap’n, I reckon, an’ he tol’ the feller
-that he’d supposed Anson Tarr dead years before, as he hadn’t heard
-from him.
-
-“‘No, he died two months ago,’ says the man, ‘an’ I was with him. He
-died o’ pneumony--was took werry sudden.’
-
-“Nat’rally this news took the old man--I sh’d say yer father--all
-aback, as it were, an’ he inquired inter his brother’s death fully.
-Fin’ly the man drew out a big package--papers he said they was--wot
-Anson Tarr had given him ter be sure ter give ter the cap’n when he
-sh’d see him. Then the feller went.
-
-“O’ course, the cap’n didn’t tell me wot the docyments was, but I
-reckoned by his actions, an’ some o’ the hints he let drop, that they
-was valible, an’ I--I got it inter my head that ’twas erbout money--er
-suthin’ o’ the kind--that your Uncle Anson knowed of.
-
-“Wal, the Silver Swan, she left the Cape, ’n’ all went well till arter
-we touched at Rio an’ was homeward boun’. Then a gale struck us that
-stripped the brig o’ ev’ry stick o’ timber an’ every rag o’ sail, an’
-druv her outer thet ’ere rock. There warn’t no hope for the ol’ brig
-an’ she began to go ter pieces to once, so we tried ter take to the
-boats.
-
-“But the boats was smashed an’ the only ones left o’ the hull ship’s
-company was men Paulo Montez, and yer father, an’--an’ another feller.
-We built the raft and left the ol’ brig, just as she--er--slid off er
-th’ rock an’ sunk inter the sea. It--it mos’ broke yer father’s heart
-ter see the ol’ brig go down an’ I felt m’self, jest as though I’d lost
-er--er friend, er suthin!”
-
-The sailor paused in his narrative and drew hard upon his pipe for a
-moment.
-
-“Wal, you know by the papers how we floated around on that ’ere raf’
-an’ how yer poor father was took. He give me these papers just afore he
-died, an’ made me promise ter git ’em ter you, ef I was saved. He said
-you’d understand ’em ter oncet, an’,” looking at Brandon keenly out of
-the corners of his eyes, “I didn’t know but ye knew something about it
-already.”
-
-Brandon slowly shook his head.
-
-“No,” he said; “I can’t for the life of me think what they could refer
-to.”
-
-“No--no buried treasure, nor nothing of the kind?” suggested the man
-hesitatingly.
-
-“I guess not!” exclaimed Don. “If I knew about such a thing, you can
-bet I’d be after it right quickly, for I don’t know any one who needs
-money just at the present moment more than I.”
-
-“Well, I believe I’ll go,” cried the sailor, rising hastily. “That
-’orspital feller must hev forgotten ter mail them papers, an’ I’ll git
-back ter New York ter oncet, an’ see ’bout it. I b’lieve they’ll be of
-vally to ye, an’ if ye want _my_ help in any way, jest let me know.
-I--I’ll give ye a place ter ’dress letters to, an’ I’ll call there an’
-git ’em.”
-
-He produced an old stump of a pencil from his pocket and a ragged
-leather note case. From this he drew forth a dog eared business card
-of some ship chandler’s firm, on the blank side of which he wrote in a
-remarkably bad hand:
-
- CALEB WETHERBEE,
- NEW ENGLAND HOTEL,
- WATER STREET,
- NEW YORK.
-
-Then he shook Don warmly by the hand, and promising to get the papers
-from the “’orspital feller” at once, struck away toward the city again,
-leaving the boy in a statement of great bewilderment.
-
-He didn’t know what the papers could refer to, yet like all boys who
-possess a good digestion and average health, he had imagined enough to
-fancy a hundred things that they _might_ contain. Perhaps there was
-some great fortune which his Uncle Anson had known about, and had died
-before he could reap the benefit of his knowledge.
-
-Yet, he felt an instinctive distrustfulness of this Caleb Wetherbee. He
-was not at all the kind of man he had expected him to be, for although
-Captain Tarr had never said much about the personal appearance of the
-mate of the Silver Swan, still Don had pictured Caleb to his mind’s eye
-as a far different looking being.
-
-As he stood there in the path, deep in thought, and with his eyes fixed
-upon the spot where he had seen the sailor disappear, the fluttering
-of a bit of paper attracted his attention. He stooped and secured it,
-finding it to be a greasy bit of newspaper that had doubtless reposed
-for some days in the note case of the sailor, and had fallen unnoticed
-to the ground while he was penciling his address on the card now in
-Don’s possession.
-
-One side of the scrap of paper was a portion of an advertisement, but
-on the other side was a short item of news which Don perused with
-growing interest.
-
- SAVANNAH, MARCH 3. The Brazilian steamship Montevideo, which arrived
- here in the morning, reports having sighted, about forty miles west
- of the island of Cuba, a derelict brig, without masts or rigging of
- any kind, but with hull in good condition. It was daylight, and by
- running close the Montevideo’s captain made the wreck out to be the
- Silver Swan, of Boston, which was reported as having been driven
- on to Reef Number 8, east of Cuba, more than a month ago. The two
- surviving members of the crew of the Silver Swan were picked up from
- a raft, after twelve days of terrible suffering, by the steamship
- Alexandria, of the New York and Rio Line. The Montevideo’s officers
- report the brig as being a most dangerous derelict, as in its present
- condition it may keep afloat for months, having evidently withstood
- the shock of grounding on the reef, and later being driven off by the
- westerly gale of February 13th.
-
- Her position, when sighted by the Montevideo, has been reported to
- the Hydrographic Office, and will appear on the next monthly chart.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-BRANDON COMES TO A DECISION
-
-
-THE first thought which flashed across Brandon Tarr’s mind as he read
-the newspaper item quoted in the previous chapter was that the story
-of the wreck of the Silver Swan, as told by the old sailor, had been
-totally misleading.
-
-“Why, he lied--point blank--to me!” he exclaimed, “and with this very
-clipping in his pocket, too.”
-
-He half started along the path as though to pursue the sailor, and then
-thought better of it.
-
-“He declared that he saw the Swan go down with his own eyes; and here
-she was afloat on the 13th of March--a month after the wreck. He must
-have wanted to keep the knowledge of that fact from me. But what for?
-Ah! those papers!”
-
-With this Brandon dropped back on the rock again and read the newspaper
-clipping through once more. Then he went over the whole matter in his
-mind.
-
-What possible object could Caleb Wetherbee have in coming to him and
-telling him the yarn he had, if there was no foundation for it? There
-must be some reason for the story, Brandon was sure.
-
-Evidently there had been papers either given into the hands of the
-mate of the Silver Swan, or obtained by him by dishonest means. These
-papers must relate to some property of value which had belonged to
-Anson Tarr, Don’s uncle, and, his cupidity being aroused, the sailor
-was trying to convert the knowledge contained in them to his own
-benefit.
-
-There was probably some “hitch” in the documents--something the
-rascally mate could not understand, but which he thought Brandon could
-explain. Therefore, his trip to Chopmist from New York to “pump” the
-captain’s son.
-
-“Without doubt,” said the boy, communing with himself, “the papers were
-brought aboard the brig just as this rascally Wetherbee said, and they
-were from Uncle Anson. Let’s see, he said he died at Kimberley--why,
-that’s right at the diamond mines!” For like most boys with adventurous
-spirits and well developed imagination, Brandon had devoured much that
-had been written about the wonderful diamond diggings of South Africa.
-
-“Perhaps--who knows?” his thoughts ran on, “Uncle Anson ‘struck it
-rich’ at the diamond mines before he died. There’s nothing impossible
-in that--excepting the long run of ill luck which had cursed this
-family.”
-
-He shook his head thoughtfully.
-
-“If Uncle Anson had owned a share in a paying diamond mine, this
-rascally sailor would have known at once that the papers relating to
-it could not benefit him, for the ownership would be on record there
-in Kimberley. It must, therefore, be that the property--whatever
-it may be--is in such shape that it can be removed from place to
-place--perhaps was brought aboard the brig by the friend of Uncle
-Anson who told father of his death.”
-
-For the moment the idea did not assist in the explanation of the course
-of Caleb Wetherbee in retaining the papers. But Brandon had set himself
-to the task of reasoning out the mystery, and when one thread failed
-him he took up another.
-
-“One would think,” he muttered, “that if there had been any money
-brought aboard the brig, father would have taken it on the raft with
-him when they left; but still, would he?
-
-“According to the report the brig grounded on Reef Number 8, and
-perhaps was not hurt below the water line. The next gale from the
-west’ard blew her off again. She is now a derelict, _and if the money
-was hidden on board it would be there now_!”
-
-At this sudden thought Brandon sprang up in excitement and paced up and
-down the path.
-
-He had often heard of the wrecks of vessels abandoned in mid ocean
-floating thousands of miles without a hand to guide their helms, a
-menace and danger to all other craft. The Silver Swan might float for
-months--aye, for years; such a thing was possible.
-
-“And if the money--if it _is_ money--is hidden aboard the brig, the one
-who finds the derelict first will have it,” was the thought which came
-to him.
-
-“But why should the mate come to _me_ about it?” Brandon asked himself.
-“Why need he let _me_ know anything about the papers, or the treasure,
-if he wished to recover it himself? Didn’t he know where on the brig
-the money was hidden? Or didn’t the papers tell that?”
-
-He cudgled his brains for several minutes to think _where_ his father
-would have been likely to hide anything of value on the brig. Was there
-any place which only he and his father had known about?
-
-This idea suggested a train of reminiscences. He had been aboard the
-Silver Swan several times while she lay in Boston, and had been all
-over her.
-
-Once, possibly four years before (it seemed a long time to him now), he
-had been alone with his father in the cabin, and Captain Tarr had shown
-him an ingeniously hidden sliding panel in the bulkhead, behind which
-was a little steel lined cavity, in which the captain kept his private
-papers.
-
-Perhaps Caleb Wetherbee did not know about this cupboard, and it was
-this information that he wished to get from him. The idea seemed
-probable enough, for if he did not know where the treasure was hidden
-on the brig, what good would the papers relating to it be to him?
-
-“There may be a fortune there, just within my grasp, and yet I not be
-able to get at it,” muttered Don, pacing the rough path nervously.
-
-“Despite his former confidence in this Wetherbee, father must have
-doubted him at the last and not dared to take the treasure (if treasure
-it really is) when he left the brig.
-
-“Instead, he gave him these papers, hoping the fellow would be honest
-enough to place them in my hands; but, still fearing to fully trust the
-mate, he wrote his directions to me so blindly, that Wetherbee is all
-at sea about what to do.
-
-“Wetherbee knows that the brig is afloat--this clipping proves
-that--and he hoped to get the information he wanted from me and then
-go in search of the Silver Swan. _Why can I not go in search of it
-myself?_”
-
-The thought almost staggered him for an instant, yet to his boyish
-mind the plan seemed feasible enough. He knew that derelicts are often
-carried by the ocean currents for thousands of miles before they
-sink, yet their movements are gradual, and by a close study of the
-hydrographic charts he believed it would be possible to locate the
-wrecked brig.
-
-“I’ve got no money, I know,” he thought, “at least, not much; but I’ve
-health and strength and an ordinary amount of pluck, and it will be
-strange if I can’t accomplish my purpose if the old brig only holds
-together long enough.”
-
-He looked at the soiled card the sailor had given him.
-
-“‘New England Hotel, Water Street,’” he repeated. “Some sailors’
-boarding house, likely. I believe--yes, I will--go to New York myself
-and see this scoundrelly Wetherbee again. He can’t do _much_ without
-me, I fancy, and perhaps, after all, I can use him to my own benefit. I
-ought to be as smart as an ignorant old sailor like him.”
-
-He stood still a moment, gazing steadily at the ground.
-
-“I’ll do it, I vow I will!” he exclaimed at last, raising his head
-defiantly. “Uncle Arad’s got no hold upon me and I’ll go. I’ll start
-tomorrow morning,” with which determination he picked up his rifle and
-left the woods.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-UNCLE ARAD HAS RECOURSE TO LEGAL FORCE
-
-
-IN the several oceans of our great globe there are many floating
-wrecks, abandoned for various causes by their crews, which may float on
-and on, without rudder or sail, for months, and even years. Especially
-is this true of the North Atlantic Ocean, where, during the past five
-years, nearly a thousand “derelicts,” as these floating wrecks are
-called, were reported.
-
-The Hydrographic Office at Washington prints a monthly chart on which
-all the derelicts reported by incoming vessels are plainly marked, even
-their position in the water being designated by a little picture of the
-wreck.
-
-By this method of “keeping run” of the wrecks, it has been found that
-some float thousands of miles before they finally reach their ultimate
-port--Davy Jones’ locker.
-
-The average life of these water logged hulks is, however, but thirty
-days; otherwise the danger from collision with them would be enormous
-and the loss of life great. Many of those vessels which have left
-port within the past few years and never again been heard from, were
-doubtless victims of collisions with some of these derelicts.
-
-Several more or less severe accidents have been caused by them, and
-so numerous have they become that, within the past few months, several
-vessels belonging to our navy have gone “derelict cruising”--blowing up
-and sinking the most dangerous wrecks afloat in the North Atlantic.
-
-At the time of the Silver Swan’s reported loss, however, it was
-everybody’s business to destroy the vessels, and therefore nobody’s.
-At any time, however, the hull of the brig, reported by the steamship
-Montevideo as floating off Cuba, might be run into and sunk by some
-other vessel, such collisions being not at all uncommon.
-
-Brandon Tarr realized that there was but a small chance of the Silver
-Swan being recovered, owing to these circumstances; yet he would not
-have been a Tarr had he not been willing to take the chance and do all
-he could to secure what he was quite convinced was a valuable treasure.
-
-Derelicts had been recovered and towed into port for their salvage
-alone, and the Silver Swan was, he knew, richly laden. It might also
-be possible to repair the hull of the brig, for she was a well built
-craft, and if she had withstood the shock of being ground on the reef
-so well, she might even yet be made to serve for several years.
-
-These thoughts flitted through the mind of the boy as he slowly crossed
-the wet fields toward the farm house.
-
-“I’ll go tomorrow morning--Uncle Arad or no Uncle Arad,” he decided.
-“It won’t do to leave the old fellow alone, so I’ll step down after
-dinner and speak to Mrs. Hemingway about coming up here. He will have
-to have her any way within a few days, so it won’t much matter.”
-
-He didn’t really know how to broach the subject to the old man, for he
-felt assured that his great uncle would raise manifold objections to
-his departure. He had lived at the farm four years now and Uncle Arad
-had come to depend on him in many ways.
-
-They had eaten dinner--a most miserable meal--and Don was washing the
-dishes before he spoke.
-
-“Uncle Arad,” he said, trying to talk in a most matter of fact way,
-“now that father is--is gone and I have nothing to look forward to, I
-believe I’ll strike out for myself. I’m past sixteen and big enough and
-old enough to look out for myself. I think I shall get along faster by
-being out in the world and brushing against folks, and I reckon I’ll go
-to New York.”
-
-Uncle Arad fairly wilted into his seat, and stared at Don in utter
-surprise.
-
-“Go to New York?” he gasped.
-
-“That’s what I said.”
-
-“Go to New York--jest when yer gittin’ of some account ter me?”
-
-“Oh, I’ve been of some account to you for some time, and any way father
-always paid my board before last fall, you know,” said Don cheerfully.
-
-Uncle Arad snorted angrily, and his eyes began to flash fire.
-
-“Paid your board!” he exclaimed. “I dunno what put _that_ inter your
-head.”
-
-“Father put it there, that’s who,” declared Don hotly.
-
-“_I_ never give him no receipts for board money,” cried the old man.
-“You can’t show a one!”
-
-“I don’t suppose you did,” returned Don, with scorn. “You never give
-receipts for anything if you can help it. If you’d given receipts to
-your own brother as you ought, you wouldn’t be in possession of this
-farm now.”
-
-“I wouldn’t, hey?” cried the old man, goaded to desperation by this
-remark, which he knew only too well to be true. “You little upstart
-you! Ye’ll go ter New York, whether ’r no, will ye?”
-
-He arose in his wrath and shook his bony fist in Don’s face. The youth
-looked down upon him scornfully, for the man would have been no match
-for him at all.
-
-“Now don’t have a fit,” he said calmly. “I’m going to step ’round to
-Mrs. Hemingway’s after dinner, and get her to come up here and look
-after you. You’ll need her any way, in a few days.”
-
-“It won’t matter! it won’t matter!” shrieked Uncle Arad, exasperated
-by the boy’s coolness. “It won’t matter, I s’pose, when I hev ter pay
-three dollars--_three dollars_, mind ye--fur a hull week’s extry work!”
-
-He fairly stamped about the room in his fury.
-
-“It don’t matter, eh, when I’ll have ter hire a man ter take your
-place? Be you crazy, Brandon Tarr?”
-
-“Guess not,” responded Don, wiping the last dish and hanging up the
-towel to dry. “You must think _me_ crazy, however. Do you s’pose I’d
-stayed here this season without wages?”
-
-“Wages!” again shrieked the old man, to whom the thought of paying
-out a penny was positive pain, “Wages! an’ you a beggar--yes, sir, a
-beggar!--’pendent upon my bounty, as it were.”
-
-Don smiled at this.
-
-“I’m a pretty sturdy beggar, as they used to call ’em in the old days,”
-he said.
-
-“Wal, any way, I’m your guardeen, an’ I’ll see if you’re goin’ jest
-when you like.”
-
-Don laughed outright now.
-
-“My guardian!” he responded. “I’d like to know _why_ I should have any
-guardian. I’ve no property, goodness knows. And as you said about the
-board receipts, _where are your papers giving you any legal control
-over me?_”
-
-The old man was utterly taken aback at this and sat down again,
-glowering at his nephew angrily, while the latter put on his hat and
-coat and departed on his errand to Mrs. Hemingway’s.
-
-But Arad Tarr was not the man to see either money or its equivalent
-slipping his grasp without strenuous efforts to retain it. His nephew
-represented to him just so much hard cash saved, for if Brandon went
-away Uncle Arad realized that the hiring of an extra hand would be an
-absolute necessity.
-
-Therefore, the boy had not been gone long before the old man decided on
-a line of action. He struggled into his own coat, locked up the house,
-and harnessed a horse to a dilapidated light wagon. He was too careful
-of his good vehicles to take anything but this out on such a nasty day.
-
-“That boy is a-gettin’ too upstartish!” he declared, climbing into the
-wagon and chirruping to the horse. “He’s jest like Anson an’ Horace.
-There was no livin’ with _them_, an’ now _he’s_ got this fool notion
-inter his head erbout goin’ away!
-
-“But I’ll git _that_ aout o’ him,” he added, with emphasis. “If I
-hain’t got no legal right ter his services, I _will_ have, now I tell
-ye! Arter all I’ve done fur him an’ fur his shif’less, no ’count pa,
-I ain’t goin’ ter let go o’ him till he comes of age--mos’ five years
-yet.”
-
-He shook his head slowly at that thought. Five years of Brandon’s
-services on the farm would be worth all of twenty-five hundred dollars!
-
-He clucked to the horse and drove on the faster at that. Suppose the
-boy should take it into his head to go before he obtained the papers
-which he was sure he could have made out? The idea was quite agonizing.
-
-“I reckon Squire Holt kin fix it up for me in short order,” he
-muttered, as he urged his horse into a faster trot. “I’ll show that boy
-’t he ain’t his own master, by no means!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-RELATING A MEETING BETWEEN UNCLE ARAD AND THE SAILOR
-
-
-THE old man drove on through the mud and slush of the country road, the
-wheels of the rickety vehicle first rattling over outcropping rocks and
-boulders, and then splashing half way to their hubs in the yellow mire.
-
-A mile beyond his own farm he turned into a broader highway which
-trended to the right--the city “pike.” Woods bordered the way on either
-side and although the rain had ceased, the drops fell in showers from
-the trees. It was a nasty day and the horse splashed itself to the
-belly with the mire.
-
-Not many rods beyond the turn old Arad overtook a man walking in the
-same direction that he was driving, and as the farmer rattled up, the
-man stepped to one side and hailed him.
-
-He was a bronzed and bearded fellow, dressed in garments about as seedy
-as the miser’s own clothing, and although he lacked all of twenty years
-of Arad’s age, his back, as he stood there beside the cart path, seemed
-almost as bent.
-
-“Hullo, shipmate!” was the man’s greeting, raising his hand for the
-farmer to stop. “Goin’ toward the city?”
-
-“Wal, I be a piece,” replied Arad grudgingly.
-
-It was something of an effort for him to speak civilly to a casual
-stranger. I presume he was afraid of wearing out the small stock of
-civility he possessed.
-
-“Ye’re goin’ in ballast, I see,” said the stranger. “Can’t ye stow me
-away there?”
-
-“Hey?” responded the farmer, who did not understand the other’s figure
-of speech.
-
-“I say ye’re goin’ in ballast,” repeated the man; “yer wagon’s empty,
-ye know. Give me a ride, will ye?”
-
-“Wal, I dunno,” said Arad slowly, with a sudden avaricious twinkle in
-his eye. “I know the team’s empty, but th’ mare ain’t s’ limber ’s she
-might be, an’ it’s hard trav’lin’.”
-
-“Got an eye on the main chance, ain’t ye, ye old land shark?” muttered
-the man. Then he said aloud: “How fur ye goin’ on this road?”
-
-“’Bout three mile furder.”
-
-“What’ll ye take me that fur, for?”
-
-“Wall, I dunno,” began Arad.
-
-“Come, I’ll give ye a quarter,” said the stranger, fishing a handful of
-silver from the depths of his pocket.
-
-The old man’s eyes flashed.
-
-“Jump aboard,” he said briefly, and the black bearded man sprang to the
-seat with great agility.
-
-“Ye’re some limber,” said the old farmer, in admiration, pocketing the
-quarter and starting up his horse again.
-
-“_You’d_ be if ye’d shinned up as many riggin’s as I hev.”
-
-“Ye’re a sailor, then?”
-
-“I be. No landlubber erbout me, is ther’? I reckon ye don’t see many
-sailors in these parts?”
-
-“Ya-as we do,” snarled Arad impolitely; “more’n’ we wanter sometimes.
-I got a nevvy who was a sailor--a cap’n. Lost at sea erbout two months
-ergo. Lef’ me er great, hulkin’ boy ter take keer of.”
-
-“Great Peter!” exclaimed the sailor, with some astonishment. “Ye don’t
-mean Cap’n Horace Tarr?”
-
-“Yes, I do mean Cap’n Horace Tarr,” growled Arad. “He was my nevvy, an’
-it’s his no ’count, wuthless boy I’ve got on my han’s. My name’s Arad
-Tarr--’n’ th’ only Tarr ’t ever knew ’nough ter make money an’ keep it.”
-
-The sailor looked at the weazened old figure curiously.
-
-“He didn’t favor you none,” he said.
-
-“Who didn’t? Horace Tarr? I reckon he didn’t!” exclaimed Arad. “He
-favored a ca’f more’n he did anything else, ’cordin’ ter _my_ notion.
-Did ye know him?” added the old man curiously.
-
-“In course I did. I sailed with him--er--lots. Why, I was with him this
-’ere las’ v’y’ge o’ his.”
-
-“Ye don’t mean it!”
-
-“I guess I do.”
-
-“Wal, wal!” exclaimed Uncle Arad, roused out of himself for a moment.
-“So you was on that raf’ fur so long, eh? Must er been quite an
-experience. An’ Horace is really dead, is he?”
-
-“Dead’s a door nail,” the sailor declared. “Can’t be no mistake erbout
-_that_. We had ter pitch him overboard--er--another feller and me;
-’cause ’twas so all fired hot, ye know. Him and Paulo Montez both went
-ter the sharks.”
-
-The old man shuddered.
-
-“An’ he died without leavin’ a cent, eh? Poor’s poverty! I allus
-knew how ’twould be. ’N’ I s’pose Anson--fur he mus’ be dead by this
-time--died poor, too.”
-
-The sailor looked at the old man sharply out of the corners of his
-eyes, and after a minute spoke again.
-
-“Yes,” he said slowly, in confirmation of Uncle Arad’s remark. “I was
-with the cap’n at the last.”
-
-“What ye doin’ ’way up here?” inquired the farmer, with sudden interest.
-
-“Well, I come up ter see Cap’n Tarr’s boy.”
-
-“Hey?” ejaculated the farmer. “Come ter see Brandon?”
-
-“That’s it,” said the sailor, nodding.
-
-“But ye didn’t see him?”
-
-“Yes, I did; over yonder in the woods.”
-
-“Why, he didn’t say nothin’ erbout it ter me,” gasped the old man.
-
-“Mebbe ye ain’t seen him since,” suggested the sailor.
-
-“When was yer er-talkin’ with him?”
-
-“Long erbout two hours back, ’r so.”
-
-“’Fore dinner?”
-
-“I reckon so. I seen him over in the woods yonder, an’ talked with him
-quite a spell. I started ’long back towards the city a’gin, but I found
-out I’d lost--er--somethin’, an’ went back ter hev er look fur it.”
-
-“What was it ye lost?” asked Uncle Arad, with perhaps a momentary
-thought that, if it was of value and had been lost on his farm, he
-might be able to find it himself.
-
-“Nothin’ but a piece of paper.”
-
-“Find it?”
-
-“Not me. Must ha’ blowed away. Howsomever, that ain’t ter the p’int.
-It’s funny yer nevvy never tol’ erbout meetin’ me.”
-
-Old Arad was silent for a minute.
-
-“I wish ye hadn’t come ’round here, fillin’ up his head with fool
-notions,” he grumbled. “Seein’ you must be what set him up ter leavin’
-so sudden.”
-
-“Goin’ to leave ye, is he?” asked the sailor quickly.
-
-“He _thinks_ he is,” returned the farmer, with a snarl. “Th’ little
-upstart! But I’ll l’arn him who’s who, now I tell ye? Goin’ ter New
-York, is he? Wal, I reckon not.”
-
-“To New York? What’s he goin’ there fur? I sh’d think ye’d want him
-right here on th’ farm,” said the sailor, with a cunning smile.
-
-“So I do--an’ right here is where he’s goin’ ter stay,” declared Uncle
-Arad wrathfully. “I’m er-goin’ down ter Square Holt’s ter see erbout it
-now. I’m either goin’ ter hev him bound ter me till he’s twenty-one, ’r
-git p’inted him gardeen. _Then_, I reckon he won’t talk no more erbout
-runnin’ off ter New York.”
-
-“Yes, I reckon this place is the best fur a boy like him,” acquiesced
-the sailor. “An’ then, ye orter be his guardeen. S’posin’ he had
-prop’ty fallin’ to him now--you’d orter hev th’ handlin’ of it till
-he’s of age.”
-
-“Prop’ty! I guess ther’ won’t be none ter fall to him,” sniffed Uncle
-Arad. “_I_ ain’t a dyin’ man, by no means, an’ his pa didn’t leave a
-cent. Didn’t even hev that brig o’ his’n insured.”
-
-“I dunno erbout that,” said the sailor shrewdly.
-
-“What don’t ye know erbout?” demanded Arad suspiciously. “The Silver
-Swan wasn’t insured, were she?”
-
-“I reckon not.”
-
-“Then what d’ye mean?”
-
-Arad’s piercing eyes were fixed searchingly on his companion’s face,
-but the sailor was not easily disturbed.
-
-“Well, now, I’ll put a case to ye--jest a s’posin’ case, now mind ye,”
-he said calmly, as Arad, now thoroughly interested in the matter, let
-the old horse walk along the muddy highway. “S’posin’ now this ’ere
-Cap’n Tarr had knowed erbout a buried treasure, ’r some sich thing, an’
-he’d writ erbout it, an’ give the papers ter another man--his mate, fur
-instance--ter be given ter his son.
-
-“Now, nat’rally, if ther’ was any money in it fur this Brandon, _you’d_
-orter know erbout it, hadn’t ye? You bein’ th’ boy’s guardeen, you’d
-orter handle that money; un’ if _I_ could help you ter the gettin’ o’
-that money, _I’d_ orter hev a part of it, eh?”
-
-Old Arad stared at him with wide open eyes, and the hand which held the
-reins trembled visibly.
-
-“Now, s’posin’ the mate sends them papers to Brandon through the mail,
-’r writes a letter erbout ’em--_you’d_ orter know it, hadn’t ye? You’d
-orter see that letter, or them papers, an’ you’d jest drop me a line,
-an’ _I_ c’d help ye get ’em, ’cause I know all erbout sich things,
-bein’ a sea farin’ man fur thirty year.”
-
-Uncle Arad moistened his trembling lips before he could speak.
-
-“But this is only s’posin’,” he said quaveringly.
-
-“But, _s’pose ’twas so!_ S’pose I seen them papers passed, an’ s’pose
-I heered Cap’n Tarr say with his own lips ther’ was ’nough suthin ’r
-other (I couldn’t ketch th’ word--gold, mebbe) there ter make a man
-fabulously rich?”
-
-“Fabulously rich!” repeated Arad.
-
-“That’s it; fabulously rich, is wot he said. An’ if it’s so, _you_
-orter to get the letters from the post office, an’ open every one of
-’em, hadn’t ye?”
-
-Uncle Arad nodded quickly.
-
-“O course ye had; and if the letter or papers sh’d come from Caleb
-Wetherbee--thet’s the mate’s name; he’s in the ’orspital yet--you’d let
-me know, an’ then we’d see wot we sh’d see, eh?”
-
-The sailor poked the old man familiarly in the ribs and slapped his own
-knee.
-
-“That’s wot we’d do, shipmate,” he said. “Wot say ye? Ye’ll need me,
-fur I reckon wherever th’ money’s hid, ye’ll need a sailor ter go ’long
-with ye--er ter git it fur ye.”
-
-“I--I couldn’t go; my health ain’t good ’nough,” declared the farmer.
-“Then--then--mebbe there ain’t nothin’ in it.”
-
-“Well, mebbe there ain’t,” said the sailor calmly, preparing to
-dismount as the old man pulled up before a house; “an’ then ag’in
-mebbe there is. Leastways, I adwise ye ter jest keep yer eyes open
-fur letters f’om New York. An’ when one comes from Caleb Wetherbee,
-p’r’aps ye’ll want ter talk with me furder.”
-
-“Where--where kin I find ye?” Arad asked, in a shaking voice.
-
-“Jest write ter Jim Leroyd, New England Hotel, Water Street, New
-York--that’ll fetch me,” declared the sailor briskly. “Now remember,
-old feller,” he added meaningly, “ye won’t be able ter do nothin’ with
-them papers ’thout me. If ye try it ye’ll be up a stump ter oncet. Now,
-take keer o’ yerself!”
-
-He turned away and rolled along the road toward the distant city, while
-Uncle Arad climbed down from the wagon.
-
-“Fabulously rich!” he muttered to himself, as he fastened the horse to
-the hitching post with trembling hands.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-INTRODUCING “SQUARE” HOLT AND HIS OPINIONS
-
-
-“SQUARE” HOLT, who was a justice of the peace as well as the judge
-of the probate court of the town, was a very tall and very angular
-individual with a massive development of nose (old Arad Tarr’s was
-as nothing beside it) and a wide mouth continually drawn into a
-grim line, as though such a thing as a smile had never crossed his
-imagination--if, indeed, he had an imagination.
-
-He had no children of his own (which was an exceedingly fortunate
-thing for the unborn generations) and had apparently forgotten his own
-boyhood. Boys, in his estimation, were made to work--the harder the
-better. In this he was of the same opinion as Uncle Arad Tarr.
-
-Old Arad was at once admitted to the front parlor of the house at
-which he had stopped, which was used by the judge as his office when
-he was not at the town hall. Here, seated in one of the prim hair
-cloth chairs, with which his soiled and badly fitting garments hardly
-harmonized, the old man told his story.
-
-“That boy, square, comes o’ the shif’lessest kind o’ stock, ye know,
-ef his gran’father _was_ my own brother,” he said, in conclusion. “You
-’member Ezra?”
-
-“Oh yes, I remember Ezra,” said the judge, grimly.
-
-“Wal, then, ye know what a shif’less loose j’inted critter he was in
-business matters, an’ Anson an’ Horace was as like him as two peas aout
-o’ the same pod. An’ now this ’ere Brandon hez got th’ same traits o’
-no ’count shif’lessness.”
-
-“Very likely, very likely,” said the other, with sternness. “I’ve seen
-the youth, I think, out gunning quite frequently--a most objectionable
-practice.”
-
-“Ye’re right, square,” old Arad exclaimed, with eagerness. “Jest er
-firin’ erway good powder an’ shot ’t cost money. Thet boy hez airnt
-money erhelpin’ of the neighbors lots o’ times, ter waste on powder an’
-shot. He’s a dretful bad boy.”
-
-“From what you say, neighbor,” said the judge, with confidence, “I
-should say that the proper place for the young rascal was the State
-reform school----”
-
-“Oh, no, no, square,” exclaimed Arad, in sudden terror at the thought
-of losing Don’s services in this way. “’Tain’t as bad as that. I kin
-manage him, once give me legal ’thority.
-
-“Ye see, his pa left him ’ithout a cent, an’ I thought it didn’t make
-a bit er diff’rance ’bout his havin’ a guardeen--’twould er been some
-expense, ye know, ter hev th’ papers made aout; but since he’s got this
-’ere wild goose notion o’ leavin’ me, I begin ter see that I sh’d hev
-some holt on him fur--hem!--fur his own good, as it were.”
-
-“Quite right,” declared the judge confidently. “And so the boy--this
-Brandon--proposes to go away at once, does he?”
-
-“So he has th’ audacity ter tell me,” responded old Arad. “He declared
-he was goin’ termorrer mornin’. Ye know, square, I’m too broke up ’ith
-the rheumatiz ter tackle him as he’d orter be tackled. A good hidin’
-would be th’ best thing fur him, in _my_ ’pinion.”
-
-“And in my opinion, too,” quoth the judge. “Now, of course this matter
-will have to be done when the court meets next week, Mr. Tarr; but I’ll
-come up and see the youth tonight, and I think that between us we can
-make him see that this is the place for him to stay, and that there
-is to be no running away from it,” and the judge shut his thin lips
-together very grimly.
-
-“That’s it, square; thank ’ee,” said the old man, shambling out of the
-house. “Dretful weather we been havin’, ain’t it?”
-
-Then he climbed into his wagon and drove back toward home, chuckling as
-he went.
-
-“I reckon I’ve put a spoke in _his_ wheel,” he muttered, referring to
-his nephew.
-
-As he pursued his homeward way, however, thoughts of the sailor with
-whom he had so recently conversed, and of that conversation itself,
-filled his mind.
-
-“I don’t persume thet ther’s anythin’ in it,” he muttered, thoughtfully
-stroking the wisp of beard on his pointed chin. “Horace Tarr never had
-no luck no-how, an’ I don’t see how he’d come ter know anythin’ erbout
-this ’ere treasure. P’r’aps that sailor was jest a yarnin’ ter me.”
-
-Still, the old man could not drive the thought out of his mind.
-
-“Fabulously rich!” he repeated. “That’s what he heard Horace say. This
-’ere mate of the Silver Swan was a chum er Horace’s, like ’nough, an’ I
-s’pose if ther’ _is_ anythin’ in it, he’ll jes’ try ter git it himself.
-An’ then--er--Brandon’ll never see a cent of it.
-
-“It really is my duty ter look aout fur th’ boy’s int’rest,” continued
-the old hypocrite. “’F I’m goin’ ter be his guardeen, I’d orter know
-what’s goin’ on; an’ this _may_ mean money fur--fur Brandon.”
-
-He wiped his wrinkled brow with a soiled handkerchief, the reins lying
-idly on his knee the while. Somehow, despite the chilliness of the day,
-the perspiration stood in great drops upon his forehead.
-
-“S’posin’,” he thought, “ther’ should be a letter at Sam Himes’ fur him
-now, f’om that Wetherbee feller? ’Twouldn’t no way do fur a boy ter git
-letters that his guardeen didn’t know nothin’ erbout, an’ ther’ ain’t
-no doubt thet, if Brandon got it, he wouldn’t show it ter me. I--I
-b’lieve I’ll drive ’round thet way an’ see.”
-
-He touched up the mare again and, upon reaching the forks of the road,
-turned to the north once more and drove along the ridge until he
-reached a little gambrel roofed cottage on the westerly side of the
-highway.
-
-This was the post office where Sam Himes held forth, and to which the
-lumbering old stage brought one mail each day.
-
-Here he dismounted from the wagon again, and went into the house, being
-greeted at the door by the customary “Haow air ye?” of the postmaster.
-
-“I was jes’ thinkin’ er sendin’ daown ter your haouse, Arad,” declared
-the postmaster, who was no respecter of persons, and called everybody
-by his first name, being familiar with them from the nature of his
-calling. “Here’s a letter fur yeou an’ one fur th’ boy--Don.”
-
-He thrust two missives into the old man’s hand, and Arad stumbled out
-to his wagon again, his fingers shaking with excitement. Glancing
-at the two envelopes he recognized one at once, and clutched it
-avariciously. It was from a brokerage firm in New York, and contained
-his monthly dividend for certain investments which he had made.
-
-The other letter, however, he did not look at until he had turned his
-horse about and started her jogging along toward home again. Then he
-drew forth the envelope and studied it carefully.
-
-It was addressed in a big, scrawling hand to: “Master Brandon Tarr,
-Chopmist, Rhode Island,” yet, despite the plainness of the address, old
-Arad, after a hasty and half fearful glance around, broke the seal and
-drew forth the inclosed page.
-
-He looked first at the signature, and finding it to be “Caleb
-Wetherbee,” he began to peruse the epistle, looking up from time to
-time to glance along the road, that nobody might catch him in the act
-of reading the letter intended only for his nephew’s eye.
-
-Uncle Arad’s sight was not so keen for written words as it once had
-been, but he managed to stumble through the document, which read as
-follows:
-
- NEW YORK MARINE HOSPITAL,
- April the 2d, 1892.
-
- MASTER BRANDON TARR,
-
- SIR:--As I am laid up in dry dock, as you might say, and can’t get up
- to see you right off as I promised your poor father, I am taking the
- first chance these swabs of doctors have given me, to write this.
-
- Me and another man was all that was saved off the raft, as you
- probably know now, for your father was hurt so bad that there wasn’t
- any chance for him. He died ten days after we left the brig.
-
- I want you should pack up your togs, leave that farm where no son of
- Captain Horace Tarr ought to dig all his life, and come down here to
- New York to see me. I shall be out of this hospital before long, and
- then we’ve got some work to do, like I promised your father before he
- died.
-
- Captain Tarr put some papers in my hands which is of great value,
- providing they can be used at once. It seems your uncle Anson died
- several months ago in Kimberley, South Africa, and while he was at
- Cape Town loading up the brig, a fellow come aboard and told your
- father about it, and brung these papers.
-
- Among the papers (though the fellow didn’t know it, so I understood
- from the few words poor Captain Tarr let drop) was a package of
- diamonds which he hid aboard the old brig, and was afraid to take
- with him on the raft for fear of the sailors that was with us. These
- papers I’ve got he said would tell where the diamonds was hid. I
- ain’t opened them yet, so I don’t know.
-
- Now you may think this here is no use because the Silver Swan is
- wrecked; but I don’t believe she has gone to pieces yet; nor your
- father didn’t think she would right off. We would have done better
- by sticking to her, any way, I reckon. She was driv upright onto the
- reef, and I’ll bet she’s sticking there yet.
-
- If you come down here to once, and I can get onto my old timber leg
- again, we’ll charter a boat and go down there and see about it. If
- it is as your father said--and I believe it--there’s enough of them
- diamonds to make you another Vanderbilt or Jay Gould.
-
- Just you leave the land shark of an uncle that you’re staying with,
- and trust yourself to
- Your true friend,
- CALEB WETHERBEE,
- Mate of the Silver Swan.
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-SOMETHING ABOUT LEAVING THE FARM
-
-
-CERTAINLY Uncle Arad Tarr had never been so filled with astonishment in
-his life as he was upon reading the letter of the mate of the Silver
-Swan to the captain’s son.
-
-Diamonds enough to make Brandon a second Vanderbilt! The thought almost
-made Arad’s old heart stand still.
-
-“Who’d er-thought it--who’d ever er-thought it?” he muttered weakly,
-folding the letter once more, and thrusting it into the pocket of his
-patched coat.
-
-Then he picked up the reins and drove on, shaking his head slowly.
-
-“Diamonds enough ter make him rich!” he murmured, with an avaricious
-contortion of his face. “Jest ter think o’ Anson Tarr ever gittin’
-more’n his bread and butter. It don’t seem ter me he c’d ha’ got ’em
-honest.”
-
-He was very ready now, considering the guilty thoughts there were in
-his own heart, to declare the fortune gained by his nephew Anson to be
-dishonestly obtained.
-
-“It jest stands ter reason,” he went on, “that this ’ere Caleb
-Wetherbee isn’t er--er trustworthy person to hev charge o’ Brandon--or
-them di’monds either. I mus’ hev them papers made out jes’ as soon as
-th’ square kin do it, an’ then I kin find that ’ere wreck--er hev it
-found--m’self.”
-
-His mind at once reverted to Jim Leroyd, the sailor with whom he had
-entered into a compact to “divide the spoils,” and he shook his head
-again doubtfully.
-
-“He ain’t jes’ th’ man I’d er chosen ter do th’ work fur me,” muttered
-the old sinner; “but then, he’s the old sailor I know, an’ it’s got ter
-take a sailor, I s’pose, ter go ter them furrin parts.
-
-“He knows suthin’ erbout it already, too, an’ it wouldn’t do ter let
-him git mad an’ go an’ tell this ’ere Wetherbee; then mebbe I couldn’t
-git th’ papers from him. But th’ fust thing is ter hev thet ’p’intment
-as guardeen fixed up.”
-
-Brandon was in the yard when he arrived, and good naturedly put up the
-horse for him.
-
-“I’ve seen Mrs. Hemingway, uncle,” he said cheerfully, “and she’ll
-be up here tomorrow morning. I shall take the stage to town in the
-morning, and go to New York on the evening train, I guess.”
-
-“Ye will, eh?” returned Uncle Arad, showing his teeth.
-
-“Yes. Now you mustn’t get uppish, uncle. You didn’t suppose I would
-stay here very long any way, did you?”
-
-“I s’pect ye’ll stay here a spell,” replied the old man, with a cunning
-leer. “I ain’t fed an’ su’ported ye in lux’ry fur nigh four year fur
-nothin’. Ye’ll stay here as my ward fur yer minor’ty, now I tell ye.”
-
-But Brandon was laughing over the thought of Uncle Arad’s “luxury,”
-and did not hear the last of his speech.
-
-He did the most of the chores about the house and barn, as was usual,
-and helped prepare the extremely frugal meal which Uncle Arad’s larder
-afforded.
-
-“By George!” he thought, as he set about this latter task, “if I was in
-the forecastle of some old ‘hooker’ I shouldn’t have worse fare than
-this. I declare I’ll go off tomorrow before breakfast. This will be my
-last meal at Uncle Arad’s table for one spell at least.”
-
-But he said nothing further about going away, knowing that it would
-only anger the old man. Before the dishes were cleared away after
-the meal, there was the sound of wheels at the gate, and in a moment
-somebody knocked sharply.
-
-Old Arad himself arose and hobbled to the door, admitting “Square”
-Holt into the miserable den of a kitchen. If it had been the President
-himself, the old man would not have opened the “best room.”
-
-“Go aout an’ take the square’s boss ’roun’ ter the shed,” harshly
-commanded Uncle Arad, and Brandon did as he was bidden, vaguely
-suspecting that something was brewing.
-
-When he came into the kitchen again after doing the errand, the parrot
-beaked judge was ready for him.
-
-“Young man,” began the judge severely, “your uncle, Mr. Tarr, who has
-done so much for you for the past four years, tells me that you have
-made a sorry return for all his kindness and bounty.”
-
-“In what?” demanded Brandon rather sharply, for he considered this
-interference on the justice’s part as wholly uncalled for.
-
-“Is _that_ the way you speak to your elders, young man?” cried the
-judge, aghast. “Have you no respect for gray hairs?”
-
-“I do not see why I should respect _you_, Mr. Holt,” replied Don,
-with some temper. “You’ve never given me cause to and I consider that
-your questions and remarks are entirely unwarranted. I propose to go
-away from my uncle’s house (to whom, by the way, my father paid three
-dollars per week board for me up to last fall, and for whom I have done
-the work of a regularly hired hand during most of the time I have been
-here) I propose to go away, I say, and nothing _you_ or uncle can say
-will stop me!”
-
-“Hoighty toighty, young man!” cried the judge; “do you realize to whom
-you are speaking?”
-
-“Yes, I do,” responded Brandon hotly. “To one who is known, far and
-wide, as the meanest man in Scituate!”
-
-The judge’s ample nasal organ flushed to the color of a well grown
-beet; but before he could reply old Arad put in _his_ oar:
-
-“What d’ye mean, ye little upstart?” (Fancy his calling Brandon
-_little_, who already stood a good three inches taller than himself!)
-“What d’ye mean, sayin’ that I was ever paid fur yer keep? Ye’ve been
-nuthin’ but an expense an’ trouble ter me ever since ye come here.”
-
-“That’s an untruth, and you know it,” declared Don, who had quite lost
-his temper by this time, and did not behave himself in just the manner
-I should have preferred my hero to behave; but Brandon Tarr was a very
-human boy, and, I have found, heroes are much like other folks and not
-by any means perfect.
-
-“Young man, mark my words!” sputtered “Square” Holt, “you will yet come
-to some bad end.”
-
-“I’ll git all this aout o’ ye, afore I’m done with ye, Brandon Tarr,”
-declared Uncle Arad, “if I hev ter hire somebody ter lick ye.”
-
-“You wouldn’t do that--you’re too stingy to hire anybody to ‘lick’ me,”
-responded Don tartly. “Now I don’t propose to listen to any more of
-this foolishness. I’m going away, and I’m going away tomorrow morning.
-I’ve eaten my last meal at this house, Uncle Arad!”
-
-“Is that the way to speak to your guardian?” said the judge, with
-horror in his tone. “Mr. Tarr, you are too lenient with this young
-scoundrel. He should be sent to the State reform school as I suggested.”
-
-“But then I wouldn’t get no work aout o’ him,” the farmer hastened to
-say. “I--I’ve got ter git the money back I’ve spent on him, ye know.”
-
-Brandon laughed scornfully.
-
-“I should like to know by what right you call him my guardian, Mr.
-Holt?” he asked.
-
-“Wal, I’m goin’ ter be yer guardeen--right off,” Arad hastened to
-inform him, before the “square” could reply. “The square’s goin’ ter
-make the papers aout ter oncet.”
-
-“They’ll be funny looking documents, I reckon,” said Don, in disgust.
-“I understand that Mr. Holt has done several pretty crooked things
-since he’s been in office, but this is going a little too far.”
-
-“Young man!” cried the judge, trying to wither the audacious youth with
-a glance.
-
-But Don didn’t “wither” at all.
-
-“If you know anything at all about law,” he said to the judge, with
-sarcasm, “you know that a guardian can’t be appointed in an hour.
-Legal notice must be given and reason shown _why_ a guardian should be
-appointed. I’ve no property, and Uncle Arad only wants to control me so
-as to have my work. And, besides all that, I am old enough to choose my
-own guardian, and you can bet your last cent that I shouldn’t choose
-Arad Tarr.”
-
-“It ain’t so! ’tain’t no sich thing, is it, square?” cried old Arad,
-in alarm. “Ain’t I th’ proper person to be ’p’inted over my own nevvy?
-Ther’ ain’t nobody else got anythin’ ter do with it.”
-
-“He can tell you what he likes,” responded Brandon quickly; “but I’ve
-given you the facts. Now I’ve heard enough of this, and I’m going to
-bed.” Then he added, turning to Holt: “When you go out to fleece a lamb
-next time, Mr. Holt, be pretty sure that the lamb is just as innocent
-as you think it.”
-
-He turned away without another word then and left the kitchen, mounting
-to his bedroom in the second story of the old house, leaving the
-baffled conspirators in a state of wrathful bewilderment.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-ANOTHER LETTER FROM NEW YORK
-
-
-“MR. TARR,” declared the judge, when Brandon had, for the moment, so
-successfully routed them and retired, “you are doing a very wrong thing
-in shielding that young reprobate from the reform school. That’s where
-he belongs. Send him there, sir, send him there!”
-
-“I never thought he’d ha’ shown disrespect fur the law,” gasped Uncle
-Arad weakly.
-
-“Disrespect!” cried the judge, “I never was so insulted in all my life.
-That boy will be hung yet, you mark my words!”
-
-“I never thought it of Brandon,” said the farmer, shaking his head.
-
-He seemed quite overcome to think that his nephew had dared defy the
-law, or its representative. To Uncle Arad the law was a very sacred
-thing; he always aimed to keep within its pale in his transactions.
-
-“You’ll never be able to do anything with that boy here,” declared
-“Square” Holt. “A strait jacket is the only thing for him.”
-
-“But if he goes there what’ll be the use o’ my bein’ his guardeen?”
-queried Arad.
-
-Then he hesitated an instant as a new phase of the situation came to
-him.
-
-“If Brandon was under lock an’ key--jes’ where I c’d put my han’ on him
-when I wanted him--I c’d go right erbout this ’ere treasure business,
-an’ git it fur--fur _him_,” he thought, yet shivering in his soul at
-the thought of the wrong he was planning to do his nephew.
-
-“I--I dunno but ye’re right, square,” he said quaveringly. “I--I don’
-wanter see th’ boy go right ter perdition, ’fore my very eyes, as ye
-might say, an’ if ye think the reformin’ influences o’ the institution
-is what he needs----”
-
-“The best thing in the world for him,” declared the judge, drawing on
-his driving gloves. “The _only_ thing, I might say, that will keep him
-out of jail--where he belongs, the young villain!”
-
-“But--but haow kin it be fixed up?” asked Arad, in some doubt.
-
-“You leave that to me,” said the judge pompously. “I’ll show that young
-reprobate that he has defied the wrong man when he defies _me_. I’ll
-give him all the law he wants--more, perhaps, than he bargained for.”
-
-“But s’pose he tries to run away in th’ mornin’, as he threatened?”
-
-“All you’ve got to do, Mr. Tarr,” said the judge, shaking one long
-finger at the farmer, “is to keep a close watch on that young man.
-Don’t give him a chance to run away. Lock him into his room tonight
-and keep him there till we can--er, hem!--straighten this out. I think
-it will be a very easy matter to place the case before the court in
-such manner that the necessity for immediate action will be at once
-admitted.
-
-“Why,” declared the judge, warming up to his subject, “I wonder, sir,
-how you--an old man” (Uncle Arad winced at that), “and in feeble
-health--have been able to remain here alone with that young scoundrel
-all this winter. I wonder that he has not laid violent hands on you.”
-
-“Wal, he _has_ been some abusive, square, but I wouldn’t say nothin’
-erbout that,” said Uncle Arad hesitatingly.
-
-“Don’t compound villainy by shielding it,” responded the judge, with
-righteous indignation. “This matter has already gone too far. When our
-quiet town is to be aroused and made a scene of riot, such as has been
-enacted--er--_here_ tonight, sir, it is time something was done. Such
-young hoodlums as this Brandon Tarr should be shut up where they will
-do no harm to either their friends or neighbors.
-
-“If I had _my_ way,” added the judge viciously, “I’d shut up every boy
-in town in the reform school!”
-
-Then he marched out to his carriage, and Uncle Arad, after locking the
-door, sat down to think the matter over.
-
-If he was successful in his nefarious plan of shutting Brandon up in
-the reformatory institution of the State, the getting of the diamonds,
-which Captain Tarr had hidden aboard the Silver Swan, would be all
-plain sailing.
-
-Of course he would have to lose Brandon’s work on the farm; but he
-had seen, by the boy’s open defiance of “Square” Holt, that he cared
-nothing for the law or its minion--and Uncle Arad dared not allow his
-nephew out of his sight for fear he would run away.
-
-To _his_ mind there was very little doubt that the attempt to shut
-Brandon up would be successful. Judge Holt was a most powerful man
-(politically) in the town, and he would leave no stone unturned to
-punish the youth who had so fearlessly defied him.
-
-Judge Holt, although disliked by many of his townsmen who realized that
-some of his methods and actions were illegal, still swayed the town on
-election days, and carried things with a high hand the remainder of the
-year. Old Arad chuckled to think how easily Brandon’s case would be
-settled by the doughty “square.”
-
-Then, remembering the suggestion the judge had made just before his
-departure, he rose hastily from his chair and quietly ascended to the
-floor above. Here Brandon and himself slept in two small bedrooms on
-opposite sides of the hall.
-
-The doors were directly opposite each other, and, although such things
-as locks were unknown in the house on any except the outside doors, the
-old man quickly lit upon a scheme that he thought remarkably clever.
-
-He obtained a piece of stout clothes line and fastened it back and
-forth from handle to handle of the two bedroom doors, which, opening
-into their respective rooms, were now arranged so that the occupants of
-neither apartment could open the portals.
-
-Then, chuckling softly over his sharp trick, the old farmer crept
-down the stairs once more to the kitchen, feeling moderately sure of
-finding Brandon in his room in the morning.
-
-But one narrow window, looking out upon the barnyard, was in his
-nephew’s apartment, and as the sash had long since been nailed in, and
-the shutters closed on the outside, Uncle Arad felt secure on this
-score.
-
-“I’ll starve him inter submission, ef I can’t do it no other way,” he
-muttered angrily.
-
-Seating himself once more in his old armchair, he drew forth the two
-letters obtained that day at the post office, adjusted his steel bowed
-spectacles which, in a moment of extravagance, he had purchased of
-a traveling peddler, and opened the epistle from his brokers which,
-heretofore, he had not read.
-
-He slit the envelope carefully with the blade of his jack knife. More
-than one man had torn or otherwise mutilated a check by opening an
-envelope too carelessly.
-
-But instead of the printed form and generous draft which was the
-usual monthly inclosure of the firm, all the envelope contained was
-a typewritten letter, which the old farmer read with something like
-horror:
-
- Office of
- BENSELL, BENSELL & MARSDEN,
- 513 Wall St., New York,
- April 2, 1892.
-
- MR. ARAB TARR,
- CHOPMIST, RHODE ISLAND.
-
- Dear Sir:
-
- We beg to announce that owing to several accidents, causing a large
- loss of rolling stock of the road, the B. P. & Q. has dropped
- several points on the market and has passed its monthly dividend.
-
- We would suggest that you hold on to your stock, however, as this is
- a matter which will quickly adjust itself.
-
- Yours sincerely,
- BENSELL, BENSELL & MARSDEN.
-
-The letter fluttered to the floor from Uncle Arad’s nerveless
-fingers. To lose money was like losing his very life, and this was no
-inconsiderable sum that had gone. He had invested a large amount in B.
-P. & Q. stock, and up to the present time it had paid large interest.
-
-“Them brokers air thieves! I know they be,” cried the old man, breaking
-forth into vituperations against the innocent firm of Bensell, Bensell
-& Marsden. “Ye can’t trust ’em--not an inch! I don’t b’lieve none o’
-their lyin’ stories erbout the railroad’s passin’ its div’dend. I--I’ll
-go ter New York m’self, I declare I will!”
-
-He got up and paced the floor wrathfully.
-
-“Jes’ as soon as I git this matter o’ Brandon’s settled, an’ git th’
-farm work started with Jim Hemin’way fur foreman, I’ll go. I ain’t
-er-goin’ ter be cheated bare faced like this ’ere.”
-
-Then he thought a moment, and pulling Caleb Wetherbee’s letter from its
-envelope again, read it once more carefully.
-
-“I--I might look inter this w’ile I was there too,” he muttered slowly.
-“I reckon I kin fin’ thet feller I saw terday--Leroyd, his name was,
-an’ his address was New England Hotel, Water Street. I shan’t furgit
-thet right off.”
-
-He shook his head slowly, thrust both letters into his pocket, and then
-shambled off to bed in the room off the kitchen as, having locked his
-nephew in, he had also locked himself _out_ of his usual bed chamber.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-BRANDON’S ARRIVAL AT THE METROPOLIS
-
-
-LONG habit had made Uncle Arad Tarr an extremely early riser, and it
-had been his custom to arouse Brandon as early as half past three or
-four during the summer months, and never later than five-thirty in
-winter. On the morning after he had fastened the door of his nephew’s
-room, however, the old man did not seek to disturb the boy, but rising
-himself before five he went about the customary duties of the house and
-barn.
-
-In this work he missed Brandon sadly; but having made up his mind that
-the boy was bound to leave him any way, old Arad was determined that he
-should go to the reform school, and therefore he would have to learn to
-do without his valuable services.
-
-To his unsophisticated mind, it seemed a very simple matter indeed for
-a powerful local politician like “Square” Holt to send his nephew to
-the State reformatory institution, “and no questions asked.”
-
-But under our present system of humane laws, and with our enlightened
-legal executives, an undeserved incarceration in prison or reform
-school is seldom known--outside of story books. Judge Holt was a large
-man in his own community (and in his own estimation) but he had never
-been beyond that community far enough to learn how very small a man he
-really was.
-
-After the arduous labor of feeding the stock and poultry, drawing water
-and bringing in wood, old Arad hardly felt equal to either the task of
-preparing breakfast, or eating the same; but he did at last sit down to
-what he termed “a cold snack” about seven o’clock.
-
-“That ’ere boy sleeps like a pig,” he muttered, with a groan, twisting
-about in his chair to get an easy position for his rheumatic limbs. “I
-wonder he hain’t begun er-kickin’ on th’ door, er suthin’, yit.”
-
-At that moment there was a noise behind him, and turning about he
-beheld the subject of his thoughts standing in the doorway leading to
-the floor above.
-
-Uncle Arad gave a shout expressing surprise and anger, and sprang to
-his feet. Brandon had been surveying him coolly, with a smile on his
-face, and now he laughed outright.
-
-“Good morning, uncle,” he said.
-
-He was fully dressed in his best suit, hat, overcoat and all, and
-carried a traveling bag in his hand.
-
-“How--how did ye git aout?” sputtered Uncle Arad, in wonder.
-
-“How did I get out?”
-
-“Yes--haow did ye git aouto’ yer room?” cried the old man.
-
-“I wasn’t in, therefore I didn’t have to get out,” responded Brandon
-calmly.
-
-“Ye warn’t in?” repeated his bewildered relative.
-
-“That’s what I said. I wasn’t in. When you crawled up stairs last
-night and took all that trouble with the clothes line, I wasn’t in my
-room at all. I expected some such delicate attention as that on your
-part, uncle, so I took the trouble to remove my things to the spare
-room at the other end of the hall, and slept there.”
-
-The farmer fairly gnashed his teeth in rage.
-
-“Where be yeou goin’?” he demanded, planting himself between his nephew
-and the door.
-
-“Why, uncle, I thought you knew that,” said Brandon, raising his
-eyebrows in apparent surprise. “I told you last night that I was going
-to New York. I haven’t changed my mind since then, though I’ve modified
-my plans somewhat. It’s such a pleasant morning, I believe I’ll walk
-down to Rockland, take the stage from there to Hope, and go to town on
-the train.”
-
-“Yeou will, hey? Wal, I guess not!”
-
-Old Arad backed up against the door as though to guard that way of
-escape. His lean form was trembling with excitement, and he was really
-in a pitiable state for so old a man.
-
-“Think not, eh?” said Brandon coolly.
-
-He came into the kitchen and deposited his traveling bag on a chair,
-and then stepped across the room and took his rifle down from the two
-hooks upon which it rested.
-
-Old Arad uttered a shout of alarm and darted away from the door to the
-opposite side of the table.
-
-“Goodness me! would you shoot me?” he gasped, fairly white to his lips.
-
-“Don’t be a fool, uncle,” responded Brandon with asperity, opening
-the hall door again and bringing in a gun case which had been standing
-in the corner of the other apartment. “The rifle isn’t loaded, and,
-besides, what do you suppose I’d want to shoot you for?”
-
-“Oh, you young villain, you!” groaned old Arad, paying for his agile
-movements of the moment before by several rheumatic twinges.
-
-“Thanks! Well, uncle, I guess I’ll be off. I don’t suppose you’ll shake
-hands with a fellow?” and Brandon stopped, with his hand on the door
-latch.
-
-“I’ll have ye a’rested afore ye git ter Rockland!” the old man shouted,
-shaking his clenched fist at him.
-
-“You’d better not try it,” the boy declared, with flashing eyes.
-
-Arad followed him outside, sputtering.
-
-“Ye’ll live ter rue this day, ye young villain!” he cried. “I’ll show
-ye no mercy.”
-
-“All right; it’s all the same to me,” Brandon returned, and whistling
-cheerfully, he went out of the gate and started down the road with his
-burden of traveling bag and gun case.
-
-It was a beautiful morning, despite the rain of the day before.
-True, there were puddles of muddy water standing in the road and
-patches of dirty snow in the fence corners and under the hedges. But
-these drawbacks did not serve to cloud either the clear azure sky or
-Brandon’s bright hopes.
-
-Looking back at the old farm house once, before turning the bend in the
-road, he had a glimpse of old Arad driving furiously out of the yard.
-
-“He is going to see his familiar spirit, Holt,” muttered Don, with a
-smile, “and lots of good may it do him. I’ll be in town before they
-catch me, and Judge Ebenezer Holt isn’t anywhere near as big a man in
-town as he is here. I’ll risk all the harm they can do me now.”
-
-He arrived at Rockland in time for the stage to Hope, and at the latter
-village took the train for Providence. Neither his uncle nor Holt had
-appeared, and he made up his mind that he was well rid of them.
-
-Once aboard the cars he settled himself back in his seat, and drew
-forth the scrap of newspaper which had dropped from the old sailor’s
-note case the day before. He read it through again carefully.
-
-“I’ve got nearly fifty dollars (wouldn’t uncle be crazy if he knew it?)
-and although that isn’t a fortune, still it ought to keep me for some
-time,” he thought. “But, the question is, after I pump all I can out of
-that Wetherbee, what had I better do?”
-
-He mused a moment in silence, and then took up the connected train of
-his reflections again.
-
-“Fifty dollars ought to last me quite a spell--and take me quite a way,
-too. Of course, I can’t hire a boat in New York to go in search of the
-Silver Swan with it; but I can watch the Hydrographic Office reports,
-and find out in what general direction the brig’s headed. Then I’ll get
-as near to her as possible and see--what I shall see!
-
-“I’d give a cent” (probably he would have given a good deal more) “if
-this Wetherbee was a different sort of a man. It’s a mystery to me how
-father ever trusted the fellow. I always supposed that father had a
-keen insight into human nature; but a man will be deceived at times, I
-suppose.
-
-“But I won’t let this treasure idea keep me from going to work, and
-working hard, too. If I don’t get the money, why I don’t want to be
-roaming about the world like Uncle Anson, with nothing to do in life
-but hunt for wealth. I believe I’ll get a place on some vessel any way,
-for there’s a good deal of the sailor in me as there was in father. We
-get it from grandfather’s folks--the Brandons--I suppose.”
-
-He arrived at Providence before noon, and spent the time until evening
-in looking about the business portion, of the city, and especially
-about the wharves. Then late in the afternoon he took the cars for New
-York, arriving in the metropolis at such an hour that to go to a hotel
-near the station seemed necessary.
-
-Although a country boy by bringing up, Brandon was not easily disturbed
-by the magnitude of life in the great city. In fact, he rather enjoyed
-it, and after retiring to his room at the hotel, he went to sleep
-without one apprehensive thought of what the morrow might bring forth.
-
-[Illustration: “GOODNESS ME! WOULD YOU SHOOT ME?”]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE FIRM OF ADONIRAM PEPPER & CO.
-
-
-LEAVING his bag and gun case at the hotel. Brandon Tarr started out by
-nine o’clock on the following morning, his first aim being to find and
-interview the sailor who had already visited Chopmist for the purpose
-of seeing him.
-
-“Caleb Wetherbee, New England Hotel. Water Street,” was the address,
-and after considerable inquiry he found the street in question.
-
-It was, however, the Battery end of it and no one seemed to know
-anything about the New England Hotel. Still, Don was not dismayed and
-pursued his way, keeping his eyes open and himself alert among the many
-new sights and sounds of the metropolis.
-
-The locality grew worse as he pursued his way, but he was not to be
-frightened off by gangs of street gamins, or crowds of half drunken
-men. Still, in these days, Water Street isn’t as bad as it was once--at
-least, not by daylight.
-
-As he wandered along he could see down the cross streets to the wharves
-and water beyond, where all sorts and conditions of seagoing craft were
-gathered from all parts of the world. He sniffed the sea breeze, too,
-which, to him, killed all the odor of the filth about him.
-
-“That’s what I want to be--a sailor,” he muttered.
-
-Just then something caught his eye and he stopped motionless on the
-sidewalk.
-
-On the opposite side of the street (the river side) as though crowded
-off Front Street by its more pretentious neighbors, was the office of a
-shipping firm. It was in a low brick building, dingy and dirty as were
-the structures about it, and a much battered sign over the door read:
-
- ADONIRAM PEPPER & CO.,
- SHIPPING MERCHANTS.
-
-The name was what attracted Brandon’s attention first. He had heard his
-father speak of it and of the man who was “Adoniram Pepper & Co.,” and
-from his description he had a desire to see this eccentric personage.
-
-Perhaps, also, Mr. Pepper would know the locality of the New England
-Hotel, and therefore Brandon crossed the street and entered the dingy
-little front office.
-
-On a high stool by a high desk just beside the window, sat a man with
-a wonderful development of leg, a terrific shock of the reddest hair
-imaginable, and a shrewd, lean face, lit up by sharp, foxy eyes.
-His face was smoothly shaven and the yellow skin was covered with
-innumerable wrinkles like cracks in the cheeks of a wax doll; but
-whether this individual was twenty-five, or fifty-five, Brandon was
-unable to guess.
-
-The man (a clerk, presumably) looked up with a snarl at Brandon’s
-appearance.
-
-“Well, what do _you_ want?” he demanded.
-
-“Is the firm in?” asked Don, almost laughing in the other’s face, for
-the red haired clerk had a huge daub of ink on the bridge of his nose
-and another on his shirt front.
-
-“_I’m_ the firm just now,” declared the man, glowering at him as though
-he was a South Sea Islander with cannibalistic tendencies.
-
-“Oh, you are, eh?” returned Brandon. “Well, I want to see Mr. Pepper.”
-
-“You do, eh?” The clerk eyed him with still greater disfavor. “You do,
-eh? Well you can’t see Mr. Pepper.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“Well, for one reason he isn’t here--he ain’t down yet--he’s gone
-away--he’s _dead_!”
-
-He slammed down his pen and jumped off the high stool.
-
-“Git out o’ here you little rapscallion!” he roared, evidently
-expecting Brandon to be frightened by his vehemence. “We don’t allow no
-loafing ’round this office. Git, I say, or----”
-
-At that instant the street door behind the amused Brandon was opened,
-and with one glance at the newcomer the clerk’s jaws shut together like
-a trap, he turned about and bounded to his seat on the stool with great
-ability, and seizing his pen went to work on his books with monstrous
-energy.
-
-Brandon turned about also, surprised at these proceedings, and found
-a short, pudgy looking little man standing in the doorway of the
-office, gazing at the clerk with a broad smile on his red face; but
-upon looking closer the boy discovered that, although the mouth was
-smiling, the gentleman’s eyes were very stern indeed behind the gold
-rimmed eye glasses.
-
-“What is the meaning of this unseemly conduct, Weeks?” he asked in a
-tone of displeasure.
-
-“I--I was just showin’ this--this young friend of mine how--how a
-feller up to the Bow’ry acted t’other night,” murmured the clerk, a
-sort of ghastly red color mounting into his withered face beneath the
-parchment-like skin.
-
-“The Bowery?” repeated the gentleman, severely, and Brandon decided
-that this was no other than Mr. Adoniram Pepper himself.
-
-“Yes, sir; Bowery Theater, you know,” responded the clerk glibly,
-with an imploring side glance at Brandon. “’Twas in the play, ‘The
-Buccaneer’s Bride,’ you know.”
-
-“No, I _don’t_ know,” replied Mr. Pepper, in disgust. “So this is your
-friend, is it?” and he turned his gaze upon Brandon genially.
-
-“Our friendship is of rather short duration,” said Don, smiling.
-
-“So I presume,” returned Mr. Pepper. “Did you wish to see me?”
-
-“Just a moment, sir.”
-
-“I’ll give you two moments if you like.” Then he turned again to
-the clerk and shook one fat finger at him. “One of these days I’ll
-discharge you, Weeks,” he said sternly.
-
-“I expect so,” groaned the clerk. “And then what’ll I do?”
-
-Mr. Pepper looked at him a moment silently.
-
-“Then you’ll go and lie somewhere else, I suppose. You _will_ lie,
-Alfred Weeks, and I suppose I might as well keep you here and let you
-lie to me, as to turn you loose upon your fellow men. Well, well! Now,
-young man;” he turned with a sigh from the clerk and again looked at
-Brandon.
-
-“I suppose you are Mr. Pepper?” began Brandon.
-
-“I--sup--pose--I--am,” replied the gentleman, with great care,
-scrutinizing the face of the captain’s son with marked interest.
-
-“Let’s see, what is your name?” he said: “or, no, you needn’t tell me.
-I know it already. Your name is Tarr, and you are Captain Horace Tarr’s
-son!”
-
-“Yes, sir, I am,” Brandon replied in surprise.
-
-“I knew it, I knew it!” declared Mr. Pepper, shaking both the boy’s
-hands so violently that the eye glasses, which had a hard enough time
-generally in staying on the little man’s nose, tumbled off, and were
-only caught and saved from destruction by great agility on Mr. Pepper’s
-part.
-
-“My dear boy! I’d have known you if I’d met you in Timbuctoo!” he
-declared. “Come into my office and tell me all about yourself. I’ve
-been thinking about you ever since--er--your poor father’s death. I’ve
-got something to tell you, too.”
-
-He led Brandon toward the inner door, marked “Private,” and opening it,
-disclosed a comfortably furnished room with a fire in the grate, and a
-general air of cheerfulness about it.
-
-“Come right in,” he repeated, and then shut the door behind his visitor.
-
-But no sooner was the door closed than the acrobatic clerk was off his
-stool, and had his ear fitted to the keyhole with a celerity which
-denoted much practice in the art of eavesdropping.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-IN WHICH BRANDON VENTURES INTO RATHER DISREPUTABLE SOCIETY
-
-
-“MY dear boy, sit down!” exclaimed Mr. Pepper, motioning Brandon to a
-chair. “Sit down and let me look at you.”
-
-He himself took a chair at a desk by the window and studied the boy
-intently for several moments. Meanwhile Brandon was making a mental
-examination of the shipping merchant as well.
-
-Adoniram Pepper was a little, rotund man with a good deal of color
-in his face and very little hair on his head. His mouth was always
-smiling, but at times, as Brandon had already seen, the gray eves could
-be very stern indeed behind the gold rimmed glasses, which latter had
-such hard work remaining upon Mr. Pepper’s squat nose.
-
-“Yes, sir, you are the perfect picture of your father,” declared the
-shipping merchant at last. “I thought when I read of his death that we
-should never see his like again; but you have the promise of all his
-outward characteristics, at least. I hope you’ve his inner ones, too.”
-
-“I hope so,” replied Brandon, pleased indeed at such praise of his
-father.
-
-“He was a good man,” continued Mr. Pepper ruminatively. “By the way,
-what’s your name?”
-
-“Brandon, sir.”
-
-“Oh yes, I remember now. Your father talked to me of you. He wanted you
-to follow the sea, too, and I suppose that is what you’ve come down
-here to New York for, eh?”
-
-“Yes, I hope to go to sea,” responded Brandon slowly.
-
-Had he not remembered his experience with Caleb Wetherbee, without
-doubt Brandon would have opened his heart to the eccentric merchant and
-told him all; but bearing in mind the (to him) evident treachery of the
-mate of the Silver Swan, he was not ready to take into his confidence
-every friend of his father who happened to turn up.
-
-“I thought so, I thought so!” exclaimed Mr. Pepper, rubbing his fat
-hands softly together. “The sea, by all means, my boy. That’s where
-I’ve obtained my living--and something beside--for many years, though
-in a little different way from your father. Captain Tarr commanded one
-of my vessels before he purchased the Silver Swan.”
-
-“Yes, so he has told me,” responded Brandon.
-
-“It was a sad thing--his loss at sea,” said Mr. Pepper.
-
-He still smiled, but there was moisture on his eye glasses, and he
-removed and wiped them gently on a silk handkerchief.
-
-“And he left you hardly a penny’s worth?” he continued interrogatively.
-
-“I have only about fifty dollars,” Brandon replied briefly.
-
-“Only fifty dollars,” repeated the shipping merchant softly. “Not
-much--more than I had, though, when I went out to seek my fortune; but
-I had friends--powerful friends--and so have you, Brandon.”
-
-“Not many of them, I fancy,” Don returned, smiling.
-
-“Not many, perhaps: but _some_,” the other declared with confidence,
-“and one of them is Adoniram Pepper.”
-
-“Thank you, Mr. Pepper,” said Don. “I hope I shall be worthy of your
-kindness.”
-
-“No doubt of that--no doubt of that,” rejoined the merchant, beaming
-upon him benignantly. “But to _talk_ isn’t enough for Adoniram Pepper;
-I want to _do_ something for you, my boy.”
-
-“I--I don’t know just what you can do for me, sir,” said Brandon
-doubtfully.
-
-“Don’t know? Why, you want to go to sea, don’t you?”
-
-“Yes, sir; I think I do.”
-
-“Then I _can_ help you,” declared the merchant. “I’ve several
-vessels--three are in port at the present time--and it will be strange
-indeed if I can’t find a berth on one of them for you.”
-
-“But I’m no sailor yet; I’ve got to learn,” objected Don.
-
-“So I suppose; but I’ll risk your learning fast enough. Now, where
-would you like to go, and what position shall I give you?” and Mr.
-Pepper settled himself deeper into his chair, and looked as though he
-was prepared to offer Don any position he craved, from cook’s assistant
-to captain.
-
-Brandon felt just a little bewildered by all this, and probably showed
-his bewilderment on his face.
-
-“I’ll tell you what I have now,” went on Mr. Pepper. “There’s the brig
-Calypso, loading for Port Said--she sails tomorrow; and the clipper
-ship Frances Pepper (my sister’s name, you know) unloading from Rio,
-and bound back there and to Argentine ports in a fortnight; and then
-there’s the whaleback, Number Three.”
-
-“The whaleback?” queried Brandon in perplexity.
-
-“Yes, sir, whaleback; a whaleback steamer, you know. Didn’t you ever
-see one?”
-
-Brandon shook his head.
-
-“Well, you’ll have a chance to,” declared Mr. Pepper. “These whalebacks
-are something new. Lots o’ folks don’t believe in ’em; but I do. I
-bought the third one the company ever built, and it lies at one of my
-wharves now, being fitted up.”
-
-“But where will _that_ go?” Brandon inquired with interest.
-
-Mr. Pepper rubbed his bald pate reflectively.
-
-“Well,” he said, “that I don’t know yet. I haven’t decided. I’ve got a
-scheme, but whether ’twill work or not, I can’t say. I must find a man
-to command her first. I don’t suppose _you’d_ feel like doing that,
-would you?” and the ship owner laughed jollily.
-
-“I’m afraid not; perhaps, though, there’d be some other place on her I
-could fill with satisfaction to you.”
-
-“Perhaps so. If I put her in the passenger trade, how would you like
-to be purser--assistant purser, of course, till you learn the duties?”
-
-“I think I should like it,” replied Brandon, with some hesitation,
-however; “provided, of course, that I could take it at all.”
-
-“Eh? Not take it? Why not?” demanded Mr. Pepper.
-
-“Well, first I want to see my father’s old mate--one of the men saved
-from the raft, you know--about--well, about a matter concerning the
-wreck. Perhaps, then, if you can give me a berth, I’ll be able to
-accept it.”
-
-“Going over to the hospital to see him, eh? I know Caleb Wetherbee.”
-
-“No, he’s out of the hospital now. He gave me his address--New England
-Hotel, on this very street--and hunting for the place is what brought
-me here.”
-
-“Bless my soul!” cried the ship owner; “Caleb out of hospital? Why, I
-didn’t expect he’d be ’round for some time yet. The papers said he was
-pretty nearly done for when he got to New York. It went harder with him
-than it did with the other sailor--a good deal harder.”
-
-Brandon looked at him curiously. If Caleb Wetherbee was a particular
-friend of Mr. Pepper, the captain’s son began to feel some doubt as to
-the latter’s sincerity.
-
-“Perhaps you can tell me where the New England Hotel is?” he asked.
-
-“Yes, it’s right along here on this side of the street; several blocks
-away, perhaps. But,” he added, “you don’t tell me that Caleb is
-_there_? Why, he must be ’way down on his luck. I must see about this.”
-
-Mr. Pepper wrinkled his brow nervously and Brandon rose.
-
-“Where are you going?”
-
-“Up to see this man--this mate of the Silver Swan.”
-
-“Oh yes. Well, you tell him I’m coming up to see him myself, today.
-It’s a mystery to me why he should go to _that_ place. I don’t
-understand it. How was he looking when you saw him--for I take it you
-_have_ seen him?”
-
-“How do you mean--sick or well?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Oh, he appeared in pretty fair health, I should say,” replied Brandon,
-beginning to think that there was something queer about it all.
-
-“Well, I’ll see him myself,” declared the merchant, rising and giving
-the boy his hand. “I tell you what we’ll do, Brandon. If you don’t get
-back here by noon, I’ll step up and get you, and we’ll go to lunch
-together; then afterward we’ll take a look at the whaleback, if you
-like.”
-
-Brandon thanked him and opened the door into the outer office, almost
-falling over Mr. Alfred Weeks, who had his head suspiciously near the
-keyhole.
-
-“Lo--looking for my ruler that I dropped,” declared the red haired
-clerk, as his employer’s eyes rested sternly upon him.
-
-But as he passed out, Brandon noticed that the ruler was on the high
-desk holding open the leaves of a much tattered paper novel.
-
-“Funny sort of fellow for a respectable ship owner to employ,” Brandon
-decided, as he made his way along the crowded thoroughfare. “In fact, I
-guess I’ll withhold my opinion of all three of these people till I know
-’em better--Wetherbee, Pepper, and his clerk.”
-
-By closely scanning the signs on the buildings as he passed, the
-captain’s son finally discovered the place he sought. He came within an
-ace of not doing so, however, for the words “New England Hotel” were
-simply painted on a small strip of tin on one side of the doorway, the
-rest of the sign space being devoted to the words: John Brady, Wines,
-Liquors, and Cigars.
-
-Brandon hesitated a moment before entering the place. It was plainly
-a saloon of the worst type, the “hotel” part evidently being but a
-“blind” by means of which the bar could be kept open all night.
-
-Two or three disreputable men--sailors or longshoremen by
-appearance--were hanging about the door, but Brandon Tarr had a good
-deal of confidence in his ability to take care of himself, and finally
-ascended the steps.
-
-A sickening odor of stale tobacco smoke and bad liquor assailed his
-nostrils as he stepped within the room, and he was almost tempted to
-back out and give up his intention of seeing Wetherbee. But the man
-behind the bar--a villainous looking fellow with a closely cropped head
-and red face--had seen him and came briskly forward.
-
-“Well, young felley, what kin I do fur ye?” he asked, in what was
-intended as a pleasant tone.
-
-Deciding that he was in for it, the captain’s son walked forward to the
-bar and replied:
-
-“Nothing to drink, thank you. I’m looking for a man who’s stopping
-here--Caleb Wetherbee.”
-
-The bartender eyed him curiously and repeated:
-
-“Caleb Wetherbee, eh? Well, I’ll see ’f he’s here.”
-
-He stepped back to a door leading into an inner room and, opening it a
-crack, called to somebody inside. There was a whispered conversation
-between the men, and the bull necked individual came back to the bar.
-
-“All right, m’ duck; he’s in dere,” he said, with a grin, and a motion
-of his thumb toward the inner door. “Yer don’t have ter send in no
-kyard.”
-
-Taking this as a permission to enter, Brandon walked across the long
-saloon, littered with tables and chairs, and its door covered with
-sawdust, and opened the door.
-
-The apartment beyond was as badly furnished as the outer room, there
-being only a square deal table and several wooden bottomed chairs. In
-one of these chairs before the table, with his head bowed upon his
-arms, was the sailor whom Brandon had seen two days before in the woods
-on his uncle’s farm back in Chopmist, the only occupant of the place.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE OLD SAILOR WITH THE WOODEN LEG
-
-
-IT was only in the country--in the woods and sheltered fence
-corners--that the patches of snow still remained on this sixth day of
-April. In New York the sun shone warmly upon the sidewalks, washed
-clean by the shower of the night before, and the tiny patches of grass
-in the parks and squares were quite green again.
-
-About the middle of the forenoon a man stumped along a street leading
-to what remains of the Battery park--a man dressed in a half uniform of
-navy blue, and with a face (where the beard did not hide the cuticle)
-as brown as a berry.
-
-At first glance one would have pronounced this person to be a sailor,
-and have been correct in the surmise, too.
-
-The man’s frame was of huge mold, with massive development of chest and
-limbs, and a head like a lion’s. But his bronzed cheeks were somewhat
-hollow, and his step halting, this latter not altogether owing to
-the fact that his right leg had been amputated at the knee and the
-deficiency supplied by an old fashioned wooden leg.
-
-Still, despite his evident infirmity, the old seaman looked cheerfully
-out upon the world on this bright April morning, and pegged along the
-sidewalk and into the park with smiling good nature.
-
-Not a beggar had accosted him during his walk down town without having
-a nickel tossed to him, and it was with vast contentment that the
-wooden legged sailor at length seated himself upon a bench, from which
-vantage point he could overlook the bay and its multitudinous shipping.
-
-“Ah!” he exclaimed, sniffing the air which blew in from the sea, like a
-hungry dog. “This is _life_, this is! Thank heaven I’ve got away from
-them swabs of doctors at last. Another week at that ere hospital would
-ha’ been the death o’ me. Still, I reckon they meant well ’nough.”
-
-He sat there for some time in cheerful silence, and drank in the
-exhilarating air, his pea cloth jacket thrown open to the breeze,
-baring the broad expanse of flannel shirt beneath.
-
-“A few days o’ this’ll put me right on my feet,” he said, with delight,
-“better’n all the tonics the old sawbones ever invented. Lord! if I’d
-had this breeze a-blowin’ inter my winder up there to the hospital, I’d
-been out a fortnight ago.
-
-“The old man ain’t dead yet. It was a pretty hard tug, I admit; but
-here I be!”
-
-He slapped his leg with such vigor that a flock of sparrows flew up
-with sudden affright from the path; but this energetic gesture was
-taken in another sense by the group of urchins which had gathered
-near by to talk and fight (much after the manner of their feathered
-prototypes, by the way) over the morning’s sale of papers.
-
-At the old man’s motion half a dozen of these sharp eyed little rascals
-broke away from the group, and ran shrieking toward him, wildly waving
-their few remaining wares in his face.
-
-“’Ere you are, sir! _Tribune_, _Sun_, _World_!”
-
-“_Tribune_,” said the old sailor, laughing heartily as though he saw
-something extremely ludicrous in their mistake.
-
-“My last ’un, sir. Thankee!”
-
-The successful Arab pocketed his money and went back to his friends,
-while the sailor slowly unfolded the sheet and took up the thread of
-his reflections again.
-
-“Once I get my sea legs on,” he thought, fumbling in his pocket for
-a pair of huge, steel bowed spectacles, which he carefully wiped and
-placed astride his nose “once I get my sea legs on, I’ll take a trip up
-ter Rhode Island and see the cap’n’s boy, unless he turns up in answer
-to my letter.
-
-“Poor lad! he’s doubtless heart broken by Cap’n Horace’s death, and
-won’t feel much like goin’ into this ’ere treasure huntin’ business;
-but for his own good I’ll have ter rouse him up. It would be what the
-cap’n would wish, I know.”
-
-He let the paper lie idly on his knee a moment, and a mist rose in his
-eyes.
-
-“Never mind if the old brig _has_ gone to pieces before we get there,”
-he muttered. “I’ve got a little shot in the locker yet, an’ the boy
-shan’t come ter want. I’ll do my duty by him as though he was my own
-son, that I will!”
-
-He picked up the paper again, and turned naturally to the shipping
-news, which he ran over carelessly, smiling the while. Finally his eye
-was attracted by something near the bottom of the column.
-
-“Eh, what’s this?” he exclaimed. “What’s this about the Silver Swan?”
-
-With great excitement he read the following news item, following each
-line of the text with his stumpy forefinger:
-
- Captain Millington, of the English steamer Manitoba, which arrived
- here yesterday from Brazil, reports that he passed a very dangerous
- wreck in latitude 22:03, longitude 70:32. It was the hull of a brig,
- apparently in good condition, but with her masts snapped off close to
- the decks, and all her rigging carried away. The name on her stern
- was Silver Swan, Boston.
-
- This is the same derelict reported by the steamer Montevideo at
- Savannah several weeks ago. According to Captain Millington, the
- wreck of the brig is a great menace to all vessels plying between
- this and South American ports, as its course seems to be right across
- the great highway followed by most of the steamship lines.
-
- It will be remembered that the Silver Swan was wrecked over two
- months ago on Reef Eight, southwest of Cuba, grounding, according to
- the report of the survivors of her crew, upright on the rock. The
- captain of the Montevideo sighted her not far from the reef, from
- which she was doubtless loosened by the westerly gale of February
- 13th; but since that time she has floated some distance to the north
- and east, and if she follows the same tactics as many of her sister
- derelicts, she may zigzag across the course of the South American
- steamers for months.
-
- The cruisers Kearsarge and Vesuvius are both lying in port at
- present, and it will be respectfully suggested to the Navy Department
- that one or both of those vessels be sent to destroy this and several
- others of the most dangerous derelicts now floating off our coast.
-
-“Shiver my timbers, sir!”
-
-With this forcible and exceedingly salty ejaculation, the old sailor
-with the wooden leg dropped the newspaper to the walk, and his
-spectacles along with it, and springing up, trampled upon them both.
-
-But in his great excitement he noticed neither the torn paper nor the
-ruined glasses. He stumped up and down the walk for several moments
-before he became calm enough to think coherently.
-
-In fact, the blue-coated policeman on the corner had begun to eye him
-suspiciously.
-
-“The Silver Swan afloat--a derelict!” he muttered. “This ’ere is a
-sitiwation I didn’t look for. An’ then, them blasted cruisers are
-liable to go down there and blow her into kingdom come any minute. The
-Silver Swan on Reef Eight was bad enough, but the Silver Swan afloat,
-at the mercy of the gales as well as other vessels, is worse!
-
-“Now, what in creation’ll I do about it? I haven’t heard from the boy
-yet, and there’s little enough time as it is. Why, she might sink ’most
-any time with all them di’monds the cap’n told about aboard her!
-
-“I’ll take a steamer to get down there ahead of them confounded
-iron pots” (by this disrespectful term did he designate Uncle Sam’s
-cruisers), “but who under the canopy’s got a steamer to charter?
-
-“By the great horn spoon, I have it!” he exclaimed, after a moment’s
-thought. “Adoniram Pepper is just the fellow.”
-
-With this declaration he jammed his hat on his head, and stumped off as
-rapidly as one good leg and one wooden one could carry him, toward the
-shipping merchant’s office on Water Street.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-THE OLD SAILOR’S EXCITEMENT
-
-
-AS the old sailor hurried along the street toward the ship owner’s
-office he became calmer, and, being a person who had all his life been
-taking greater or less chances in his business of seagoing, he began to
-look at the situation more composedly.
-
-The Silver Swan was without doubt in far greater danger of destruction
-now than she had been while hard and fast on the reef, but no amount
-of worrying would better the matter, and therefore one might accept
-the fact coolly. Then, besides, she had floated unmolested for over
-six weeks already, and there was a big chance for her doing so for six
-weeks or more to come.
-
-“Blast these navy vessels any way, I say!” the old man muttered,
-stumping along now at a moderate gait. “They probably won’t be able to
-find her. And if nothing collides with her, I reckon she’ll keep afloat
-for one while, for I can swear myself that the old brig warn’t injured
-none below the water line--she went on that reef jest as easy!
-
-“She’s got the same chance o’ staying above board--the Silver Swan
-has--as any other craft that’s become a derelict. Look at the schooner
-W. L. White, abandoned by her crew during the great storm of ’88. She
-floated about the North Atlantic for the better part of a year, before
-she went ashore at last on the Hebrides.
-
-“An’ then there was the Weyer G. Sargent, mahogany laden, floated
-fifty-five hundred mile, or more, ’cording to the pilot chart,
-a-swingin’ ’round the Atlantic from New Foundland to the Azores for
-two years. An’ there may be many another good ship that’s got a bigger
-record ’n that at this very day, down in the Sargasso sea. Oh, it might
-be worse.”
-
-Nevertheless, despite this cheerful view, the old sailor’s forehead was
-knotted into a scowl as he opened the door of the ship owner’s dingy
-office and entered. The red haired clerk was alone at the desk and the
-door of the private office was shut.
-
-“Well, you jail bird, are you here yet?” demanded the visitor
-impolitely, eying the clerk with exceeding disfavor.
-
-“Oh, is that you, Mr. Featherbee----”
-
-“Wetherbee, you scoundrel!” roared the sailor, in a voice like a bull.
-
-“Oh, yes! I should say Wetherbee--er--that’s what I meant,” the clerk
-hastened to say.
-
-It was remarkable to notice the difference between the greeting
-accorded to Caleb Wetherbee and that given young Brandon Tarr shortly
-before.
-
-“So you haven’t managed to get at Pepperpod’s till and clear out, yet,
-eh?” demanded Caleb jocularly.
-
-Mr. Weeks scowled and grinned at the same time, a feat that very few
-men can perform; but he made no verbal reply to the question.
-
-“Where is he?” queried the sailor, nodding toward the inner office. “In
-his den?”
-
-“He’s busy--engaged,” Mr. Weeks hastened to say.
-
-“I believe you’re lying to me, Weeks,” returned the sailor, after eying
-the fellow a moment. “You’d rather lie than eat. Where’s Pepperpod?”
-
-“He--he really _is_ engaged, sir,” declared Weeks, who stood in mortal
-fear of the brawny sailor. “That is, he told me to say so to anybody
-that called----”
-
-“I don’t doubt it--that’s what’s taught you to lie,” cried Caleb, in
-disgust. “Well, I’m going to see him if he’s engaged fifty times. Cut
-along now and tell him I’m here.”
-
-Mr. Weeks slowly descended from his stool, evidently unwilling to
-comply with the request.
-
-“Get a move on you,” the sailor commanded. “If you don’t I’ll roast you
-over a slow fire. I’m just out of the hospital and I’ve got an appetite
-like an ostrich--or I’d never think of eating _you_.”
-
-Mr. Weeks unwillingly went to the inner door and rapped on the panel.
-Then he turned the knob and went in, remaining a few moments, and on
-making his appearance again, held the portal open for Caleb.
-
-The sailor entered without a word and the clerk closed the door behind
-him; then, as on the former occasion, he applied his ear to the keyhole
-with a diligence worthy of a better cause.
-
-Mr. Pepper was sitting before his desk, which was piled high with
-papers and letters. The day’s mail had just been sent up from the
-wareroom office by Mr. Marks, the ship owner’s trusted manager, or
-“steward,” as Adoniram was in the habit of calling him.
-
-Beginning business life more than fifty years before in this very
-office, Mr. Pepper could not bring himself, as his trade increased,
-to leave his old quarters, and having found his manager to be a most
-trustworthy man, he had shifted the burden of the more arduous duties
-upon his younger shoulders, and himself reposed contentedly amid the
-dust, the gloom, and the cobwebs of the Water Street office.
-
-Thus it was that few people ever saw “Adoniram Pepper & Co.” to know
-him; but to his old friends, those of his boyhood and young manhood,
-Adoniram was always the same.
-
-Naturally his acquaintance was mostly among seafaring people, and it
-was no uncommon sight to see old hulks of sea captains and ship owners,
-long past their usefulness, steering a course for the Water Street
-office on pleasant days, where they were sure to receive a pleasant
-word from the little old gentleman, if he was in, and not uncommonly
-a bit of silver to spend for luxuries which “sailors’ homes” do not
-supply.
-
-The old gentleman sprang up at once at Caleb’s appearance, the
-unfortunate eye glasses jumping off the chubby little nose as though
-they were endowed with life. Mr. Pepper gave both his hands to the huge
-sailor, who indeed looked gigantic beside the little man, and begged
-him to sit down.
-
-“Well, Pepperpod, how are ye?” cried the sailor, in a hearty roar that
-shook the light pieces of furniture in the room, just as his bulk shook
-the chair he had seated himself in.
-
-“First rate, old Timbertoes!” declared the old gentleman, laughing
-merrily. “So you’re out of the hospital, at last?”
-
-“I be, Adoniram, I be!” cried Caleb with satisfaction. “Never was so
-glad o’ anythin’ in my life. Them sawbones would have killed me if
-they’d kep’ me there much longer.”
-
-“Well, well, Caleb, you was a mighty sick man--a mighty sick man.”
-
-“I reckon I was,” responded the sailor reflectively.
-
-“The doctor wouldn’t let me come in to see you,” said the merchant,
-smiling jovially; “so I had to content myself with sending up things.”
-
-“Yes, you did,” said Caleb, turning on him sternly. “I _did_ think,
-Adoniram, that you wouldn’t waste your money on such truck as
-that--a-sendin’ me white grapes, an’ jellies, an’ bunches o’ posies.”
-
-He snorted in veriest scorn.
-
-“Well, er--er--you see, Caleb, I told Frances about you and she took
-over the things herself,” said Adoniram hesitatingly.
-
-“Hem!”
-
-The old sea dog flushed up like a girl and mopped his suddenly heated
-face with a great bandanna, finally saying gruffly:
-
-“You tell your sister, Miss Frances, that I am mightily obleeged for
-’em, Adoniram. They--er--jest went to the right spot, you tell her;
-jest what I needed to tone me up!”
-
-“You’d better come up and tell her yourself, Caleb,” said the merchant,
-with a sly smile.
-
-“Well--er--mebbe I will. Thankee, Adoniram.”
-
-He was silent a moment, and then, suddenly bethinking himself of the
-errand which had brought him there, he turned upon the little merchant
-with a slap of his knee which sounded throughout the office like a gun
-shot.
-
-“But this ’ere ain’t what brought me here--not by a long chalk. Ye know
-the Silver Swan, Adoniram? Cap’n Horace Tarr’s brig ’t I was with when
-she grounded on Reef Eight, two months and more ago?”
-
-Mr. Pepper nodded.
-
-“Well, sir, she’s afloat.”
-
-“Afloat!”
-
-“That’s what I said; afloat! A-f-l-o-t-e,” responded the sailor,
-spelling the word very carefully, if a trifle erratically.
-
-“How--how can that be?”
-
-“Well, ye see she went aground jest like she was goin’ inter stocks for
-repairs, and if we’d stuck by her, it’s my opinion Cap’n Tarr’d ha’
-been alive now.” He stopped and blew his nose hastily. “Well, what is,
-can’t be bettered, so we’ll say no more o’ that.
-
-“But what I’m gettin’ at is this: she went aground all standin’, an’
-the storm wot come up right arterwards, blew her off ag’in. She’s been
-floating, according to this morning’s paper, ever since.”
-
-“Well, well!” exclaimed Adoniram. “It’s too bad her hull can’t be
-secured for the boy. If it’s still sound----”
-
-“Sound as a dollar!”
-
-“Where is it floating?”
-
-“’Cordin’ to the report of a cap’n wot sighted her, she’s somewheres
-about latitude 22, longitude 70.”
-
-“A pretty valuable derelict, eh, Caleb?” said the merchant,
-reflectively.
-
-“Valible? Well, I should say!” The old sailor looked at his friend
-curiously a moment, and then leaned forward and rested his huge hand on
-Adoniram’s knee. “Besides a valible cargo wot we took on at the Cape
-and Rio, _there’s enough diamonds hid aboard that brig to make the boy
-a second Vanderbilt_!”
-
-“Mercy me!” exclaimed the merchant, and this time the eye glasses
-leaped off their insecure resting place and fell with a crash to the
-floor, the splintered crystal flying in all directions.
-
-“Now you’ve done it, Adoniram!” ejaculated Caleb in disgust. “What
-under the canopy a man like you--with no nose to speak of--wants to try
-to wear such tackle as them for, is beyond me.”
-
-“Well--er--Frances thinks they look better on me than other kinds of
-glasses,” remarked the merchant meekly.
-
-“Well--hem!--I s’pose they _do_ look some better on ye,” declared Caleb
-loyally, and then a slight noise from the other side of the door caused
-him to jump up and spring hastily to it.
-
-When he flung the door open, however, the red haired clerk was astride
-his high stool with a look of perfect innocence on his face; but Caleb
-was not reassured. He shook his huge fist at the fellow, and then shut
-the door again, turning the key in the lock and hanging his hat upon
-the door knob for further precaution.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-CALEB RECEIVES A STARTLING COMMUNICATION
-
-
-“SOME of these days,” said Caleb, with decision, when he had taken
-these precautions, “I shall wring that scoundrel’s neck, Adoniram. I
-wonder at your keeping him here.”
-
-“Well, you see, nobody else would have him,” responded the merchant, as
-though that fact was reason enough for _his_ keeping the objectionable
-Mr. Weeks.
-
-“Ya-as--one o’ your blasted philanthropic notions,” declared Caleb,
-with a snort denoting disgust. “Well, he’ll rob and murder you some day
-and then you’ll wish you’d heard to me. If ‘jail bird’ ain’t written on
-_his_ face, then I never saw it on no man’s.”
-
-“But, Caleb, what do you mean by the astounding remark you just made
-about the Silver Swan?” asked the merchant, drawing the sailor’s mind
-away from the subject of Mr. Alfred Weeks and his frailties.
-
-“I’ll tell you about it,” said Caleb, in a lower tone, seating himself
-by the desk again. “What I said is straight, Pepper. There is hidden
-inside that hulk of the Silver Swan, a lot o’ di’monds--how many, I
-don’t know--but enough, according to Cap’n Horace’s own words to make a
-man fabulously rich. They belong to his boy, Brandon, and _we_ must get
-’em for him.
-
-“I never knew a word about the stones till we was on the raft. Cap’n
-Horace was pretty fur gone--any one with half an eye could see
-_that_--and when we’d been out several days an’ hadn’t sighted no ship,
-he wrote a long letter to Brandon an’ give it to me with a package of
-other papers.
-
-“I’ve got them papers right here at this identical minute; but I ain’t
-opened ’em, ’cause it ain’t my place to do so. They tells all about the
-di’monds an’ how they come into Cap’n Horace’s han’s.
-
-“It seems that just afore we left the Cape a man come aboard the Silver
-Swan and brought a package of wot _he_ thought was papers, to Cap’n
-Horace, from his brother Anson.”
-
-“Why, Anson was dead long ago, I thought,” interrupted Mr. Pepper.
-
-“So did everybody else think so; but he wasn’t. He was dead, though,
-when this feller seed Cap’n Horace, for he’d give the package into the
-man’s hands when he was dying, for _him_ to send to Cap’n Tarr. But we
-put into the Cape afore the man got ’round to sendin’ ’em to the States.
-
-“_He_ never knew what a valible thing he was a carryin’ ’round; but
-when the cap’n come to open the package he found a lot o’ di’monds done
-up in a separate wrapper. These he hid somewhere about the brig--he
-tells about it in this letter to Brandon, I b’lieve.
-
-“I wanted to know why he didn’t take ’em on the raft when we left the
-brig, but it seems he misdoubted himself about a rascally sailor we had
-with us--one Jim Leroyd.
-
-“This ’ere Leroyd had been snoopin’ around the cabin when the cap’n was
-given the diamonds, and he thought the feller suspected something. So,
-not knowing how it might go with any of us, he left the gems on the
-brig, preferring to risk losin’ ’em altogether, rather than to cause
-strife an’ p’r’aps bloodshed on that raft.
-
-“An’ I reckon ’twas lucky he did so, fur we had trouble enough with
-that swab Leroyd.”
-
-“Why, wasn’t he the man who was saved with you?” asked the merchant.
-
-“That’s who.”
-
-“Tell me, Caleb,” said Mr. Pepper earnestly, “why was it he stood the
-experience so much better than you? Why, he was discharged from the
-hospital in a week, so I understand, while you show traces of the
-suffering you underwent even now.”
-
-Caleb closed his lips grimly and looked at the little man in silence
-for several moments. Then he leaned further forward and clutched his
-arm with one great brown hand.
-
-“He had food that I didn’t have,” he whispered hoarsely.
-
-“What!” cried Adoniram, shrinking back, his eyes abulge.
-
-Caleb nodded slowly.
-
-“There were four of us on that raft. Paulo Montez--he went first. We
-divided the food and water, an’ that villain Leroyd ate his all up.
-Then we had ter drive him behind his chest at the other end of the
-raft, an’ keep him there at the point of our pistols.
-
-“Then the cap’n went, an’--an’--_I had to throw him to the sharks to
-keep him out o’ the clutches o’ that cannibal Leroyd!_”
-
-“Great heavens!” exclaimed the ship owner, shrinking back into his
-chair, his face the picture of horrified amazement.
-
-“Yes, sir,” whispered Caleb; “he dragged poor Paulo’s body back o’ that
-chest--an’--well, ’taint no use talkin’! I ain’t said a word about it
-before to any living creature. It’s only my word ag’in his, at best.
-But I swear, Adoniram, I’d kill the hound with as little compunction as
-I would a rat.
-
-“He’s been sneaking ’round the hospital, inquiring about me, too,”
-continued the sailor. “He’s got his eye on these papers, for he see
-Cap’n Horace give ’em to me. I reckon he don’t know what they’re about,
-but he suspects there’s money in it. He was ’round to the hospital only
-last night, so the doctor told me.
-
-“And now, Adoniram, wot I want o’ you is to help me find this derelict
-before some o’ Uncle Sam’s blasted iron pots go out after her. We must
-get the boy down from that uncle’s place in Rhode Island----”
-
-“Why, didn’t you see him this morning?” asked Mr. Pepper, in surprise.
-
-“See who?”
-
-“Why, the boy--Captain Tarr’s son, Brandon?”
-
-“What?” roared the sailor. “Then he’s here in New York, is he?”
-
-“Why--of--course,” responded the merchant, in bewilderment. “I thought
-you’d seen him again. He started out to call on you not two hours ago.
-He said you’d given him your address--at the New England Hotel, just
-below here.
-
-“And what I want to say, Caleb is that I don’t consider it a great
-proof of friendship on _your_ part, for you to go to such a place as
-that, even if you were low in finances. I’d only be too glad to have
-you come to my house and stay the rest of your natural life--and so
-would Frances.”
-
-“Me!--at the New England Hotel!--why the man’s crazy!” declared Caleb.
-
-“Ain’t you stopping there?” gasped the merchant.
-
-“Am I? Well. I guess not! I ain’t but just got out o’ the hospital this
-blessed morning.”
-
-“Why, he said he’d seen you once, and you’d told him to call at the New
-England Hotel.”
-
-“Who?” roared Caleb.
-
-“Brandon Tarr.”
-
-“Why, man alive, I never saw the lad in all my life!”
-
-“Then,” declared Adoniram with energy, “there’s foul play about it.
-When I came down this morning I found the captain’s son waiting to see
-me. He’d just come down from Rhode Island, I believe, and he’d got your
-address--said he’d already seen you once, mind you--and was going up to
-this place to see you again.
-
-“I thought ’twas funny you should put up at such a house, Caleb; but I
-didn’t know but perhaps you were ‘on your uppers’” (Caleb snorted at
-this), “and had gone there for cheapness. I told Brandon I’d come up
-after him this noon and take him to lunch.”
-
-But Caleb was on his feet now, and pacing the floor like a caged lion.
-
-“I see it all--I see it all!” he declared. “It’s some o’ that swab
-Leroyd’s work. Why, man alive, do you know what the New England Hotel
-is? It’s one o’ the wickedest places in New York. I know the den well,
-and the feller as runs it, too. Why, the boy’s in danger every moment
-he stays there!”
-
-He seized his hat and jammed it on his head again.
-
-“Ef anything’s happened to that boy, I’ll break every bone in that
-scoundrel’s body!” he exclaimed, seizing the door and throwing it wide
-open without the formality of unlocking it.
-
-The splintered wood and broken lock flew in all directions as he dashed
-through the doorway and flung himself into the street, while Mr. Pepper
-remained weakly in his chair, too utterly bewildered to move, and the
-festive Mr. Weeks dodged behind the high desk with alacrity, as the
-sailor went through the outer office like a whirlwind.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-TELLING HOW BRANDON BEARDED THE LION IN HIS LAIR
-
-
-AS Brandon Tarr entered the apartment behind the bar room of the New
-England Hotel, the man at the table raised his head and surveyed him
-surlily. Evidently he had been drinking, and the liquor had changed
-his mood greatly from that of the affable sailor who had accosted the
-captain’s son in the Chopmist woods.
-
-“Well, how came _you_ here?” inquired the sailor, in no very friendly
-tone, gazing at Brandon, with bloodshot eyes.
-
-“I came down on the train.”
-
-“Ain’t you lost?”
-
-“Guess not,” responded the boy.
-
-The man shifted his position uneasily, keeping his eyes fixed upon his
-visitor.
-
-“Can’t say as I expected to see you--just yet, any way.”
-
-“No?” returned Brandon coolly.
-
-“Say! wot the blazes do you want, any way?” demanded the sailor
-fiercely, after an instant’s silence. “It won’t pay you to be sassy
-here, my lad, now I can assure ye.”
-
-“Think so? Seems to me you’re not as glad to see me as I reckoned you
-would be. It didn’t exactly pay you to come ’way up to Rhode Island to
-pump me, did it?”
-
-The fellow hissed out an oath between his teeth and clinched his fist
-angrily.
-
-“You’re too fresh, you are!” he declared.
-
-“Maybe.”
-
-“So I went up there to pump you, eh?”
-
-“I reckon.”
-
-“And what did _you_ come down here for?”
-
-“To pump you,” responded the captain’s son, laughing.
-
-The sailor stared at him in utter amazement for a moment.
-
-“Of all the swabs----” he began, but Brandon interrupted him.
-
-“See here, Wetherbee, I’ve come here for a purpose. My father intrusted
-you with some papers for me (though why he ever did so _I_ don’t see--I
-mistrusted your ugly face the first time I ever saw it), and now you
-are trying to play me false.”
-
-“You know too much!” roared the sailor, rising and thumping the table
-with his clenched fist.
-
-“Yes, I _do_ know too much for your good--or for the success of your
-plot,” Brandon replied, with cool sarcasm. “See this?”
-
-He took the bit of newspaper from his pocket and tossed it upon the
-table before the man.
-
-“What is it?” demanded the sailor, clutching at the clipping.
-
-“The newspaper item stating that the Silver Swan is a derelict, instead
-of being sunken, as you declared to me. Had I not found it in the
-woods after you left, I might have still believed your lying yarn,
-Wetherbee.”
-
-The sailor crumpled the bit of paper in his fist and shook the clenched
-member in the boy’s face.
-
-“Young man,” he said with emphasis, “ye think ye’re smart; but do ye
-know that ye’re likely ter git inter trouble ’fore ye get out o’ this
-place? I don’t ’low no boy ter sass me.”
-
-“I’m sorry for that,” said Brandon, thinking the fellow’s threat but
-mere bombastic eloquence; “for I reckon you’ll have to stand it.”
-
-His very fearlessness caused the man to hesitate ere he used
-violence, for it _might_ be that the boy had friends within call. The
-sailor therefore bit his thick lip in fury, and poured a shower of
-vituperations upon his visitor’s head.
-
-“Let me tell you something else, also,” continued Brandon. “I propose
-to have those papers that father gave you.”
-
-“Oh, you do?” half screamed the man, stamping up and down the room in
-ungovernable rage.
-
-“Yes, sir; and no amount of swearing will scare me. Those papers are
-mine and if you won’t give them up peaceably, the law will make you.”
-
-Suddenly the man stopped storming and became more tranquil.
-
-“So you’re goin’ ter law erbout it, be ye?”
-
-“No, I don’t think I’ll have to; I think you’ll see plain enough that
-it will be best for you to give them up. By your own confession you
-don’t know where the treasure is hid; _but I do_. Somehow I’m going
-to find the wreck of the brig and get--whatever it was father hid. But
-first, I want those papers that I may know _what_ the--the treasure
-consists of.”
-
-“Oh, ye do? Well, how be ye goin’ ter prove that I’ve got the
-docyments?”
-
-“Very easily indeed,” Brandon responded frankly. “I’m going to look up
-the sailor who was with you on the raft. If father gave you the papers
-_he_ doubtless knows it, and I don’t believe that there are _two_ men
-as dishonest as you, Wetherbee.”
-
-“So you know where the old man has hid the stuff, hey? An’ yer goin’
-ter see th’--th’ other sailor an’ git his evidence, be ye?”
-
-The man’s ugly face turned a deep reddish hue and he reached out
-his hands and clutched the empty chair as though he were strangling
-somebody. The gesture was so terribly realistic and the man’s face so
-diabolical, that Brandon involuntarily shrank back.
-
-“You little fool!” hissed the other slowly. “You’ve put yourself right
-inter my han’s an’ let me tell ye I’m a bad man ter monkey with. I’ve
-let ye hev it all your own way so fur, but now ’twill be _my_ turn, an’
-don’t you forgit it! Ye know where thet treasure is hidden aboard the
-brig, hey? Then, by the great jib boom, ye’ll tell me or _ye’ll never
-git out o’ here alive_!”
-
-As he uttered the threat he sprang upon the boy so suddenly that
-Brandon was totally unprepared for the assault. His victim was no match
-for his great strength, and was borne to the floor at once.
-
-The villain’s hand upon his throat deprived the boy of all power of
-utterance, and he felt himself being slowly choked into insensibility.
-
-Suddenly the door between the apartment and the bar room was flung wide
-open as though a small hurricane had descended upon the establishment
-of the New England Hotel. Don’s villainous assailant--big and burly
-though he was--was seized in a grip of iron, pulled from his victim,
-and thrown bodily to the other side of the room.
-
-“You scoundrel!” roared Caleb (for it was he) in a voice that made the
-chandelier tremble. “Would you kill the lad?”
-
-But Brandon, now that the pressure was removed from his throat, was
-on his feet in a moment, staring curiously at the big, wooden legged
-sailor.
-
-“Just saved you from adding murder to your other sins, did I?”
-continued the mate of the Silver Swan. “Did he hurt you, lad?”
-
-“Guess I’m all right,” responded Brandon, feeling of his throat as his
-assailant arose to his feet, scowling ferociously at the newcomer.
-
-“I’ll live to see you hung yet, Jim Leroyd!” Caleb declared, shaking
-his huge fist at the sailor.
-
-“Great Scott!” exclaimed Brandon; “is _that_ his name? Why, he told me
-he was Caleb Wetherbee!”
-
-“He did, eh? Blast his impudence! Let me tell you, lad, if Cale
-Wetherbee looked like that scoundrel, he’d go drown himself for very
-shame. _I’m_ Caleb Wetherbee, myself, and _you_, I reckon, are Brandon
-Tarr.”
-
-Brandon was fairly stupefied by this announcement.
-
-“But what about the--the papers father put into his hands for me?” he
-asked, breathlessly.
-
-“Your father give _him_ papers, lad? Well, I reckon not! He’s lied to
-ye.”
-
-“Then he hasn’t them?”
-
-“Not he. I’ve got ’em myself, safe and sound.”
-
-“You have them?” repeated Brandon.
-
-“That I have,” replied the mate confidently, “and what’s more, I’ve got
-’em right here!”
-
-At this juncture the door behind them opened and the red faced
-barkeeper came into the room.
-
-“Look er-here, wot’s de meanin’ of all dis, hey?” he demanded, eying
-Caleb with disfavor.
-
-“Oh, it’s you, is it?” said the wooden legged sailor, in disgust. “I
-know _you_, Jack Brady. Get out here, you walking beer keg! I’m having
-a private seance with this gentleman,” intimating the cowed Leroyd.
-
-A quick look of intelligence passed between Leroyd and the bartender.
-
-“Ye’re tryin’ ter kick up a shindy in dis place, dat’s wot ye’re at!”
-declared the latter, rolling up his sleeves, belligerently.
-
-“Yes, and I’ll kick up a bigger row before I’m through,” Caleb replied
-threateningly. “Now you run out and play, sonny, while I talk to my
-friend, Mr. Leroyd, here.”
-
-This so angered the pugilistic looking man that he made a dash at the
-big sailor; but the consequences were exceedingly unpleasant.
-
-Caleb’s hammer-like fist swung round with the force of a pile driver,
-and an ox would have fallen before that blow. As Mr. Brady himself
-would have put it, he was “knocked out in one round.”
-
-But the treacherous Leroyd, taking advantage of his friend’s attack on
-the mate, sprang upon Caleb from the other side. This flank movement
-was totally unexpected, and, weakened by his long confinement in the
-hospital, the mate of the Silver Swan could not hold his own with his
-former shipmate.
-
-Both went to the floor with a crash, and as they fell Leroyd tore open
-his antagonist’s coat and seized a flat leather case from the mate’s
-inside pocket. Dealing one heavy blow on the other’s upturned face, the
-scoundrel sprang up and disappeared like a shot through the door at the
-opposite end of the apartment.
-
-“Stop him!” roared Caleb, and Brandon, who had stood utterly bewildered
-and helpless throughout the scene, sprang forward to the door.
-
-“The papers! He’s stolen the papers!” he gasped, seizing the knob and
-trying to pull open the door.
-
-But the key had been turned in the lock and the stout door baffled all
-his attempts upon it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-HOW THE OMNIPRESENT WEEKS PROVES HIS RIGHT TO THE TERM
-
-
-HAMPERED as he was by his wooden leg, it was several moments before
-the old sailor could get upon his feet, and the festive Mr. Brady,
-maddened and almost blinded by the blow he had received in the first of
-the fracas, would have pitched into him had not Brandon threatened the
-fellow with one of the heavy chairs with which the room was furnished.
-
-“I’ll make dis the sorriest day er your life, ye bloomin’ big brute!”
-declared Mr. Brady, holding one hand to his bruised face, and shaking
-the other fist at the sailor. “I’ll have ye jugged--that’s wot I’ll
-do----”
-
-And just then he stopped, for in the doorway leading to the bar room
-stood Adoniram Pepper, flushed and breathless, and behind him the burly
-forms of two blue-coated policemen.
-
-“Thank goodness, the boy is safe!” gasped the little merchant. “Are
-_you_ hurt, Caleb?”
-
-“Some shaken up, but that’s all, shipmate,” declared the mate of the
-Silver Swan. “I got here just in time to keep that brute Leroyd from
-choking the lad to death.”
-
-“Mercy! and where is he now?”
-
-“Skipped, I reckon,” responded Caleb briefly, brushing the sawdust off
-his clothing.
-
-“But he’s stolen the papers,” said Brandon.
-
-“Not the papers your father gave Caleb?” cried the little man. “He must
-be captured at once!”
-
-“Yes, he robbed me,” said Caleb slowly; “but whether he got anything o’
-much value or not is another question. Let’s get out o’ here, ’Doniram,
-and take account o’ cargo.”
-
-Just here the policemen crowded into the room.
-
-“Has your man got away, sir?” one of them asked Mr. Pepper.
-
-“I’m afraid he has, officer--unless you want this fellow arrested,
-Caleb?” indicating the saloon keeper.
-
-At this Brady began to storm and rave disgracefully.
-
-“Come, quit that, Brady!” commanded officer Mullen. “You’re deep in
-this, I’ve no doubt. You want to walk a chalk line now, or I’ll have
-your license taken away. D’ye understand?”
-
-Mr. Brady subsided at this threat, and the party filed out.
-
-“It’s all right now, officer,” said Adoniram, slipping something into
-Mr. Mullen’s hand. “We won’t trouble you further. If anything more
-comes of it, I’ll step around and see the captain myself.”
-
-The two policemen nodded and Mr. Pepper led his friends back to his
-office.
-
-On the way Brandon explained his previous connection with the villain
-Leroyd, and recounted what had occurred at the New England Hotel before
-Caleb’s timely appearance.
-
-“Well, I reckon you were just what Leroyd told you--a little too
-fresh,” was the comment of the mate of the Silver Swan. “’Twas only by
-luck that ye warn’t garroted by that scoundrel. There’s been more than
-one man gone into that dive that never come out arterwards, now I tell
-ye.”
-
-“You are wrong, Caleb,” declared Mr. Pepper confidently “It was not
-luck--’twas Providence.”
-
-“Mebbe you’re right, old man,” returned the mate. “Now, lad, come in
-here and tell us all about yourself before we do anything further. We
-want to get a thorough understanding o’ the case.”
-
-They had arrived at the shipping merchant’s office, but it was locked
-and Mr. Pepper had to use his own private pass key.
-
-“Weeks has gone out,” the old gentleman explained, ushering them in.
-“It’s his dinner hour.”
-
-“I’m glad the swab’s out of the way,” growled the sailor. “I don’t see
-what you keep that prying, sneaking rascal about here for any way.
-He’ll do you some damage some time, ’Doniram.”
-
-“I--I should dislike to discharge him,” said the old gentleman gently.
-“He--he is an unfortunate fellow----”
-
-“Unfortunate!” snorted the mate in disgust.
-
-“Yes, unfortunate, Caleb. Even his face is against him. Who would want
-such a looking fellow around an office? And office work is all he knows
-how to do. Marks wouldn’t keep him down to the other office, so I _had_
-to take him up here.”
-
-“Had to!”
-
-Caleb stared at his old friend in pitying surprise.
-
-“’Doniram,” he said, “you--make--me--weary!”
-
-Then he shook his head sadly and dropped heavily into a chair he had
-formerly occupied near the merchant’s desk.
-
-“Come,” he said, turning to Brandon, holding out his hand
-affectionately, “come and sit down here beside me, my lad. We want to
-know each other better--you and I--and I’ve got a good deal to say to
-ye.
-
-“Your father’s last words to me was ‘Remember, Cale!’ an’ they referred
-to the fac’ that he’d left me in charge o’ you--an’ of your property.
-An’ I’m rememberin’, though that hospital business delayed me a good
-bit.”
-
-“But, Caleb,” said the merchant nervously, “what will you do about
-those--those diamonds,” and he looked at Brandon smilingly, “now that
-that scamp has stolen the captain’s papers?”
-
-“Diamonds?” echoed Brandon.
-
-“Aye, diamonds--lashin’s of ’em!” the sailor declared earnestly. “If
-yer father was ter be believed--an’ _you_ know whether or not to
-believe him as well as _I_--there’s di’monds hid aboard that brig,
-enough to make you a rich man, my lad.”
-
-“But the papers?” repeated Mr. Pepper.
-
-“Blast the papers!” exclaimed the sailor, slapping his thigh
-impatiently. “They don’t amount to a row of pins.”
-
-“But they’ll tell that Leroyd all about the treasure and just where to
-find it,” said Brandon.
-
-“And you won’t know _where_ to look for it aboard the Silver Swan,” Mr.
-Pepper chimed in.
-
-“I won’t hey?” responded Caleb with a snort of disgust. “Sure of that,
-be ye?”
-
-“I think I know where father would place the gems for safe keeping,”
-said Brandon, slowly.
-
-“Yes, an’ I reckon _I_ know, too,” the mate declared. “There’s a
-sliding panel in the cabin--eh, lad?”
-
-Brandon nodded acquiescence.
-
-“Yes, that’s it,” went on the sailor; “it come to me just now when I
-was a-thinkin’ of the matter. We useter keep our private papers in that
-’ere hole in the bulkhead. It’s the third panel on the port side front
-the companionway.”
-
-“Sh!” exclaimed the merchant, “suppose somebody should overhear you.”
-
-“Oh, that sneak Weeks isn’t here,” replied Caleb carelessly. “You don’t
-have anybody else working for you here who would snoop like him, do
-you, ’Doniram?”
-
-The merchant shook his head with a mild smile.
-
-“Well, then,” said the mate of the Silver Swan, “we can get down to
-business. We understand each other, eh, lad? Ye’ll put yourself under
-our care, an’ ’Doniram an’ I’ll see you through this thing.”
-
-“I’m only too glad to have your help,” cried Don warmly. “Alone I can
-do nothing; but with you to help me, Mr. Wetherbee----”
-
-“Drop that!” thundered Caleb. “Don’t you ‘mister’ me, blast yer
-impudence! I’m Cale Wetherbee to _you_, as I was to yer father.”
-
-Then he added more mildly:
-
-“You can count on me, Don. And you can count on Pepperpod, here, every
-time, eh?” and he nodded to the ship owner.
-
-“That you can, Don,” rejoined Mr. Pepper. “And already I have a vessel
-I can place at your disposal. It is the whaleback steamer I spoke of
-this morning. You shall have her and go in quest of the Silver Swan.”
-
-“A whaleback, hey?” repeated Caleb quickly, with a doubtful shake of
-his head. “I don’t know much about them new fangled things.”
-
-“Well, you shall before long,” Mr. Pepper declared. “With her you can
-beat any of these cruisers to the brig, and get the diamonds before
-they blow her sky high.
-
-“Now, let us go out to lunch; it is long past my regular hour,” he
-continued. “I will close the office for the day and you must both go
-home with me. Wait, I’ll telephone to Marks.”
-
-“Let me git my clo’es brushed before we go up town, ’Doniram,”
-exclaimed Caleb, in sudden haste. “I’ve got sawdust all over me.”
-
-“All right,” the merchant responded, giving the call for the wareroom
-office (it was a private line); “you’ll find a whisk broom in that
-wardrobe there. Don can brush you.”
-
-The sailor arose and walked over to the wardrobe.
-
-“Dem the thing! how it sticks,” he remarked impatiently, tugging at the
-handle.
-
-Then he exerted his great strength and the door flew open with
-surprising suddenness, and with it, to the startled amazement of the
-entire party, came the red haired clerk, Alfred Weeks, clinging vainly
-to the inner knob.
-
-The momentum of his exit fairly threw him across the small room, where
-he dropped into a chair which happened to stand handy, gazing, the
-picture of fright, at the infuriated sailor.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-BRANDON LISTENS TO A SHORT FAMILY HISTORY
-
-
-“WEEKS! Weeks! I wouldn’t have thought it of you,” exclaimed Adoniram
-Pepper sorrowfully, turning away from the ’phone to gaze sternly at the
-rascally clerk.
-
-“Wouldn’t have thought it of him?” roared Caleb. “’Doniram, you’re
-a fool! It’s just exactly what you might have expected of him. Oh,
-you--you swab, you!” he added, shaking his fist at the trembling
-culprit. “I wish I had you aboard ship. If I wouldn’t haze you!”
-
-Then he sprang at the fellow, and seizing him ere he could escape,
-tossed him face downward over his knee, and, while he held him with one
-hand, delivered a most energetic spanking with the other huge palm, to
-his squirming prisoner’s manifest discomfort.
-
-“Oh! oh! oh!” roared Weeks, almost black in the face. “Oh, he’s
-a-murderin’ me I Let me go! Oh! oh!”
-
-“Stop your bawling, Alfred,” Mr. Pepper commanded, as the breathless
-sailor released the scamp and placed him upright with no gentle force.
-
-Brandon, who had been well nigh convulsed with laughter at the mode of
-punishment the clerk had received, had not thought it possible for the
-jolly Adoniram to ever appear so stern as he did now.
-
-“Weeks,” continued the merchant, the customary smile totally eradicated
-from his features, “Weeks, I have done my best for you for ten years.
-I’ve helped you the best I know how. I have shielded you from those who
-would have given you over to justice more than once, for your petty
-crimes. Now, sir, I am through with you!
-
-“This offense is unpardonable. You may go down to the other office and
-draw your salary to the end of the month, and never let me see you
-again until you have become a respectable member of society, and shown
-by your actions, not by words, that you are such. Go at once, sir!”
-
-Weeks hesitated an instant as though he contemplated making an appeal
-to his old employer for mercy; but the look on Mr. Pepper’s face
-forbade that. The old merchant was an embodiment of justice now; mercy
-for the rascally clerk had flown.
-
-Picking up his hat, he limped silently to the door, but ere he
-disappeared he turned and looked at Brandon, who, in spite of himself,
-was unable to keep his face straight. He glared at the laughing youth
-an instant, and then the real nature of the fellow flashed out from
-beneath the veneer of apparently harmless impudence and cunning.
-
-His dark, old looking face flushed deeply red, his narrow eyes flashed
-with sudden rage, and he shook his clenched fist at Brandon Tarr with
-insane fury.
-
-“I’ll even things up with _you_, you young whelp!” he hissed, and in
-another moment limped out of the place.
-
-“A nice fellow you’ve harbored, there, ’Doniram, just as I told you,”
-Caleb declared. “He’ll knife you some dark night, if you’re not
-careful.”
-
-But Adoniram only shook his head sadly and returned to the telephone.
-After talking to his manager several minutes, he picked up his hat and
-gloves and led the way out of the office, locking it behind him.
-
-“Adoniram Pepper & Co. will take a holiday today,” he said, his old
-jovial smile returning. “First let us go to lunch.”
-
-They were all too hungry by this time to go far before attending to the
-wants of the inner man; but notwithstanding that they were so far down
-town, Adoniram was able to introduce them to a very comfortable looking
-little chop house. He also, despite their protestations, settled the
-checks himself, and then telephoned to Brandon’s hotel and to the
-Marine Hospital for the luggage of both his guests to be sent to his up
-town residence.
-
-“We’ll go up leisurely and give the baggage a chance to get there
-before us,” said the merchant, as they left the restaurant; “then
-Frances will know that company is coming.”
-
-So they saw a bit of New York for Brandon’s benefit, arriving at the
-large, though plain looking house in which the merchant resided, just
-before six o’clock.
-
-Brandon noticed, as they neared their destination, that the old sailor
-seemed ill at ease, and that the conversation was being mostly carried
-on by Mr. Pepper and himself. He did not understand this until they
-were in the house, and the old merchant had gone to summon his sister
-to meet his guests.
-
-Caleb seemed terribly nervous. He sat on the edge of the substantial,
-upholstered chair and twisted his hat between his huge hands, his face
-and neck of flaming hue, while his eyes were downcast, and he started
-at every sound.
-
-Finally, as the merchant did not return at once, Caleb drew forth his
-bandanna and blew his nose furiously.
-
-“This ’ere is terrible, isn’t it, lad?” he muttered hoarsely, to
-Brandon, who had been eying him in great surprise.
-
-“What is, Caleb?”
-
-“This ’ere meeting ladies, ye know,” responded the mate of the Silver
-Swan in a mild roar, laboring under the delusion that he was speaking
-very low indeed.
-
-“There isn’t but one, Caleb,” replied Don encouragingly.
-
-“I--I know it,” said Caleb, with a groan; “but she’s--she’s th’
-spankin’est craft ever yer see! Sails allus new and fresh, riggin’ all
-taut--I tell ye, lad, it allus rattles me for fear I ain’t all trim.”
-
-“You look first rate, Caleb,” Brandon assured him, stifling a desire to
-laugh as the old seaman evidently considered the occasion so serious.
-“I wouldn’t worry.”
-
-“That’s easy enough for _you_ to say,” returned Caleb, with another
-shake of his head. “You wouldn’t be Cap’n Horace’s son if ye didn’t
-find it all plain sailin’ in a city droorin’ room, same’s on th’
-ship’s deck; but with me it’s different. Oh, Lordy! she’s hove in
-sight.”
-
-There was a rustle of silken skirts, and Brandon looked up to see Miss
-Frances Pepper entering the room.
-
-She was short and plump like her brother, though of considerable less
-weight, and she smiled like him. But otherwise Miss Pepper was rather
-prim and exact in her appearance, manner, and dress. As the sailor had
-said “her rigging was all taut,” and she looked as though she had just
-stepped out of a bandbox.
-
-“My old friend. Mr. Whitherbee!” she exclaimed, holding out her hand to
-Caleb with unfeigned warmth.
-
-“Wetherbee--Caleb Wetherbee, ma’am,” responded Caleb, in a monotone
-growl, seizing the tips of the lady’s fingers as though they were as
-fragile as glass, and he feared to crush them in his calloused palm.
-
-“Oh, yes--Mr. Wetherbee,” she replied brightly, gazing frankly into the
-old seaman’s face, which naturally added materially to poor Caleb’s
-confusion. “I was very sorry to hear about your illness, and am glad
-you have at length been released from the hospital ward.”
-
-Then she turned to Brandon who had also risen. She went up to him, and
-seizing both his hands imprinted a motherly kiss upon his forehead.
-
-The youth saw that her soft brown eyes, which could not possibly look
-stern as could her brother’s gray ones, were filled with tears.
-
-“God bless you, my boy!” she said, in a low tone. “I knew your father,
-Captain Tarr, and a very nice man he was. You are like him.
-
-“And now, brother,” added Miss Frances briskly, “if you will take Mr.
-Wetherbee to his room to prepare for dinner, I will show Brandon to
-_his_ apartment. Dinner will be ready in twenty minutes.”
-
-Mr. Pepper, who had entered behind his sister, bore Caleb off as she
-had commanded, to a room on the lower floor, while Brandon was led up
-stairs by Miss Frances. The house was nicely though plainly furnished,
-evidences of comfort rather than of great wealth being apparent.
-
-Everywhere, on mantel and table, and in the niches of the hall, were
-innumerable curiosities in the line of shells and coral brought from
-all parts of the world.
-
-Miss Frances ushered Brandon into a very prettily furnished chamber on
-the second floor--almost too daintily furnished for a boy’s room, in
-fact. Innumerable bits of fancy work and the like, without doubt the
-work of feminine fingers, adorned the place: yet all was fashioned in a
-style of at least twenty years back.
-
-Above the bed, in a heavily gilded frame, was a large portrait of a
-young woman--not exactly a beautiful woman, but one with a very sweet
-and lovable face--which smiled down upon the visitor and attracted his
-attention at once.
-
-Miss Frances noticed his glance, and lingered a moment at the door.
-
-“It was our little sister Milly,” she said softly. “This was her room
-years ago. She was more than twenty years younger than Adoniram and I.”
-
-“Then she died?” queried Don softly, still gazing up at the smiling
-face.
-
-“No, she married against father’s wishes. Father was a very stern,
-proud man; not at all like Adoniram, who, I am afraid, is not stern
-enough for his good,” and she smiled a little; but there was moisture
-in her eyes as she gazed up at the portrait.
-
-“She was a lovely girl--at least _we_ thought so--and she was father’s
-favorite, too. But she married a poor sea captain by the name of Frank,
-in direct opposition to father’s command, and so he cast her off.
-
-“He forbade Adoniram or me having anything to do with her, or to help
-her in any way, and she herself put it out of our power to do so, by
-going to the other side of the world with her husband. Several years
-later we heard of her death, and were told that there was a child; but
-although Adoniram has done all he could he has never been able to find
-this Captain Frank.”
-
-The old lady wiped her eyes before continuing.
-
-“After father died we had this room fixed just as she used to have it,
-and had that picture hung there.
-
-“Now, Brandon, I won’t bother you longer. There is your satchel, which
-the expressman brought an hour ago. If you want anything, please ring.”
-
-Then she departed, and left the captain’s son to make ready for dinner.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-TELLING A GREAT DEAL ABOUT DERELICTS IN GENERAL
-
-
-ALTHOUGH there seemed to be everything for comfort about the Pepper
-mansion, the habits of the household were most simple. Miss Frances was
-evidently a woman of very domestic tastes, and had a vital interest
-in all her household arrangements. Yet there appeared to be plenty of
-servants about.
-
-When dinner was over, the merchant had a short conference with his
-manager, Mr. Marks, who always came to report on matters at the close
-of the day; after which he took his two guests into the library, and
-the all absorbing topic of the search for the Silver Swan was broached
-by Caleb, who had now regained some of his wonted confidence.
-
-“This ’ere delay is a bad thing,” the old sailor declared, when Miss
-Frances had left them to talk the matter over. “If I hadn’t been
-laid up all these weeks in the hospital, I sh’d ha’ follered up the
-brig long before, and had the di’monds. Now we’ve got two--yes,
-three--circumstances against us.
-
-“First and foremost is the fact that the Swan has already been afloat
-’most two months, an’ that’s longer than the majority of derelicts
-last. Then these confounded cruisers may get after her any minute,
-which will be remarkably bad for our plans. And thirdly, as the
-parsons say, there’s that rascal Leroyd. He’s not the man I think him
-if he doesn’t make a break for the wreck at once.”
-
-“And he’s got the papers, too,” interjected Mr. Pepper.
-
-Caleb smiled at this, but said nothing in reply, continuing his remarks:
-
-“Now, I’ve seen a good many derelicts in my time--a good many--but if
-the Silver Swan is in the shape I think her, she’s liable (setting
-aside accident) to float for months. And she’s got lots of company,
-too.”
-
-“I should think these derelicts would be dreadfully dangerous,”
-suggested Brandon, with all the curiosity of a boy about anything
-pertaining to sea and sea going.
-
-“They are,” declared Caleb; “more dangerous, it’s likely, than anybody
-dreams of. Many a good ship--steamers and sailing vessels both--has
-doubtless gone to Davy Jones’ Locker because of them. Take one o’ these
-’ere European steamships making time across the ocean; she strikes a
-derelict--a coal laden one, mebbe; they’re the most dangerous--and we
-never hear of her again.
-
-“I’ll never forget something that happened when I was mate of the
-American bark Neptune, several years ago. The Neptune were a mighty
-speedy craft, an’ Cap’n Tollman was a terror for crowding on all sail.
-
-“We was scuddin’ along one dark night before a stiff easterly gale,
-an’ I had the deck. It was just before eight bells--half past three
-o’clock, mebbe--when all to onct the man on lookout gave a yell that
-fairly riz my hair on end.
-
-“‘A wreck! dead ahead!’ he yelled. ‘Down with your helm! hard down!’
-
-“I jumped to the wheel myself an’ helped the helmsman swing ’er over.
-Right up before us loomed the dim, black form of a vessel--her stern
-under water, an’ her bowsprit straight up. I tell ye, for about two
-minutes I was dead sure ’twas all day with the old Neptune, and us
-along with her.
-
-“However she did it I dunno, but she answered her helm quicker ’n she
-did afore or since. She jest shaved the wreck, some of the cordage
-fastened to the upright bowsprit catching in our spars an’ being torn
-away, an’ we slipped by without any damage. But I don’t want to have a
-closer shave than _that_.”
-
-“That was a close call, Cale,” said Mr. Pepper reflectively. “I’ve a
-man in my employ--Richards his name is; he sails this trip as captain
-of the Calypso--who came originally from New Brunswick. A regular
-‘blue-nose’ he is, and a good sailor.
-
-“Well, he was one of the crew of the ‘Joggins raft’ as it was called,
-that left the Bay of Fundy for New York several years ago.”
-
-“And a mighty foolish thing that was, too,” interrupted Caleb, shaking
-his head. “It’s a merciful Providence that that thing didn’t occasion
-half a dozen wrecks; but it didn’t, as far as anybody knows.”
-
-“Richards tells a pretty thrilling story of his experience,” the
-merchant continued, seeing that Brandon was interested in the tale.
-“Lumber and coal laden derelicts are considered the most dangerous,
-eh, Caleb? And this Joggins raft was probably the most perilous object
-that was ever set afloat.
-
-“The raft was composed of 27,000 great tree trunks, bound together
-with chains, and it weighed something like eleven thousand tons. The
-hawsers by which it was towed, parted in a hurricane, and the raft went
-to pieces south of Nantasket. For a good many months the logs were
-reported as scattered over a great portion of the North Atlantic. As
-Caleb says, however, they did no damage, but the hydrographic charts
-during the time were plentifully decorated with them.”
-
-“What are these hydrographic charts?” asked Brandon, with interest.
-“That clipping Leroyd lost and which I found, mentioned the matter of
-the Swan’s being reported to the Hydrographic Office at Washington.
-What did it mean?”
-
-“Well,” responded Mr. Pepper, while Caleb, at the little merchant’s
-request, filled and smoked his evening pipe, “when these abandoned
-wrecks are sighted by incoming steamers, they are reported at once to
-the Hydrographic Office at the capitol, the latitude and longitude,
-name of the vessel if known, and her position in the water, being given.
-
-“As fast as messages of this kind are received at the office they are
-posted on a big blackboard on which is inscribed an outline map of the
-North Atlantic. The position of each derelict is indicated by a pin
-stuck into the board, and thrust at the same time through a square
-scrap of paper.
-
-“On this bit of paper is inscribed in red ink the name of the deserted
-craft, if it is known, together with a minute picture showing the
-attitude of the vessel, whether bottom up, sunken at the stern, or
-what not.
-
-“These little pictures are reproduced on the next pilot chart (which is
-a monthly publication), and changes are made in the chart as frequently
-as the derelicts are reported.”
-
-“Seems to me, ’Doniram,” remarked Caleb, puffing away with vast content
-at the pipe--“seems to me you know a good deal about this derelict
-business.”
-
-The little man seemed strangely confused at this, and his jolly face
-blushed a deep red as he shifted his position restlessly.
-
-“Well,” he said slowly. “I _have_ been looking it up lately. I--I had
-an idea--a scheme, you know--that caused me to study the matter some.
-Seems odd, too, doesn’t it, with the matter of the Silver Swan coming
-right on top of it?”
-
-But here Brandon, whose thoughts had been wandering a little,
-interrupted any further questioning on the sailor’s part.
-
-“I’m dreadfully sorry that that rascally Leroyd got away with the
-letter father wrote me,” he said reflectively.
-
-Caleb looked at him with a smile, and removed his pipe from between his
-lips.
-
-“Did I say he _had_ got away with it?” he said.
-
-“Eh?” interjected Adoniram, quickly.
-
-“What do you mean?” queried Brandon.
-
-“See here,” said Caleb, enjoying their surprise, “You’ve been running
-this pretty much by yourselves. _I_ haven’t said that the swab got away
-with the papers, have I?”
-
-“For pity’s sake, what _did_ he steal then?” demanded Brandon,
-springing to his feet.
-
-“Well,” returned the mate of the Silver Swan, “by my reckoning he got
-an old pocketbook with some worthless bills of lading in it and about
-ten dollars in money--an’ much good may it do him.”
-
-“Why--why--” sputtered Mr. Pepper, staring at the smiling sailor in
-amazement.
-
-“Now, don’t be in a hurry,” urged Caleb. “I _didn’t_ say the papers
-were stolen, so don’t ye accuse me o’ that. Ye both jumped at that
-conclusion and I let you think so, for as I’d made a fool of myself
-once by lettin’ folks know I had ’em, I reckoned I wouldn’t do it again.
-
-“But now,” he added, “if ye think this is the time and place to see
-them papers, I can perduce ’em ter oncet.”
-
-“Where are they? Let’s see ’em,” urged Brandon, in excitement.
-
-“All right, my lad. If you says the word, why here goes.”
-
-The old sailor laid his pipe down, and coolly began to unstrap his
-wooden leg. The implement was an old fashioned affair, consisting of
-a smoothly turned stick at the lower end hardly larger than a broom
-handle, but swelling as it rose, to the semblance of a leg.
-
-In a moment he had it off and to the surprise of his two friends this
-swelled portion of the imitation limb was hollow. From this cavity he
-drew forth first a bulky wallet and then a package of papers wrapped in
-oiled paper.
-
-“There ye be,” he declared, with satisfaction. “If _I’d_ known about
-them di’monds afore we left the brig, I sh’d have had the cap’n let me
-hide ’em in this ’ere timber leg. Then we’d have been saved a mighty
-sight o’ bother.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-THE CONTENTS OF SEVERAL INTERESTING DOCUMENTS
-
-
-“WELL, of all things!” ejaculated Mr. Pepper, as the old sailor
-produced the papers from their queer repository, while Brandon burst
-out laughing.
-
-“There’s some reasons for being grateful for even a wooden leg,”
-remarked Caleb grimly. “I hid those papers there when I was aboard the
-raft, and if I’d passed in my checks I reckon papers an’ all would have
-gone to the sharks, for Leroyd would never have thought to look there
-for ’em.”
-
-Then he strapped the artificial limb in place again, and gravely handed
-the package to Brandon. The boy had lost all desire to laugh now, for
-he was in possession of the last written words of his father, and for a
-moment his hands trembled and his eyes filled with tears.
-
-“Open it, my lad,” said the sailor. “I haven’t touched the wrapper
-since Cap’n Horace gave it to me.”
-
-Brandon untied the string which bound the package, and removed the
-oiled paper. There were several folded documents within and one was
-marked:
-
- “To my son, Brandon,
- Horace Tarr.”
-
-Don quickly opened the paper, recognizing the chirography of the dead
-captain at once, although much of the writing was blurred and illy
-formed, showing how great a tax the effort had been for the injured and
-dying man. It read as follows:
-
- ON BOARD THE RAFT,
- TUESDAY NOON.
-
- MY BELOVED SON:
-
- We have now been on this raft two days, and I feel that my end is
- drawing near, although my companions will doubtless escape. But I
- have received a terrible blow on the head, and my sufferings at times
- are frightful; therefore I know I am not long for this world.
-
- Oh, that I might see you again, my son! That I might be spared to
- reach you, and to put into your hand the power to make you the
- wealthy man I should have been had I lived. But no; it could not be.
- Fortune has at last come to the Tarrs, but I shall not share it; your
- uncle Anson was not benefited by it, and death will overtake me soon,
- too. But you, my son, I pray may regain the fortune which I have
- hidden aboard the brig.
-
- We committed a grave error in leaving the wreck; I know that now.
- The hull of the Silver Swan was uninjured, and she may outlast many
- gales. I shall put these papers into Caleb Wetherbee’s hands ere I
- am called, and he, I know, will help you to regain the fortune which
- first belonged to Anson. Be guided by him, and trust him fully.
-
- The letter from your uncle will explain all about the diamonds, and
- how he came in possession of them. I dared not take the gems with
- me from the brig, for Leroyd knew about them, or suspected their
- presence, and he would have killed us all for them, I fear.
-
- But they are hidden in the steel lined closet--the one I showed you
- in the cabin. Caleb knows where it is. Go to the reef at once and
- get the jewels, before some one else gets there. There are diamonds
- enough to make you fabulously rich, if Anson appraised them rightly.
-
- I am so weak that I cannot write longer.
-
- These will probably be my last words on earth to you, my son. Live
- uprightly; fear God; and hold sacred your mother’s memory. God bless
- you, my boy! Farewell!
- Your loving father,
- HORACE TARR.
-
-Tears fairly blinded Don’s eyes as he finished reading the missive. He
-passed it to Mr. Pepper, who, in turn, passed it to Caleb.
-
-“He was a good man,” declared Adoniram softly, while the old sailor
-blew his nose loudly, and wiped the suspicious moisture from his eyes.
-
-“That he were!” responded the latter. “Cap’n Horace were all that he
-tells you to be, Don.”
-
-“Please God, I’ll be worthy of his memory,” said Brandon quietly. “If
-we are fortunate enough to obtain any of this treasure he speaks of. I
-hope I shall use it wisely, and as he would wish.”
-
-“Don’t you fear--we’ll get it, lad,” Caleb assured him earnestly. “I
-feel it in my bones we will.”
-
-“What else was there in the package?” asked the merchant curiously.
-
-“There were two other papers,” Brandon replied. “One is my father’s
-will.”
-
-He picked that up from his lap and opened it.
-
-“Why,” he exclaimed, “you are named as executor, Mr. Pepper.”
-
-He passed the legal document to Adoniram who adjusted the eye glasses
-(of which a new pair had been purchased), and examined it with manifest
-surprise.
-
-“This is a legal will, as sure as I am alive!” he exclaimed. “It was
-drawn up at Rio by an American lawyer--a Mr. Bromley. Properly signed
-and witnessed.”
-
-“Well, you’ll look out for it, won’t you?” said Caleb, who was eager to
-hear the other paper--the letter from Anson Tarr to his brother--read.
-
-“Of course. But let me tell you its contents,” replied the merchant.
-“It is short and to the point, Caleb. _You_ are given the Silver Swan,
-in fee simple, and everything else goes to Brandon, here.”
-
-He read the paragraph which secured all the property of which Captain
-Tarr had been possessed, excepting the brig, to Brandon, including
-“certain uncut diamonds, roughly estimated at two hundred thousand
-dollars.”
-
-“Two hundred thousand!” repeated Brandon, in bewilderment.
-
-“Quite a pile, my boy,” said Caleb. “That is, if we get ’em.”
-
-“And you and I, Caleb,” concluded Mr. Pepper, “are joint guardians of
-Don.”
-
-“All right, all right,” cried the impatient sailor. “But let’s hear the
-other letter, my lad. Read it out.”
-
-Thus urged, Brandon unfolded the third paper, and read its contents
-aloud:
-
- “KIMBERLEY, SOUTH AFRICA,
- “November the 27th, 1891.
-
- “BROTHER HORACE:
-
- “Probably you have long since believed me dead, and I have given
- you good reason for that belief, for, if I am not mistaken, it was
- eight years ago, after my miserable failure at the Australian gold
- diggings, that I last wrote to you.
-
- “I intended then that you should never hear from me again. I was a
- failure--a complete failure, I believed--and I determined to tempt
- fortune no further. With this intention I went to an island in the
- Pacific, and buried myself there, with only natives and one other
- white man for company, for six years.
-
- “Then the old roving spirit awoke in me again, and I longed to try my
- luck once more where other men were gaining wealth. The news of the
- rich finds here in the diamond fields reached even our lonely isle,
- and finally I could not resist the temptation longer, and came here,
- leaving my companion to dwell alone among the natives. I have been
- here now the better part of a year and, at last, have been successful!
-
- “Two months ago I struck a pocket in the hills, and out of a trench
- less than two rods in length, I have dug what I believe to be at
- least forty thousand pounds’ worth of diamonds of exceptional purity.
- But the diggings have now petered out.
-
- “I kept the find a secret, and got all there was myself, excepting a
- small number which my black digger ran away with, and now I am afraid
- I shall not live to enjoy my riches.
-
- “Perhaps it is as well. You know that riches have ever taken wings
- with us, and I should probably lose all in some other venture. I
- hope that you, Horace, will do better with them than I, for to you,
- brother, and to your boy, if he has lived, I bequeath the gems.
-
- “I have been very ill now several days and the physician tells me
- that I am in a very bad way. Exposure to all sorts of weather in
- every kind of climate, is telling on me. Therefore I do write this
- to you, my brother, and take precaution to have the letter and the
- package of uncut stones sent to you.
-
- “Nobody here knows of my find. It is safest to trust nobody in such
- a place as this. I propose to give the letter and the gems, all in a
- sealed packet, to a friend, who is the most trustworthy man I know,
- and have him give them to you. He will believe the package to contain
- nothing but papers, and therefore you will stand a good chance of
- getting the diamonds safely.
-
- “Good by for this world, Horace. May the luck of the Tarrs be changed
- with this find of mine.
-
- “Your brother,
- “ANSON TARR.”
-
-“Well,” exclaimed Caleb, with a sigh, as Brandon folded the document,
-“we’ve got the rights of it at last. Two hundred thousand dollars wuth
-o’ di’monds--for that’s what forty thousand pounds mean, I take it, eh,
-’Doniram?”
-
-“About that,” said the merchant. “You will be a very rich man, Don.”
-
-“Let’s not count our chickens too soon,” said the youth, trying to
-stifle his excitement. “It seems too bewilderingly good to be true.”
-
-“That’s a good idea about not countin’ our chickens,” said Caleb. “But
-we’ll have a whack at ’em just as soon as possible, my lad.”
-
-“And you’ll let me furnish the vessel,” the merchant added.
-
-“Let’s see,” said the old sailor. “You was saying something about
-havin’ one all ready. ’Doniram, wasn’t you?”
-
-“One that can be ready in a week’s time, any way; and the craft you
-want, too--a whaleback.”
-
-“I dunno,” said Caleb slowly. “I don’t fancy them new fangled things.
-What under the sun did you ever get a whaleback steamer for?”
-
-Mr. Pepper looked at his old friend curiously, and his little eyes
-twinkled.
-
-“Well,” he said reflectively, “oddly enough, I purchased Number Three
-from the American Barge Company for the very purpose for which you wish
-to use it.”
-
-“What?” shouted Caleb.
-
-“Not to go in search of the Silver Swan?” cried Brandon, in wonder.
-
-“No, not exactly that; but to go in quest of derelicts in general.”
-
-“Another of your crazy ideas, ’Doniram!” Caleb declared finally.
-
-“Perhaps; but I notice that most of my ‘crazy ideas’ turn out pretty
-successfully, old Timbertoes,” said the little merchant jovially. “If
-you’ll give me a chance, though, I’ll explain how I came to think of
-_this_ ‘crazy idea.’”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-IN WHICH MR. PEPPER MAKES A PROPOSITION TO CALEB AND DON
-
-
-“YOU see,” the ship owner began, as soon as he was assured of the
-attention of his audience, “I have had my eye on these whaleback
-steamers from the start. Three years ago, you know, nobody but Captain
-Alexander MacDougall, the inventor, knew anything about them.
-
-“We are altogether too conservative here in the East,” continued
-Adoniram warmly. “It takes the Westerners to get hold of new things,
-and practically test them. These whalebacks are a Western idea and were
-first used and tested on the Great Lakes.
-
-“You don’t seem to realize, Caleb, that the boat was never built which
-could sail as easily as those whalebacks. In the heaviest gales they
-only roll slightly, as a log would at sea. The waves can beat against
-the curved steel sides of the craft as much as they like, or wash clean
-over her; but the boat is not affected by them in the least.”
-
-“It’s the most wonderful thing I ever heard of,” Brandon declared.
-
-“They _are_ wonderful boats, as you will declare, yourself, when you
-see Number Three, tomorrow,” Adoniram returned. “My whaleback is 265
-feet long, 38 feet beam, and 24 feet deep. She is warranted to carry
-3,000 tons of grain on a sixteen and one half foot draft. You see, for
-her size, she carries an enormous cargo, for between the collision
-bulkhead forward, and the bulkhead in front of the engine room aft, the
-whole inside of the craft is open for lading.
-
-“But my scheme--the reason I bought this vessel, in fact--is this,”
-went on Mr. Pepper.
-
-He hesitated a moment, and looked just a little doubtfully at Caleb.
-
-“I presume this _is_ what you will call a ‘crazy idea,’ Caleb,” he
-said. “Several months ago my attention was drawn to the fact that great
-numbers of these derelicts now afloat in the Atlantic, north of the
-equator, are richly laden merchant vessels on whose cargoes and hulls a
-large salvage might be demanded by any vessel towing them into port.
-
-“Now and then, you know, it happens that somebody _does_ recover
-a derelict with a valuable cargo. In these times, when the crews
-of American ships, and even many of the officers, are ignorant and
-untrustworthy fellows, lacking altogether the honor arm perseverance
-which were characteristics of sailors forty years ago (I don’t say that
-_all_ are so, but many) under these circumstances, I say, many a vessel
-which might be worked safely into port, is abandoned in mid ocean by
-the frightened crew.
-
-“With a vessel like Number Three one could recover and tow into port
-many of these hulks, and net a large salvage from the owners. Vessels
-which would not be worth saving themselves, might still contain
-articles which it would pay to transfer to the hold of the whaleback,
-before they were sunk; for it was my intention to have Number Three
-destroy all the wrecks which are not worth saving.
-
-“I have even sounded the Washington officials in the matter of aiding
-me in the work of destroying these derelicts; but I find that the
-Hydrographic Office is trying to get an appropriation from Congress to
-build a vessel of about 800 tons burden, especially for the work of
-blowing up these wrecks. Until that matter is decided, of course I can
-get no bonus on what I do.
-
-“Nevertheless,” Mr. Pepper continued, “I believe that there is money
-enough in it to amply reward me for my outlay. Why, look at that New
-England whaler which found the British ship Resolute fast in the ice of
-Melville Bay in the summer of ’55.
-
-“She was one of three vessels sent out by the British government to
-find Sir John Franklin. She was ‘nipped’ by the ice in the winter
-of ’51 and was abandoned. The whaler brought her to New London, and
-Congress bought her for $200,000 salvage and sent her to England. Of
-course, I shouldn’t expect to get many such prizes as that,” and the
-little man laughed, “but I do expect to make a handsome profit on the
-venture.”
-
-“Take, for instance, the case of the Silver Swan. I’ll make you a
-proposition, Brandon, and you see if it isn’t a fair one. Caleb shall
-judge himself. I’ll send the whaleback out after the brig at my own
-expense. If we are successful and find the derelict and tow her to
-port, I will take the cargo (I know it to be a valuable one) for my
-pains--of course, not including the diamonds, which are your own
-personal property, my boy. The brig herself is Caleb’s, any way,
-according to the terms of your father’s will. Now what do you say?”
-
-“I say it’s a good offer!” exclaimed Caleb, slapping his thigh
-heartily. “You’re a man and a gentleman, Adoniram. And far from
-thinking this scheme of yours crazy, I think well of it--mighty well.”
-
-“That’s because it ‘hits you where you live,’ as the saying is,”
-returned Mr. Pepper, smiling slily.
-
-“Oh, I don’t know anything about whalebacks,” began Caleb.
-
-“But you will,” the merchant declared, interrupting him. “I haven’t got
-through with my proposition yet.”
-
-“Fire ahead, old man,” said Caleb puffing steadily on his pipe.
-
-“Well, then, first I want you for the captain of the steamer, Caleb.”
-
-“Yes, so I supposed,” remarked the mate of the Silver Swan
-imperturbably. “What else?”
-
-“I want Brandon for second mate.”
-
-“Me?” exclaimed Don. “Why, I never was aboard a steamship in my life.”
-
-“Oh, that doesn’t make any difference, Don,” returned Caleb
-sarcastically. “It would be just like him (if he wanted to) to send the
-vessel out with every blessed one of the crew landlubbers. It don’t
-make a particle o’ difference.”
-
-“Now, Caleb,” said the merchant deprecatingly.
-
-“No, Adoniram, we can’t do it. The boy knows nothing at all about a
-steamship, and I know but little more.”
-
-“You’ve been mate on a steamer, Caleb.”
-
-“On a dredger, you mean,” returned the old sailor, in disgust.
-
-“There’s no reason why you can’t do it--both of you,” the ship owner
-declared. “If I’m satisfied, _you_ ought to be. I’ve already engaged
-Lawrence Coffin for mate.”
-
-“Coffin!” ejaculated Caleb, his face lighting up, as he forgot to
-pull on his pipe in his interest. “Got _him_, eh? Well, that puts a
-different complexion on the matter. I could sail the Great Eastern with
-Lawrence Coffin for mate.”
-
-“I thought so,” said Mr. Pepper, laughing gleefully. “Then I’ve got
-a man by the name of Bolin for third. He’s a good man, and knows his
-business, too.”
-
-“That would make Don’s duties pretty light,” said Caleb reflectively.
-
-“Of course. I shall put in rather a larger crew than a whaleback
-usually carries--fourteen at least,” Mr. Pepper added; “to handle the
-cargoes I shall expect the steamer to recover.”
-
-“Well, well,” said Caleb, rising; “let’s sleep on it. It’s never best
-to decide on anything too quickly.”
-
-“If you’ll take up with my offer,” concluded the merchant, rising, too,
-“the craft can be made ready, and you can get away this day week.”
-
-“Let’s think it over,” repeated the old sailor, bound not to be hurried
-into the business; but Don went to bed so excited by the prospect that
-it was hours before he was able to sleep.
-
-“Did a fellow _ever_ have a better chance for fun and adventure?” was
-his last thought as he finally sank into a fitful slumber.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-INTO BAD COMPANY
-
-
-IF I were to follow up my own inclinations I should much prefer to stay
-in the company of Brandon Tarr and of his two good friends, the honest,
-hearty old seaman, Caleb Wetherbee, and the jovial, philanthropic ship
-owner, Adoniram Pepper. And I feel sure that the reader, too, would
-much prefer to remain with them.
-
-But, for the sake of better understanding that which is to follow, I
-shall be obliged for a short time to request the company of the reader
-in entirely different scenes, and among rather disreputable characters.
-
-Mr. Alfred Weeks, who had been in receipt of so many favors in times
-past from the firm of Adoniram Pepper & Co., is the first person who
-will receive our attention.
-
-Weeks was “an effect of a cause.” He was of the slums, his ancestry
-came from the slums; he was simply, by accident of education
-(compulsory education, by the way) once removed from the usual “gutter
-snipe” of the city streets.
-
-Who his parents were, he could not, for the life of him, have told.
-I do not mean to suggest for an instant that Weeks was not to be
-pitied; but that he was deserving of pity I deny. He had been saved
-from the debasing influences of the reform school in his youth by
-a philanthropic gentleman (who might have been the twin of Adoniram
-Pepper), and sent to a Western State where he was clothed, fed, and
-educated by a kind hearted farmer, whom he repaid by theft and by
-finally running away.
-
-Then he went from one thing to another, and from place to place,
-and you may be sure that neither his morals nor his habits improved
-during the progression. Finally at twenty-five, he drifted back to the
-metropolis, and quickly found his old level again--the slums. Here he
-likewise discovered many of the acquaintances of his youth, for he had
-been a boy of twelve when he had been sent West.
-
-Among these old friends he was known as “Sneaky” (a very appropriate
-appellation, as we have seen), “Alfred Weeks” being the name given him
-by his Western benefactor. The fellow was a most accomplished hypocrite
-and it was by the exercise of this attribute that he had obtained
-the situation as Adoniram Pepper’s clerk, and kept it for ten years,
-despite many of his evil deeds coming to the knowledge of the shipping
-merchant.
-
-Not one of the three persons who had been in the office that afternoon
-when his presence in the wardrobe was discovered, realized how
-thoroughly bad at heart Weeks was, or how dangerous an enemy they had
-made. Even Caleb Wetherbee did not fully recognize it.
-
-But they _had_ made an enemy, and within twenty-four hours that enemy
-was at work to undermine and thwart their plans.
-
-Weeks had overheard enough of the story of the Silver Swan and her
-valuable cargo to make it an easy matter for him to decide on a line
-of action which might lead to his own benefit, as well as to the
-compassing of his much desired revenge.
-
-He solaced his wounded feelings the evening after his dismissal
-from the ship owner’s office by a trip to his favorite resort--the
-Bowery Theater--where he again drank in the highly colored sentences
-and romantic tableaux of that great drama “The Buccaneer’s Bride.”
-Unfortunately, however, he was forced to remain standing during the
-play for obvious reasons; the seats of the theater were not cushioned.
-
-The next forenoon he adorned himself in the height of Bowery style, and
-strolled down past the scene of his former labors and on toward that
-rendezvous known as the New England Hotel. He had his plans already
-mapped out, and the first thing to do was to join forces with Jim
-Leroyd, whom he knew very well by reputation, at least, as did a great
-many others among the denizens of lower New York.
-
-But as he strolled along Water Street he discovered something which
-slightly changed his plans. Perhaps, to be exact, I should say that he
-discovered _somebody_.
-
-On the opposite side of the thoroughfare was a weazen faced old man,
-with bowed shoulders, and not altogether steady feet. He was dressed in
-rusty black clothes of a pattern far remote from the present day.
-
-Evidently he was quite confused by his surroundings and by the crowd
-which jostled him on the walk.
-
-“What a chance for a ‘bunco man,’” exclaimed the festive Alfred, under
-his breath. “That’s country, sure enough. I wonder how it ever got
-here all alone,” and the philanthropic ex-clerk crossed the street at
-once and fell into the old man’s wake.
-
-Despite his countrified manner, however, there was an air of shrewd,
-suspicious intelligence about the man of the rusty habiliments.
-Fortunately for the success of his further plans, Weeks did not seek to
-accost him at once.
-
-Had he done so he would have aroused the countryman’s suspicions. The
-latter had come warned and forearmed against strangers who sought his
-acquaintance.
-
-As they went along, the old man ahead and Weeks in the rear, the latter
-discovered that the countryman was seeking for something. He went along
-slowly, with his eyes fixed on the signs on either side, studying each
-new one as it came in view with apparent interest.
-
-Finally he stopped on the corner of a cross street and looked about him
-at the rushing, hurried life in perplexity. Now was Mr. Week’s chance.
-
-He strolled slowly along toward the old fellow, the only person without
-an apparent object, in that whole multitude.
-
-As the ex-clerk expected, the countryman accosted him.
-
-“Say, mister,” he said, in his harsh, cracked voice, which rose plainly
-above the noise of the street, “kin you tell me the whereabouts of the
-New England Hotel?”
-
-“Whew!” thought Mr. Weeks. “Pretty shady locality for a respectable
-farmer. Wonder what the old fellow wants _there_?”
-
-Then aloud he said:
-
-“I’m going along there myself, sir; it is several blocks yet.”
-
-“Wal, ’t seems ter me,” snarled the other, taking his place by the side
-of Weeks, “thet this ’ere street hain’t got no end, nor no numbers ter
-speak of. I looked in one o’ them things over at the hotel--a d’rectory
-I b’lieve the clerk called it--but I don’t see as it helped me any.”
-
-“It’s pretty hard for a stranger to find his way about New York, that’s
-a fact.”
-
-The old fellow flashed a sudden look at his companion, which was not
-lost on the sly Weeks. The farmer had “read up” on “bunco men” and
-their ways, and expected that the polite stranger would suggest showing
-him about the city a little.
-
-But Weeks didn’t; he wasn’t that kind.
-
-Finding that the fellow seemed totally uninterested as to whether he
-found his way about the metropolis or not, the countryman gained a
-little confidence in his new acquaintance.
-
-“New York streets hain’t much like Providence streets,” he said. “Ye
-_kin_ find yer way ’round them; but I defy any one ter know whether
-they’re goin’ straight here, or not.”
-
-Mr. Weeks smiled and nodded, but let the other do most of the talking.
-He went on the principle that if you give a fool rope enough he’ll
-hang himself; and although the old fellow thought himself exceedingly
-shrewd, and took pains to dodge the real object of his visit to New
-York, in seeking to be pleasant to his new acquaintance he “gave the
-whole thing dead away,” as the astute Alfred mentally expressed it.
-
-“Ye see,” said the old man. “I’m down here a-lookin for my nevvy,
-Brandon, who’s run away from me. Nothing else would ha’ got me down
-here right in the beginnin’ of the spring work.”
-
-Weeks started slightly, but otherwise showed no signs of special
-interest; but as the old fellow ran on about the terrible state he
-expected his affairs would be in because of his absence, Mr. Alfred
-Weeks did some pretty tall thinking.
-
-“Brandon is no common name,” so the ex-clerk communed with himself. “I
-bet there hasn’t been _two_ Brandons come to New York within the past
-few days--both from Rhode Island, too.
-
-“This is the old uncle I heard the young chap mention. He’s down here
-after the boy, eh? But I’m betting there’s something else behind it.
-Now, let’s see; what does he want at the New England Hotel?
-
-“Leroyd, so young Tarr said, had been up to Rhode Island to see him.”
-Weeks thought, continuing his train of reasoning. “Passed himself off
-to _him_, at least, as old Wetherbee. Oh, Jim’s a keen one, he is!
-Now Leroyd’s at the hotel--at least, he _has_ been. What is this old
-scarecrow going there for?
-
-“There’s a great big rat in the toe of this stocking,” Mr. Weeks
-assured himself. “This uncle is an old scamp, that’s _my_ opinion.”
-(Mr. Weeks knew a scamp when he saw one--excepting when he looked in
-the glass.) “I’d wager a good deal that he and Jim understand each
-other pretty well.
-
-“Probably Jim has let the old fellow into the fact that there’s
-treasure aboard that brig, hoping to get him to back him in an attempt
-to find it. By the cast in the old man’s eye, I reckon he’s always on
-the lookout for the almighty dollar. Now, he and Jim are going to try
-and hitch horses together, I bet. And am I in this? I betcher! with
-both feet!”
-
-With this elegant expression, Mr. Weeks drew up before the uninviting
-resort known as the New England Hotel.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-MR. ALFRED WEEKS AT A CERTAIN CONFERENCE
-
-
-“HERE we are, mister,” said the ex-clerk; “see, there’s the sign--New
-England Hotel. Did you expect to find your runaway nephew here?”
-
-“No-o,” replied old Arad Tarr, eying the place with a good deal of
-disfavor.
-
-“See here,” said Weeks slowly, “I’ve been trying to remember
-whereabouts I’ve heard that name ‘Brandon’ before. It’s not a common
-name, you know.”
-
-“No, ’taint common. D’ye thing ye’ve seen Brandon since he’s been here
-in New York? He’s only been here two days, I reckon,” said old Arad
-eagerly.
-
-“Perhaps.”
-
-“Where was he?” queried the old man. “I’m his lawful guardeen, an’ I’m
-a-goin’ ter hev him back, now I tell ye!”
-
-“Let’s see; his name is Brandon Tarr, isn’t it?”
-
-“That’s it; that’s it,” Arad declared.
-
-“And he came from Chopmist, Rhode Island?”
-
-“Sartin. You must have seen him, mister.”
-
-“I guess I have,” said Weeks reflectively. “He was the son of a Captain
-Horace Tarr, lost at sea on the Silver Swan not long ago, eh?”
-
-“The very feller!” cried Arad, with manifest delight.
-
-“Then I guess I can help you find him,” declared Weeks cheerfully.
-“Let’s go inside and I’ll tell you how I happened to run across him.
-It’s not a very nice looking place, this isn’t; but they know me here
-and it won’t be safe for them to treat any of my friends crooked.”
-
-The old man, who had forgotten all about bunco men and their ilk in
-his anxiety to recover his nephew, followed him into the bar room. The
-place was but poorly patronized at this hour of the day, and with a
-nod to Brady, who, his face adorned with a most beautiful black eye,
-was behind the bar, Weeks led the way to an empty table in the further
-corner.
-
-“What’ll you an’ your friend hev ter drink?” inquired Mr. Brady, with
-an atrocious grin.
-
-“Oh, a bottle of sarsaparilla,” responded Weeks carelessly, and when
-the bull necked barkeeper had brought it, the ex-clerk paid for the
-refreshment himself.
-
-Old Arad had looked rather scared at the appearance of the bottle. His
-mind at once reverted to the stories he had read in the local paper
-at home (which paper he had borrowed from a neighbor, by the way) of
-countrymen being decoyed into dens in New York and treated to drugged
-liquor.
-
-But as Weeks allowed the bottle to stand on the table between them
-untouched throughout their conference, the old man felt easier in his
-mind.
-
-“Ye say ye’ve seen Brandon?” inquired Arad, when Jack Brady had
-returned to his position behind the bar, and there was nobody within
-earshot.
-
-“Yes. I’ll tell you how it was. You see, Mr. Tarr--that’s your name,
-isn’t it?--I have a position in a shipping merchant’s office as clerk.
-The office is--er--closed today, so I am out. This office is that of
-Adoniram Pepper & Co. Ever hear of them?”
-
-Old Arad shook his head negatively.
-
-“Pepper was a great friend of this Brandon’s father, so I understand.”
-
-“Mebbe,” snarled the farmer. “Cap’n Tarr’s friends warn’t _my_ friends.”
-
-“No? Well, your nephew steered straight for Pepper’s office, and I
-believe that he’s staying at the old man’s house now--he and a man by
-the name of Caleb Wetherbee.”
-
-“Caleb Wetherbee? Gracious Peter!” ejaculated the old man. “Hez he
-found _him_ so soon.”
-
-Mr. Weeks nodded briefly.
-
-“This Wetherbee was mate of the Silver Swan.”
-
-“That’s the man,” muttered Arad hopelessly.
-
-“I take it you didn’t want your nephew and this Wetherbee to meet?”
-suggested Weeks shrewdly.
-
-“No--o----well, I dunno. I--I’m erfraid ’twon’t be so easy to git
-Brandon back ter the farm ef he’s found this mate.”
-
-“Perhaps we can fix it up,” said Weeks cheerfully.
-
-“D’ye think so?”
-
-“Let’s see; are you his legal guardian?”
-
-“Yes, I be,” declared Arad savagely; “on’y the papers ain’t made aout.”
-
-“I don’t really see, then, how you can bring it about until you are
-appointed,” said Mr. Weeks slowly.
-
-“I jest kin!” asserted Arad, with confidence. “I gotter warrant here
-for him.”
-
-“Whew!” The astute Weeks looked at the old sinner admiringly. “Well,
-well! you _are_ a smart one. What’s the charge?”
-
-“Robbing me,” responded the old man. “The day he run away he took ’most
-fifty dollars outer a--a beury droor. Dretful bad boy is that Brandon.”
-
-“Yes, I should think so. Well, with that warrant I should think you had
-him pretty straight.”
-
-“D’ye think I kin find him all right?” asked Arad anxiously.
-
-“If you can’t, I can,” responded Weeks. “I know where to put my hand on
-him.”
-
-At that moment a door at the rear of the room (within a few feet of the
-table at which they were seated, in fact) opened, and a man entered.
-Weeks recognized him at once as Jim Leroyd; he had seen him before,
-although he could claim no speaking acquaintance with him.
-
-Old Arad also saw and recognized the newcomer, and as the sailor passed
-along the room, he caught sight of the old farmer.
-
-“Why, dash my top lights!” he exclaimed, in surprise. “Ef here ain’t
-Mr. Tarr!”
-
-He stepped back to the table and grasped the old man’s hand most
-cordially, at the same time casting a suspicious glance at Weeks. He
-knew the ex-clerk by reputation, as Weeks knew _him_.
-
-“Don’t ye be up ter any funny biz with this gentleman, Sneaky,” he
-said, with a scowl. “He’s my friend.”
-
-“Don’t you fret,” responded Weeks. “He and I were talking about his
-nephew, Brandon Tarr, who was up to see you yesterday----”
-
-Mr. Leroyd uttered a volley of choice profanity at this, and Arad was
-greatly surprised.
-
-“Came ter see yeou?” he gasped. “Er--erbout that matter we was
-a-talkin’ of, Mr. Leroyd? Ye know I--I’m his legal guardeen----”
-
-“Don’t ye be scared, Mr. Tarr,” said Weeks, who understood the
-circumstances pretty well, “I can vouch for Jim, here, not playing you
-false.”
-
-“What do you know about it, anyway?” growled Jim uglily.
-
-“Now, sit down and keep cool, Leroyd,” urged Weeks. “I know _all_ about
-it. I know about your little scheme to gobble the--the _treasure_
-aboard the Silver Swan----”
-
-“Sh!” exclaimed Leroyd fiercely. “You know too much, young feller.”
-
-“No, I know just enough, and I’ll prove it to you.”
-
-“I s’pose ye think ye kin force yer way inter this, but ye’re mistaken.
-This is the private affair o’ Mr. Tarr an’ me, an’ I warn ye ter keep
-yer nose out.”
-
-He arose as he spoke, his fierce eyes fixed threateningly upon Weeks’
-impassive face.
-
-“You come with me, Mr. Tarr, where we can talk the matter over
-privately. We don’t want nothin’ o’ that swab.”
-
-The red headed ex-clerk fairly laughed aloud at this.
-
-“See here, Leroyd,” he said, still coolly: “you made a break for those
-papers yesterday, I believe. What did you get?”
-
-“Hey?” roared the sailor.
-
-“I said that you made a break for those papers of Cale Wetherbee’s
-yesterday,” repeated Weeks, slowly and distinctly. “Now, what did you
-get?”
-
-“Not a blamed thing,” responded the sailor frankly, after an instant’s
-hesitation.
-
-“That’s what I thought. I thought Cale Wetherbee took it altogether too
-coolly if you _had_ made a haul worth anything. Now, I could tell you
-something, if I thought ’twould be worth my while.”
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“Do you know what the treasure hidden aboard the brig consists of?”
-
-“No,” replied Leroyd shortly, while old Arad gazed from one to the
-other in bewilderment.
-
-“Well, I do,” declared Weeks.
-
-“Ye do?”
-
-“Sure. I heard that Wetherbee and the boy and old man Pepper talking it
-over.”
-
-“Who’s Pepper?” growled Leroyd.
-
-“He’s the feller who is going to back ’em in this hunt for the brig.
-He’s going to furnish the vessel and all.”
-
-“Curses on the luck!” growled the sailor again.
-
-Here old Arad interposed. The old man’s hands were trembling violently,
-and his face was pale with excitement.
-
-“We--we must stop ’em--they ain’t got no right ter do it,” he
-sputtered. “Horace Tarr was my nevvy, an’ I’m the guardeen o’ that
-boy. There hain’t nobody else got no right to go arter them di’monds.”
-
-“Diamonds!” exclaimed Leroyd. “Is _that_ the treasure?”
-
-“Ye--es,” replied Arad hesitatingly, looking at Weeks. “I--I found a
-letter from this Wetherbee, the mate of the Silver Swan, an’ it says
-so. Horace’s brother Anson got ’em in South Afriky.”
-
-“Good for you, old feller,” said Leroyd admiringly. “Ye did take my
-advice, didn’t ye?”
-
-Old Arad rubbed his hands together as though washing them with
-imaginary soap, and grinned.
-
-“Yes, diamonds is the treasure,” Weeks rejoined calmly. “Now, you’ll
-start right off to find the brig with Mr. Tarr here to back you with
-money, eh, Leroyd?”
-
-“Never ye mind _what_ I’ll do,” returned Jim, uglily. “I tell ye this
-hain’t none o’ your funeral, so you keep out of it, Sneaky.”
-
-“Are you sure?” asked Weeks, with a tantalizing smile.
-
-“Yes, I’m sure!” roared the enraged sailor.
-
-“Well, don’t holler so loud,” the red haired one admonished him. “But I
-think you’re mistaken.”
-
-Leroyd glared at him like an angry bull dog but said nothing.
-
-“Now I s’pose,” continued Weeks, cocking his eye at the smoke begrimmed
-ceiling of the bar room, “that you expect to get a vessel an’ go in
-pursuit of the Silver Swan; and that when you’ve got her you’ll tow her
-in port, an’ you’ll have the salvage--that’ll be a pretty good sum.”
-
-“And the di’monds,” interjected Arad, with an avaricious chuckle.
-
-“Oh, will you?” said Weeks with cool sarcasm. “That remains to be seen.
-You’ll have the brig fast enough: but how’ll you get the stones?”
-
-“Why, ef we git the brig won’t the diamonds be aboard her?” queried
-Arad.
-
-“Yes, they will; but _where will they be_, aboard her? Can you tell me
-that?”
-
-Arad’s jaw fell and he stared blankly at the shrewd Weeks. Even Leroyd
-was visibly moved by this statement.
-
-“You don’t know where the diamonds are hidden,” continued Weeks,
-pursuing his advantage. “You might tear that whole brig to pieces an’
-not find ’em, _but I know just where they are and I can put my hand
-right on ’em_!”
-
-“You kin?” gasped old Arad.
-
-“Is that straight, Sneaky?” demanded Leroyd, with interest.
-
-Weeks nodded calmly.
-
-“I believe you’re lying,” the sailor declared.
-
-“Well you can think so if you want to,” said the ex-clerk, rising, “and
-I’ll go now and find somebody to go in with me on this scheme, and I’ll
-run my chances of getting to the brig first. You can have the old hulk
-and welcome after I’ve been aboard her five minutes, Leroyd.
-
-“But, if you’ll let me in on the ground floor of this,” he continued,
-“and give me one third of all there is in it, why all right. If you
-don’t, probably you’ll get nothing, while me and the other fellow’ll
-get it _all_,” and Mr. Weeks smiled benignantly upon his audience.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-HOW A NEFARIOUS COMPACT WAS FORMED
-
-
-“BUT yeou can’t do that!” cried old Arad Tarr, the first to break
-the silence after Mr. Weeks had delivered what might be termed his
-“ultimatum.” “There hasn’t anybody got airy right ter go arter them
-di’monds, but them I send.”
-
-“That is where you make an error, Mr. Tarr,” responded Weeks
-cheerfully. “This is what is called ‘treasure trove;’ the fellow who
-gets there first has the best right to it.”
-
-“It ben’t so, is it?” whined the old man, appealing to Leroyd.
-
-“Yes, I s’pose it is,” admitted the sailor, with a growl. “He’s got us
-foul, old man.”
-
-“Now, don’t talk that way, Leroyd,” exclaimed Weeks briskly. “We three
-must strike hands and share evenly in this thing. You need me, any way,
-though I can get along without either of you; for you know it wouldn’t
-take me long to find a man to back me with a couple of hundred dollars
-against the chance of winning thousands.”
-
-“Well, you’re right,” said the sailor, seeing that it would be for his
-advantage to make terms with “Sneaky Al,” as the red haired Weeks was
-familiarly called.
-
-“Two hundred dollars is an awful lot of money ter risk,” muttered old
-Arad, knowing that he was the one who would be expected to furnish the
-“sinews of war.”
-
-“’Tain’t much compared with mebbe three hundred thousand dollars. I
-heered Cap’n Tarr say, myself, that there was enough o’ them di’monds,
-ter make a man fabulously rich,” responded Leroyd quickly. “That’d be a
-clean hundred thousand for each of us.”
-
-“But ef I furnish the money I’d oughter hev more o’ th’ returns,”
-declared the farmer, who was quite as sharp as either of his companions.
-
-“Come, we won’t quarrel over that,” the sailor declared, rising again.
-“But we want to talk this matter over where it’s more quiet like. I’ve
-got a room here. Let’s go up to it, where we shan’t be disturbed.”
-
-“Now you’re talking sense,” Weeks declared, rising gingerly from the
-chair in which he had again seated himself.
-
-At that instant Mr. Brady, who had been kept busy at the bar by
-transient customers for the past half hour, called Leroyd over to him.
-
-“Now, look a-here, Jim,” he said, in a hoarse aside, “wot be you
-an’ Sneaky Al up to? Dere ain’t goin’ ter be no game played on dat
-countryman here, see? Ye got me inter ’nough trouble yest’day. Ef I
-hadn’t a pull in dis ward, dey’d er--nabbed me, sure.”
-
-“Don’t you fret, Jack,” responded Leroyd reassuringly. “We ain’t inter
-any bunco business. The old man knows what he’s about, ef he _does_
-look like a hay-seed. Ef he don’t do _us_, it’ll be lucky.”
-
-“Well, what’s de game?” Brady demanded.
-
-“Never you mind, old man. We’re just going up stairs for a private
-confab, an’ ef things turn out right, I kin promise a cool hundred for
-keeping your mouth shut. Savey?”
-
-Brady nodded.
-
-“I’m mum,” he said, with satisfaction. “On’y I don’t want dem cops down
-on me ag’in, so mind yer eye.”
-
-Armed with a bottle and glasses, Leroyd led the way into a small room
-a good deal nearer the roof of the building, in which the New England
-Hotel was located. His two companions, however, left the sailor to
-dispose of the refreshments alone; the old farmer because he had never
-used liquor in any shape at home, and Weeks because he proposed to keep
-his brain perfectly clear that he might be sure to retain the “whip
-hand” of the other conspirators.
-
-It is not my purpose to report verbatim the plans of the three
-villains. Let it suffice to say that after much discussion, and by
-virtue of coaxings, threatenings, promises, and what not, the sailor
-and Weeks (who saw at once that it would be for their mutual advantage
-to play into each other’s hands) obtained old Arad Tarr’s consent to
-furnish them with the sum of over two hundred dollars (and more if it
-was found to be actually needed) with which to charter the vessel.
-
-You may be sure that the two rascals never worked harder (with their
-tongues) for two hundred dollars in their lives, for the amount looked
-as large to old Arad as ten thousand would to almost any other man.
-
-The plot of the conspirators likewise included the discovery of
-Brandon’s whereabouts and his arrest on the charge of robbery, as set
-forth in the warrant with which Arad supplied himself before he left
-Rhode Island. This part of the scheme Weeks proposed to attend to.
-
-Then, with a great deal of flourish and legal formula, the astute Mr.
-Weeks drew up a most wonderful document (he was well versed in legal
-phrases), which bound each of the three, Arad Tarr, James Leroyd, and
-Alfred Weeks, to a co-partnership, the object of which was to seek and
-obtain the floating hulk of the Silver Swan, and the treasure thereon,
-the profit of the venture to be divided equally between them, excepting
-the sum of one thousand dollars which was to go to Arad Tarr under
-_any_ circumstances. And, of course, the document wasn’t worth the
-paper on which it was written.
-
-But the old man didn’t know this. He was a great worshiper of the
-law, and he trusted in the legality of the paper to hold his partners
-to their promises. He lost sight, however, of the fact that the two
-men were going together on the quest for the Silver Swan, and that
-he--well, _he_ was to stay at home, and _wait_. Waiting isn’t very hard
-work, to be sure; but it is terribly wearing.
-
-These several things having been accomplished, and it being long past
-noon, the conspirators went their different ways--old Arad to interview
-the brokerage firm of Bensell, Bensell & Marsden, which, he was sure,
-was cheating him out of his dividends: Weeks to hunt up a scaly friend
-of his to serve the warrant upon unsuspicious Brandon; and Leroyd to
-look about for a vessel which could be converted to their purpose in
-the shortest possible time.
-
-And now, let us return to Brandon and his two good friends, Caleb
-Wetherbee and Adoniram Pepper, and find out how much progress _they_
-have made in the quest of the Silver Swan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-UNCLE ARAD MAKES AN ANNOUNCEMENT
-
-
-IF Caleb Wetherbee passed as sleepless a night as did his young friend,
-Brandon, he showed no signs of it when he appeared the next morning.
-They were a very jolly party indeed at the breakfast table, for the old
-sailor had recovered, to some extent at least, his equanimity when in
-the presence of Miss Frances.
-
-“Now, Caleb, have you decided to accept my offer of last evening?”
-Adoniram inquired, as they arose after the meal.
-
-“Let’s see the steamer,” returned the sailor, noncommittally; so the
-merchant and his two guests went down to the docks at once.
-
-To a person who has never seen a whaleback steamer, the first view of
-one is certainly a most surprising sight. He is at once reminded of
-Jules Verne’s great story of the Nautilus, the wonderful steel ship
-which could sail equally well below and upon the surface of the ocean.
-
-Number Three was more than two hundred feet in length, and was shaped
-like a huge cigar, the blunt end, oddly enough, being the bow. This
-blunt “nose” is what suggested the term “pig,” as applied to the
-whalebacks when first they appeared on the Great Lakes.
-
-At the forward end of the steamer a turret arose from the curved deck,
-furnished with one of the American Ship Windlass Co.’s steam windlasses
-(with the capstan above), and with hand steering gear, the shaft and
-hub of the wheel being of brass to avoid affecting the compass.
-
-The cabin aft, which was fifteen feet above the deck, and therefore
-presented a most astonishing appearance, was supported by two turrets,
-and several strong ventilating pipes, the latter connecting with the
-engine room, fire hold, and cargo hold.
-
-A low rail ran from bow to stern of the steamer, on either side,
-inclosing the turrets within its shelter, thus making it possible for
-the crew to go from the aft to the forward turrets.
-
-The deck, however, was so curved that the feat would not be easy to
-perform in rough weather, if the whaleback _did_ roll as do other
-vessels.
-
-“Ye call that a steamer, do ye?” demanded Caleb, in disgust, when he
-first caught sight of Number Three; but after he had gone aboard, and
-seen and understood the advantages the whaleback possessed over the
-other seagoing craft, he no longer scoffed.
-
-Adoniram first led them to the officers’ quarters. These were finished
-in oak, and furnished almost as sumptuously as the cabin of a fancy
-yacht. The suite contained a dining room of comfortable size, and a
-chart room and offices on the port side of the cabin.
-
-Below deck were the quarters of the crew, forward and aft, and they
-were as comfortable as those on a palatial ocean steamship.
-
-“It’s a wonderful boat,” Brandon declared, as they examined the engine.
-
-“It is that,” the ship owner assented. “I paid a pretty penny for her,
-but she’s worth it--every cent. She’ll outride any gale that ever blew,
-as long as you keep her in deep water. ’Twould be hard to sink her.
-
-“In the matter of ballast,” he continued, “there are arrangements for
-carrying eight hundred ton of water--water is used altogether for
-ballast in these whalebacks. Then the engines are of the newest build,
-too, you see.
-
-“The steam is generated from these two steel boilers, each eleven and
-a half feet in diameter by the same in length, possessing a working
-pressure of one hundred and twenty-five pounds. If the engine goes back
-on you, you will have to get out the oars and row ashore, for there is
-no chance for raising a sail,” and the jolly ship owner laughed good
-naturedly.
-
-“Well, I’ve been to sea on a good many craft--most anything that would
-float, in fact, from a torpedo boat to a Chinese junk--but this takes
-the bun,” Caleb declared as they stepped upon the dock again.
-
-“Then I take it you’ll try your hand at this?” Adoniram asked slily.
-
-“Oh, yes, I s’ppose so, Pepperpod--and the boy, too. By the way, does
-Lawrence Coffin know anything about this craft?”
-
-“He went to West Superior (where she was built) and came down in her,”
-declared the merchant.
-
-“It’s all right, then. He’ll know what to do if we get to sea and the
-blamed thing should roll over.”
-
-But despite the fact that he scoffed at the vessel, Caleb set to work
-with his customary energy to make ready for the voyage.
-
-The ship owner gave him _carte blanche_ to provision the whaleback and
-secure the crew. The engineers and firemen were already engaged and the
-work of making ready for sea went on rapidly.
-
-Caleb being a worker himself, expected a good deal of everybody about
-him and Brandon found himself with plenty to do during the next two
-days. He ran errands, and bought provisions under the old sailor’s
-directions, and saw to the storing away of the articles purchased.
-
-On the morning of the third day, however, came an interruption, and one
-which promised to be most serious.
-
-In these times of hurried preparation Caleb and his young second
-mate made the Water Street office of Adoniram Pepper & Co. their
-headquarters. They were in and out of the place a score of times a day
-to the satisfaction of Adoniram, but, if the truth were told, to the
-great annoyance of the solemn faced young man whom Mr. Marks had sent
-up from the other office to take the place of the departed Weeks.
-
-About ten o’clock on this forenoon Brandon ran in to see if he could
-find Caleb, as that individual was not at the dock where lay the
-whaleback, and where the boy had expected to meet him.
-
-“Where do you suppose he has gone?” Don asked of Mr. Pepper, who, good
-soul, seemed to have no other business on hand but the getting ready of
-the steamer.
-
-“I don’t know, I’m sure. You’d better sit down, my boy, and wait for
-him,” advised Adoniram kindly. “He’s sure to turn up here, first or
-last.”
-
-So Brandon sat down, striving to stifle his impatience. He had not
-waited ten minutes, however, when the door of the outer office was
-opened, and somebody entered.
-
-“Here he is now,” exclaimed the youth, thinking he heard Caleb’s voice.
-
-He threw open the door between the two offices, gave one glance into
-the apartment beyond, and staggered to the nearest chair in utter
-amazement.
-
-“Great Peter! it’s Uncle Arad!” he gasped, in answer to Adoniram’s
-questioning exclamation, and the next instant Uncle Arad himself
-appeared at the open portal of the private office.
-
-“Thar ye air, ye young reskil!” exclaimed the old man, shaking his bony
-forefinger at the youth.
-
-Behind him was another man--a clean shaven, foxy looking fellow, who,
-when old Arad had pointed the boy out, stepped quickly into the room.
-
-“Well, well!” exclaimed Brandon, recovering in part from his surprise.
-“Who’d have thought of seeing _you_ here, Uncle Arad!”
-
-“Not yeou, I warrant!” cackled the old man shrilly. “I s’pose ye
-thought ye c’d git off scott free with yer ill gotten gains, didn’t ye?”
-
-“What?”
-
-Brandon’s face flamed up redly, and he sprang to his feet in rage.
-
-“What do you mean?” he demanded.
-
-“Don’t ye let him escape, officer!” the farmer exclaimed, shrinking
-back. “He’s quick’s a cat.”
-
-But here Adoniram took a hand in the proceedings.
-
-“I should like to know, sir, what you mean by this?” he said, his gray
-eyes flashing behind the tip tilted eye glasses. “Brandon is under _my_
-care, sir, and I will not allow such remarks to be addressed to him.”
-
-No one would have believed that it was the jolly Adoniram, to see his
-face now. The habitual smile had disappeared entirely.
-
-“I dunno who yeou be,” Arad replied defiantly; “but I kin tell ye who I
-be, purty quick. I’m Arad Tarr; this young reskil here is my nevvy; an’
-I’m his nateral an’ lawful guardeen.”
-
-“Ah!” said Mr. Pepper, with quiet sarcasm. “So you are his guardian,
-are you? How long since?”
-
-“How long since?” repeated the old man, in a rage. “I’ll show ye! I’ve
-_allus_ been his guardeen--leastways, since his pa died.”
-
-“Which occurred a little over two months ago,” said Adoniram briefly.
-“Now, Mr. Tarr, for I suppose that is your name, where are your papers
-making you this lad’s guardian? Who appointed you?”
-
-“I’m his nateral guardeen now,” old Arad declared slowly; “but I’m
-goin’ to be ’p’inted by the court.”
-
-“What court?”
-
-“The Court o’ Probate, o’ Scituate, R. I.,” responded the farmer
-pompously.
-
-“Well, I think not,” said Adoniram, who was probably never more angry
-in his life than at that moment. “You have made a slight mistake, Mr.
-Tarr.”
-
-“Hey?” returned the farmer, growing red in the face, and looking
-daggers at the little merchant.
-
-“I say you have made a slight mistake. You will _not_ be appointed
-guardian of Brandon, by any court in the land. Did it ever occur to you
-that Captain Horace Tarr might have made a will?”
-
-“A will?” gasped the old man.
-
-“Yes, sir, a will.”
-
-“But he didn’t hev nothin’ ter will, ’ceptin----”
-
-“Well, excepting what?” Mr. Pepper demanded, as the other hesitated.
-
-“Nothin’.”
-
-“Well, he _did_ have something to will, and he appointed me joint
-guardian, with another gentleman, and _you_, Mr. Tarr, are _not_ the
-party named to assist me. We have already made application in the New
-York courts to have the appointment allowed and the will has been
-presented for probate.”
-
-“I--I don’t believe it!” shouted Arad.
-
-“You’re not obliged to. But that doesn’t affect the facts of the case,
-just the same.”
-
-For a moment the farmer was quite nonplussed: but then he looked at the
-man he had brought with him again, and his faith revived.
-
-“Ye can’t escape me this way, ye young varmint!” he exclaimed, turning
-upon Brandon as though he were some way at fault for the wrecking of
-his plans. “Mebbe I hain’t your guardeen, but I’ve power ’nough right
-here ter lug ye back ter Scituate an’ put yer through fur stealin’ that
-money.”
-
-“What money?” demanded Brandon, white with rage. “To what do you refer?”
-
-“That fifty dollars ye stole f’om me--that’s what I mean,” old Arad
-declared. “Th’ money ye stoled f’om my beury droor. I gotter warrant
-right here fur ye, ’n’ this officer ter serve it!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-CALEB WETHERBEE OBSTRUCTS THE COURSE OF THE LAW
-
-
-BRANDON was fairly paralyzed by Uncle Arad’s announcement. He had
-realized that the old man was sorely disappointed at his inability to
-keep him on the farm. He had not, however, believed he would follow him
-clear to New York, and hatch up such a scheme as this to get him again
-in his power.
-
-“You old scoundrel!” he exclaimed, too enraged for the moment to
-remember that he was speaking to a man whose age, if not his character,
-should command his respect.
-
-“Hush, Don,” commanded Adoniram Pepper admonishingly. “It will not
-better matters to vituperate. Mr. Tarr,” he added, turning to the
-farmer, “do you realize what a serious charge you have made against
-your nephew?”
-
-“I reckon I do,” Arad declared with vigor. “I got it all down here on
-er warrant--Squire Holt made it aout hisself. I’m er-goin’ ter hev that
-boy arrested for burglarizing me. Now you go erhead, Mr. Officer, an’
-arrest him.”
-
-“Wait a moment,” and Adoniram stepped quickly in front of Don before
-the foxy looking man could lay his hand upon the boy’s shoulder.
-
-“Let me see that warrant?” he said.
-
-The officer passed the paper over with a flourish, and Adoniram
-examined it closely.
-
-“Why,” he exclaimed, shortly, “this is returnable to the Rhode Island
-courts.”
-
-“Of course it is,” snarled old Arad.
-
-“But do you propose taking the boy back to Rhode Island?”
-
-“Yes, I do.”
-
-“But can’t this be settled here, officer?” asked Adoniram nervously,
-knowing that any such delay as this would ruin their plans for an early
-start after the Silver Swan.
-
-“No, sir; the robbery was committed in Rhode Island--it must be tried
-there,” replied the officer, with a crafty smile.
-
-Adoniram handed the warrant back in utter bewilderment; but at that
-juncture the door opened again, and Caleb Wetherbee himself stumped in.
-
-“Hey! what’s this?” the old seaman demanded, seeing instantly that
-something was up.
-
-Old Arad tried to shrink out of sight behind the officer’s back as he
-viewed Caleb’s fear inspiring proportions.
-
-“This is my _dear_ Uncle Arad, Caleb,” Brandon hastened to say, “and he
-has come all the way from Rhode Island to arrest me and take me back.”
-
-“For what?” cried Caleb, aghast.
-
-“For robbing him; so he says. Isn’t he kind?”
-
-Brandon was fairly furious, but he trusted in the old seaman to get him
-out of his relative’s clutches.
-
-“Robbing him!”
-
-Caleb’s face grew red with rage.
-
-“What d’ye mean, ye old scamp?”
-
-“He _hez_ robbed me,” Arad shrieked.
-
-“See here,” Caleb said coolly, “this looks to me like petty
-persecution, don’t it to you, ’Doniram? I reckon the courts would see
-it that way, too.”
-
-“The courts’ll send that reskil ter the State reform school--that’s
-what they’ll do,” Arad declared.
-
-“So it’s locking him up you’re after, eh?” returned Caleb. “Now,
-Brandon, don’t you worry about this. We kin have it fixed up in no
-time.”
-
-“But the boy’s got to be taken to Rhode Island,” exclaimed Adoniram.
-“It will be a matter of weeks.”
-
-“Weeks?” roared Caleb. “Why, the steamer sails Tuesday. He can’t go.”
-
-“I guess, mister, that you won’t have much to do with it,” remarked the
-man with the warrant officiously. “This warrant is returnable to the
-Rhode Island courts, and to Rhode Island he must go. If the boy had
-wanted to go on a voyage he shouldn’t have stolen the money.”
-
-Caleb actually roared at this and shook his huge fist in the fellow’s
-face. Adoniram hastened to keep the peace.
-
-“How do we know you are an officer?” he demanded sternly. “This is a
-most atrocious action on Mr. Tarr’s part, and for all we know you may
-be party to it.”
-
-The officer smiled slily, and throwing back his coat showed his badge.
-
-“I’m a dep’ty sheriff an’ don’t you fear,” he said. “The boy must come
-along.”
-
-But as he reached out to clutch Don, the big sailor seized the youth
-and whirled him in behind him, placing himself between the officer and
-his prisoner.
-
-“Don’t be too fast,” he said.
-
-“Do you dare resist arrest?” the officer demanded angrily.
-
-“Nobody’s resisted you, yet.”
-
-His huge bulk, however, barred all approach to Don, who was now between
-all the others and the outer door.
-
-“If you arrest this boy you’ll seriously inconvenience our plans, an’
-we’ll make you sweat for it, now I tell ye.”
-
-“I don’t care; I’m er--goin’ ter hev him took up!” shrieked old Arad,
-to whom all this delay was agonizing.
-
-“You shut that trap of yours!” roared Caleb, turning upon the old man
-in a fury. “Don’t ye dare open it ag’in w’ile ye’re here, or there’ll
-be an assault case in court, too.”
-
-Old Arad dodged back out of range of the sailor’s brawny fist with
-great celerity.
-
-“Do----don’t ye let him tetch me, officer,” he implored, jerking his
-bandanna from the pocket of his shiny old black coat, and wiping his
-face nervously.
-
-With the handkerchief came forth a letter which fell at Mr. Pepper’s
-feet; but for the moment nobody but the merchant himself saw it.
-
-Brandon, who was directly behind the seaman, leaned forward and
-whispered something in Caleb’s ear. The old seaman’s face lit up in an
-instant, and he changed his position so that his burly form completely
-blocked the doorway leading into the outer office.
-
-“So you won’t settle this thing out o’ court, eh?” he demanded.
-
-The officer shook his head.
-
-“It’s gone too far,” he said.
-
-“It has, hey?” Caleb exclaimed in wrath. “Well, so’ve _you_ gone too
-far.” Then he exclaimed, turning to Don: “Leg it, lad! We’ll outwit the
-landlubber yet.”
-
-“Hi! stop him! stop him!” shrieked Uncle Arad, for at the instant Caleb
-had spoken, Don had darted back to the street door and thrown it open.
-
-“Good by, Uncle Arad!” the captain’s son cried mockingly. “I’ll see you
-when I’ve returned from the West Indies.”
-
-He was out in a moment, and the door slammed behind him.
-
-The deputy sheriff sprang forward to follow, but Caleb managed to get
-his wooden leg in the way, and the officer measured his length on the
-office floor, while Uncle Arad, fairly wild with rage, danced up and
-down, and shrieked for the police.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-WHEREIN BRANDON TARR CONCEALS HIMSELF
-
-
-THE doughty deputy sheriff was on his feet in an instant, and with a
-wrathy glance at Caleb, dashed out of the office after the fleeing
-Brandon. If he did not make the arrest he would fail to get his money,
-and he did not propose to lose that.
-
-But Uncle Arad could not get to the door without passing Caleb and he
-hardly dared do that. Just then the big seaman looked in no mood to be
-tampered with. The farmer, however, _did_ sputter out something about
-having the law on everybody in general.
-
-“Bring on all the law you want to, you old scarecrow,” responded Caleb,
-vigorously mopping his face. “I reckon we kin take care of it. What ye
-got there, Adoniram?”
-
-Mr. Pepper had picked up the letter which had fallen from old Arad’s
-pocket, and was looking at the superscription in a puzzled manner.
-
-Arad caught sight of the epistle as quickly as did Caleb.
-
-“That’s mine! give it here!” he cried, making a snatch at the paper.
-
-But Adoniram held it out of his reach.
-
-“I don’t see how you make that out, Mr. Tarr,” he said quietly. “This
-letter is not addressed to you. It is in _your_ handwriting, Caleb,
-and is addressed to ‘Master Brandon Tarr, Chopmist, Rhode Island.’”
-
-“Oh, you swab!” exclaimed the old tar, with a withering glance of
-contempt at old Arad, as he seized the letter. “This ’ere’s what I
-wrote the boy w’en I was in the hospital--w’ich same he never got. Now,
-how came _you_ by it? You old land shark!”
-
-Arad was undeniably frightened. Although he might explain the fact of
-his opening Don’s letter as eminently proper, to himself, he well knew
-that he could not make these friends of his nephew see it in the same
-light.
-
-“I--I--it came arter Brandon went away,” he gasped in excuse.
-
-“It did, hey?” exclaimed Caleb suspiciously.
-
-Mr. Pepper took the envelope again and examined the postmark critically.
-
-“Hum--um,” he said slowly, “postmarked in New York on the third;
-received on the afternoon of the fourth at the Chopmist post office.
-I’m afraid, my dear sir, that that yarn won’t wash.”
-
-Uncle Arad was speechless, and looked from one to the other of the
-stern faced men in doubt.
-
-“He--he was my nevvy; didn’t I hev a right ter see what he had written
-ter him?”
-
-“You can bet ye didn’t,” Caleb declared with confidence, and with a
-slight wink at Adoniram. “Let me tell ye, Mr. Tarr, that openin’ other
-folks’ correspondence is actionable, as the lawyers say. I reckon that
-you’ve laid yourself li’ble to gettin’ arrested yourself, old man.”
-
-“Ye--ye can’t do it,” sputtered Arad.
-
-“If that monkey of a sheriff finds Brandon (w’ich same I reckon he
-won’t), we’ll see if we can’t give _you_ a taste of the same medicine.”
-
-The old man was undeniably frightened and edged towards the door.
-
-“I guess I better go,” he remarked hesitatingly. “I dunno as that
-officer’ll be able ter ketch thet reskil.”
-
-“No, I don’t b’lieve he will myself,” Caleb declared. “And if you want
-to keep your own skin whole, you’d best see that he doesn’t touch the
-lad.”
-
-Old Arad slunk out without another word, and the two friends allowed
-him to depart in contemptuous silence.
-
-When he had disappeared Adoniram turned to the sailor at once.
-
-“Where has Don gone, Caleb?” he asked anxiously.
-
-“You’ve got me. He told me he was goin’ to skip, and for us to go ahead
-with the preparations for getting off next week, just the same. He’d
-lay low till the old scamp had given it up, and then slip aboard the
-steamer. Oh, the boy’s all right.”
-
-“He is, if that sheriff doesn’t find him,” said the merchant doubtfully.
-
-“I’ll risk that,” responded Caleb, who had vast confidence in Brandon’s
-ability to take care of himself.
-
-But Adoniram shook his head.
-
-“New York is a bad place for a boy to be alone in. Where will he go?”
-
-“Down to the pier, I reckon, and hide aboard the steamer. I’ll agree to
-put him away there so that no measly faced sheriff like _that_ fellow
-can find him.”
-
-“It’s a bad business,” declared Mr. Pepper, shaking his head slowly.
-“If he hadn’t run off there might have been some way of fixing it up so
-that he wouldn’t have had to go back to Rhode Island, and thus delay
-the sailing of the steamer. We might have scared the uncle out of
-prosecuting him. He was badly frightened as it was.”
-
-Caleb gazed at his friend for several moments with a quizzical smile
-upon his face.
-
-“Do you know, Adoniram,” he said at length, “I b’lieve you’re too
-innocent for this wicked world.”
-
-“How do you mean?” asked the merchant, flushing a little, yet smiling.
-
-“Well, you don’t seem to see anything fishy in all this.”
-
-“Fishy?”
-
-“Yes, fishy,” returned Caleb, sitting down and speaking confidentially.
-“Several things make me believe that you (and me, too) haven’t been
-half awake in this business.”
-
-“I certainly do not understand you,” declared Adoniram.
-
-“Well, give me a chance to explain, will you?” said the sailor
-impatiently. “You seem to think that this old land shark of an uncle of
-the boy’s is just trying to get him back on the farm, and has hatched
-up this robbery business for that purpose? I don’t suppose you think
-Don stole any money from him, do you?” he added.
-
-“Not for an instant!” the merchant replied emphatically.
-
-“That’s what I thought. Well, as I say, you suppose he wants Brandon
-back on the farm--wants his work, in fact?”
-
-“Ye--es.”
-
-“Well, did it ever strike you, ’Doniram,” Caleb pursued, with a smile
-of superiority on his face--“did it ever strike you that if he was
-successful in proving Brandon guilty, the boy would be locked up and
-then _nobody_ would get his valuable services--nobody except the State?”
-
-“Why, that’s so.”
-
-“Of course it’s so.”
-
-“Then, what is his object in persecuting the poor lad? Is he doing it
-just out of spite?”
-
-“Now, see here; does that look reasonable? Do you think for a moment
-that an old codger like him--stingy as they make ’em--d’ye think he’d
-go ter the expense o’ comin ’way down here to New York out of revenge
-simply? Well, I guess not!”
-
-“Then, what is he up to?” demanded Adoniram, in bewilderment.
-
-“Well, of that _I’m_ not sure, of course; but,” said Caleb, with
-vehemence, “I’m willing to risk my hull advance that he’s onter this
-di’mond business.
-
-“Why, Pepper, how could he help being? Didn’t he get that letter of
-mine, an’ didn’t I give the hull thing away in it, like the blamed
-idiot I was? Man alive, a sharper like that feller would sell his
-immortal soul for a silver dollar. What _wouldn’t_ he for a big stake
-like this?”
-
-“But--” began Adoniram.
-
-“Hold on a minute and let me finish,” urged Caleb. “That scoundrel
-Leroyd was up to Chopmist, mind ye. Who knows but what he an’ old Arad
-Tarr have hitched hosses and gone inter this together? I haven’t told
-either you or Brandon, for I didn’t want to worry you, but I learned
-yesterday that Jim is tryin’ ter charter a craft of some kind--you an’
-I know what for.
-
-“He’s got no money; what rascal of a sailor ever has? He must have
-backing, then. And who is more likely to be the backer than the old
-sharper who’s just gone out of here! I tell ye, ’Doniram, _they’re
-after them di’monds_, and it behooves us ter git up an’ dust if we want
-ter beat ’em.”
-
-The ship owner shook his head unconvinced.
-
-“You may be right, of course, Caleb; I don’t say it is an
-impossibility. But it strikes me that your conclusions are rather far
-fetched. They are not reasonable.”
-
-“Well, we’ll see,” responded the old seaman, pursing up his lips. “I
-shall miss Brandon’s help--a handier lad I never see--but he will have
-to lay low till after the whaleback sails.”
-
-He went back to the work of getting the steamer ready for departure,
-expecting every hour that Brandon would appear. But the captain’s son
-did not show up that day, nor the next.
-
-Monday came and Number Three was all ready for sailing. Her crew of
-twenty men, beside the officers, were aboard.
-
-The first and third mates were likewise present, the former, Mr.
-Coffin, being a tall, shrewd looking, pleasant faced man, who eternally
-chewed on the end of a cigar (except when eating or sleeping) although
-he was never seen to light one; and Mr. Bolin, the third, a keen,
-alert little man who looked hardly older than Brandon himself.
-
-But Brandon did not come. The new captain of the whaleback, and the
-owner himself, were greatly worried by the boy’s continued absence.
-
-They had already set on foot inquiry for the youth’s whereabouts, but
-nothing had come of it.
-
-They did discover that Uncle Arad had gone back to Rhode Island, and
-gone back alone. The “scaly” ward politician who held the onerous
-position of deputy sheriff, and who had sought to arrest the boy, had
-not been successful, Brandon’s friends knew, for the man haunted the
-pier at which the whaleback lay, day and night.
-
-“If he don’t come tonight, Adoniram,” Caleb declared, “we shall sail
-in the morning, just the same--and that by the first streak of light,
-too. _You_ will be here, and I can trust you to look out for the lad.
-_I_ must be away after those di’monds. Don’ll turn up all right, I know
-right well; and we mustn’t let them swabs get ahead of us, and reach
-the brig first.”
-
-He had taken the precaution ere this to have his own and Brandon’s
-effects brought down to the boat. He was ready, in fact, to cast off
-and steam away from the dock at a moment’s notice.
-
-As the evening approached Caleb ordered the fires built under the
-boilers, and everything to be made ready for instant departure.
-Adoniram Pepper came down after dinner and remained in the whaleback’s
-cabin, hoping to see Brandon once again before the steamer sailed.
-
-Caleb was too anxious to keep still at all, but tramped back and
-forth, occasionally making trips to the wheelman’s turret in which he
-had stationed Mr. Coffin and one of the sailors, so as to have no delay
-in starting, no matter what should happen.
-
-“By Jove, this beats blockade running at Savannah in the sixties,”
-muttered the first mate, after one of his commander’s anxious trips to
-the forward turret to see that all was right. “This youngster they’re
-taking all this trouble for must be a most remarkable boy.”
-
-“There’s two fellows watching the steamer from the wharf,” Caleb
-declared, entering the cabin again.
-
-Just then there was a sound outside, and a heavy knock sounded at the
-cabin door. Caleb pulled it open in an instant.
-
-Without stood three burly police officers.
-
-“Well, well!” exclaimed Mr. Pepper, in wonder.
-
-“What do _you_ want?” Caleb demanded, inclined to be a little combative.
-
-“Beg pardon, sir,” said the spokesman of the two, nodding respectfully
-to Mr. Pepper, “but we’ve been sent to search the steamer for a boy
-against whom this man holds a warrant,” and the officer motioned to a
-third individual who stood without. It was the deputy sheriff.
-
-“Very well,” said Mr. Pepper quietly.
-
-“Search and be hanged,” growled Caleb, glowering at the man with the
-warrant. “If you can find him you’ll have better luck than we.”
-
-He refused to assist them in any way, however, and Mr. Bolin politely
-showed the party over the whole steamer. But of course, they found not
-a sign of Brandon.
-
-After nearly an hour’s search the officers gave it up and departed,
-Caleb hurling after them several sarcastic remarks about their
-supposed intellectual accomplishments--or rather, their lack of such
-accomplishments.
-
-The deputy sheriff, whose name was Snaggs, by the way, would not give
-it up, however, but still remained on the wharf.
-
-Mr. Coffin, who had begun to take a lively interest in the proceedings,
-was pacing the inclined deck of the whaleback on the side furtherest
-from the pier, a few minutes past midnight (everybody on board was
-still awake at even this late hour) when his ear caught the sound of a
-gentle splash in the black waters just below him.
-
-He stopped instantly and leaned over the rail.
-
-“Hist!” whispered a voice out of the darkness. “Toss me a rope. I want
-to come aboard.”
-
-Mr. Coffin was not a man to show his emotions, and therefore, without a
-word, he dropped the end of a bit of cable into the water, just where
-he could see the faint outlines of the owner of the voice.
-
-Hidden by the wheelhouse from the view of anybody who might be on the
-wharf, he assisted the person aboard, and in a minute the mysterious
-visitor stood upon the iron plates at Mr. Coffin’s side.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-THE DEPARTURE OF THE WHALEBACK, NUMBER THREE
-
-
-NO emergency was ever too great for Lawrence Coffin. The appearance of
-the stranger whom he had lifted over the rail to the steamer’s deck may
-have surprised him; but he gave no visible sign.
-
-The instant the fellow was on his feet, Mr. Coffin slid open the door
-of the wheelhouse and pushed the newcomer in.
-
-“Jackson,” he said sharply, to the man inside, “go for Captain
-Wetherbee.”
-
-Then he turned to the dripping figure that stood just within the door
-of the turret.
-
-The stranger was a youth of fifteen or sixteen, with a sharp,
-intelligent face, and his saturated clothing was little more than rags.
-
-“Hullo!” said the mate, “_you’re_ not Brandon Tarr, I take it.”
-
-“You kin bet on that, mister,” responded the youth grinning. “An’ you,
-I reckon, ain’t Cale Wetherbee. He’s got a wooden leg.”
-
-“I’ve sent for Mr. Wetherbee,” replied Mr. Coffin. “What do you want?”
-
-“I’ll tell th’ boss, wot I was told ter see,” declared the fellow
-shrewdly.
-
-The youth was evidently of that great class of individuals known as
-“street gamins” who, in New York City, are numbered by the thousand.
-
-He was thin and muscular, quick in his movements, and his eyes were
-shifty and uneasy, not from any lack of frankness or honesty, perhaps,
-but because his mode of life forced him to be ever on the watch for
-what might “happen next.”
-
-Mr. Coffin had hardly made this mental inventory of the fellow, when
-Caleb, accompanied by Mr. Pepper, came forward. The strange youth
-evidently recognized the captain of the whaleback at once as the
-individual he wished to see.
-
-“You’re Captain Wetherbee,” he said quickly fumbling in the inside of
-his coarse flannel shirt (the shirt and trousers were all he had on) “I
-got somethin’ fur you from Brandon Tarr.”
-
-“Where is he?” cried Mr. Pepper, in great excitement.
-
-“He’s gone to sea, boss,” responded the boy calmly.
-
-“Hey!” roared Caleb, and then the messenger brought forth that which he
-was fumbling for--a little waterproof matchbox.
-
-“Gone to sea?” repeated Adoniram, in bewilderment.
-
-“Dat’s it,” said the boy. “He went day ’fore yest’day mornin’ in de
-Success.”
-
-But Caleb had opened the matchbox and drawn forth the folded paper it
-contained.
-
-“It’s a letter--the young rascal! Why didn’t he come himself?”
-
-“Didn’t I tell ye he’d gone ter sea?” demanded the youth in disgust.
-
-“Listen to this,” exclaimed Caleb, paying not the least attention to
-the messenger’s words, and he read the closely written page aloud:
-
- “DEAR CALEB--Swivel is going to make a break with this letter for me,
- although the Success sails, we understand, in an hour or two. He can
- tell you how I came aboard here, so I won’t stop to do that.
-
- “What I want to say is, that Leroyd is aboard and that the brig will
- touch at Savannah for Mr. Pepper’s old clerk, Mr. Weeks, who is in
- the plot to find the Silver Swan, too. I shall leave her at Savannah
- if it is a possibility.
-
- “If you get into Savannah while she is there, however, and I don’t
- appear, try to find some way of getting me out. I’m afraid of
- Leroyd--or, that is, I should be if he knew I was here.
-
- “I’ve got enough to eat and drink to last me a long time and am
- comfortable. I can make another raid on the pantry, too, if I run
- short.
-
- “Look out for Swivel; he’s a good fellow. He can tell you all that I
- would like to, if space and time did not forbid.
-
- “Yours sincerely,
- “BRANDON TARR.
-
- “P. S. We’ll beat these scamps and get the Silver Swan yet.”
-
-“Well, well!” commented Mr. Pepper, in amazement. “What will that boy
-do next?”
-
-“The young rascal!” Caleb exclaimed in vexation. “What does he mean by
-cutting up such didoes as this? Aboard the very vessel the scoundrels
-have chartered, hey?”
-
-“But how did he get there?” cried Adoniram wonderingly.
-
-“This young man ought to be able to tell that,” suggested Mr. Coffin,
-referring to the dripping youth.
-
-Caleb looked from the open letter to the boy.
-
-“So you’re Swivel, eh?” he demanded.
-
-The lad grinned and nodded.
-
-“Well, suppose you explain this mystery.”
-
-But here Adoniram interposed.
-
-“Let us take him to the cabin, and give him something dry to put on.
-He’ll catch his death of cold here.”
-
-“’Nough said. Come on,” said Caleb leading the way.
-
-Fifteen minutes later the youth who rejoiced in the name of Swivel was
-inside of warm and dry garments, several sizes too large for him, and
-was telling his story to a most appreciative audience.
-
-I will not give it in detail, and in Swivel’s bad grammar; a less
-rambling account will suffice.
-
-When Brandon Tarr had made his rapid retreat from the office of
-Adoniram Pepper and Co. he had run across the street, dodged around the
-first corner, and then walked hastily up town. He determined to keep
-away from the office for the remainder of the day, hoping to tire out
-both Uncle Arad and the deputy sheriff.
-
-Finally he took a car and rode over to Brooklyn, and it was there that
-he fell in with Swivel, who was a veritable street gamin--a “wharf-rat”
-even--though a good hearted and not an altogether bad principled one.
-
-It being a time in the day when there were no papers to sell, Swivel
-(wherever the boy got the name he didn’t know, and it would have been
-hard to trace its origin) was blacking boots, and while he shined
-Brandon’s the two boys scraped up an acquaintance.
-
-Fearing that Uncle Arad or the officer, or perhaps both, would be on
-the watch about the shipping merchant’s office, or the steamer dock,
-Brandon decided that Swivel would be a good one to have along with him
-to send ahead as “scout,” and for a small sum the gamin agreed.
-
-Brandon was a country boy, and was unfamiliar with city ways or
-city conveniences. It never crossed his mind to use the telephone
-communicating with his friends, and Swivel knew very little about
-telephones, any way.
-
-So they waited until toward evening and then came back to New York.
-
-Water Street and its vicinity, and the docks, were as familiar to
-Swivel as were the lanes and woods of Chopmist to Brandon. By devious
-ways the gamin led the captain’s son to the ship owner’s office, but it
-was quite dark by that time and the place was closed.
-
-So they went to the pier at which the whaleback lay, and here Swivel
-showed that he was of great use to Brandon, for had it not been for
-him, his employer would have run straight into a trap. The deputy
-sheriff, Snaggs, was watching the steamer, and no less a person than
-Mr. Alfred Weeks himself, was talking with him.
-
-By careful maneuvering the two boys got into a position from which they
-could hear some of the conversation of the two rascals; but the way to
-the steamer was right under Snaggs’ eye, and Brandon dared not attempt
-it.
-
-By intently listening, the captain’s son heard several important items
-of news, and, greatly to his astonishment, discovered that Uncle Arad,
-Leroyd, and Mr. Weeks himself were playing right into each other’s
-hands, and that their object was to keep Brandon from getting back to
-his friends, and thus delay the sailing of the whaleback so that the
-craft on which the plotters expected to sail might get away first.
-
-Snaggs was to keep a sharp lookout from the shoreward side of the
-whaleback and there was already a man in a boat patroling the riverside
-that Brandon might not return from that direction, and a third person
-was “shadowing” Adoniram Pepper’s residence. The ship owner’s office
-would be watched during the day.
-
-As soon as Brandon made his appearance he was to be seized at once on
-the strength of the Rhode Island warrant and sent back to Chopmist.
-This, the conspirators hoped, would keep Caleb Wetherbee from sailing
-for several weeks, and by that time Leroyd and the ex-clerk expected
-to overhaul the Silver Swan--that is, this is what Weeks and Leroyd
-themselves were planning to do; but the former took care to say nothing
-about the Silver Swan to the deputy sheriff.
-
-Finding that there was no chance to get aboard the whaleback just then,
-and having heard Weeks say that he was going to meet Leroyd and that
-they two were to go that night and see the vessel and her commander,
-Brandon decided to follow them, and find out the name of the craft and
-where she lay, believing that the information would be of value to
-himself and to his friends.
-
-Piloted by Swivel, Brandon followed “Sneaky Al” to the New England
-Hotel and while the ex-clerk went inside for Leroyd the two boys waited
-without, and then took up the trail again when the two conspirators
-appeared.
-
-The sailor and Weeks went over to Brooklyn and after two hours’ dodging
-and running and hiding, they tracked the rascals to the brig Success,
-lying at a Brooklyn wharf.
-
-Brandon decided that it would never do to be so near and not hear the
-plans the villains made with the captain of the Success, so he rashly
-crept aboard and listened to the conversation at the cabin skylight.
-And this was when he got into trouble.
-
-He heard the two plotters agree with the captain of the vessel (who was
-not in the scheme at all) to pay two hundred dollars for six week’s use
-of the brig, providing the Success put to sea at once.
-
-She already had a very fair cargo for Savannah, and the agreement was
-that she should put in at that port for the time necessary for the
-cargo to be landed.
-
-Thus, of course, the captain, who was the owner as well, was going to
-make a very good thing out of it, indeed. He asked no questions as to
-what use the brig was to be put to; and he agreed to allow Leroyd to
-accompany him to Savannah, where Weeks would meet them.
-
-Brandon made a shrewd guess that the ex-clerk was to remain in New York
-until he was certain of _his_ capture and incarceration; then he would
-reach Savannah by steamer.
-
-It was quite evident that the two rascals had managed to “boil” more
-money out of old Arad Tarr than they had first expected, and could
-afford to be more lavish with their funds.
-
-But, as I said, the boys, by venturing aboard the Success, got into
-trouble. Somebody came aft while they were listening to the conference
-below, and to escape discovery, they dodged down the after hatch.
-
-The crew of the Success were already aboard, and the two men who
-constituted the “anchor watch” remained near the open hatchway (the
-other hatches were battened down), and the two boys were unable to
-leave the hold.
-
-Morning came, and found them still there. The cargo was nearly all in,
-and the crew went to work to finish the lading by daylight. Brandon and
-Swivel retreated into the bows of the vessel, and managed to remain
-hidden all day.
-
-They did not dare leave the hold, although they suffered extremely from
-lack of food and water, for Leroyd had come aboard to superintend the
-work, and would have seen them.
-
-At evening the hatches were battened down, and the unintentional
-stowaways were left in darkness. But Swivel, who a shrewd and sharp
-eyed lad, had noticed a small door in the cabin bulkhead by which the
-cook doubtless entered the hold for provisions from time to time.
-
-With their pocket knives they forced the fastenings of this door and
-Swivel made a raid into the pantry, which was left unguarded, and
-returned laden with provisions enough to last them a week if need be.
-He secured a big “beaker” of water, too.
-
-Brandon also discovered the ship’s provisions stored near the bows, and
-was sure that he could stand a siege.
-
-Leroyd, they ascertained, hardly ever left the cabin or deck of the
-Success, and Brandon dared not venture out. At last, after talking the
-whole matter over, Swivel agreed to take the risk of giving himself up
-as a stowaway, and thus get put ashore before the brig started.
-
-Then he was to make his way to the whaleback and explain Brandon’s
-situation to Caleb.
-
-The captain’s son wrote his letter and placed it in the matchbox, which
-Swivel in turn had hidden in the breast of his shirt. Then the gamin
-pounded on the hatch until the crew heard him and let him out.
-
-Naturally the captain of the Success was angry enough, for the brig
-was already to sail, and they were getting the lines cast off, so he
-summoned a night watchman from the dock, who took the unlucky Swivel in
-charge and handed him over to a policeman.
-
-This was a phase of the situation which neither of the boys had
-considered. But there was no way out of it, and the gamin spent the day
-in the police station, for it was Sunday.
-
-He was brought before the magistrate the next morning, but of course
-there was nobody to appear against him, so he was discharged with a
-reprimand. The police captain, however, kept him busy about the station
-until late in the afternoon, before he would let him go.
-
-“He kep’ me jugglin’ wid er mop er wipin’ up de floor,” as the gamin
-expressed it to his hearers.
-
-As soon as he was free he had hurried to the New York side; but upon
-reaching the vicinity of the whaleback he discovered that the “patrol
-line” was drawn even closer than before.
-
-Snaggs and two of his friends were on duty, for as the time approached
-for the sailing, they decided that if Brandon came back he would do so
-very soon.
-
-Swivel had seen the raid the policemen made under the deputy’s
-instigation, and after the bluecoats were safely out of the way, he had
-slipped into the water and made for the steamer.
-
-“An’ here I is,” he said, in conclusion. “Dey didn’t ketch me, nor dat
-Brandon Tarr, nuther. We’s too fly for ’em.”
-
-“Of all the scrapes I ever heard of, this is the worst,” Adoniram
-exclaimed in comment.
-
-But Caleb, now that his fears for Don’s safety were somewhat allayed,
-seemed rather to enjoy the situation.
-
-“Oh, that boy’s smart,” he declared, with a chuckle. “I’ll risk him
-even if he is in that vessel’s hold. Leroyd won’t get the best of
-_him_. Probably, too, the captain of the Success is not a bad sort of a
-fellow, an’ he won’t see the boy maltreated.
-
-“I feel better, ’Doniram, and with your permission we’ll get under way
-at once.”
-
-“But what shall we do with this lad?” asked the little merchant,
-nodding and smiling at Swivel. “He’s deserving of much praise for his
-honesty and faithfulness.”
-
-“Oh, take me along, will yer?” exclaimed the gamin, with eagerness.
-“I’ll work _hard_ ef ye will! I jest wanter see dis thing out, I do! I
-like dat Brandon Tarr, an’ I wanter see him git the di’monts wot he
-said was on dat wreck yer arter. Say, lemme go, will yer?”
-
-Caleb looked at the ship owner in perplexity.
-
-“Oh, take him, Caleb,” said Adoniram quickly. “It may be the making of
-the lad to get him off the city streets. He deserves it.”
-
-“So be it then,” said Caleb, rising. “Now, Mr. Coffin and Mr. Bolin--to
-work! You’ll have to go ashore at once, Adoniram. I shall have Number
-Three out of her berth in half an hour.”
-
-Steam was got up, the crew flew about their several duties under
-the energetic commands of the officers, and within a short time the
-whaleback, to the manifest disappointment of Mr. Snaggs, who watched
-proceedings from the shadow of the wharf, cast off her lines and
-steamed down the bay into the darkness of the night.
-
-Thus did she begin the voyage whose object was the finding of the wreck
-of the Silver Swan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-THE STOWAWAY ABOARD THE SUCCESS
-
-
-AS we know, Brandon Tarr had no intention of remaining long away from
-his friends when he slipped out of Adoniram Pepper’s office to escape
-arrest on the fraudulent charge of robbery, concocted by Uncle Arad.
-
-The events which followed, however, made it necessary for him to remain
-away, and, finally, to go to sea as a stowaway in the hold of the
-Success, the vessel chartered by the conspirators to make search for
-the Silver Swan.
-
-After the friendly street gamin, Swivel, left him in the hold, in
-the early hours of Sunday morning, Brandon of course had no means of
-knowing what had become of him--whether he had accomplished his purpose
-of getting away from the brig before she sailed, or whether, because
-she was short handed, the captain of the Success had retained him.
-
-After Swivel was let up on deck, and the hatch closed, however, Brandon
-heard nothing further, except the heavy tramping of the sailors,
-the creaking of the ropes, and the hoarse roars of command from the
-officers.
-
-The work of getting the Success away from the dock went rapidly on.
-
-Quite fortunately for the stowaway, the hold of the Success was little
-more than two thirds filled with Savannah goods. In the bows, beside a
-great many bags and boxes and barrels of provisions for the use of the
-crew, there were likewise spare sails, cordage, etc.
-
-It would be a very easy matter indeed for him to hide among the stuff
-if any one came into the hold.
-
-The scent of bilge water was not at all strong, for the Success was a
-comparatively new vessel and had evidently been recently pumped out.
-
-Brandon judged her to be about the size of the Silver Swan, much the
-same sort of craft in fact, and, like his father’s vessel, the Success
-was a “tramp.”
-
-It was night--or at least a gloomy twilight--at all times in the hold;
-but Brandon thought that it was surely daylight by the time the brig
-was under way.
-
-She was taken down the river by a fussy little steam tug and then,
-meeting the swells of the Atlantic, and a brisk gale springing up, she
-shook out her sails and dropped the tug astern.
-
-Brandon was fearful that he might be sick, for he had never really been
-to sea and the brig pitched not a little in the waves of the ocean.
-
-To reduce the possibility of this misfortune to a minimum, he ate but
-sparingly the first day or two out, and by that time all “squeamish”
-feelings passed away.
-
-It was dreadfully dull in the dark hold, however. Of food and water he
-had a sufficiency, although the latter was warm and brackish; but there
-was absolutely nothing for him to do to pass away the time. There was
-not even the spice of danger about his situation, for nobody came into
-the hold.
-
-He dared not explore much at first, for he was afraid that he might be
-heard from the cabin or forecastle.
-
-During a slight blow which came up the fourth day, however, while the
-spars and cordage were creaking so that all other sounds were drowned,
-he felt perfectly safe in moving about. If he could not hear what went
-on outside, nobody outside would be likely to hear him.
-
-On this day, however, he received several tumbles, for the ship
-occasionally pitched so suddenly that he was carried completely off his
-feet. Nothing worse happened to him, though, than the barking of his
-elbows and knees.
-
-Gaining confidence in his ability to get around without being
-discovered, he changed his position more frequently after this. The
-weather remained fair for some time following this small blow, and
-Brandon hung about the cabin bulkhead, striving to hear more of
-Leroyd’s plans, if possible.
-
-It was plain that the captain of the brig knew nothing of the real
-plans of the conspirators. They had told him what they pleased, and he
-was to ask no questions.
-
-It was not long, however, before the stowaway discovered something
-which was quite a surprise to him. There was a woman on board the brig;
-he heard the rustle of her garments, and occasionally the tones of a
-female voice.
-
-At first he thought her to be the captain’s wife, but because of the
-youthfulness of her tones and some words which the captain addressed to
-her, he changed this opinion, and decided that she was his daughter.
-
-Brandon was quite interested in her, for a girl on a sailing vessel
-was certainly a novelty. He was sure she must be a “jolly one,” as he
-expressed it, to sail with her father on a merchantman. Not many girls
-would have the pluck to do that.
-
-As the days passed by, and the Success fled on before the favoring
-gales, drawing nearer and nearer to Savannah, Brandon became
-correspondingly worried over the obstructions to a safe escape from the
-brig, which were presented to his mind.
-
-Once the brig reached port and the hatches were opened, it would be
-“all day” with him. Nothing but a miracle would save him from falling
-into the hands of Jim Leroyd, and he didn’t like to think of that.
-
-He had good reason to believe that the rascally sailor would not
-hesitate to injure him in any way possible.
-
-Naturally his mind reverted to the trap in the cabin bulkhead by which
-Swivel had gained access to the cook’s galley, as a possible means of
-escape before the hatches were removed. If the brig reached Savannah
-late in the day, doubtless the hatches would remain battened down till
-the next morning. In that case the trap might be his salvation.
-
-Several times during the voyage the steward, sometimes with a seaman
-with him, entered the hold by this door, for something among the
-stores. At such times Brandon “laid low” and his presence was not
-discovered.
-
-What little food he had purloined from the stores was not noticed
-either.
-
-Therefore, as the brig drew nearer to her destination Brandon set about
-studying the topography of the cabin--its entrances and exits--and how
-he could best pass through it and reach the deck without attracting the
-attention of anybody on board.
-
-All this scouting had to be done at night, of course, and many were his
-narrow escapes while engaged in this most perilous undertaking.
-
-“Nothing ventured, nothing gained,” was the motto of the Tarrs, father
-and son. In Captain Tarr’s case, and in that of his brother Anson, it
-had been, as a usual thing, a good deal of _venture_ and little _gain_.
-
-The same motive, however, was predominant in Brandon’s nature, and he
-took many risks in thus scouting about the brig’s cabin that almost any
-other boy would not have taken.
-
-One night he had cautiously set the narrow door leading into the
-steward’s pantry ajar, and sat just under it in the darkness of the
-hold, trying to discover if all but the officers, excepting the one in
-command of the watch, had turned in.
-
-There was a light in the outer cabin, but he could not see into the
-room from where he sat, and he dared not enter the pantry until he
-was sure that the cabin was unoccupied. Occasionally a sound of low
-conversation would reach his ears from the deck, but otherwise all was
-still.
-
-[Illustration: “I’M A STOWAWAY. I’VE BEEN IN THE HOLD SINCE WE LEFT NEW
-YORK.”]
-
-“I believe I’ll risk it,” he declared, after remaining in a
-listening attitude for nearly half an hour. “I need water badly--my
-throat is well nigh parched--and if I could learn whether the lamp was
-usually left turned up like that, whether the cabin was empty or _not_,
-I might know better how to act when I do try to escape.”
-
-Finally he crawled through the opening and crept softly to the cabin
-door. The apartment was empty--or it appeared to be--although there
-was a chair drawn up to the table, and some books lay there as though
-having been in recent use.
-
-“Guess I’d better not stay,” thought the stowaway nervously. “But I
-must have a drink.”
-
-He turned back into the cook’s galley, and took a deep draught from a
-bucket he found there. Just as he was about to leave the place he was
-electrified by hearing a voice say,
-
-“What are _you_ doing here?”
-
-Brandon wheeled about like a flash. There framed by the cabin doorway
-was a young girl--the girl whose voice he had heard more than once
-since his incarceration in the hold of the Success--the captain’s
-daughter!
-
-“Who are you? What do you want!” she repeated, eying him fearlessly,
-though with a puzzled expression of countenance. “I never remember
-having seen _you_ before.”
-
-Brandon was suddenly conscious that his long captivity in the vessel’s
-hold had not improved his personal appearance, and with his feeling of
-fright at being discovered, there was also considerable vexation at
-being seen in such a plight by a lady.
-
-The girl was bright looking and intelligent, with a face which
-attracted the boy greatly; in fact, he was almost tempted to believe
-that he had seen her somewhere, so familiar did she appear.
-
-Dressed in a simple blue flannel yachting suit, trimmed with white
-braid, which set off her plump figure to great advantage, she was a
-pleasing picture.
-
-“Why don’t you answer me?” she demanded in vexation, as Brandon
-continued silent.
-
-“Sh! don’t give me away,” begged the boy, taking a step nearer. “I’m a
-stowaway, I’ve been in the hold ever since we left New York.”
-
-“Another stowaway!” she exclaimed, but in a lower tone. “Why father
-found one just before we left port.”
-
-“I know it,” returned Brandon. “He was with me. What did they do with
-him?”
-
-“Father gave him into the hands of the police,” replied the girl
-gravely. “He’s very hard on stowaways. Why did you get into the hold?”
-
-“Because I _had_ to; yes, I did--actually had to,” declared Brandon, in
-a whisper. “I can’t tell you the whole story now; but I will some time.
-I haven’t done anything wrong--excepting taking a few provisions from
-the ship’s stores. Those I will pay you for now,” and he took his purse
-from the pocket of his stained and ragged coat.
-
-“No, no!” cried the girl, drawing back, “I do not want your money.”
-
-“Then I shall leave it, as I first intended, on the cabin table when we
-get to Savannah.”
-
-“But the men will find you when we get in, even if I _don’t_ tell
-father.”
-
-“I hope not,” Brandon replied, so earnestly that the captain’s daughter
-looked at him curiously.
-
-“Is there anybody aboard whom you fear?” she asked shrewdly.
-
-“Yes, there is. It is that evil looking man--the one who has chartered
-the brig--Jim Leroyd.”
-
-“He!” she exclaimed, in surprise. Then after a little silence she added:
-
-“He _is_ an evil looking man; I’ve told father so more than once,
-but he says that a man is not always as bad as he looks. Father has
-seen so many people and so much of the world, that I seldom question
-his judgment; but I have been impressed from the first that there
-was something wrong about him--and about that Mr. Weeks, who is in
-partnership with him, and whom we expect to meet at Savannah.
-
-“It is a strange thing--this searching for a derelict brig--any way. I
-tell father that there is something wrong back of it.”
-
-“There _is_,” Brandon declared. “I don’t dare tell you about it now.
-You won’t let anybody know I’m here, will you?”
-
-“No--o, I’ll promise that. It wasn’t right to stow yourself away aboard
-the brig, but you look honest--although you _are_ awfully dirty and
-ragged,” said this most plain spoken young lady.
-
-“I know it; I look terribly,” whispered Don, creeping through the door
-into the hold again. Then he turned about and asked, “What is your
-name, please?”
-
-“Milly Frank.”
-
-“Thank you; and mine is Brandon Tarr. Some time I can explain all this
-to you, and you will see that I did the only thing I could in stowing
-myself away here.”
-
-“But how do you expect to get out?”
-
-“I hope we’ll get to port in the night. If we do, then I’ll try to slip
-out through the cabin.”
-
-“Somebody will catch you.”
-
-“I hope not.”
-
-“We-ell, I _hope_, not, too,” said Miss Milly frankly. “I don’t suppose
-it is just right, but I’ll try to help you. If I see a chance for you
-to get away I’ll come to this door and knock--see, like this.”
-
-She knocked twice in succession, but lightly, so that nobody might hear
-her but the stowaway.
-
-“Thank you--thank you!” murmured the boy, and then he shut the trap
-quickly, for a heavy step sounded from the cabin without.
-
-Somebody had come down from the deck--probably the officer of the
-watch.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-SHOWING WHAT MISS MILLY DOES FOR BRANDON
-
-
-BRANDON crept away from the trap in the bulkhead, fearing that at
-any moment the person who had entered the outer cabin during his
-conversation with the captain’s daughter, might strive to capture him.
-He was afraid that the person had heard his movements in descending
-into the cargo hold again; but if the newcomer _did_ hear anything,
-Milly evidently convinced him that there was nothing unusual going on,
-for Brandon was not disturbed.
-
-Then ensued for the stowaway a period of anxious waiting. The very fact
-that some hope of successful escape had been held out to him, made the
-waiting all the harder to bear.
-
-Each hour was bringing the Success nearer to Savannah, and Brandon
-remained near the bulkhead all the time, so as to miss no communication
-from his fair assistant.
-
-Miss Milly seemed to really enjoy her secret knowledge of the
-stowaway’s presence, and before the Success reached port she several
-times called him to the bulkhead, ostensibly for the purpose of finding
-out if he was all right, and was not going hungry. She supplied him
-with water, too, these last two or three days, and he no longer had to
-leave the hold on midnight foraging expeditions.
-
-“We shall be in this evening--perhaps before dark--so father told me
-last night,” she whispered to him one morning, and Brandon’s heart
-leaped for joy at the information.
-
-Slowly, indeed, did that day pass.
-
-The Success was beating up toward Savannah against a light head wind,
-which gave promise of becoming an off shore gale before it was through
-with. Fortunately, the brig escaped it, taking a tug about the middle
-of the afternoon, and pulling into her dock about dark.
-
-“Thank Heaven!” was Brandon’s mental ejaculation, when this information
-was whispered through the crack in the bulkhead door to him, and he was
-indeed devoutly grateful.
-
-His life in the hold from the time of departure from New York, had been
-a continual fever of impatience and doubt, and now that the real danger
-of attempting to escape was at hand, he was rejoiced. In a short time
-he would know whether he was to be free, or in Jim Leroyd’s power.
-
-Milly had informed him that Captain Frank was exceedingly hard on all
-stowaways (as sea captains usually are, in fact), and he had no doubt
-but that he would be placed in a very uncomfortable, if not dangerous,
-position if the doughty captain should discover him.
-
-Leroyd, of course, would step forward at once and declare that he
-(Brandon) was wanted in New York for robbery, and that fact could be
-proved by telegraphing, should the Savannah officers desire to do so.
-Then, if the whaleback steamer was not in, he should be absolutely
-friendless, and at the mercy of the vindictive sailor.
-
-He lay close up against the door of the bulkhead all through the early
-evening. Some of the crew, he judged by what he heard, were allowed
-to go ashore for a few hours, and a part of the officers went with
-them--which officers, however, he could not tell.
-
-There was both a first and second mate on the Success.
-
-Brandon had no means of telling the time, but it must have been well
-along towards ten o’clock--perhaps later--when he heard the two gentle
-raps for which he had been so anxiously listening.
-
-“Are you there, Brandon?” whispered the captain’s daughter, and as
-Don pulled the door slightly ajar, she seized his hand, and aided him
-through the opening.
-
-“Is the coast clear?” he asked anxiously.
-
-“Sh! Yes, father and Mr. Marsh have gone up town with some of the men,
-and Mr. Barry has finally gone to bed.” (Mr. Barry was the second
-officer.) “I was afraid that he’d never stop talking to me. I had to
-fairly _freeze_ him out,” and the merry girl laughed softly.
-
-“But Leroyd?” pursued Brandon.
-
-“He’s gone, too.”
-
-“To bed?”
-
-“No; up the street. I hope you can get off the brig before any of them
-get back. Now hurry.”
-
-“You’re a good girl, Miss Milly. I hope I shall be able to repay you
-some time.”
-
-“Hush! go along now,” she said, smiling, but pushing him toward the
-companionway. “What’s that for?” for Brandon had thrust a little wad of
-bank notes into her hand.
-
-“It is to pay for the stores I broke into below. Take it, and put it
-where your father will see it. Good by.”
-
-He started up the ladder, but came back again to ask,
-
-“Is there a steamer in the bay? Did you get in time enough to see?”
-
-“Lots of them.”
-
-“No, I should have said a whaleback steamer?”
-
-“What are those--oh, I know what you mean. A great long, steel boat,
-with cabins way up above the hull, and no deck to speak of.”
-
-“That’s it,” said Brandon eagerly.
-
-“Yes, there _is_ one here. I saw it and meant to ask father what it
-was. I thought it was a dredger of some kind,” and Milly laughed again
-gleefully. “Is that a steamer?”
-
-“Yes. My friends are aboard her.”
-
-“Then you will find them,” she returned delightedly. “That funny boat
-lies not far from our dock. Now go, or somebody will catch you.”
-
-Brandon crept noiselessly up the steps at this command, and peered out
-across the deck. A sailor sat on the rail some rods away, but his back
-was towards him; nobody else was in sight.
-
-“Now’s my chance,” muttered Don, and springing quickly up the
-remaining steps, he darted as noiselessly as a shadow across the deck,
-and leaped upon the pier. An instant later he was on the street, and
-slinking along in the shadow of the buildings, hurried away from the
-vicinity.
-
-He did not know in which direction the “funny boat” Milly had seen,
-lay, but went blindly along, his only care for the moment being to
-escape from the neighborhood of the Success and from his enemy, Jim
-Leroyd.
-
-The street he followed kept close to the wharves--skirted the
-waterfront in fact--and he passed many sailors; but he kept in the
-shadow as much as possible and nobody remarked about his apparel or the
-grime on his face and hands.
-
-Suddenly, as he approached a great pier, where several large vessels
-were lying, he caught sight of a familiar figure coming down the street
-toward him. There was no mistaking that rolling, peculiar gait, nor
-the sound of the sharp “tap, tap” of the steel shod leg on the wooden
-pavement.
-
-It was Caleb Wetherbee!
-
-“Oh, Cale!” Brandon almost shouted, and running forward fairly threw
-himself into the sailor’s arms.
-
-“By the jumping Jehosophat!” cried the startled Caleb, and then,
-recognizing the boy, despite his rags and dirt, he uttered a loud
-“hurrah!” which left no doubt in Brandon’s mind as to the sailor’s
-satisfaction at seeing him once more.
-
-But in a moment, he pushed the boy away from him and holding him by
-both shoulders, peered down upon him curiously.
-
-“Well, well!” he exclaimed. “Where in the name o’ Davy Jones have you
-been? Ye look as though you’d been stowed away in the hold o’ a coal
-barge for a month.”
-
-“Well, I _have_ been stowed away in a brig’s hold--she got in only this
-evening. I’ve just got away from her. Did you get my note by Swivel?”
-
-“I did, my lad.”
-
-“And Swivel himself?”
-
-“He’s aboard the steamer.”
-
-“I’m glad of that,” declared Brandon. “I hoped you’d be kind to him. He
-did me a lot of favors, and I shan’t be able to repay him for some time
-to come. Now, have you heard anything further from the Silver Swan?”
-
-“I have, my lad, this very afternoon. She was sighted two weeks ago by
-a steamship from Rio to New York. Adoniram telegraphed me. But there’s
-something else that ain’t so pleasin’.”
-
-“What’s that, Caleb?”
-
-“The Kearsarge has been ordered to destroy several of these derelicts,
-the Silver Swan included, on her way down the coast to Havana. She
-sails tomorrow, I hear.”
-
-“Then we haven’t any time to lose,” Brandon exclaimed. “Let’s go aboard
-at once, Cale. The first thing I want is a wash--I’m as dirty as a
-pig--and then I’ll tell you the whole story.”
-
-“We’ll do so right now,” declared the big captain. “Come on. My boat’s
-down here. Number Three lays off some way.”
-
-He hurried Brandon down to the dock, and they were quickly seated in
-the steamer’s small boat, and the men pulled out to the long, low, odd
-looking craft, which, since her arrival in the bay three days before,
-had attracted an enormous amount of attention.
-
-“She sails like a swan, Don,” declared Caleb, who, from openly scoffing
-at the whaleback, had begun fairly to worship her. “I never see
-anything beat it. She can outsail any cruiser in the navy, I believe,
-an’ if we don’t reach the Silver Swan in her first, it’s because
-somethin’ busts!” with which forcible declaration he helped the boy
-over the low rail to the iron deck of the steamer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI
-
-WHEREIN NUMBER THREE APPROACHES THE SUPPOSED VICINITY OF THE SILVER SWAN
-
-
-“WE’LL be off at once,” Caleb Wetherbee declared, as soon as he had
-stepped upon the deck of the whaleback. “Go up to the cabin, Don, and
-tell the steward to fix you out with a bath and some clean clothes. You
-know which stateroom yours is.”
-
-Gladly did Brandon avail himself of this opportunity, and while Caleb
-was personally seeing to the matter of getting under way, he indulged
-in the luxury of a bath and a full change of clothing.
-
-Before he was presentable again, Number Three had steam up (the fires
-had only been banked), and was moving slowly away from Savannah.
-
-“Quick connections on this trip, eh, lad?” Caleb said, rubbing his
-hands gleefully, as he entered the cabin and found Brandon “clothed and
-in his right mind” again, as the youth himself expressed it. “Three
-hours ago you were in the hold of the brig, wasn’t you? Now, let’s hear
-your yarn.”
-
-Brandon complied with his request, giving fullest details of his
-incarceration in the hold of the Success.
-
-“That ’ere is a mighty plucky girl,” was Caleb’s admiring comment when
-the tale was finished. “What d’ye say her name was?”
-
-“Milly Frank; the cap’n is her father, and he owns the brig himself.”
-
-“Frank--Frank,” repeated Caleb slowly. “That has a familiar sound.”
-
-“It has to me, too,” said Brandon slowly. “I’ve been trying to think,
-ever since I met the girl, where I had heard her name and seen her
-face, too, for both seem familiar.”
-
-“I have it!” suddenly exclaimed Caleb, smiting his thigh.
-
-“Well?”
-
-“Frank was the name of the chap as Adoniram’s sister married--the
-little one, ye know.”
-
-“You’re right. And her name was Milly, too,” Brandon rejoined eagerly.
-“Bet you this was a daughter of hers. I thought her face looked
-familiar, and now I think of it, it was because she looked so much like
-the face of Milly Pepper--her picture hung in the room they gave me at
-Mr. Pepper’s.”
-
-“’Twould tickle ’Doniram ’most to death to know he had a niece,” Caleb
-said.
-
-“And Miss Frances, too. As soon as we find the Silver Swan we must look
-up the Success.... And that reminds me, Caleb. You say you’ve heard of
-the wreck again?”
-
-The captain of the whaleback drew a telegram from his pocket and passed
-it over to his young second officer.
-
-“That’s from ’Doniram. As I said, I got it this afternoon.”
-
-This was the message:
-
- Rio steamship Creole Prince arrived this a. m., reports Silver Swan
- as being sighted March 23rd, latitude 27:18, longitude 68:30.
-
-“Still moving northeast, isn’t she?” Brandon said, handing back the
-yellow slip.
-
-“In course.”
-
-“And what was that you told me about the Kearsarge?”
-
-“Here’s the evening paper,” responded Caleb, handing over a folded
-sheet. “There’s the item,” and he pointed with his stumpy forefinger to
-a marked passage which read as follows:
-
- The Department has ordered the Kearsarge to leave the Chesapeake
- tomorrow on her trip to the West Indies. Her commander has received
- special orders to destroy several of the most dangerous derelicts
- which are at present infesting the coast below Hatteras, and
- especially off the Bermudas. The hull of the Hattie Marvin, floating
- bottom upwards north of Bermuda, and that of the Silver Swan, south
- of the same islands, both of which have been frequently reported of
- late and are exceedingly dangerous, will have the early attention of
- the midshipmen, who consider the excitement of blowing up derelicts a
- boon indeed.
-
-“We have a good start of her,” Brandon declared with satisfaction. “It
-will be because we’re not smart if we can’t find the Silver Swan first.”
-
-“Right, lad. An’ we _will_ find her, too,” said Caleb hopefully.
-
-“And about Swivel,” went on Don, changing the subject; “where is he?”
-
-“He’s below with the men. Smart lad, he is, an’ I reckon we’ll make
-quite a man of him yet.”
-
-“I must do something for him--if I get those diamonds,” Brandon added.
-“Now, Captain Wetherbee, with your permission I’ll turn in and get some
-sleep, for I haven’t slept decently for a week, I was so worried.”
-
-At sunrise the whaleback had left the mouth of the Savannah river, and
-the shores were low down on the horizon behind them. At sunset, when
-Brandon finally arose from a long slumber, the steamer was alone on a
-vast extent of heaving, restless sea. The land had entirely disappeared.
-
-Brandon took up his duties of second officer with enthusiasm. He had
-everything to learn--or about everything--but the work was right along
-the line of his strongest taste. He loved it, and therefore went about
-it earnestly, and learned rapidly.
-
-Messrs. Coffin and Bolin assisted him in every way possible, for they
-were greatly attracted to the boy. Of course, Caleb was ever his
-faithful mentor and teacher, and Brandon soon fell into the ways and
-duties of the ship, and accredited himself very well, indeed.
-
-The swift steamer kept on her southeasterly course for several days
-without incident of importance. No derelicts were sighted, and but few
-vessels.
-
-Brandon was told, however, that coming down from New York the whaleback
-had sighted two wrecks, but the captain dared not delay to investigate
-them until the principal object of the voyage was accomplished. Caleb
-determined to let all other derelicts but the Silver Swan severely
-alone.
-
-The whaleback passed the Bermudas low down on the sea line, and being
-well supplied with fuel kept on toward that portion of the ocean where
-the hull of the Silver Swan was supposed to be making her objectless
-voyage.
-
-A sharp lookout was kept day and night, but it was not until after the
-Bermudas had faded from sight that anything other than passing sailing
-vessels and steamers were sighted. At night the whaleback ran very
-slowly, indeed, so that naught might escape her, but during the day she
-traveled at a high rate of speed.
-
-Just before sunrise one morning Brandon was aroused by a commotion on
-deck. He leaped from his berth at once, and having been to sea long
-enough now to know how to dress quickly, was outside in less than a
-minute. Then he made out what the lookout on the top of the forward
-turret was shouting:
-
-“Wreck--dead ahead, sir!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII
-
-RELATING HOW THE SILVER SWAN WAS HEARD FROM
-
-
-AS the sun rose and lit up the sea more fully Brandon could plainly
-view the wreck which the steamer was now rapidly approaching.
-
-It was not, he believed at first glance, the Silver Swan. It was the
-hull of a vessel, sunk a good deal at the stern; but one mast was
-standing, and a great tangle of cordage and torn sails was still
-attached to it.
-
-“That’s never the Silver Swan, lad,” Caleb declared. “She was swept as
-clean as a whistle. This was a square rigged vessel, however.”
-
-The steamer ran in very close to the wreck, and Brandon made out the
-words, “Porpoise, New Haven,” under the bows.
-
-The derelict gave every appearance of being what Mr. Coffin called “an
-old stager,” and labored in the seas most heavily.
-
-“That’s a mighty dangerous wreck,” Caleb declared reflectively, as
-the whaleback steamed slowly by. “It wouldn’t take long to sink her,
-although ’twould cost something. What d’ye say, Mr. Coffin--will you go
-aboard her, and if she isn’t worth towing in, drop enough dynamite into
-her hold to blow her up? You know how to run that battery Mr. Pepper
-had put aboard.”
-
-“Aye, aye, sir,” the first officer replied, and bustled away to order a
-boat launched at once.
-
-By special request Brandon was allowed to accompany the expedition. The
-old hulk was found to be in ballast, and Mr. Coffin therefore placed a
-quantity of the powerful explosive in her hold, attached the wire, and
-they pulled back toward the steamer.
-
-When the small boat was out of danger the officer touched the button
-and an instant later the still morning air was shattered by a terrific
-roar.
-
-The wreck seemed almost to rise from the sea, a great volume of fire
-and smoke issued from her amidships, and she broke in two, the water
-rushing in and filling the interior with a sound like the echo of the
-explosion.
-
-Slowly the derelict settled, her stern going first, until the very
-tip of the tottering mast disappeared below the surface. Only a few
-splintered deck timbers, which would soon follow the ship to the
-bottom, remained to show where the hulk had disappeared.
-
-“Good job, that,” Caleb declared, when the boat had returned to the
-steamer, “though it cost us three hours’ time. That hulk had been
-floating for nearly a year, according to the pilot charts.”
-
-The second day after the blowing up of the derelict Porpoise, a
-steamship was sighted by the whaleback. It was the City of Havana, of
-the James E. Ward line, and, by running in close, Caleb was able to
-hold converse with the ship’s captain.
-
-To the satisfaction of the captain of Number Three, the City of
-Havana’s commander could, and did, give him some information about the
-derelict brig of which they were in search.
-
-The steamship had sighted the Silver Swan in latitude 28, longitude
-69:13, and reported the vessel in a remarkable state of preservation.
-The spring storms had not appeared to damage her much.
-
-This news was hailed joyfully by Caleb and Brandon, and the course of
-the whaleback was changed a little more to the east.
-
-The weather, however, which had been all that they could wish thus
-far since leaving Savannah, began to get nasty. The sea became short
-and choppy, though without apparently affecting the sailing of the
-whaleback, and the sky looked bad.
-
-Finally, after a day or two of this, a dead calm occurred, and Caleb
-shook his head sagely.
-
-“We’re goin’ to ketch it,” he declared, “an’ we’ll have a chance to
-find out how the steamer rides in a gale, whether we want to or not.”
-
-And he was right. While the whaleback steamed slowly ahead, a heavy
-swell came on, although there was not a breath of air stirring. The sea
-heaved and rolled, seemingly in throes of agony.
-
-At first the cause was entirely submarine. At length, however, there
-was a groaning, moaning sound, which gradually increased in volume,
-until, with a sudden roar, the hurricane swooped down upon them. The
-waves were tossed toward the wind driven, leaden clouds with awful
-fury, breaking like surf over the whaleback; but the steamer withstood
-the fearful shocks as easily as she had the choppy waves which
-preceded the gale.
-
-She kept but little headway, however, and as the black night shut
-down about the craft, Brandon realized fully the terrible risks and
-hazardous chances taken by “those who go down to the sea in ships.”
-
-For two days the gale continued, but with less fury than signaled its
-first appearance. Number Three might have put back into Bermuda, but
-she acted so well that Caleb decided to stay outside and thus lose no
-possible opportunity of sighting the Silver Swan.
-
-Brandon had never contemplated what a storm at sea meant before and he
-was thankful indeed that he was not upon a sailing vessel.
-
-During the first of the gale they had sighted several vessels, with
-close reefed sails, scudding before the wind, but all were riding the
-sea well.
-
-Late in the afternoon of the second day, however, the lookout, who was
-lashed to the top of the wheelhouse, reported a wreck ahead.
-
-At first Caleb and Brandon, who were both armed with glasses, could not
-make it out clearly enough to decide what it was.
-
-Finally the old seaman declared with conviction.
-
-“It’s the hull of a vessel an’ her masts have been carried away sure.”
-
-“Do you think it is the brig, Caleb?” the young second mate asked
-eagerly.
-
-“Ye got me there. It _may_ be, and then ag’in it may not. We’ll run
-down an’ see.”
-
-The storm was by no means abating and Caleb dared not run very close to
-the wreck.
-
-As they approached it, however, the former mate of the Silver Swan
-became convinced that it was not the wreck they sought. He was familiar
-with every line of Captain Horace Tarr’s vessel and this, he declared,
-was not it.
-
-Suddenly Swivel’s sharp eyes caught sight of something which the others
-had not seen.
-
-“There’s something tied to that stump of a mast, sir,” he exclaimed,
-pointing toward the forward part of the wreck. “It’s a flag o’ some
-kind.”
-
-“It’s a signal!” Mr. Coffin declared. “There’s some poor soul on the
-wreck. See--there he is.”
-
-At the instant he spoke they all descried a moving figure on the
-derelict--some one, who, clinging with one hand to the cordage which
-still hung to the mast, with the other waved a signal frantically at
-the approaching steamer.
-
-“Great Heavens!” exclaimed Mr. Coffin, strongly moved by the scene.
-“What shall we do? No mortal man can help him in this gale.”
-
-“We must do something,” Caleb replied.
-
-“A boat couldn’t live in this sea, sir,” said the first officer
-despairingly.
-
-“We must try to throw him a line.”
-
-But upon trial it was found that it would be exceedingly hazardous to
-run down near enough to the wreck for that. The hull was rolling so
-frightfully that it might turn completely over at any moment and carry
-the steamer to the bottom with it should they run in too near.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII
-
-IN WHICH COMRADES IN COURAGE LAUNCH THEMSELVES UPON THE DEEP
-
-
-BRANDON’S glass had been turned upon the figure on the wreck for the
-few moments during which the others had been discussing the possibility
-of saving the poor creature. Now he exclaimed hurriedly.
-
-“That’s not a man--it’s a woman! Don’t you see her skirts blowing in
-the gale? She is alone on the wreck.”
-
-Caleb seized his own glass again, and Mr. Bolin dived into the cabin
-for his.
-
-“You’re right, lad,” the captain declared. “Either all the men have
-been swept overboard, or the white livered rascals have taken to the
-boats and abandoned her.”
-
-But Brandon was making other discoveries. As the steamer cut through
-the huge waves, approaching nearer and nearer to the wreck, something
-about the outlines of the female figure seemed familiar to him.
-
-He knew the face which was turned pleadingly toward the steamer--the
-powerful glass revealed every feature clearly.
-
-It was Milly Frank!
-
-At the instant of Brandon’s discovery, the steamer gave a sudden roll,
-and he was thrown partially from his balance and his glass wavered an
-instant from the girl’s face.
-
-In that instant the stern of the fated vessel came within range of his
-vision and he plainly saw the word “Success” painted in tarnished gold
-lettering upon it.
-
-“Caleb! Caleb!” he cried, forgetting for the moment to apply the proper
-term of respect to the captain which, according to the quarter deck
-etiquette, he should have done, “that’s the Success, and the _girl_ is
-the captain’s daughter!”
-
-“Oh, it can’t be, lad!” cried the old man, unwilling to believe such a
-fact possible.
-
-“It is the Success--I see her name,” Mr. Bolin declared.
-
-“Poor little girl! poor little girl!” exclaimed the honest old sailor
-brokenly. “We can’t stand here and see her perish.”
-
-“I shan’t,” Brandon affirmed, passing his own glass to Mr. Coffin.
-
-“What can you do, lad?” queried Caleb. “The gale’s not abating a mite.”
-
-“All that we can do I see, sir, is to stand by till the sea goes down,
-and then, God willing, take her off,” said Mr. Coffin.
-
-“Why, that old hulk may sink at any moment!” cried Brandon. “I won’t
-stay idle and see that girl drown after all she has done for me.”
-
-“An’ it’s Adoniram’s niece--no doubt of it,” murmured Caleb.
-
-“That is another reason why we should try to save her. I haven’t
-forgotten all that Mr. Pepper has done for me,” declared Brandon
-decidedly.
-
-“But, lad, lad, what can we do?” gasped the captain. “It’s not a living
-possibility to send a boat to that brig, and I dare not risk the lives
-of all these men in my care by running in near enough for a cable to be
-thrown.”
-
-“And the girl probably couldn’t fasten it, if we did,” added Mr. Bolin.
-
-“Then we must do something else. Run by her, Caleb, and I’ll carry a
-rope to the brig.”
-
-“You’re crazy!” cried Mr. Coffin.
-
-“Maybe I am,” Brandon returned, his face white and set; “but I shall do
-it.”
-
-Swivel, who was clinging to a guard rope within hearing, struck in with
-him.
-
-“Lemme do it, Brandon--I mean Mr. Tarr. I kin swim like a fish.”
-
-“Nobody shall go but myself,” the boy declared, with emphasis. “I won’t
-suggest a perilous undertaking and not be the one to carry it out.”
-
-“Cap’n Tarr right over again,” Caleb muttered.
-
-Then he turned suddenly upon his young second officer.
-
-“Kick off your shoes, lad, and try it. If it’s the Lord’s will that you
-accomplish it, well and good; if you can’t, we’ll haul you back. Quick,
-now! I’ll order Mike to go ahead full speed.”
-
-Before the words were scarcely out of the captain’s mouth, Brandon had
-kicked off his light shoes.
-
-Swivel, who could not be taught strict quarter deck manners, followed
-the young officer’s example.
-
-“What are you about, you young limb o’ Satan?” demanded Mr. Coffin,
-catching hint at this.
-
-“Ef he goes, I’m goin’ an’ you ain’t goin’ ter stop me, Mr. Coffin,”
-announced the gamin. “I’m in dis!”
-
-“Behave yourself,” Brandon commanded, quickly knotting a light, strong
-cable about his waist, while Mr. Bolin fastened a life preserver
-beneath his arms. “One is enough.”
-
-“Den I’m de one!” the boy declared vehemently, and dodging Mr. Coffin’s
-outstretched arm, he seized a second coil of rope, one end of which was
-fastened to a ring in the deck, and ran to the stern of the steamer.
-
-“Come back here!” roared the first mate angrily. “I’ll rope’s end you,
-you little scamp!”
-
-“You’ll have ter do it when I get back from dat wreck!” returned the
-boy, with an impish grin, and the steamer having now forged ahead of
-the laboring brig, and Brandon being all ready, the fearless Swivel
-also dropped over the rail, and clinging with one hand a moment, let go
-simultaneously with his friend and patron.
-
-Brandon tried to send him back, but it was too late then. The first
-wave seized them in its embrace and they were carried far out from the
-steamer’s stern.
-
-The cork belt kept the young second mate above the waves, but even with
-this assistance, he found himself much less able to cope with the heavy
-seas than was his companion.
-
-Swivel dived through the rollers like a gull, keeping faithfully by
-his friend’s side; and had it not been for the street gamin, Brandon
-afterward declared that he should never have reached the wreck alive.
-
-He had no idea how furious the waves were until he was among them,
-battling for his life, and trying to reach the distant brig.
-
-It was a terrific struggle, lasting perhaps not five minutes, but a few
-more seconds would have completely exhausted him.
-
-A great wave suddenly swept them directly under the brig’s bows. Swivel
-seized Brandon’s hand with one of his own and with the other grabbed a
-rope trailing over the rail of the wreck.
-
-Fortunately the other end of the rope was securely fastened, and with
-an almost superhuman effort Swivel raised Brandon until the second mate
-of the whaleback could grasp the rail.
-
-In another moment Brandon was aboard the brig, and had pulled Swivel
-over the rail after him.
-
-“Wot--did--I--tell--ye?” gasped the gamin, whose spirit no amount
-of danger could quench. “Two heads _is_ better’n one, ef one _is_ a
-cabbage head. Where’s de girl?”
-
-But Milly was already creeping forward to their position on her hands
-and knees.
-
-“How can you take me back?” she asked at once, her voice sounding as
-firmly above the gale as though danger was the farthest of anything
-from her thoughts.
-
-Then she recognized Brandon.
-
-“You?” she exclaimed, in surprise. “I never thought of you being on
-that steamer.”
-
-“I didn’t forget what you did for me,” Brandon said in reply. “I’d have
-risked a good deal more than this for you.”
-
-“You couldn’t risk any more,” she declared firmly; “for you’ve risked
-your life.”
-
-Meanwhile Swivel was signaling to those on the steamer to attach a
-heavier cable to the one tied about his waist. This was done in a short
-time, and then all three of the endangered ones laid hold and pulled
-the cable in, hand over hand.
-
-It was hard work. The heavy rope was wet and unmanageable, and the
-strain on their young muscles was terrible.
-
-Milly worked as unceasingly as did the two boys, but the cable came
-across the tossing waves but slowly.
-
-“Where are the crew--where is your father?” asked Brandon.
-
-The girl’s face worked pitifully at this question.
-
-“Father is dead,” she sobbed, “and the crew took to the boats while I
-was below. That was early this morning.”
-
-“And you’ve been here alone ever since!” said Brandon pityingly.
-
-At that instant there was a slight exclamation from Swivel, and the
-small cable by which they were endeavoring to gain the larger one, came
-in over the rail with fearful suddenness.
-
-All three were sent sprawling on the deck.
-
-“What is it?” gasped Milly.
-
-“The rope’s parted,” cried Brandon in horror.
-
-“Never mind; don’t you give up, missy,” Swivel exclaimed. “We’ve got
-anoder rope yet. Where’s de end o’ dat rope you had tied ’round you,
-Brandon?” he demanded.
-
-Brandon only groaned.
-
-“Where is it?” shrieked the other lad, fairly shaking him in his
-impatience.
-
-“I cast it loose,” was the disheartening reply. “It is gone!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-THE INCIDENTS OF A NIGHT OF PERIL
-
-
-NIGHT was shutting down over the face of the storm tossed ocean--night
-of the blackest and wildest description. Already the outlines of the
-steamer ahead were scarcely visible from the bows of the water logged
-brig.
-
-By a series of misfortunes (Brandon Tarr bitterly accused himself of
-causing the crowning mischance of them all) the three unfortunates on
-the Success were entirely cut off from escape.
-
-“Oh,” cried Milly, in bitterness of spirit second only to Brandon’s
-own, “you have lost your lives for me--both of you. I am not worthy of
-it!”
-
-“Don’t ye lose heart, missy,” Swivel declared, with a courage he was
-far from feeling. “Th’ ship hain’t sunk.”
-
-“No one but God Himself knows how long it will keep afloat, though,”
-Brandon returned despairingly.
-
-“And the gale is increasing again, too,” added Milly softly.
-
-“This is the last end of it, that’s wot I think,” declared Swivel
-cheerfully. “It’ll blow itself out now purty soon.”
-
-Brandon could not look at the situation thus hopefully, but he
-determined to say nothing further to make the girl despair.
-
-Swivel’s tone shamed him into thinking of her rather than of himself.
-
-The men on board the steamer, had ere this discovered what had
-happened, but they could do nothing to assist the three on the brig.
-
-It was absolutely necessary to keep some headway--considerable, in
-fact--on the whaleback, to prevent her from swinging around into the
-trough of the waves. Every moment they were getting farther and farther
-away from the doomed derelict.
-
-Caleb roared something to them through the trumpet, but the distance
-and the howling of the gale prevented them from making out what he
-said. The wind and spray beat upon them alternately as they crouched
-together in the high bows, and every other sound but that of the
-elements was drowned.
-
-“Come back in the shelter of the mast,” Brandon shouted at last. “We
-can do nothing further here. Our position is so exposed that we may be
-washed off before we know it.”
-
-Each of the boys grasped an arm of the captain’s daughter and with no
-little trouble they managed to reach the great tangle of rigging and
-shreds of canvas which hung about the one remaining mast.
-
-The topmast had long since been carried away, but the main spar still
-defied the storm, writhing and twisting like a thing of life in the
-fierce grasp of the gale.
-
-Here, crouching under its lee, the shipwrecked boys and girl clung to
-the stiffened ropes with hands little less stiffened by the cold and
-water.
-
-As an extra precaution they bound themselves together, and then
-fastened the same rope to the mast, knowing that a wave might board the
-lumbering brig at any moment and sweep everything on it that was not
-fastened, into the sea.
-
-Occasionally, as the wreck climbed heavily to the summit of an enormous
-roller, they could catch a glimpse of the steamer’s lights; but as the
-hours dragged slowly on, these became less and less distinct.
-
-Without doubt the whaleback was drawing slowly away from the wreck, and
-the worst of it was, those on the steamer probably did not suspect it.
-
-The castaways had no means of showing their whereabouts by lights, and
-the steamer was too far away, and had been since the darkness shut
-down, for those aboard her to see the outlines of the brig. Therefore
-Caleb Wetherbee and his officers had no means of knowing that the
-steamer was traveling nearly two miles to the brig’s one.
-
-Suddenly there was a flash of light from the steamer’s deck, and a
-rocket went hurtling upwards into the leaden sky, to fall in showers
-of sparks into the sea. It was a message of hope to the unfortunates
-on the brig--it was meant as such, at least--but they had no way of
-replying to it.
-
-“Aren’t there any rockets aboard?” asked Brandon of the captain’s
-daughter.
-
-“There may be, but I do not know where,” the girl replied; “and the
-cabin is half filled with water, too.”
-
-“Never mind if it is; I believe I’ll try to find them. There must be
-something of the kind aboard.”
-
-“Ye’d better stay here,” Swivel warned him anxiously. “I don’t like ter
-see ye git out o’ sight.”
-
-“Don’t you think I can take care of myself?” Brandon demanded.
-
-“Not alone,” was the prompt reply. “I reckon ’at none of us can’t take
-very good keer of ourselves in this gale. We’d best not git too fur
-apart.”
-
-“Well, I’m going to try to get into the cabin,” Brandon added. “Nothing
-ventured, nothing gained.”
-
-He unfastened the rope from about his waist, and in spite of the
-objections of his two companions, crept aft toward the cabin
-companionway.
-
-The feat was not of the easiest, as he quickly found; but once having
-determined to do it, he would not give up.
-
-The door of the cabin was jammed fast, but after some little
-maneuvering he was able to force an entrance and descended into the
-apartment, which was knee deep with water washed in from the heavy seas
-which had broken over the brig during the day.
-
-There was no means of lighting a lantern, however, and after rummaging
-about in the darkness for half an hour, he had to return to the deck
-without having accomplished anything.
-
-As he stepped outside again, he found the brig pitching worse than
-ever. The gale was full of “flaws” now--a sure sign that it was blowing
-itself out--but occasionally it would rise to greater fury than it had
-shown in all the two previous days.
-
-Just as he reached the deck one of these sudden squalls occurred, and
-a huge green roller swept in over the stern of the brig, and advanced
-with lightning speed along the deck, sweeping wreckage and all else
-before it.
-
-Brandon had just closed the door, and by clinging to the handle, was
-able to keep himself from being washed overboard; but he was almost
-drowned during the few moments while the wave filled the companionway.
-
-As it passed, there was a sudden crack forward, and even above the
-shriek of the gale, he heard Swivel’s cry of alarm.
-
-With a rush and roar like the fall of a mighty forest tree, the mast,
-splitting at the deck, toppled over across the rail.
-
-Brandon uttered a despairing shout, for it seemed impossible for the
-wreck ever to right herself, the weight of the fallen spar dragged her
-over so far.
-
-But providentially the mast had split clear off at the deck, and after
-staggering a moment from the blow, the brig shook off her incumbrance,
-and came to an even keel again.
-
-But following the falling of the mast came a shriek from Milly Frank
-which pierced his very soul.
-
-“Brandon! Brandon! Help!”
-
-With that cry ringing in his ears, the boy dashed forward along the
-slippery deck and reached the spot where he had left his companions.
-
-“Quick! this way!” called the girl’s clear voice, and darting to the
-rail he was just able to grasp the captain’s daughter and drag her back
-from the cruel sea.
-
-“Now him!” commanded the girl, and pulling in the line which was still
-attached to her waist, Brandon drew the form of Swivel out of the waves.
-
-“Oh, he is dead!” cried Milly in agony. “He saved me, Brandon. When the
-mast fell he cut the rope and took me in his arms and ran, but one of
-the ropes tripped him up and we were washed to the rail by that great
-wave.”
-
-“I hope he isn’t dead--oh, I hope not!” Brandon returned, kneeling down
-beside the motionless boy, and chafing his forehead tenderly.
-
-Milly took one of the poor street gamin’s hands in her own and chafed
-it likewise.
-
-Probably never before during his miserable, eventful existence had
-Swivel known such gentleness. His life had been hard indeed, and it
-looked as though its lamp had gone out now in the performance of a
-noble and courageous deed.
-
-There on the storm swept deck Milly and Brandon knelt for nearly an
-hour before the unconscious boy showed the least sign of life.
-
-Then the eyelids fluttered a little and he drew in his breath with a
-slight sigh.
-
-“He’s coming to!” Brandon exclaimed.
-
-But although poor Swivel opened his eyes once or twice, it was a long
-time before he seemed to realize where he was or what had happened.
-
-At last he whispered brokenly.
-
-“Don’t--don’t--fret yerself--missy--I’m--I’m goin’ ter be all right.”
-
-“Are you in pain, Swivel?” queried Brandon, having almost to shout to
-make himself heard.
-
-Milly was crying softly. The strain of the last twenty hours was
-beginning to tell on even her bravery and fortitude.
-
-“Dret--dretful!” gasped the injured boy weakly.
-
-Brandon had to place his ear almost to his lips to distinguish his
-words.
-
-“Right--here,” and he laid his hand feebly on his chest.
-
-“That’s where he struck across the rail,” declared Milly, when Brandon
-had repeated these words to her. “Oh, the poor fellow has been hurt
-internally. _Do_ you think the morning will ever come, Brandon?”
-
-“I’m afraid it will come very soon for him, poor boy,” replied Don
-meaningly, and there were tears in his own eyes.
-
-Swivel had closed his eyes and a strange, grayish pallor was spreading
-over his drawn features.
-
-His hearing seemed wonderfully acute, however. He heard the word
-“morning” at least, and his eyes flew open again and he struggled to
-raise himself on his elbow.
-
-“_Is_ it morning now?” he asked feebly.
-
-“No, no,” replied Brandon soothingly. “Not yet, Swivel. Don’t exert
-yourself. Lie down again.”
-
-The injured youth strove to speak once more, but suddenly fell back
-upon the rude pillow Don had made of his coat, and a stream of blood
-flowed from his lips.
-
-Milly uttered a startled gasp, but Brandon hastily wiped the poor
-fellow’s lips, and after a moment the hemorrhage ceased.
-
-But they looked at each other meaningly. They had lost all hope now of
-the shock not proving fatal.
-
-While they had watched Swivel, the gale, as though at last satisfied
-with its cruel work, had gradually lessened. The wind ceased almost
-wholly within the next hour, although the waves did not entirely go
-down.
-
-Swivel lay motionless during all this time, occasionally opening his
-eyes to gaze up into the faces of his two friends, whom he could see
-quite clearly, but otherwise showing no sign of life.
-
-Finally he attempted to speak again.
-
-“It’s--it’s hard--on me--ain’t it?” he gasped, in Brandon’s ear.
-“I--I--don’ wanter die.”
-
-His friend did not know what to say in reply to this, but Milly seized
-his hand and tried to comfort him.
-
-“Don’t be afraid. Swivel,” she said, trying to make her own faith serve
-for the dying fellow too. “It will be better over there.”
-
-“Mebbee--mebbee they won’t let me come.”
-
-“Yes, you may, if you ask, Swivel. Don’t you love God?”
-
-“I hain’t--hain’t never--heered--much erbout Him,” returned the lad. “I
-heered the chap at the mission--school talk erbout--erbout Him some.
-I--I never paid much ’tention.”
-
-His voice was stronger now, but in a moment the blood gushed from his
-lips again.
-
-“Don’t talk--oh, don’t talk, Swivel?” cried Brandon beseechingly.
-
-“’Twon’t matter--not much,” the boy returned, after a few minutes.
-
-He felt blindly for Brandon’s hand and seized it tightly. Milly, still
-kneeling on the opposite side, held the other.
-
-“Can’t ye say a prayer, like--like that feller in the mission did--er
-one o’ them hymns?” he muttered.
-
-The boy and girl crouching above him looked into each other’s faces a
-moment in silence.
-
-Brandon Tarr might have faced a thousand dangers without shrinking, but
-he could not do this. It remained for Milly to comply with the poor
-boy’s request.
-
-After the terrific howling of the gale, the night seemed strangely
-still now. The hurrying, leaden clouds were fast breaking up, and here
-and there a ray of moonlight pierced their folds and lit up the froth
-flecked summits of the tossing billows.
-
-One narrow band of light fell across her pale face as she raised it
-toward the frowning heavens and began to sing:
-
- “Jesus, Saviour, pilot me,
- Over life’s tempestuous sea;
- Unknown waves before me roll,
- Hiding rock and treach’rous shoal:
- Chart and compass come from the Thee:
- Jesus, Saviour, pilot me.
-
- “When at last I near the shore,
- And the fearful breakers roar
- Twixt me and the peaceful rest,
- Then, while leaning on Thy breast,
- May I hear Thee say to me,
- ‘Fear not, I will pilot thee’!”
-
-Faintly at first, but mounting higher and clearer, rose the sweet
-girlish voice, and not only the poor street gamin, but Brandon himself
-listened entranced.
-
-When the beautiful hymn was finished, Brandon felt that it was a prayer
-not only for him whose spirit might at any moment depart, but for Milly
-and himself, who should remain behind at the mercy of the storm tossed
-sea.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV
-
-SHOWING HOW CALEB APPEARED ON THE SCENE JUST TOO LATE
-
-
-THE anxiety of Caleb Wetherbee for Brandon’s safety was really pitiful
-to behold. When the cable parted which attached the wrecked brig to
-the steamer, the captain at once realized that his ward and his two
-companions were in a very serious predicament.
-
-There was absolutely nothing that those aboard the whaleback could do
-in that howling gale to assist in the rescue of the castaways.
-
-Occasionally Caleb had a rocket fired to show the unfortunate trio
-that he was remaining near them; but, as we know, that was very sorry
-comfort to Brandon and his two companions. It simply served to convince
-them how rapidly Number Three was leaving them astern.
-
-On one point Caleb’s calculations were very much amiss. He was running
-the whaleback as slowly as practicable, keeping just enough headway on
-to keep her from broaching to; but he failed to realize that even at
-that speed he was sailing two miles or more to the brig’s one.
-
-Of course, when once the night had shut down it was impossible for
-anybody aboard the steamer to see the outlines of the wreck, and
-therefore this fact escaped their attention. The water logged Success
-moved at a snail’s pace, and all night long the steamer drew away from
-her, so that, after the storm had cleared away and the sun rose, not a
-sign of the brig appeared.
-
-“Has she sunk?” queried Caleb in distress, as, in company with his two
-remaining officers, he swept the horizon with his glass.
-
-“Rather, we have left her behind,” declared Mr. Coffin, making a shrewd
-guess as to the real facts in the case. “The brig must have sailed
-slower than we supposed.”
-
-“Then we must turn about at once and run back,” Caleb declared, and the
-necessary orders were given.
-
-The day following the cessation of the gale was most beautiful, but
-Caleb cared nothing for that. He neither ate nor slept, but remained on
-deck nearly all the time, scanning the wide stretch of sea visible from
-the top of the after cabin.
-
-The day passed and night came on, however, without a sign of the wreck
-appearing.
-
-During this time the steamer had been running in a direction generally
-south; while the gale was on she had run northeast. The whole day being
-spent in fruitless search in this direction, however, Caleb commanded
-the steamer to be put about again at evening.
-
-All that second night she ran slowly to the eastward, thus allowing
-for the supposed drift of the Success, but they saw no signs of the
-derelict, although the night was clear and the moon bright.
-
-The day following they spoke several partially dismantled vessels
-whose crews were beating into the Bermudas for repairs. None of these,
-however, had sighted the wreck of the Success.
-
-“They’ve gone to the bottom,” groaned poor Caleb that afternoon, as he
-sat on the edge of the berth in his stateroom.
-
-He could not sleep, but had taken Mr. Coffin’s advice and tried to.
-
-“All gone--Brandon, whose dead father I promised I’d look out for him,
-an’ that other poor lad, an’ the little girl. God help me! how can I go
-back and tell Adoniram about this?
-
-“An’ then, we’ve not found the Silver Swan yet--nor air we likely to
-after this gale. She’s gone to the bottom, too, mayhap, and Brandon’s
-fortune along with her. Well----”
-
-Just here he was interrupted in his soliloquy by the hurried entrance
-of Mr. Bolin.
-
-“Will you please come on deck, sir?” said the third officer, evidently
-somewhat excited. “We have sighted what appears to be a steamer and a
-dismantled vessel with her. Mr. Coffin wishes you to come up and see if
-you can make her out.”
-
-But Caleb was out of the cabin before Mr. Bolin had finished speaking,
-glass in hand.
-
-“Where is she?” he demanded.
-
-“Right ahead, captain,” replied Mr. Coffin. “There! you can see the
-black smoke rising from the steamship’s funnels now. The wreck, if it
-is a wreck, is between her and us.”
-
-Caleb got the range of the two vessels almost immediately, and it did
-not take a very long look to assure him that his mate was right.
-
-“That’s a wreck, sure enough,” he declared, paying but very little
-attention to the steamship. “Order the engineer to go ahead at full
-speed.”
-
-Fifteen minutes later they were near enough to see the wreck quite
-plainly. The steam vessel seemed to be lying quietly upon the sea now,
-and as they looked a boat was lowered and pulled toward the dismantled
-hulk.
-
-They were still several miles away, however, and could not see whether
-the wreck was boarded by those in the small boat or not.
-
-“It strikes me,” began Mr. Coffin after a prolonged gazing through his
-glass at the wreck, “that that doesn’t have the same appearance as that
-vessel the boys are on. What do you think, Mr. Wetherbee?”
-
-Caleb had doubts in that direction himself.
-
-“I tell ye what it is,” he said: “the Success had a mast for’ard. This
-one hain’t.”
-
-“It’s my opinion that’s the hull of a brig, just the same,” Mr. Coffin
-declared.
-
-Suddenly Caleb uttered an exclamation.
-
-“That’s no steamship,” he declared. “See her colors and open ports.
-Why, it’s a man o’ war!”
-
-“Right you are,” returned the mate.
-
-“It’s the Kearsarge,” added Mr. Bolin. “She was to come down this way,
-you know. Going to the West Indies.”
-
-“One of her duties was to blow up derelicts--the Silver Swan among
-them. Suppose this hull is the Swan!” cried Mr. Coffin.
-
-Caleb had fairly grown white in spite of his tan.
-
-“Great Peter!” he ejaculated. “Look-er-there!”
-
-The small boat had left the side of the wreck, and was now some
-distance away from her.
-
-The whaleback was near enough to see that the officer commanding the
-cutter had ordered the men to cease rowing and was standing up in the
-bow of the boat.
-
-“They’re going to blow her up!” shouted Caleb. “Crowd on every ounce of
-steam she’ll hold. We must stop it! Suppose that it is the Silver Swan!”
-
-He fairly groaned aloud, and in his excitement allowed the costly glass
-to fall upon the deck, which treatment did not materially benefit it.
-
-Mr. Bolin darted away to the engine room, and in another moment the
-funnels of the whaleback began to pour forth the blackest kind of
-smoke, and the water beneath her stern was churned to foam by the rapid
-beats of the propeller.
-
-They were all of a mile away from the wreck yet, and every instant
-was precious. Caleb stumped up and down the deck, fairly wild with
-apprehension, his eyes fixed on the cruiser’s cutter, in the bow of
-which the officer seemed to be adjusting something.
-
-If the whaleback had been armed Caleb would have fired a shot to
-attract the attention of the cruiser’s people, but there wasn’t a
-weapon larger than Brandon’s rifle on the steamer.
-
-Mr. Coffin looked at his commander anxiously. He did not fully
-understand why the captain wished to reach the Silver Swan and save it,
-if _this was_ the Silver Swan; but he did not believe that they could
-accomplish it. And he was right.
-
-The whaleback was still half a mile away from the scene of operations
-when suddenly the officer in the cutter sat down, and the instant
-following there was a loud explosion.
-
-A column of smoke and flame shot into the air, and when the smoke cloud
-rose, only a few harmless splinters on the surface of the sea remained
-to show the former position of the wreck!
-
-And then, when it was too late, the officer in the small boat
-discovered the approach of the whaleback.
-
-Number Three was still driving ahead at full speed, and when her steam
-was shut off she had such headway that she nearly passed the cruiser’s
-cutter.
-
-Caleb, his voice trembling with apprehension, leaned over the rail and
-shouted his question to the officer who had just “touched off” the
-charge that had blown the derelict into atoms.
-
-“What craft is that you blew up?” he asked.
-
-“That was a derelict,” responded the officer, who was an ensign, in
-surprise.
-
-“What was her name, d’ye know?”
-
-“She was sunken so low at the stern that we couldn’t read her name.”
-
-“But can’t you guess?” cried Caleb, in great exasperation.
-
-“Oh, there’s not much doubt in our minds as to who she was. She was one
-we were ordered to destroy. The name on her bow was badly battered, but
-we could make out part of it.”
-
-“Well, for heavens’ sake, what was it?” burst forth the wooden legged
-captain wildly. “Don’t beat ’round the bush any longer.”
-
-The ensign began to grow as red as a peony. The old man’s manner of
-questioning ruffled his dignity sorely.
-
-“To the best of my belief it was the brig Silver Swan, of Boston, U. S.
-A.,” he declared stiffly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI
-
-THE CASTAWAYS ON THE BRIG SUCCESS
-
-
-TO Milly and Brandon on board the water logged brig, it seemed as
-though the long night would never end. They crouched together over the
-body of poor Swivel, until his clasp relaxed from their hands and he
-sank into a deep sleep.
-
-Brandon did not believe that the injured boy would ever awake from that
-unconsciousness; nevertheless, he made his way below to the cabin again
-and brought up an armful of blankets to add to his comfort.
-
-He wrapped one about Milly, and she made him share it with her, when
-Swivel was more comfortable.
-
-Thus sitting close together on the cold, wet deck, they conversed in
-whispers till dawn; Milly, at Don’s earnest solicitation, relating all
-that had occurred since the night he had escaped from the Success at
-Savannah.
-
-It was rather a disconnected story, for the poor girl often broke into
-weeping at the memory of her father’s violent death. She had sincerely
-loved him, although he was a stern, rather morose man.
-
-It seemed that Leroyd had learned that the plans of himself and his
-friends to delay the departure of the whaleback from New York had
-failed, and that the steamer had touched at Savannah and departed the
-very night the Success got in.
-
-Finding that Sneaky Al had already arrived by steamship from New York,
-he promised Captain Frank an extra hundred dollars if he would land
-only a portion of his goods and set sail for the Bermudas again.
-
-The brig’s commander could not resist this temptation, and therefore
-the Success lay at Savannah but a day and two nights. Then, with
-Messrs. Weeks and Leroyd aboard, she had sailed directly for that part
-of the ocean in which the whaleback had run across her during the gale.
-
-Brandon also elicited the information that the brig had not been
-successful in her search--had not seen a derelict, in fact, since
-leaving Savannah--and that Leroyd was in a fiendish temper before the
-gale came up.
-
-When that began, he and his friend, Weeks, turned to with the brig’s
-crew and did all they could to keep her afloat. Captain Frank, however,
-was crushed under a falling spar and instantly killed when the gale
-first started in, and the first officer was washed overboard.
-
-When the brig became unmanageable and the crew rushed for the boats,
-nobody thought, or at least nobody stopped, for the bereaved girl in
-the cabin. She discovered that the crew had gone and left her only by
-coming on deck after the water had begun to fill the cabin.
-
-Brandon and the captain’s daughter had ample time, before the sun
-appeared, to get very well acquainted with each other.
-
-Don told her all about himself, about the object of the voyage of the
-whaleback, and of the plot concocted by his uncle Arad and Messrs.
-Leroyd and Weeks to find the Silver Swan and obtain the treasure aboard
-her themselves.
-
-As soon as it _did_ grow light, Brandon made his way below again and
-after a great deal of trouble lit an oil lamp and heated a little water
-over its blaze. He was then able to make some warm drink for Swivel and
-Milly, denying himself until she had swallowed some, and between them
-they had forced a little of the mixture between the injured boy’s lips.
-
-After this Swivel brightened up a bit, and, as he did not try to talk,
-the hemorrhage did not return. But he was very weak.
-
-Milly and Brandon ate a little solid food too, but their companion was
-unable to do that.
-
-Now that it was light enough for them to see over the expanse of
-waters, they found as they had feared, that the whaleback had left them
-behind during the night.
-
-Not a sign of her presence nor of the presence of any vessel which
-might come to their assistance, appeared.
-
-The condition of the Success worried them a great deal--or worried Don
-and Milly at least--for she was gradually sinking at the stern, and the
-water was gaining more rapidly than they liked in the cabin. Whereas it
-had only been to Brandon’s knees when he had first gone below, it was
-now up to his waist.
-
-During one of these trips of his to the flooded interior of the brig,
-he heard Milly’s voice excitedly calling to him to come on deck.
-
-“What is it?” he asked, hastily making his appearance.
-
-“Look! look, Brandon!” cried the girl.
-
-She was standing up in the stern and looking over the starboard side.
-
-Brandon hurried toward her and followed the direction of her hand with
-his eyes.
-
-Far across the tossing sea a dark object rose and fell upon the
-surface. It was not far above the level of the water, and therefore,
-though hardly three miles away, had until now remained unseen by the
-voyagers of the Success.
-
-“Is it a wreck like this?” she inquired eagerly.
-
-“It must be,” said Brandon, after a careful examination.
-
-“Bring poor papa’s long glass up from his stateroom,” cried Milly. “You
-can see it then more plainly.”
-
-The boy hurried to obey this suggestion and quickly brought the
-instrument from the dead captain’s cabin.
-
-By the aid of the glass the shipwrecked boy and girl could quite
-plainly view the second wreck, for wreck it was. There was no room for
-doubt of that.
-
-“It’s the hull of a vessel like this,” Brandon declared, “though it’s
-not sunken at the stern, and it rides the waves easier.
-
-“There isn’t a sign of a spar upon it--it’s swept as clean as this,” he
-continued. “There must have been many vessels treated that way in the
-storm. Derelicts will be plentiful enough.”
-
-He stopped with a startled exclamation, and stared at his companion in
-perplexity.
-
-“What is it, Brandon?” Milly asked, noting his change of manner.
-
-“I was thinking,” he said slowly, “that if the Silver Swan--my father’s
-old brig, you know--kept afloat through this last hurricane, she would
-likely be in just such shape as yonder hulk.”
-
-“Oh, it couldn’t be possible, could it?” gasped the girl. “That would
-be too wonderful a coincidence.”
-
-“Not as wonderful as you might think,” Brandon returned decisively,
-gaining confidence in the idea now that some one opposed him. “We are
-in the very part of the ocean--or at least, I have reason to think we
-are--in which the Silver Swan was last reported. I tell you, Milly, it
-may be she!”
-
-“If you could only get to her and see,” cried the young girl anxiously.
-
-“I--I will get to her!” declared Brandon, and then he handed the glass
-to her and went back to sit by poor Swivel and think it over.
-
-Milly, however, remained to watch the distant wreck through the
-instrument.
-
-By all appearances it was much more buoyant than the Success. Whereas
-the latter staggered up the long swells and labored through the trough
-of the sea, the strange derelict rode the waves like a duck, and,
-propelled by some current, moved a good deal faster, though in the same
-general direction as themselves.
-
-Brandon, meanwhile, sitting beside the injured boy, who was now
-sleeping deeply, was turning over in his mind the project he had
-suggested.
-
-He knew, even better than Milly, that the Success was sinking deeper
-and deeper every hour, and that before evening the water might begin to
-wash in over the stern.
-
-The ocean was rapidly becoming smooth. Together they would be able to
-launch a small raft--a hatch covering, perhaps--place Swivel thereon,
-and by using oars, or perhaps a small sail, might reach the distant
-derelict quite easily.
-
-Whether it was the Silver Swan he had sighted, or not, it certainly
-rode the swells better and seemed to be far more seaworthy than the
-Success.
-
-Finally, when Milly came up from the stern, he broached his plan to her.
-
-“I don’t want to force you into this, Milly,” he said. “You shall have
-the deciding vote. Perhaps I am influenced by the hope that yonder
-vessel is the Silver Swan, and maybe this is a dreadfully foolish plan
-for us to try. I think, though, that it is the best and wisest thing we
-can do.”
-
-“What can we use for a raft?” the girl asked slowly.
-
-“One of the hatch covers. I have found a tool chest below--I can get at
-it yet--and there are spars and pieces of canvas for a sail in the same
-place. I saw them only this morning.”
-
-“Can we launch a raft?” asked the practical Milly.
-
-“I believe we can. It is growing calmer all the time, now, and the rail
-is so low at the stern that we can push a well balanced raft into the
-sea and load it afterward.”
-
-“And Swivel?”
-
-“I’m afraid,” said Brandon, looking down at the injured boy sadly,
-“that whatever we do cannot affect Swivel. We can make him as
-comfortable on the raft as elsewhere.”
-
-“Then let us do it,” agreed Milly energetically. “I have been watching
-the other wreck and it seems to sail much better than the Success. The
-old brig may go down now at any time.”
-
-And so they set to work at once at the task of building a raft.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII
-
-LEFT IN DOUBT
-
-
-THE task they had set themselves was no child’s play, and this Brandon
-and Milly soon discovered. But they were working for their lives, for
-according to their reckoning, the Success would not remain above the
-surface many hours.
-
-The captain’s daughter showed herself not only capable of handling
-tools, but she was strong, too. For years she had sailed up and down
-the seas with her father--nearly all her life, in fact--for her mother,
-Brandon had discovered by questioning, had died when she was quite
-young.
-
-This information assured him that there could be no reasonable doubt of
-Milly Frank’s identity. But for the present he said nothing to the girl
-about her relatives in New York.
-
-Milly’s life, therefore, had made her hardy and strong, although her
-education was limited in many lines.
-
-But she had a good basis of hard, common sense to build upon, and with
-a few terms at a well conducted school, she would make as well informed
-a girl as one could find.
-
-With some trouble they managed to wrench away the fastenings of the
-forward hatch, and with a heavy bit which Brandon found in the
-captain’s chest ’tween decks, he was able to bore a hole of sufficient
-size to receive the butt of the small spar.
-
-He brought two oars on deck also, and a square of sailcloth which was
-bunglingly fashioned into a sail.
-
-Brandon proposed to leave nothing undone which would make the success
-of their undertaking more sure. Something _might_ happen to keep them
-from reaching the other wreck, so he brought up several cans of sea
-biscuit and some canned meats from the cabin stores, and placed them in
-readiness for loading the raft after it was launched.
-
-Then with the aid of heavy rollers and a short bar they got the raft
-under way, and once it was started down the inclined deck they had no
-trouble whatever in keeping it going. The only bother was to keep it
-from moving too fast.
-
-Brandon found it impracticable to launch the raft from the stern, and
-therefore cut away a piece of the rail on the starboard side wide
-enough to admit of the passage of the lumbering hatch.
-
-They took the precaution to fasten a cable to the raft, that it might
-not get away from them in its plunge overboard, and then, by an almost
-superhuman effort, rolled the platform into the sea.
-
-It went in with a terrific splash, the sea water wetting both the
-castaways a good deal, for they had to stand at the rail to steady the
-raft’s plunge into the ocean.
-
-“Hurrah!” Brandon shouted. “It floats, and we shall be able to get
-away.”
-
-He hastened to pull the hatch up under the brig’s rail; and, with
-Milly’s aid, stepped the short mast. Then he placed the boxes and
-provisions aboard and lashed them firmly, after which a bed was made
-for Swivel on the raft.
-
-Once more he descended into the half submerged galley and made some
-more warm drink for the injured boy, and this time Swivel was able to
-eat a little cracker with it.
-
-They told him what they were about to do, and he seemed to take more
-interest in the plan than he had in anything since the night before.
-
-“Can--can you carry me, Don?” he asked faintly.
-
-“I can if I don’t hurt you,” the other replied. “Now don’t try to talk,
-Swivel; but, if I hurt you badly, touch me so I’ll know.”
-
-With this he lifted the slight form of the lad in his strong arms, and
-carried him quickly, though easily, across the sloping deck and stepped
-aboard the raft, which floated almost even with the brig’s rail.
-
-The sea had gone down very much now, and it was therefore a simple
-matter to embark upon the hatch.
-
-Swivel was made comfortable among the blankets, his two friends hoisted
-the rule sail, the painter was cast off, and the castaways moved slowly
-away from the hulk of the Success.
-
-By this time it was quite late in the afternoon. Still there were
-several hours of daylight left them, for in this latitude the sun does
-not set very early, even in the spring.
-
-The time which had elapsed since they had first sighted the second
-wreck had given this latter an opportunity to sail by the Success, for
-she moved much faster than the water logged brig. The raft, however,
-wafted along by the brisk breeze, began to overhaul the stranger at
-once. By the aid of an oar, in lieu of a rudder, Brandon was able, with
-little difficulty to keep headed toward their objective point.
-
-Milly, who had brought her father’s glass along, as well as the log
-book of the Success, and all papers of any value belonging to her
-father, occupied her time in trimming the sail, under Brandon’s
-directions, and in gazing through the glass at the strange vessel.
-
-Soon the outlines of the latter became quite clearly visible.
-
-“It was a brig like papa’s,” declared the girl, scrutinizing the hull
-which, although denuded of every inch of spar and rigging, still rode
-the long swells as though perfectly seaworthy.
-
-“Can you see the stern, Milly?” Brandon asked, in excitement.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Is there a name on it? The Swan had her name on the stern?”
-
-“There is something on the stern, but it’s too far off yet for me to be
-sure,” she replied.
-
-“The raft is behaving beautifully,” Brandon declared, “and we shall be
-near enough presently for you to be sure of what you _do_ see.”
-
-Milly put down the glass and knelt by Swivel a moment, to place his
-head more comfortably. Then she went back to the instrument again.
-
-Fifteen minutes passed before she uttered a word, while Brandon watched
-her face with eager interest. Finally she passed him the glass and
-seized the steering oar herself, although she said never a word.
-
-With hands that trembled slightly Brandon placed the instrument to his
-eye and ranged it upon the stern of the derelict. Long and earnestly
-did he examine the lettering upon it, and then closed the glass with a
-snap.
-
-“The Silver Swan--thank God!” he said.
-
-“Oh, I’m so glad, for your sake, Don!” exclaimed Milly, tears of
-happiness shining in her eyes. “You’ll get your father’s diamonds and
-be rich.”
-
-“Riches on a wreck won’t do us much good,” returned Don grimly. “I’d
-rather be a pauper ashore.”
-
-“Ah, but somebody will come very quickly now to take us off,” she said
-confidently.
-
-“Perhaps. But, did you ever think, that perhaps somebody has been
-before us?”
-
-“How do you mean?”
-
-“Why, I mean that perhaps somebody has boarded the brig already and
-secured the diamonds.”
-
-“Who?” asked the girl doubtfully. “Who knows about it excepting your
-Mr. Wetherbee and that Leroyd and his friend Weeks?”
-
-“Nobody that I know of.”
-
-“And nobody else knew where the jewels were hidden?”
-
-“Probably not.”
-
-“Then do you suppose the steamer has been here first?”
-
-[Illustration: LONG AND EARNESTLY DID HE EXAMINE THE LETTERING UPON IT
-THEN CLOSED THE GLASS WITH A SNAP]
-
-“Oh, no; Caleb would have towed the old Swan to a place of safety if he
-had found her--especially if she is as seaworthy as she appears to
-be from this distance.”
-
-“Then what _do_ you mean?” demanded Milly in exasperation.
-
-“What about Leroyd and Weeks?” asked Brandon slowly.
-
-“Well, what about them?”
-
-“Do you suppose they are drowned?”
-
-“They may be.”
-
-“And then again they may not be. If they were picked up by some vessel
-they might have still continued their search for the derelict; might
-have found her by accident, in fact.”
-
-“Oh, Don,” cried the girl, “you are supposing altogether too much.
-Don’t conjure up such disheartening ideas as that. Let us hope that we
-are the first, who know about the treasure, to find the Silver Swan.”
-
-“Well, it doesn’t seem hardly possible that I should get the diamonds
-without any more trouble,” Brandon said, with a sigh. “I’m afraid
-there’s something wrong about it.”
-
-“Don’t talk that way, but be thankful that you haven’t had more
-trouble--though, I should say you’d had almost enough,” returned Milly,
-laughing a little.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII
-
-HOW THE ENEMY APPEARED
-
-
-SLOWLY the rude craft drew near the hull of the Silver Swan. The brig
-floated as well as though she had never struck upon Reef Eight, nor
-been buffeted by the gales of this southern sea for well nigh three
-months.
-
-The recent storm had done little damage to her deck either, although
-the rails were smashed in one or two places. Her wheel had been lashed
-firmly, and strangely enough it still remained so, and now, in this
-quiet sea, the brig held as even a keel as though she was well manned.
-
-Within two hours of the time the castaways had been assured that the
-wreck they were nearing _was_ the Silver Swan, the raft came up under
-her lee rail, and Brandon caught the bight of a cable over a pin on the
-quarter. Then he leaped aboard himself and made the rope secure.
-
-The rail of the Silver Swan was so much higher above the surface of
-the sea than that of the sinking Success had been that Brandon and
-Milly had to fashion a “sling” of the sail, in which to get Swivel
-aboard. The injured youth bore the pain this must have caused him
-uncomplainingly and was soon made comfortable on the deck of this,
-their new refuge.
-
-They did not let the raft float away, although they hoped that they
-should not need it again, and Brandon even took the precaution of
-fastening it with a second cable before they started to explore the
-brig.
-
-The Silver Swan had been almost uninjured by her long journey with no
-pilot but the fickle winds and currents of the ocean. The masts had, of
-course, all gone in the first gale, and her crew had cut away every bit
-of the wreckage before leaving her to her fate on the reef.
-
-The hatches had been battened down and the doors of the forecastle and
-cabin likewise closed, so that the occasional seas which had washed
-over her had done little toward injuring the interior.
-
-Leaving Milly to look out for Swivel, Brandon forced open the cabin
-door (it had swelled badly during the long siege of stormy weather
-which the brig had withstood) and went below. Naturally everything was
-in confusion--tables, chairs, and what not overturned; but nothing
-about the cabin seemed injured.
-
-The cook’s quarters showed a bad state of affairs, however, for there
-wasn’t a whole dish (except the tin ones) in the place, and the stove
-lay on its back kicking its four feet in the air as though in its last
-expiring agonies.
-
-Brandon righted this useful utensil first, and mended the broken pipe
-as best he could. Then, when he had a fire started in the thing, he
-went on to examine the smaller cabins or staterooms.
-
-He knew his father’s well enough and looked in. But he could not bear
-to enter that just now, and so fixed upon one, which should have
-belonged to the second mate, for the use of poor Swivel.
-
-He went back to Milly and the injured boy then, and removed the latter
-to the brig’s cabin.
-
-Milly, who was a capable girl in more ways than one, went to work
-at once to get up a substantial meal from the stores which they had
-brought from the Success, with the addition of some eatables belonging
-to the provisions of the Swan.
-
-It was rapidly growing dark, and to prevent the liability of a
-collision, Brandon hunted out some of the ship’s lanterns and hung two
-in the bows, and another at the masthead, devoutly hoping that the
-lights, placed in these peculiar positions, would attract the attention
-of some passing vessel.
-
-Then the lamp in the cabin was filled and lighted, and for the first
-time in forty-eight hours or more, they sat down to a comfortable meal.
-
-At least, Milly and Brandon sat down; Swivel remained in his berth,
-with the door of the stateroom open, and watched them with a wan smile
-on his pale face.
-
-“Now, Brandon, why don’t you see if the diamonds are here?” asked the
-young girl, as they finished their supper. “I thought you would be
-eager to look as soon as you got aboard.”
-
-Don glanced across the table at her curiously.
-
-“Do you know,” he said hesitatingly. “I’m half afraid to. It would be a
-terrible disappointment if they should not be there--and perhaps they
-are not.”
-
-“Come, come! don’t be foolish,” said practical Milly. “Take a look
-in the secret closet--wherever it is--or I shall be tempted to do it
-myself.”
-
-Brandon, thus urged, rose and approached the companionway.
-
-“Third panel, on port side,” he repeated. “That was Caleb’s direction,
-if I remember rightly. Now let’s see.”
-
-He pressed on the designated panel, first one way and then another. It
-seemed a trifle loose, but otherwise refused to move.
-
-“Maybe I’ve made a mistake,” he muttered, when suddenly, on his
-pressing downward on the edge of the wood, a section of the panel
-dropped out leaving a shallow, metal lined cavity displayed to view.
-
-“Bring the lamp, Milly,” he cried eagerly.
-
-The girl obeyed and held the light so that it might illuminate the
-interior of the secret closet. There was something in the compartment!
-
-Brandon hastily thrust in his hand and drew forth a flat, heavy
-package, sealed in oiled silk and bound with a cord. Hurrying to the
-cabin table with his prize he tore off the cord, broke the seals, and
-unwound the outer wrappings.
-
-Milly, quite as excited as himself, held the lamp closer, watching his
-movements anxiously.
-
-Beneath the outer covering was a flat pouch of chamois skin, the flap
-sealed at one end. This seal the youth broke without hesitation, and
-in another instant had poured a glittering shower of gems upon the
-polished surface of the cabin table.
-
-“Diamonds! diamonds! thousands of dollars’ worth!” cried Milly
-delightedly, running her fingers through the little heap of glittering
-stones and letting them fall in a flashing shower from her hands.
-
-The gems were uncut--at least by the hand of man--but even in their
-crude state they sparkled wonderfully.
-
-For several moments they feasted their eyes on the brilliant spectacle,
-and then Milly filled both hands with the precious gems and ran to show
-Swivel.
-
-“Whew!” whispered that youth, his eyes growing round with wonder. “Wot
-a lot of shiners!”
-
-“Don’t let him talk, Milly,” commanded Brandon, beginning to see that
-it would never do for them to excite the sick boy by the sight of the
-gems. “When he is better he can see them all.”
-
-The young girl came back with the jewels, smiling happily at her
-friend. She seemed quite as joyful because of his good fortune as
-though the gems were her own.
-
-Brandon took the precautions to close the door between the cabin and
-Swivel’s stateroom soon after this, that the boy might go to sleep, and
-then he and Milly sat down at the table and counted the diamonds.
-
-There were no very large gems among the lot, but they were of fair size
-and of the purest white.
-
-It was late that night before the two castaways retired. Brandon
-prepared what had once been Caleb Wetherbee’s quarters for Milly, but
-he himself slept in the cabin, rolled up in a blanket on the floor,
-that he might be near Swivel.
-
-They were so exhausted from their privations of the past day and a half
-that they slept until far into the next forenoon. Swivel was actually
-better, and had no more sinking spells, so that Milly and Brandon
-began to hope for his recovery.
-
-Just after they rose Brandon saw a sailing vessel far down on the
-horizon; but it passed by without noticing the brig. And once during
-the day the smoke of a steam vessel blotted the lines where the sky and
-sea met, far to the eastward.
-
-These momentary glimpses of other craft gave them some hope, for it
-showed them that they were not entirely out of the track of shipping.
-
-That night Brandon hung the lanterns out again, and according to
-arrangement with Milly, remained on deck to watch. She was to watch
-days, and he at night, and he fulfilled his lonely vigil faithfully.
-
-But not a vessel appeared to gladden his lonely eyes.
-
-Milly rose early on that third day and prepared breakfast, after eating
-which Brandon went to bed. The sky remained beautifully clear, and
-they had nothing to fear from the elements, for the glass forecasted a
-continued spell of fine weather.
-
-Milly took up her position with the long spy glass on the deck, and
-swept the horizon for some sign of rescue. Occasionally she went down
-to look in on Swivel, and about noon to prepare the dinner.
-
-When the meal was nearly ready the young girl ran up the companionway
-stairs again for a final look before she summoned Brandon from his
-stateroom. As she put the glass to her eye and gazed toward the west a
-cry of surprise and joy burst from her lips.
-
-Approaching the derelict brig, with a great expanse of canvas spread to
-the fresh breeze, was a small schooner, the water dashing white and
-frothy from her bows!
-
-“Saved! saved!” gasped the girl. “Oh, thank God!”
-
-While she had been below the vessel had come in sight, and was now less
-than half a mile from the wreck.
-
-What seemed strange, however, was that the schooner was laying a course
-directly for the brig as though it was her intention to board her.
-
-“Brandon! Brandon!” she cried, running back to the cabin and rapping on
-the door.
-
-“Aye, aye!” he shouted, and was out of his berth in a moment.
-
-“What is it?” he asked, appearing in the cabin.
-
-“There is a schooner coming right for us!” cried Milly, laughing and
-crying for joy. “I’ve just discovered it. It’s about here.”
-
-She was about to dart out upon deck again, but Brandon grasped her arm.
-
-“Wait, Milly,” he said cautiously. “Have they seen you yet?”
-
-“No; but I want them to.”
-
-“Not yet. We don’t know what they may be. Let me look at them,” said
-the boy rapidly.
-
-He seized the glass, and mounting to the top of the stairs, peered out
-from the shelter of the companionway at the strange schooner.
-
-She lay to about a quarter of a mile away from the derelict, and a boat
-was already half way between the vessel and the wreck. Brandon examined
-the men in it intently.
-
-Only a moment did he scrutinize them, and then he dropped the glass
-with a cry of alarm. He had recognized Jim Leroyd and the fellow Weeks
-among the crew of the small boat!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX
-
-SHOWING HOW MR. WEEKS MADE HIS LAST MOVE
-
-
-“WHAT is it, Brandon?” gasped Milly, seeing the look upon her
-companion’s face.
-
-“Look! look!” whispered the youth, thrusting the glass into her hands.
-
-Milly gazed in terrified silence at the approaching boat.
-
-She, as well as Don, at once recognized the villainous Leroyd and his
-friend, Sneaky Al, and her heart sank with fear.
-
-“What shall we do?” she inquired at last, turning to Brandon.
-
-The latter turned back into the cabin without a word, opened the secret
-closet and grasping the package of diamonds thrust it into the breast
-of his shirt.
-
-“I’ll hide in the hold,” he said, appearing to grasp the situation at
-once. “I do not believe they’ll find me. Tell Swivel, and he’ll know
-what to tell and what not to tell, if they try to pump him.
-
-“They needn’t know that I’m here at all, or that you know anything
-about me. They’ll not dare to hurt you, Milly. But I shall be on hand
-in case they try it.”
-
-“But what can you do against so many?” she returned, with a hysteric
-laugh.
-
-“Something--you’ll see. They shan’t hurt you while I’m alive,” he
-declared earnestly.
-
-“But suppose they take us off with them--Swivel and I?”
-
-“Go, of course,” returned Brandon promptly. “Leave me to shift for
-myself. When you get ashore communicate with Adoniram Pepper & Co. of
-New York, and tell them how I’m fixed. Good by, Milly!”
-
-He wrung her hand warmly and disappeared in the direction of the booby
-hatch ’tween decks. At the same moment there were voices outside and
-the noise of the schooner’s small boat scraping against the side of the
-brig.
-
-Milly, with hands clasped tightly across her breast, as though in the
-endeavor to still the heavy beating of her heart, remained standing
-beside the cabin table as the men boarded the brig and entered the
-cabin.
-
-The first to come below was the ill featured Leroyd himself, and close
-behind him was Alfred Weeks and two other men from the crew of the
-schooner.
-
-“Dash my top lights!” cried the sailor, as he caught sight of the young
-girl standing there so silently.
-
-He retreated precipitately upon his friend Weeks, who was almost as
-greatly astonished as himself.
-
-“How under the sun came you here, Miss Frank?” demanded Sneaky Al,
-stepping forward.
-
-But Leroyd grabbed his arm and strove to drag him back.
-
-“Stop, man! ’tis not a human!” he gasped, his usually red face fairly
-pallid. “It’s the spirit of the poor girl. I knowed how ’twould be
-we’en we left her aboard the Success.”
-
-Weeks shook off his grasp in contempt.
-
-“I’m only too willing to meet such a charming ghost as this,” he said,
-with a smirk, smiling at the young girl. “Don’t be a fool, Jim. It is
-Miss Frank herself, though how she came here is the greatest of all
-mysteries.”
-
-“’Tis the work o’ Davy Jones hisself,” muttered the sailor.
-
-The other two men, both low browed, sullen appearing fellows looked on
-without comment.
-
-“How did you get here?” repeated Weeks.
-
-“We came from the Success just before she was about to sink,” Milly
-declared. “Did you come to save us?”
-
-“_Us?_” cried Weeks, in utter amazement. “For goodness’ sake, who’s
-with you?”
-
-“After poor papa was killed,” there was a little choke in Milly’s voice
-here, “a vessel overhauled the Success and a boy tried to save me. He
-brought a rope to the wreck, but it parted before we could haul in a
-heavier cable, and the gale swept the other vessel away during the
-night.”
-
-“Brave chap!” muttered Weeks. “Where is he now?”
-
-“There,” she said, pointing to the open door of the stateroom in which
-Swivel was lying. “He is hurt.”
-
-“But that doesn’t explain how ye got here, miss,” said the sailor
-suspiciously.
-
-“I hadn’t got to that, Mr. Leroyd. Had you been men, you would not
-have left me to drown as you did, and then there would have been no
-necessity for my remaining for three days on these two vessels.”
-
-“You misjudge us, I assure you,” Weeks hastened to say, as Leroyd
-shrank back at the girl’s scornful words. “Both Leroyd and I were in
-one boat and the second mate was in the other boat. He declared you to
-be safe, and I thought, and so did Mr. Leroyd, that you were with him.
-
-“It was not until we were picked up by the schooner Natchez, of
-Bermuda, and carried to those islands, that we discovered your
-deplorable loss.”
-
-But Milly did not believe this plausible story. She had too vivid a
-remembrance of Leroyd and the cowardly Weeks during the gale, to be
-impressed by this tale.
-
-“This brig passed the Success on the second day after you left me, and
-we made a raft and came to it, because it was so much more seaworthy
-than papa’s vessel,” said Milly coldly.
-
-“You say this boy is hurt, eh?” said Weeks, stepping around to the
-stateroom door and peering in at Swivel, who was sleeping heavily
-despite the sound of voices. “Gee! he does look bad, doesn’t he?”
-
-“Well, wot in thunder shall we do?” growled Leroyd at length. “We’ve
-got no time to spend in fooling, Al. No knowing what that--that other
-craft is.”
-
-“Miss Milly,” Weeks assured her, without paying any attention to the
-words of his companion, “we shall have the pleasure of taking you
-and your brave young friend ashore with us--after we settle a little
-business here.”
-
-“Well, I’m glad ter hear you gittin’ down ter business,” declared
-Leroyd, with satisfaction. “Come, now, skin out of here, you fellers,”
-he added, addressing the two men at the companionway. “We’ll come up or
-call for you when we want ye.”
-
-The men departed and the sailor turned again to his partner.
-
-“Hurry!” he exclaimed eagerly. “Where’s the place you said they were
-hid? It’s somewhere in the cabin here, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then send the gal on deck, too, and let’s rummage.”
-
-“We won’t be rude enough to do that,” said Weeks, with another smirk at
-Milly. “We will just request the young lady not to speak of what she
-sees us do.”
-
-“I don’t care. Anything, so long’s we get ’em and get out o’ here.
-Suppose--”
-
-“Never mind supposing any longer. Let me see, now,” and Weeks walked
-slowly to the upper end of the cabin and counted off three panels from
-the companionway on the port side.
-
-Quickly his long finger touched the surface of the panel, pressing here
-and there and rattling the loose board, and finally the panel dropped
-down, disclosing the secret cupboard--empty!
-
-Leroyd darted forward.
-
-“What is it? Is it there?” he cried.
-
-“The infernal luck! it’s empty!” shouted Weeks, and with a volley of
-maledictions he staggered back and dropped into the nearest chair.
-
-Leroyd was fairly purple.
-
-“Have you tricked me!” he yelled, seizing his partner by the shoulders
-and shaking him.
-
-“No, you fool! why should I trick you? That is where Caleb Wetherbee
-said the diamonds were hid.”
-
-“Sh!” growled the sailor. “D’ye want that gal ter know everything? She
-knows too much now.”
-
-“She doesn’t know anything about this; why should she?”
-
-“Then, what’s become of them?”
-
-“I can tell you that,” returned Weeks. “Cale Wetherbee’s been here.”
-
-“And left the Silver Swan a derelict--almost as good as new--an’ him
-with a steamer?” roared Leroyd. “Man, you’re dreaming!”
-
-“Then--what--has happened!” asked Alfred Weeks slowly.
-
-“The gal--the gal here,” declared Leroyd, turning fiercely upon Milly.
-“She’s found ’em, I tell ye!”
-
-He advanced upon the shrinking girl so threateningly, that Milly
-screamed, and rushed to the companionway. Leroyd pursued her, and Weeks
-followed the angry sailor.
-
-Up to the deck darted the girl, and almost into the arms of one of the
-men whom Leroyd had driven out of the brig’s cabin. The fellow looked
-excited and he shouted to the angry sailor as soon as he saw him:
-
-“De steamer come--up queek. Mr. Leroyd! Dey put off-a boat already.”
-
-Milly, who had dodged past the speaker, turned her eyes to the
-east--the opposite direction from which the schooner had appeared--and
-beheld a steamship, her two funnels vomiting thick smoke, just rounded
-to, less than two cable lengths away.
-
-It was the whaleback steamer, Number Three!
-
-Already a boat had put off from the whaleback and it was now being
-swiftly propelled toward the Silver Swan.
-
-The two men whom Leroyd and Weeks had brought with them from the
-schooner, had been smoking in the lee of the deck-house and had not
-discovered the steamer’s approach until she was almost upon the
-derelict.
-
-“Curses on it!” Weeks exclaimed as he took in the situation and
-recognized the steamer, whose smoke they had beheld in the distance,
-before boarding the brig.
-
-But Leroyd kept on after the fleeing Milly. He believed that she knew
-something about the missing gems, or had them in her possession, and he
-was determined to get them.
-
-Milly ran to the bows of the brig, with Leroyd close behind her.
-
-“Let that gal alone!” roared a voice from the approaching boat. “Give
-way, boys! I won’t leave a whole bone in that scoundrel’s body, once I
-get my paws on him.”
-
-In an instant the small boat was under the brig’s rail, and Caleb
-Wetherbee himself was upon her deck with an agility quite surprising.
-Mr. Coffin and two of the boat’s crew were right behind him.
-
-A moment later the panting girl, having eluded the clumsier sailor, was
-behind the shelter of Caleb’s towering form and those of his companions.
-
-Weeks stopped Leroyd in his mad rush for the girl, and whispered a few
-swift sentences in his ear. Then he stepped forward.
-
-“By what right do you board this brig, Mr. Wetherbee?” he asked. “This
-is a derelict. We have seized her and propose to tow her to port for
-salvage. I command you to leave her.”
-
-“How long since you boarded her for that purpose?” Mr. Coffin demanded,
-for Caleb was fairly purple with rage and surprise.
-
-“Since half an hour ago,” replied Weeks calmly.
-
-“If that is the case, I think I have a prior claim,” suddenly
-interrupted a voice. “I came aboard two days ago and I claim the Silver
-Swan as mine by right of discovery!”
-
-The astounded company turned toward the cabin entrance and beheld
-Brandon Tarr just appearing from below.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL
-
-IN WHICH THE ENEMY IS DEFEATED AND THE QUEST OF THE SILVER SWAN IS ENDED
-
-
-“BRANDON!” shouted Caleb; “it’s the boy himself!”
-
-But Leroyd uttered a howl of rage and sprang toward the youth, his face
-aflame and his huge fist raised to strike. Caleb, however, despite his
-wooden leg, was too quick for him.
-
-He flew to Don’s rescue, and ere Leroyd could reach his intended
-victim, the old mariner felled the villain to the deck with one swing
-of his powerful arm.
-
-Weeks, who had also dashed forward to aid in Brandon’s overthrow, was
-seized by the doughty captain of the whaleback and tossed completely
-over the brig’s rail.
-
-“Git out o’ here, the hull kit an’ bilin’ of ye!” Caleb roared,
-starting for the two men belonging to the schooner.
-
-They obeyed with surprising alacrity, and the old man picked up the
-dazed Leroyd and tossed him into the boat after them. Weeks, dripping
-and sputtering, was hauled aboard by his companions, and the small boat
-was rowed back to the schooner, while Brandon, unable to restrain his
-emotion, threw up his hat and shouted, “Hurrah!” with all his might.
-
-It occupied the three castaways--Milly, Brandon, and Swivel--and
-Mr. Coffin and Caleb, fully two hours to straighten out matters
-satisfactorily. They had so much to tell and so much to explain for one
-another’s benefit, that the whaleback had run in and the crew passed
-a hawser from her stern to the bow of the brig, under Mr. Bolin’s
-directions, ere the conference was ended.
-
-Words cannot well express the astonishment that those on the whaleback
-felt at finding the castaways aboard the Silver Swan--or at finding the
-brig itself. For the past twelve hours they had all believed that the
-derelict was a victim of Uncle Sam’s feverish impatience to destroy all
-obstructions to commerce in his ocean.
-
-Upon figuring the whole matter up, it was pretty evident that it was
-the Success which the naval ensign had exploded, for she had been sunk
-at the stern sufficiently to cover her name, and had been so battered
-by the waves that the lettering on the bow was also probably unreadable.
-
-After believing, as they did, that the Swan was sunk and all her
-treasures with her, the whaleback had sailed about in circles, seeking
-the wreck of the Success, on which they believed Brandon and his two
-companions to be.
-
-It was only by providential fortune that the brig had finally been
-sighted, and the whaleback had steamed up just in time to wrest the
-Silver Swan from Messrs. Leroyd and Weeks.
-
-Swivel was taken aboard the steamer and carefully examined by Lawrence
-Coffin, who was no mean surgeon, and he pronounced the youth as
-seriously, if not dangerously, injured. He had burst a blood vessel and
-had sustained other internal injuries, and would probably be unfit for
-work of any kind for a long time.
-
-“Best place for him is the Marine Hospital,” declared Mr. Coffin to
-Brandon and Caleb that night in the steamer’s cabin.
-
-“Hospital nothin’!” exclaimed Caleb, with conviction. “The hospital
-is all right for them as hain’t go no homes--like as I hadn’t, nor no
-friends--a good deal as I _was_--nor nothing; but _that_ boy ain’t
-goin’ to lack a shelter as long as _I’m_ alive.”
-
-“Best not take him on a sea voyage just yet, Mr. Wetherbee,” responded
-Mr. Coffin seriously.
-
-“I don’t intend to. He’s goin’ ter live with me, though.”
-
-“But won’t you sail the Silver Swan?” asked the first officer. “She’s
-as good as new and she’s yours, too, I understand.”
-
-“No, sir, I’m not. When the Silver Swan is in shape again, I shall put
-Mr. Bolin in command of her. I’ve already spoken to him about it.”
-
-“Whew!” whistled Mr. Coffin. “And the whaleback?”
-
-“You’ll command her; that was the agreement I made with Adoniram before
-we left New York.”
-
-“Thank you, Mr. Wetherbee,” exclaimed the first officer gratefully.
-“But may I ask what you propose to do?”
-
-“I shall retire from the sea--that is, from commandin’ a ship, any
-way.”
-
-“So you’re goin’ to keep bachelor’s hall, and going to take this Swivel
-to it?” and Mr. Coffin shook his head gravely. “He really needs a
-woman’s nursing.”
-
-Caleb grew very red in the face, and blew his nose furiously.
-
-“He--he’ll get it, Mr. Coffin,” he said hesitatingly.
-
-Both Brandon and the first officer looked at the old tar in blank
-amazement.
-
-“I said he’d get it,” repeated Caleb solemnly, though with a rather
-shamefaced look. “He’ll get it, sir, an’ from the trimmest little woman
-ye ever see.”
-
-“It’s Miss Frances!” burst forth Brandon at length.
-
-“It is her, my lad. An’ hain’t I right erbout her bein’ a mighty trim
-one?”
-
-“She is, indeed! She’s splendid!” cried Brandon enthusiastically,
-seizing his friend’s mighty palm.
-
-Mr. Coffin also offered his congratulations, but went away afterward
-with rather a dazed look on his face.
-
-He was pretty well acquainted with the old seaman, and he wondered, as
-did Brandon, how under the sun Caleb had ever plucked up the courage to
-ask Adoniram Pepper’s sister for her hand.
-
-“Yes, lad,” said the old man gravely; “I’ve been floating about from
-sea to sea and from land to land for the better part of fifty years,
-an’ now I’m goin’ ter lay back an’ take it easy for the rest of my
-days.”
-
-And as Brandon wrung his hand again he felt that the old seaman fully
-deserved it all.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In good time the whaleback, with her tow, the derelict brig, arrived in
-New York, where the Silver Swan was at once sent to the shipyard for
-repairs, and is now doing her owner good service as a merchantman.
-
-Adoniram Pepper & Co.’s scheme of recovering derelicts in general and
-towing them in for their salvage, has never amounted to anything yet,
-for directly following the trip of Number Three (rechristened the Milly
-Frank, by the way), the owner received a good offer for putting the
-whaleback in the European trade, and she is still carrying grain to
-England, with Mr. Coffin as commander.
-
-Milly Frank’s joy at finding her relatives, of whose existence her
-father had never told her, was only equaled by the joy of Adoniram
-and Frances Pepper themselves in recovering their “little sister”
-again--for as such Milly appears to them.
-
-Miss Frances is of course Miss Frances no longer; but with her husband,
-she still occupies her brother’s house in New York, and Milly dwells
-with them.
-
-Brandon, who is at present in the naval school, resides there also
-during vacation, and calls the company of assorted humanity there
-gathered “the happy family.”
-
-Swivel is in the West--that land of bracing and salubrious climate--for
-after he recovered from the accident he sustained on the wreck, the
-doctors told him that he could never live and be strong in the East
-again. So, with the assistance of Caleb, Adoniram, and Brandon, who
-quarreled not a little as to who should do the most for him, he was
-sent West, and a glorious start in business life was given him in that
-rapidly growing country.
-
-Brandon himself, though made independently rich by the sale of the
-diamonds found by Anson Tarr, loves the sea too well to give it up
-altogether, and, as I said, is in the naval academy at Annapolis. When
-he is through school and gets his appointment, he and Milly may--but I
-won’t anticipate.
-
-As for the disappointed Uncle Arad, he never pressed the matter of
-Brandon’s arrest after the failure of the plot (hatched up by himself
-and Messrs. Leroyd and Weeks) to convert his nephew’s property to his
-own use. He still remains on the farm at Chopmist, and by report is as
-crabbed and stingy as ever; but Brandon has had no desire to return to
-the farm since his Quest of the Silver Swan was ended.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
- Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEST OF THE SILVER
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The quest of the Silver Swan, by W. Bert Foster</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The quest of the Silver Swan</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A land and sea tale for boys</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: W. Bert Foster</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: May 26, 2022 [eBook #68182]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Library of Congress)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEST OF THE SILVER SWAN ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">“WELL, SHIPMATE, OUT GUNNING?”</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1>THE QUEST OF THE<br />
-SILVER SWAN</h1>
-
-<p><span class="large">A Land and Sea Tale for Boys</span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-<span class="large">W. BERT FOSTER</span></p>
-
-<p>Author of “In Alaskan Waters,” “With Washington at<br />
-Valley Forge,” “The Lost Galleon,” “The Treasure<br />
-of Southlake Farm,” etc.</p>
-
-<p><i>ILLUSTRATED</i></p>
-
-<p>NEW YORK<br />
-<span class="large">CHATTERTON-PECK COMPANY</span><br />
-PUBLISHERS</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="bbox">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p class="ph1">GOOD BOOKS FOR BOYS</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-
-<p>The Young Builders of Swiftdale. By Allen Chapman.<br />
-Cloth. Price, 60 cents.</p>
-
-<p>Andy the Acrobat. By Peter T. Harkness. Cloth.<br />
-Illustrated. Price, 60 cents.</p>
-
-<p>Canoe Boys and Camp Fires. By William Murray<br />
-Graydon. Cloth. Price, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p>From Office Boy to Reporter. By Howard R. Garis.<br />
-Cloth. Illustrated. Price, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p>With Axe and Flintlock. By George Waldo Browne.<br />
-Cloth. Illustrated. Price, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p>The Crimson Banner. By William D. Moffat. Cloth.<br />
-Price, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p>The Quest of the Silver Swan. By W. Bert Foster.<br />
-Cloth. Price, 75 cents.</p>
-
-<p>&#160;</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">Copyright, by Frank A. Munsey Co., 1894 and 1895, as a serial.</p>
-</div></div></div></div></div>
-
-<p class="center">Copyright, 1907, by Chatterton-Peck Company.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The Quest of the Silver Swan.</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt"><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td class="tdrb" colspan="2"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">I.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">The Raft at Sea</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_9"> 9</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">II.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Introducing Brandon Tarr and Uncle Arad</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_21"> 21</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">III.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">An Account of the Wreck of The Silver Swan</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_34"> 34</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">IV.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Brandon Comes to a Decision</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_40"> 40</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">V.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Uncle Arad Has Recourse to Legal Force</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_45"> 45</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">VI.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Relating a Meeting Between Uncle Arad and the Sailor</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_51"> 51</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">VII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Introducing “Square” Holt and His Opinions</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_59"> 59</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">VIII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Something About Leaving the Farm</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_66"> 66</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">IX.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Another Letter From New York</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_72"> 72</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">X.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Brandon’s Arrival at the Metropolis</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_79"> 79</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XI.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">The Firm of Adoniram Pepper</span> &amp; <span class="smcap">Co.</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_85"> 85</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">In Which Brandon Ventures into Rather Disreputable Society</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_90"> 90</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XIII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">The Old Sailor with the Wooden Leg</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_98"> 98</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XIV.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">The Old Sailor’s Excitement</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_103"> 103</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XV.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Caleb Receives a Startling Communication</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_110"> 110</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XVI.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Telling How Brandon Bearded the Lion in His Lair</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_116"> 116</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XVII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">How the Omnipresent Weeks Proves his Right to the Term</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_123"> 123</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XVIII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Brandon Listens to a Short Family History</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_130"> 130</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XIX.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Telling a Great Deal About Derelicts in General</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_137"> 137</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XX.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">The Contents of Several Interesting Documents</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_144"> 144</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXI.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">In Which Mr. Pepper Makes a Proposition to Caleb and Don</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_151"> 151</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Into Bad Company</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_156"> 156</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXIII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Mr. Alfred Weeks at a Certain Conference</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_163"> 163</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXIV.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">How a Nefarious Compact was Formed</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_171"> 171</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXV.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Uncle Arad Makes an Announcement</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_176"> 176</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXVI.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Caleb Wetherbee Obstructs the Course of the Law</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_183"> 183</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXVII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Wherein Brandon Tarr Conceals Himself</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_188"> 188</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXVIII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">The Departure of the Whaleback, Number Three</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_197"> 197</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXIX.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">The Stowaway Aboard the Success</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_208"> 208</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXX.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Showing What Miss Milly Does for Brandon</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_217"> 217</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXXI.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Wherein Number Three Approaches the Supposed Vicinity of the Silver Swan</span> &#160; &#160; </td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_224"> 224</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXXII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Relating How the Silver Swan was Heard From</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_229"> 229</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXXIII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">In Which Comrades in Courage Launch Themselves Upon the Deep</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_234"> 234</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXXIV.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">The Incidents of a Night of Peril</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_240"> 240</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXXV.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Showing how Caleb Appeared on the Scene Just Too Late</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_250"> 250</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXXVI.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">The Castaways on the Brig Success</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_257"> 257</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXXVII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Left in Doubt</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_264"> 264</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXXVIII.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">How the Enemy Appeared</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_270"> 270</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XXXIX.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">Showing How Mr. Weeks Made his Last Move</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_278"> 278</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdrt">XL.</td><td class="tdhi"> <span class="smcap">In Which the Enemy is Defeated and the Quest of the Silver Swan is Ended</span></td><td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_286"> 286</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-
-<p class="ph2">THE QUEST OF<br />
-THE SILVER SWAN</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-
-<small>THE RAFT AT SEA</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> sun, whose upper edge had just appeared
-above the horizon, cast its first red beams aslant a
-deserted wilderness of heaving billows.</p>
-
-<p>Here and there a flying fish, spurning its usual
-element, cut the air like a swift ray of light, falling
-back into the sea again after its short flight with
-a splash that sent myriad drops flashing in the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>There were not a few triangular objects, dark in
-color, and looking like tiny sails, darting along the
-surface of the sea, first in this direction and then in
-that. There was a peculiar sinister motion to these
-fleshy sails, an appearance to make the beholder shudder
-involuntarily; for these objects were the dorsal
-fins of sharks, and there is nothing more bloodthirsty
-and cruel than these “tigers of the sea.”</p>
-
-<p>It was quite noticeable that these monsters had
-gathered about an object which, in comparison with
-the vast expanse of sea and sky, was but a speck.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-It labored heavily upon the surface of the sea, and
-seemed to possess a great attraction for the sharks.</p>
-
-<p>It was really a heavily built raft, more than twenty
-feet in length, and with a short, stumpy mast lashed
-upright amidships. Near each end was a long sea
-chest, both placed across the raft, and there were
-also a broken water butt and several empty cracker
-boxes lashed firmly (as were the chests) to the
-strongly built platform.</p>
-
-<p>At one end of this ungainly craft, behind one of
-the chests, lay two men; at the further side of the
-opposite chest reclined another.</p>
-
-<p>One might have thought the sea chests to be fortifications,
-for all three men were heavily armed, and
-each was extremely careful not to expose his person
-to the party behind the opposite chest.</p>
-
-<p>Between the two boxes lay the figure of a fourth
-man; but he was flat upon his face with his arms
-spread out in a most unnatural attitude. He was evidently
-dead.</p>
-
-<p>Of the two men who were at the forward end of
-the raft (or what was the forward end for the time
-being, the ocean currents having carried the craft
-in various directions during the several past days),
-of these two, I say, one was a person of imposing, if
-not handsome, presence, with curling brown hair
-streaked with gray, finely chiseled features, and skin
-bronzed by wind and weather; but now the features
-were most painfully emaciated, and a blood stained
-bandage was wrapped about his brow.</p>
-
-<p>His companion was a hearty looking old sea dog,
-well past the half century mark, but who had evidently<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-stood the privations they had undergone far
-better than the first named.</p>
-
-<p>He was burned even darker than the other, was
-of massive figure and leonine head, and possessed a
-hand like a ham. One leg was bent up beneath him,
-but the other was stretched out stiffly, and it took only
-a casual glance to see that the old seaman had a
-wooden leg.</p>
-
-<p>Every few moments the latter individual raised his
-head carefully and peered over the chest, thus keeping
-a sharp watch on the movements of the single
-occupant of the space behind the other fortification.</p>
-
-<p>This person was a broad shouldered, deep chested
-man, seemingly quite as powerful as the wooden
-legged sailor. Privation and hardship had not improved
-his appearance, either, for his raven black
-beard and hair were matted and unkempt, and his
-bronzed face had that peculiar, pinched expression
-with which starvation marks its victims; and this
-look did not make his naturally villainous features less
-brutal.</p>
-
-<p>In truth, all three of these unfortunates were starving
-to death; the fourth man, who lay so still upon
-the rough boards between the two chests, was the
-first victim of the hardships they had suffered for
-the last ten days.</p>
-
-<p>These four men had been members of the ship’s
-company of the good brig Silver Swan, bound to
-Boston from Cape Town and Rio Janeiro. After
-leaving the latter port three weeks before, several
-severe storms had arisen and the brig was beaten terrifically
-by the elements for days and days.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>Finally, after having every stick wrenched from
-her and even the jury mast the crew had rigged,
-stripped bare, the brig, now being totally unmanageable,
-was blown upon a narrow and barren reef several
-leagues to the south and west of Cuba.</p>
-
-<p>The crew, who had ere this most faithfully obeyed
-the captain and mate, Caleb Wetherbee, now believing
-the vessel about to go to pieces, madly rushed to
-the boats, and lowering them into the heavy sea, lost
-their lives in their attempt to leave the brig.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Tarr and mate Wetherbee were able to
-save only two of the unfortunates—Paulo Montez, a
-Brazilian, and Jim Leroyd, the latter the least worthy
-of all the crew.</p>
-
-<p>These four had built the rude raft upon which they
-had now floated so long, and not daring to remain
-with the brig during another storm that seemed imminent,
-they set sail in the lumbering craft and left
-the well built and still seaworthy brig hard and fast
-upon the reef.</p>
-
-<p>This storm, which had frightened them from the
-Swan, was only severe enough to strip their rude mast
-of its sail and rigging and drive them seemingly far
-out of the course of other vessels, for not a sail had
-they sighted since setting out on the raft.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly their provisions had disappeared, while the
-now calmed sea carried them hither and thither as it
-listed; and at last the captain and mate had decided to
-put all hands upon still shorter allowance.</p>
-
-<p>At this, Leroyd, always an ugly and brutal fellow
-even aboard ship, had rebelled, and had tried to stir up
-his companion, Paulo, to mutiny against the two officers;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-but the Brazilian was already too far gone to
-join in any such scheme (in fact, he died the next
-forenoon), and Caleb Wetherbee had driven Leroyd
-to his present position behind the further chest, at
-the point of his pistol.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Tarr, who had received a heavy blow on
-the head from a falling block at the time of the brig’s
-wreck, was far less able to stand the hardship than
-either of his living companions, and, now that ten full
-days had expired since leaving the Silver Swan, he
-felt himself failing fast.</p>
-
-<p>Alone, he would have been unable to cope with
-Leroyd; but Caleb Wetherbee stood by him like a
-faithful dog and kept the villainous sailor in check.
-As Leroyd had demanded his share of the water and
-scanty store of provisions, the mate had, with careful
-exactness, given him his third and then made
-hint retire behind his chest again; for he could not
-trust the fellow an instant.</p>
-
-<p>“The scoundrel would put two inches o’ steel between
-both our ribs for the sake o’ gettin’ the whole
-o’ this grub,” declared Caleb, keeping a firm grip upon
-his pistol.</p>
-
-<p>“He’d only shorten my time a little, Cale,” gasped
-Captain Tarr, a paroxysm of pain weakening him
-terribly for the moment. “I can’t stand many such
-times as <i>that</i>,” he added, when the agony had passed.</p>
-
-<p>“Brace up, cap’n,” said the mate cheerfully.
-“You’ll pull through yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t deceive yourself, or try to deceive me,
-Caleb,” responded Captain Tarr gloomily. “I know
-my end is nigh, though I’m not an old man yet—younger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-than you, old trusty, by ten years. And
-my life’s been a failure, too,” he continued, more to
-himself than to his companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Tut! tut! don’t talk like that ’ere. Ye’ll have ter
-pull through for the sake o’ that boy o’ yourn, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall never see him again,” declared the injured
-man, with confidence. “And how can I die
-in peace when I know that I shall leave my son penniless?”</p>
-
-<p>“Penniless!” exclaimed Wetherbee. “Didn’t you
-own the brig, an’ ain’t you been makin’ v’y’ges in her
-for the past ten year?”</p>
-
-<p>“I <i>did</i> own the Silver Swan, and I <i>have</i> made paying
-voyages with her,” replied the captain weakly;
-“but, shame on me to have to say it, all my earnings
-have been swallowed up by a speculation which turned
-out to be utterly worthless. A sailor, Caleb, should
-stick by the sea, and keep his money in shipping;
-I went into a mine in Nevada and lost every cent I had
-saved.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there was the Swan,” said the dumfounded
-mate; “there’ll be the int’rest money on her—and a
-good bit it should be, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, <i>should</i> be,” muttered Captain Tarr bitterly;
-“but the brig is on that reef and there’s not a cent of
-insurance on her.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! no insurance?” gasped Wetherbee.</p>
-
-<p>“No. When I left port last time my policy had
-run out, and I hadn’t a cent to pay for having it renewed.
-So, if the old brig’s bones whiten on that
-reef, poor Brandon will not get a cent.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>“<i>If</i> they do,” exclaimed the mate in wonder.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, <i>if</i> they do,” responded Captain Tarr, rising
-on his elbow and speaking lower, so that there could
-be no possibility of the man at the other end of the
-raft hearing his words; “for it’s my firm conviction,
-Caleb, that we’d done better to stick by the old Swan.
-This last storm drove hard from the west’ard. Suppose
-she’d slipped off again into deep water? She
-didn’t leak enough to keep her sweet, in spite of the
-terrific pounding she got from waves and rocks, and
-she might float for weeks—aye, for months—and
-you know she’d have plenty of company drifting up
-and down the Atlantic coast.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that ain’t probable, cap’n, though I’ll grant
-ye that we might have done better by stickin’ by her
-a while longer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Probable or not, Caleb, I <i>feel</i> that it is true. You
-know, they say a dying man can see some things
-plainer than other folks.”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb was silenced by this, for he could not honestly
-aver that he did not believe his old commander
-to be near his end.</p>
-
-<p>“And we had a valuable cargo, too, you know—very
-valuable,” murmured Captain Tarr. “I put
-every cent I received from the sale of the goods we
-took to Cape Town into this cargo, and would have
-cleared a handsome profit—enough to have kept
-both Brandon and me in good circumstances for a
-year. And then, there is something else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what is it?” Caleb asked, after taking a
-squint over the top of their breastwork to make sure
-that Leroyd had not ventured out.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>“If I’d got home with the Silver Swan, Caleb, I
-should have been rich for life, and <i>you</i>, old trusty,
-should have had the brig just as she stood, for the
-cost of makin’ out the papers.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” exclaimed Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at his commander for several moments,
-and then shook his head slowly. He believed that
-the privation they had suffered had at length affected
-even Captain Horace Tarr’s brain.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not crazy, Caleb,” said the captain faintly.
-“I tell you I should have been immensely wealthy.
-Brandon should have never wanted for anything as
-long as he lived, nor should I; and I had already decided
-to give the brig to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What—what d’ye mean if ye <i>ain’t</i> crazy?” cried
-Caleb, in bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember the man who came aboard the
-brig at Cape Town, just before we sailed?” asked
-Captain Tarr, in a whisper, evidently saving his
-strength as much as possible for his story. “He
-was a friend of my brother Anson.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anson!” interjected Caleb. “Why, I supposed
-<i>he</i> was dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is now,” replied the captain; “but instead of
-dying several years ago, as we supposed, he had been
-living in the interior of Cape Colony, and just before
-he actually did die he gave a package (papers, this
-man supposed them to be) to an acquaintance, to be
-delivered to me. I happened to touch at Cape Town
-before the friend of my brother had tried to communicate
-with me by mail, and he brought the package
-aboard the brig himself.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>“He did not know what he was carrying—he
-never would have dared do it had he known—for
-with a letter from Anson was a package, done up in
-oil silk, of—diamonds of the purest water!”</p>
-
-<p>“Diamonds!” repeated Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, diamonds—thousands of dollars’ worth—enough
-to make one man, at least, fabulously rich!”
-The captain slowly rolled his head from side to side.
-“After all these years the luck of the Tarrs had
-changed, Caleb. Fortune has ever played us false,
-and even now, just when wealth was in our grasp,
-it was snatched from us again.</p>
-
-<p>“After wandering up and down the earth for forty
-years, Anson finally ‘struck it rich,’ and am I, who
-was to profit by his good fortune, and the son whom I
-love more than I do anything else on earth, to lose
-this treasure after all?”</p>
-
-<p>He fell back upon the raft, and the exertion set
-the wound in his head to bleeding again. A dark
-stream appeared beneath the bandage and trickled
-down his forehead, while he lay, gasping for breath,
-upon the bit of sailcloth which served him for a bed.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you do with the diamonds?” the mate
-asked, when the dying man had again become calm.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I have written a letter to Brandon, telling
-him all about it,” gasped the captain. “That is what
-I wrote the second day we were on the raft. I dared
-not take them with me from the brig, and they are
-hidden in the cabin. I know now that we made a
-grave mistake in leaving the Silver Swan at all, for
-she may hold together for months.</p>
-
-<p>“Take—take the papers from my pocket, Cale,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-he added, feebly unbuttoning his coat, “and keep
-them. If you are saved I charge you to give them
-to Brandon with your own hands, and I can trust you
-to assist him in every possible way to recover his
-fortune, should such a thing be possible.”</p>
-
-<p>The mate bent over the unfortunate owner of the
-Silver Swan, and with trembling hands removed several
-thick documents from his pocket and thrust them
-into the breast of his flannel shirt.</p>
-
-<p>As he did so and turned again, he saw the scowling
-visage of Jim Leroyd peering at them above his
-chest. Quick as a flash he seized his pistol and aimed
-it at the sailor; but Leroyd dodged out of view at
-once. Without doubt, however, he had seen the papers
-passed from the captain to mate Wetherbee.</p>
-
-<p>“Take good care of them, Cale,” whispered Captain
-Tarr. “And let nobody else see them. I believe
-that Leroyd suspected something back there at
-Cape Town, for he came into the cabin on an errand
-just as that friend of poor Anson gave the package
-into my hands, and I caught him snooping about the
-companionway several times afterward. It was he
-I feared most when we left the brig, and therefore
-dared not take the diamonds with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll shoot him yet,” muttered the old seaman
-fiercely, with his weather eye cocked over the top of
-the chest. “I hated the sight o’ that fellow when
-he first boarded the brig at New York. His face is
-enough to bring bad luck to any ship.”</p>
-
-<p>But the captain was not listening to him. He had
-floated away into a restless slumber, from which he
-only awoke once to whisper, “Remember, Cale!” and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-then passed into a dreamless sleep from which there
-could be no awakening in this world.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb Wetherbee closed the captain’s eyes tenderly,
-wrapped him in the bit of sailcloth which had served
-as his bed, and fastened his lifeless body so that no
-unexpected roll of the raft would precipitate it into
-the water. Then he took the scant share of food left
-of the captain’s hoard, and religiously divided it into
-two equal portions.</p>
-
-<p>“Jim!” he said, when this was done, allowing himself
-but a moment to gloat over the pitifully meager
-supply which he laid on the chest lid.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, aye, sir!” responded the sailor gruffly, cautiously
-raising his head from behind his fortification.</p>
-
-<p>“Captain Tarr is dead, Jim, and I have divided <i>his</i>
-share o’ the grub. Put down your weapons and come
-forward to the chest and take your part. Remember,
-no slippery business or I’ll bore a hole in ye! Step
-out now.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the sailor arose, his ungainly, dwarfish
-proportions being more manifest now that he was
-on his feet, and approached his officer, stepping over
-the body of Paulo without a glance at it.</p>
-
-<p>His fierce eyes lighted eagerly as he saw the little
-supply of food (he had already consumed all his own),
-and he seized it at once. While he did so he looked
-at the wooden legged sailor with a crafty smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Wot was it the old man give ye, Caleb?” he
-asked familiarly.</p>
-
-<p>The mate scowled fiercely at him, and did not reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ye needn’t act so onery,” went on Leroyd.
-“<i>I</i> knowed there was somethin’—money I bet—that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-was given to the old man at the Cape. He’s
-acted like a new man ever since, and if there’s anything
-in it, I’m goin’ ter hev my share, jest like this
-share o’ the grub, now I tell ye!”</p>
-
-<p>“You take that food and git back to your place!”
-roared Caleb, pointing the huge “bull dog,” which
-had a bore like a rifle, at the fellow’s head. “An’ let
-me tell you that I shall be on the watch, I shall, an’
-it’ll be a long say afore you catch Caleb Wetherbee
-asleep. Ef I ain’t saved, <i>you</i> won’t be, let me tell you,
-for ef I feel myself a-goin’ to Davy Jones, <i>you’ll go
-along with me</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Leroyd sneaked back to his place again, and
-crouched behind the chest. In that position he could
-not see the movements of Caleb, who, after a few moments’
-thought, deposited the packet of papers where
-he believed no one would think of looking for them.</p>
-
-<p>“There!” he muttered grimly. “If I <i>do</i> foller
-Cap’n Tarr, I reckon these papers’ll never do that
-scoundrel any good, an’ he can throw this old hulk to
-the sharks and welcome. If the cap’n’s boy don’t
-profit by ’em, <i>nobody</i> shall.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he folded his arms, the pistol still in his
-grasp, and continued his task of watching for the rescuing
-sail, which it seemed would never come.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-
-<small>INTRODUCING BRANDON TARR AND UNCLE ARAD</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Leading</span> from the village of Rockland, Rhode
-Island, a wide, dusty country road, deeply rutted here
-and there, winds up to the summit of a long ridge, the
-highest land in that portion of the State, which past
-generations have named Chopmist.</p>
-
-<p>It is a drizzly, chilly spring day, the showers pattering
-down in true April style, the sun promising to
-show his face every few minutes, and then, when you
-are expecting his warming rays, down falls another
-shower and Sol hides his face in despair.</p>
-
-<p>Near the highest part of the ridge, on the easterly
-side of the road, stood an old, gambrel roofed, weather
-beaten house, its end facing the road and its front door
-at the side as though it, like its present owner, had
-turned sourly away from the world, refusing even
-to look out upon the highway which passed socially
-near it.</p>
-
-<p>The rain dripped steadily into the moss covered
-water butt at the corner of the house, and a bedraggled
-chicken, who seemed not to possess enough
-energy to get under better cover, sat humped up in a
-most dismal manner under the lilac bush at the other
-corner of the house.</p>
-
-<p>It was well nigh as dismal inside the house as out.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-A miserable little fire of green wood sputtered and
-hissed in an even more miserable stove, and the faded
-yellow cambric curtain at the little window, did its
-best (with the aid of the dirt, which was considerable)
-to keep the light from penetrating the panes.</p>
-
-<p>At one end of the kitchen was a square deal table
-littered with soiled dishes left from the morning
-meal; the two or three chairs about the room were in
-a state of great dilapidation; and even the old clock
-on the mantel shelf ticked with a sort of rasping
-groan, as though every stroke put its rheumatic old
-wheels and springs in agony.</p>
-
-<p>Before the stove, in a sadly abused, wooden bottomed
-armchair, and with his back humped up a good
-deal like the chicken under the lilac bush outside, sat
-an old man with weazened, wrinkled face, eyes like
-a hawk’s, a beak-like nose, and a sparse settlement of
-gray hairs on his crown and chin.</p>
-
-<p>He leaned forward in his seat, and both claw-like
-hands clutching the arms of the chair, seemed to be
-all that kept him from falling upon the stove.</p>
-
-<p>At the window, just where the light fell best upon
-the book in his hand, sat a youth of sixteen years—a
-well made, robust boy, whose brown hair curled about
-his broad forehead, and whose face was not without
-marks of real beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Just now his brows were knit in a slight frown,
-and there was a flash of anger in his clear eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno what’s comin’ of ev’rything,” the old
-man was saying, in a querulous tone. “Here ’tis the
-first o’ April, an’ ’tain’t been weather fit ter plow a
-furrer, or plant a seed, yit.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>“Well, I don’t see as it’s <i>my</i> fault, Uncle Arad,”
-responded the boy by the window. “<i>I</i> don’t make the
-weather.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno whether ye do or not,” the old man declared,
-after staring across at him for an instant.
-“I begin ter believe yer a regular Jonah—jest as
-yer Uncle Anson was, an’ yer pa, too.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy turned away and looked out of the window
-at this mention of his parent, and a close observer
-might have seen his broad young shoulders
-tremble with sudden emotion as he strove to check
-the sobs which all but choked him.</p>
-
-<p>Whether the old man was a close enough observer
-to see this or not, he nevertheless kept on in the same
-strain.</p>
-
-<p>“One thing there is erbout it,” he remarked; “Anson
-knew <i>he</i> was born ter ill luck, an’ he cleared out
-an’ never dragged nobody else down ter poverty
-with him. But your pa had ter marry—an’ see
-what come of it!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know as it affected <i>you</i> any,” rejoined the
-boy, bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ’t’as, too! Ain’t I got you on my hands,
-a-eatin’ of your head off, when there ain’t a sign of
-a chance o’ gittin’ any work aout o’ ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I’ve paid for my keep for more’n <i>one</i>
-year,” the other declared vehemently; “and up to the
-last time father went away he always paid you for my
-board—he told me so himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“He did, did he?” exclaimed Uncle Arad, in anger.
-“Well, he——”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you say my father lied!” cried the boy, his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-eyes flashing and his fists clenched threateningly. “If
-you do, you’ll wish you hadn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—I ain’t said so, hev I?” whined Uncle
-Arad, fairly routed by this vehemence. “Ain’t you
-a pretty boy to threaten an old man like me, Brandon
-Tarr?”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon relapsed into sullen silence, and the old
-man went on:</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe Horace <i>thought</i> he paid your board, but
-the little money he ever give me never more’n ha’f
-covered the expense ye’ve been ter me, Don.”</p>
-
-<p>His hearer sniffed contemptuously at this. He
-knew well enough that he had done a man’s work
-about the Tarr place in summer, and all the chores
-during winter before and after school hours, for the
-better part of three years, and had amply repaid any
-outlay the old man had made.</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad Tarr was reckoned as a miser by his
-townsmen, and they were very nearly correct. By
-inheritance the farm never belonged to him, for he
-was the youngest son of old Abram Tarr, and had
-been started in business by his father when he was
-a young man, while his brother Ezra had the old
-homestead, as the eldest son should.</p>
-
-<p>But reverses came to Ezra, of which the younger
-brother, being successful in money matters, took advantage,
-and when Ezra died at last (worked to death,
-the neighbors said) the property came into Arad’s
-hands. There was little enough left for the widow,
-who soon followed her husband to the grave, and
-for the two boys, Anson and Horace.</p>
-
-<p>Anson was of a roving, restless disposition, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-he soon became disgusted with the grinding methods
-of old Arad, who sought to get double work out of
-his two nephews. So he left the farm, and, allured
-by visions of sudden wealth which led him all over
-the world, he followed from one scheme to another,
-never returning to the old place again, though his
-brother, Horace, heard from him occasionally.</p>
-
-<p>The younger lad was not long in following his
-brother’s footsteps (in leaving home, at least), and
-went to sea, where he rose rapidly from the ranks
-of the common sailor to the post of commander.</p>
-
-<p>He married a girl whom he had known in his boyhood,
-and Brandon, the boy who was now left to
-the tender mercies of the great uncle, was their only
-child.</p>
-
-<p>By patient frugality Captain Tarr had amassed
-sufficient money to purchase a brig called the Silver
-Swan, and made several exceptionally fortunate voyages
-to South and West African ports, and to
-Oceanica.</p>
-
-<p>But after his wife’s death (she was always a delicate
-woman) his only wish seemed to be to gain a
-fortune that he might retire from the sea and live
-with his son, in whom his whole heart was now bound.
-There was a trace of the same visionary spirit in
-Horace Tarr’s nature that had been the <i>motif</i> of his
-brother Anson’s life, and hoping to gain great wealth
-by a sudden turning of the wheel of fortune, he speculated
-with his savings.</p>
-
-<p>Like many other men, he trusted too much in appearances
-and was wofully deceived, and every penny<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-of his earnings for a number of voyages in the brig
-was swept away.</p>
-
-<p>His last voyage had been to Cape Town, and on
-the return passage the good Silver Swan had struck
-on a rock somewhere off Cuba, and was a total loss,
-for neither the vessel itself, nor the valuable cargo,
-was insured for a penny’s worth.</p>
-
-<p>This had occurred nearly two months before, and
-the first news Brandon and Uncle Arad had received
-of the disaster was through the newspaper reports.
-Two surviving members of the crew were picked up
-by a New York bound steamship, from a raft which
-had been afloat nearly two weeks, and but one of the
-men was in a condition to give an intelligible account
-of the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>From his story there could be but little doubt of
-the total destruction of the Silver Swan and the loss
-of every creature on board, excepting himself and
-the mate, Caleb Wetherbee, who was so exhausted
-that he had been taken at once to the marine hospital.
-Captain Tarr had died on the raft, from hunger
-and a wound in the head received during the
-wrecking of his vessel.</p>
-
-<p>It was little wonder, then, with these painful facts
-so fresh in his mind, that young Brandon Tarr found
-it so hard to stifle his emotion while his great uncle
-had been speaking. In fact, when presently the crabbed
-old man opened his lips to speak again, he arose
-hastily, threw down his book, and seized his hat and
-coat.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going out to see if I can pick off that flock
-of crows I saw around this morning,” he said hastily.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-“If you <i>do</i> get a chance to plant anything this spring,
-they’ll pull it up as fast as you cover the seed.”</p>
-
-<p>“We kin put up scarecrows,” said Arad, with a
-scowl, his dissertation on the “shiftlessness” of Don’s
-father thus rudely broken off. “<i>I</i> can’t afford you
-powder an’ shot ter throw away at them birds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody asked you to pay for it,” returned the
-boy gruffly, and buttoning the old coat about him, and
-seizing his rifle from the hooks above the door, he
-went out into the damp outside world, which, despite
-its unpleasantness, was more bearable than the atmosphere
-of the farm house kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>The farm which had come into Arad Tarr’s possession
-in what he termed a “business way,” contained
-quite one hundred acres of cultivated fields, rocky
-pastures, and forest land.</p>
-
-<p>It was a productive farm and turned its owner a
-pretty penny every year, but judging from the appearance
-of the interior of the house and the dilapidated
-condition of the barn and other outbuildings,
-one would not have believed it.</p>
-
-<p>There was sufficient work on the farm every year
-to keep six hired hands beside Brandon and the old
-man, himself, “on the jump” every minute during
-the spring, summer, and fall.</p>
-
-<p>In the winter they two alone managed to do the
-chores, and old Arad even discharged the woman who
-cooked for the men during the working season.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the season opened, however, and the old
-man was obliged to hire help, the woman (who was a
-widow and lived during the winter with a married
-sister in the neighborhood) was established again<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-in the Tarr house, and until the next winter they lived
-in a manner that Brandon termed “like Christians,”
-for she was a good cook and a neat housekeeper; but
-left to their own devices during the cold weather, he
-and his great uncle made sorry work of it.</p>
-
-<p>“The frost is pretty much out of the ground now,”
-Brandon muttered as he crossed the littered barnyard,
-“and this drizzle will mellow up the earth in
-great shape. As soon as it stops, Uncle Arad will
-dig right in and work to make up for lost time, I
-s’pose.”</p>
-
-<p>He climbed the rail fence and jumped down into the
-sodden field beyond, the tattered old army coat (left
-by some hired hand and used by him in wet weather)
-flapping dismally about his boots.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder what’ll become of me now,” he continued,
-still addressing himself, as he plodded across
-the field, sinking ankle deep in the wet soil. “Now
-that father’s gone there’s nothing left for me to do
-but to shift for myself and earn my own living. Poor
-father wanted me to get an education first before I
-went into anything, but there’ll be no more chance
-for that here. I can see plainly that Uncle Arad
-means to shut down on school altogether now.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll never get ahead any as long as I stay here
-and slave for him,” he pursued. “He’ll be more exacting
-than ever, now that father is gone—he didn’t
-dare treat me <i>too</i> meanly before. He’ll make it up
-now, I reckon, if I stay, and I just <i>won’t</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>He had been steadily approaching the woods and
-at this juncture there was a rush of wings and a sudden
-“caw! caw!”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>Crows are generally considered to be endowed with
-a faculty for knowing when a gun is brought within
-range, but this particular band must have been asleep,
-for Brandon was quite within shooting distance as the
-great birds labored heavily across the lots.</p>
-
-<p>The rifle, the lock of which he had kept dry beneath
-his armpit, was at his shoulder in a twinkling,
-there was a sharp report, and one of the birds fell
-heavily to the ground, while its frightened companions
-wheeled with loud outcry and were quickly out of
-view behind the woods.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon walked on and picked up the fallen bird.</p>
-
-<p>“Shot his head pretty nearly off,” he muttered.
-“I believe I’ll go West. Knowing how to shoot
-might come in handy there,” and he laughed grimly.</p>
-
-<p>Then, with the bird in his hand, he continued his
-previous course, and penetrated beneath the dripping
-branches of the trees.</p>
-
-<p>Pushing his way through the brush for a rod or two
-he reached a plainly defined path which, cutting obliquely
-across the wood lot, connected the road on
-which the Tarr house stood with the “pike” which
-led to the city, fourteen miles away.</p>
-
-<p>Entering this path, he strolled leisurely on, his
-mind intent upon the situation in which his father’s
-death had placed him.</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t a dollar, or not much more than that
-sum,” he thought, “nor a friend, either. I can’t expect
-anything but the toughest sort of a pull, wherever
-I go or whatever I take up; but it can’t be worse than
-’twould be here, working for Uncle Arad.”</p>
-
-<p>After traversing the path for some distance, Don<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-reached a spot where a rock cropped up beside the
-way, and he rested himself on this, still studying on the
-problem which had been so fully occupying his mind
-for several weeks past.</p>
-
-<p>As he sat there, idly pulling handfuls of glossy
-black feathers from the dead crow, the noise of a footstep
-on the path in his rear caused him to spring up
-and look in that direction.</p>
-
-<p>A man was coming down the path—a sinister
-faced, heavily bearded man, who slouched along so
-awkwardly that Brandon at first thought him lame.
-But the boy had seen a few sailors, besides his father,
-in his life, and quickly perceived that the stranger’s
-gait was caused simply by a long experience of treading
-the deck of a vessel at sea.</p>
-
-<p>He was a solidly built man, not below the medium
-height, yet his head was set so low between his shoulders,
-and thrust forward in such a way that it gave
-him a dwarfed appearance. His hands were rammed
-deeply into his pockets, an old felt hat was drawn
-down over his eyes, and his aspect was generally seedy
-and not altogether trustworthy.</p>
-
-<p>He started suddenly upon seeing the boy, and gazed
-at him intently as he approached.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, shipmate, out gunning?” he demanded, in
-a tone which was intended to be pleasant.</p>
-
-<p>“A little,” responded Brandon, kicking the body
-of the dead crow into the bushes. “We’re always
-gunning for those fellows up this way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Crows, eh?” said the man, stopping beside the
-boy, who had rested himself on the rock again.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-“They’re great chaps for pullin’ corn—faster’n you
-farmers can plant it, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon nodded curtly, and wondered why the
-tramp (as he supposed him) did not go along.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, mate,” went on the man, after a moment,
-“I’m lookin’ for somebody as lives about here,
-by the name of Tarr——”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you’re on the Tarr place now,” replied
-Brandon, with sudden interest. “That’s <i>my</i> name,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it isn’t now!” exclaimed the stranger, in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>A quick flash of eagerness came over his face as he
-spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not Brandon Tarr?” he added.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” replied Don, in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Not Captain Horace Tarr’s son! God bless ye,
-my boy. Give us your hand!”</p>
-
-<p>The man seized the hand held out to him half
-doubtfully, and shook it warmly, at the same time
-seating himself beside the boy.</p>
-
-<p>“You knew my father?” asked Brandon, not very
-favorably impressed by the man’s appearance, yet
-knowing no real reason why he should not be friendly.</p>
-
-<p>“Knew him! Why, my boy, I was his best
-friend!” declared the sailor. “Didn’t you ever hear
-him speak of Cale Wetherbee?”</p>
-
-<p>“Caleb Wetherbee!” cried Don, with some pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>He had never seen his father’s mate, but he had
-heard the captain speak of him many times. This
-man did not quite come up to his expectation of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-what the mate of the Silver Swan should have been,
-but he knew that his father had trusted Caleb Wetherbee,
-and that appearances are sometimes deceitful.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I <i>have</i> heard him speak of you many
-times,” and the boy’s voice trembled slightly as he
-offered his hand a second time far more warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” repeated the sailor, blowing his nose
-with ostentation, “I’m an old friend o’ your father’s.
-He—he died in my arms.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon wiped his own eyes hastily. He had
-loved his father with all the strength of his nature,
-and his heart was too sore yet to be rudely touched.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, jest before he—he died, he give me them
-papers to send to ye, ye know.”</p>
-
-<p>As he said this the man flashed a quick, keen look
-at Brandon, but it was lost upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“What papers?” he asked with some interest.</p>
-
-<p>“What papers?” repeated the sailor, springing
-up. “D’ye mean ter say ye never got a package o’
-papers from me a—a month ergo, I reckon ’twas?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t received anything through the mail since
-the news came of the loss of the brig,” declared Don,
-rising also.</p>
-
-<p>“Then that mis’rable swab of an ’orspital fellow
-never sent ’em!” declared the man, with apparent
-anger. “Ye see, lad, I was laid up quite a spell in
-the ’orspital—our sufferings on that raft was jest
-orful—an’ I couldn’t help myself. But w’en your
-father died he left some papers with me ter be sent
-ter you, an’ I got the ’orspital nurse to send ’em. An’
-you must hev got ’em—eh?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>“Not a thing,” replied Brandon convincingly.
-“Were they of any value?”</p>
-
-<p>“Valible? I should say they was!” cried the sailor.
-“Werry valible, indeed. Why, boy, they’d er made
-our—I sh’d say <i>your</i>—fortune, an’ no mistake!”</p>
-
-<p>Without doubt his father’s old friend was strangely
-moved by the intelligence he had received, and Don
-could not but be interested in the matter.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-
-<small>AN ACCOUNT OF THE WRECK OF THE SILVER SWAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">To</span> what did these papers bear reference?” Brandon
-asked. “Father met with heavy misfortunes in
-his investments last year, and every penny, excepting
-the Swan itself, was lost. How could these papers
-have benefited me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that I don’t rightly know,” replied the
-sailor slowly.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at the boy for several seconds with knitted
-brows, evidently deep in thought. Brandon could
-not help thinking what a rough looking specimen he
-was, but remembering his father’s good opinion of
-Caleb Wetherbee, he banished the impression as ungenerous.</p>
-
-<p>“I b’lieve I’ll tell ye it jest as it happened,” said
-the man at length. “Sit down here again, boy, an’
-I’ll spin my yarn.”</p>
-
-<p>He drew forth a short, black pipe, and was soon
-puffing away upon it, while comfortably seated beside
-Don upon the rock.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twere the werry night we sailed from the Cape,”
-he began, “that I was—er—in the cabin of the Silver
-Swan, lookin’ at a new chart the cap’n had got,
-when down comes a decently dressed chap—a landlubber,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-ev’ry inch o’ him—an’ asks if this were
-Cap’n Horace Tarr.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It is,’ says the cap’n.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Cap’n Horace Tarr, of Rhode Island, U. S. A.?’
-says he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That’s me,’ says the cap’n ag’in.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, Cap’n Tarr,’ says the stranger chap, a-lookin’
-kinder squint eyed at me, ‘did you ever have
-a brother Anson?’</p>
-
-<p>“Th’ cap’n noticed his lookin’ at me an’ says, afore
-he answered the question:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ye kin speak freely,’ says he, ‘this is my mate,
-Cale Wetherbee, an’ there ain’t a squarer man, nor
-an honester, as walks the deck terday,’ says he. ‘Yes,
-I had a brother Anson; but I persume he’s dead.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, he is dead,’ said the stranger. ‘He died
-up country, at a place they calls Kimberley, ’bout two
-months ago.’</p>
-
-<p>“That was surprisin’ ter the cap’n, I reckon, an’ he
-tol’ the feller that he’d supposed Anson Tarr dead
-years before, as he hadn’t heard from him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, he died two months ago,’ says the man, ‘an’
-I was with him. He died o’ pneumony—was took
-werry sudden.’</p>
-
-<p>“Nat’rally this news took the old man—I sh’d say
-yer father—all aback, as it were, an’ he inquired
-inter his brother’s death fully. Fin’ly the man drew
-out a big package—papers he said they was—wot
-Anson Tarr had given him ter be sure ter give ter the
-cap’n when he sh’d see him. Then the feller went.</p>
-
-<p>“O’ course, the cap’n didn’t tell me wot the docyments
-was, but I reckoned by his actions, an’ some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-o’ the hints he let drop, that they was valible, an’ I—I
-got it inter my head that ’twas erbout money—er
-suthin’ o’ the kind—that your Uncle Anson
-knowed of.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, the Silver Swan, she left the Cape, ’n’ all
-went well till arter we touched at Rio an’ was homeward
-boun’. Then a gale struck us that stripped the
-brig o’ ev’ry stick o’ timber an’ every rag o’ sail, an’
-druv her outer thet ’ere rock. There warn’t no hope
-for the ol’ brig an’ she began to go ter pieces to once,
-so we tried ter take to the boats.</p>
-
-<p>“But the boats was smashed an’ the only ones
-left o’ the hull ship’s company was men Paulo Montez,
-and yer father, an’—an’ another feller. We built the
-raft and left the ol’ brig, just as she—er—slid off
-er th’ rock an’ sunk inter the sea. It—it mos’ broke
-yer father’s heart ter see the ol’ brig go down an’ I
-felt m’self, jest as though I’d lost er—er friend, er
-suthin!”</p>
-
-<p>The sailor paused in his narrative and drew hard
-upon his pipe for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, you know by the papers how we floated
-around on that ’ere raf’ an’ how yer poor father was
-took. He give me these papers just afore he died, an’
-made me promise ter git ’em ter you, ef I was saved.
-He said you’d understand ’em ter oncet, an’,” looking
-at Brandon keenly out of the corners of his eyes, “I
-didn’t know but ye knew something about it already.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon slowly shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he said; “I can’t for the life of me think
-what they could refer to.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>“No—no buried treasure, nor nothing of the
-kind?” suggested the man hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess not!” exclaimed Don. “If I knew about
-such a thing, you can bet I’d be after it right quickly,
-for I don’t know any one who needs money just at
-the present moment more than I.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I believe I’ll go,” cried the sailor, rising
-hastily. “That ’orspital feller must hev forgotten
-ter mail them papers, an’ I’ll git back ter New York
-ter oncet, an’ see ’bout it. I b’lieve they’ll be of vally
-to ye, an’ if ye want <i>my</i> help in any way, jest let me
-know. I—I’ll give ye a place ter ’dress letters to,
-an’ I’ll call there an’ git ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>He produced an old stump of a pencil from his
-pocket and a ragged leather note case. From this he
-drew forth a dog eared business card of some ship
-chandler’s firm, on the blank side of which he wrote
-in a remarkably bad hand:</p>
-
-<p class="center">CALEB WETHERBEE,<br />
-<span class="indentleft"><span class="smcap">New England Hotel,</span><br />
-<span class="indentleft2">Water Street,</span><br />
-<span class="indentleft3">New York</span>.</span></p>
-
-<p>Then he shook Don warmly by the hand, and promising
-to get the papers from the “’orspital feller” at
-once, struck away toward the city again, leaving the
-boy in a statement of great bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>He didn’t know what the papers could refer to, yet
-like all boys who possess a good digestion and average
-health, he had imagined enough to fancy a hundred
-things that they <i>might</i> contain. Perhaps there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-was some great fortune which his Uncle Anson had
-known about, and had died before he could reap the
-benefit of his knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, he felt an instinctive distrustfulness of this
-Caleb Wetherbee. He was not at all the kind of man
-he had expected him to be, for although Captain Tarr
-had never said much about the personal appearance
-of the mate of the Silver Swan, still Don had pictured
-Caleb to his mind’s eye as a far different looking
-being.</p>
-
-<p>As he stood there in the path, deep in thought, and
-with his eyes fixed upon the spot where he had seen
-the sailor disappear, the fluttering of a bit of paper
-attracted his attention. He stooped and secured it,
-finding it to be a greasy bit of newspaper that had
-doubtless reposed for some days in the note case of
-the sailor, and had fallen unnoticed to the ground
-while he was penciling his address on the card now in
-Don’s possession.</p>
-
-<p>One side of the scrap of paper was a portion of an
-advertisement, but on the other side was a short item
-of news which Don perused with growing interest.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Savannah, March 3.</span> The Brazilian steamship Montevideo,
-which arrived here in the morning, reports having
-sighted, about forty miles west of the island of Cuba, a derelict
-brig, without masts or rigging of any kind, but with hull
-in good condition. It was daylight, and by running close the
-Montevideo’s captain made the wreck out to be the Silver
-Swan, of Boston, which was reported as having been driven
-on to Reef Number 8, east of Cuba, more than a month ago.
-The two surviving members of the crew of the Silver Swan
-were picked up from a raft, after twelve days of terrible suffering,
-by the steamship Alexandria, of the New York and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-Rio Line. The Montevideo’s officers report the brig as being
-a most dangerous derelict, as in its present condition it may
-keep afloat for months, having evidently withstood the shock
-of grounding on the reef, and later being driven off by the
-westerly gale of February 13th.</p>
-
-<p>Her position, when sighted by the Montevideo, has been
-reported to the Hydrographic Office, and will appear on the
-next monthly chart.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-
-<small>BRANDON COMES TO A DECISION</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> first thought which flashed across Brandon
-Tarr’s mind as he read the newspaper item quoted in
-the previous chapter was that the story of the wreck
-of the Silver Swan, as told by the old sailor, had been
-totally misleading.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, he lied—point blank—to me!” he exclaimed,
-“and with this very clipping in his pocket,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>He half started along the path as though to pursue
-the sailor, and then thought better of it.</p>
-
-<p>“He declared that he saw the Swan go down with
-his own eyes; and here she was afloat on the 13th of
-March—a month after the wreck. He must have
-wanted to keep the knowledge of that fact from me.
-But what for? Ah! those papers!”</p>
-
-<p>With this Brandon dropped back on the rock again
-and read the newspaper clipping through once more.
-Then he went over the whole matter in his mind.</p>
-
-<p>What possible object could Caleb Wetherbee have
-in coming to him and telling him the yarn he had, if
-there was no foundation for it? There must be some
-reason for the story, Brandon was sure.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently there had been papers either given into
-the hands of the mate of the Silver Swan, or obtained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-by him by dishonest means. These papers
-must relate to some property of value which had belonged
-to Anson Tarr, Don’s uncle, and, his cupidity
-being aroused, the sailor was trying to convert
-the knowledge contained in them to his own benefit.</p>
-
-<p>There was probably some “hitch” in the documents—something
-the rascally mate could not understand,
-but which he thought Brandon could explain.
-Therefore, his trip to Chopmist from New
-York to “pump” the captain’s son.</p>
-
-<p>“Without doubt,” said the boy, communing with
-himself, “the papers were brought aboard the brig
-just as this rascally Wetherbee said, and they were
-from Uncle Anson. Let’s see, he said he died at Kimberley—why,
-that’s right at the diamond mines!”
-For like most boys with adventurous spirits and well
-developed imagination, Brandon had devoured much
-that had been written about the wonderful diamond
-diggings of South Africa.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps—who knows?” his thoughts ran on,
-“Uncle Anson ‘struck it rich’ at the diamond mines
-before he died. There’s nothing impossible in that—excepting
-the long run of ill luck which had cursed
-this family.”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“If Uncle Anson had owned a share in a paying
-diamond mine, this rascally sailor would have known
-at once that the papers relating to it could not benefit
-him, for the ownership would be on record there in
-Kimberley. It must, therefore, be that the property—whatever
-it may be—is in such shape that it can be
-removed from place to place—perhaps was brought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-aboard the brig by the friend of Uncle Anson who
-told father of his death.”</p>
-
-<p>For the moment the idea did not assist in the explanation
-of the course of Caleb Wetherbee in retaining
-the papers. But Brandon had set himself to the
-task of reasoning out the mystery, and when one
-thread failed him he took up another.</p>
-
-<p>“One would think,” he muttered, “that if there
-had been any money brought aboard the brig, father
-would have taken it on the raft with him when they
-left; but still, would he?</p>
-
-<p>“According to the report the brig grounded on
-Reef Number 8, and perhaps was not hurt below the
-water line. The next gale from the west’ard blew
-her off again. She is now a derelict, <i>and if the money
-was hidden on board it would be there now</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>At this sudden thought Brandon sprang up in excitement
-and paced up and down the path.</p>
-
-<p>He had often heard of the wrecks of vessels abandoned
-in mid ocean floating thousands of miles without
-a hand to guide their helms, a menace and danger
-to all other craft. The Silver Swan might float
-for months—aye, for years; such a thing was possible.</p>
-
-<p>“And if the money—if it <i>is</i> money—is hidden
-aboard the brig, the one who finds the derelict first
-will have it,” was the thought which came to him.</p>
-
-<p>“But why should the mate come to <i>me</i> about it?”
-Brandon asked himself. “Why need he let <i>me</i> know
-anything about the papers, or the treasure, if he
-wished to recover it himself? Didn’t he know where
-on the brig the money was hidden? Or didn’t the papers
-tell that?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>He cudgled his brains for several minutes to think
-<i>where</i> his father would have been likely to hide anything
-of value on the brig. Was there any place
-which only he and his father had known about?</p>
-
-<p>This idea suggested a train of reminiscences. He
-had been aboard the Silver Swan several times while
-she lay in Boston, and had been all over her.</p>
-
-<p>Once, possibly four years before (it seemed a long
-time to him now), he had been alone with his father
-in the cabin, and Captain Tarr had shown him an
-ingeniously hidden sliding panel in the bulkhead, behind
-which was a little steel lined cavity, in which
-the captain kept his private papers.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps Caleb Wetherbee did not know about this
-cupboard, and it was this information that he wished
-to get from him. The idea seemed probable enough,
-for if he did not know where the treasure was hidden
-on the brig, what good would the papers relating to it
-be to him?</p>
-
-<p>“There may be a fortune there, just within my
-grasp, and yet I not be able to get at it,” muttered
-Don, pacing the rough path nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“Despite his former confidence in this Wetherbee,
-father must have doubted him at the last and not
-dared to take the treasure (if treasure it really is)
-when he left the brig.</p>
-
-<p>“Instead, he gave him these papers, hoping the fellow
-would be honest enough to place them in my
-hands; but, still fearing to fully trust the mate, he
-wrote his directions to me so blindly, that Wetherbee
-is all at sea about what to do.</p>
-
-<p>“Wetherbee knows that the brig is afloat—this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-clipping proves that—and he hoped to get the information
-he wanted from me and then go in search
-of the Silver Swan. <i>Why can I not go in search of
-it myself?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The thought almost staggered him for an instant,
-yet to his boyish mind the plan seemed feasible
-enough. He knew that derelicts are often carried by
-the ocean currents for thousands of miles before they
-sink, yet their movements are gradual, and by a close
-study of the hydrographic charts he believed it would
-be possible to locate the wrecked brig.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got no money, I know,” he thought, “at
-least, not much; but I’ve health and strength and an
-ordinary amount of pluck, and it will be strange if I
-can’t accomplish my purpose if the old brig only
-holds together long enough.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at the soiled card the sailor had given
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘New England Hotel, Water Street,’” he repeated.
-“Some sailors’ boarding house, likely. I
-believe—yes, I will—go to New York myself and
-see this scoundrelly Wetherbee again. He can’t do
-<i>much</i> without me, I fancy, and perhaps, after all, I
-can use him to my own benefit. I ought to be as
-smart as an ignorant old sailor like him.”</p>
-
-<p>He stood still a moment, gazing steadily at the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll do it, I vow I will!” he exclaimed at last,
-raising his head defiantly. “Uncle Arad’s got no
-hold upon me and I’ll go. I’ll start tomorrow morning,”
-with which determination he picked up his rifle
-and left the woods.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-
-<small>UNCLE ARAD HAS RECOURSE TO LEGAL FORCE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the several oceans of our great globe there are
-many floating wrecks, abandoned for various causes
-by their crews, which may float on and on, without
-rudder or sail, for months, and even years. Especially
-is this true of the North Atlantic Ocean, where, during
-the past five years, nearly a thousand “derelicts,”
-as these floating wrecks are called, were reported.</p>
-
-<p>The Hydrographic Office at Washington prints a
-monthly chart on which all the derelicts reported by
-incoming vessels are plainly marked, even their position
-in the water being designated by a little picture
-of the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>By this method of “keeping run” of the wrecks,
-it has been found that some float thousands of miles
-before they finally reach their ultimate port—Davy
-Jones’ locker.</p>
-
-<p>The average life of these water logged hulks is,
-however, but thirty days; otherwise the danger from
-collision with them would be enormous and the loss
-of life great. Many of those vessels which have left
-port within the past few years and never again been
-heard from, were doubtless victims of collisions with
-some of these derelicts.</p>
-
-<p>Several more or less severe accidents have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-caused by them, and so numerous have they become
-that, within the past few months, several vessels belonging
-to our navy have gone “derelict cruising”—blowing
-up and sinking the most dangerous wrecks
-afloat in the North Atlantic.</p>
-
-<p>At the time of the Silver Swan’s reported loss,
-however, it was everybody’s business to destroy the
-vessels, and therefore nobody’s. At any time, however,
-the hull of the brig, reported by the steamship
-Montevideo as floating off Cuba, might be run into
-and sunk by some other vessel, such collisions being
-not at all uncommon.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon Tarr realized that there was but a small
-chance of the Silver Swan being recovered, owing
-to these circumstances; yet he would not have been a
-Tarr had he not been willing to take the chance and
-do all he could to secure what he was quite convinced
-was a valuable treasure.</p>
-
-<p>Derelicts had been recovered and towed into port
-for their salvage alone, and the Silver Swan was, he
-knew, richly laden. It might also be possible to repair
-the hull of the brig, for she was a well built
-craft, and if she had withstood the shock of being
-ground on the reef so well, she might even yet be
-made to serve for several years.</p>
-
-<p>These thoughts flitted through the mind of the boy
-as he slowly crossed the wet fields toward the farm
-house.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go tomorrow morning—Uncle Arad or no
-Uncle Arad,” he decided. “It won’t do to leave the
-old fellow alone, so I’ll step down after dinner and
-speak to Mrs. Hemingway about coming up here.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-He will have to have her any way within a few days,
-so it won’t much matter.”</p>
-
-<p>He didn’t really know how to broach the subject
-to the old man, for he felt assured that his great
-uncle would raise manifold objections to his departure.
-He had lived at the farm four years now and
-Uncle Arad had come to depend on him in many ways.</p>
-
-<p>They had eaten dinner—a most miserable meal—and
-Don was washing the dishes before he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Arad,” he said, trying to talk in a most matter
-of fact way, “now that father is—is gone
-and I have nothing to look forward to, I believe I’ll
-strike out for myself. I’m past sixteen and big
-enough and old enough to look out for myself. I
-think I shall get along faster by being out in the world
-and brushing against folks, and I reckon I’ll go to
-New York.”</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Arad fairly wilted into his seat, and stared
-at Don in utter surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Go to New York?” he gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I said.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go to New York—jest when yer gittin’ of some
-account ter me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ve been of some account to you for some
-time, and any way father always paid my board before
-last fall, you know,” said Don cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Arad snorted angrily, and his eyes began to
-flash fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Paid your board!” he exclaimed. “I dunno
-what put <i>that</i> inter your head.”</p>
-
-<p>“Father put it there, that’s who,” declared Don
-hotly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>“<i>I</i> never give him no receipts for board money,”
-cried the old man. “You can’t show a one!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t suppose you did,” returned Don, with
-scorn. “You never give receipts for anything if
-you can help it. If you’d given receipts to your own
-brother as you ought, you wouldn’t be in possession
-of this farm now.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t, hey?” cried the old man, goaded to
-desperation by this remark, which he knew only too
-well to be true. “You little upstart you! Ye’ll go
-ter New York, whether ’r no, will ye?”</p>
-
-<p>He arose in his wrath and shook his bony fist in
-Don’s face. The youth looked down upon him scornfully,
-for the man would have been no match for him
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>“Now don’t have a fit,” he said calmly. “I’m
-going to step ’round to Mrs. Hemingway’s after dinner,
-and get her to come up here and look after you.
-You’ll need her any way, in a few days.”</p>
-
-<p>“It won’t matter! it won’t matter!” shrieked Uncle
-Arad, exasperated by the boy’s coolness. “It won’t
-matter, I s’pose, when I hev ter pay three dollars—<i>three
-dollars</i>, mind ye—fur a hull week’s extry
-work!”</p>
-
-<p>He fairly stamped about the room in his fury.</p>
-
-<p>“It don’t matter, eh, when I’ll have ter hire a man
-ter take your place? Be you crazy, Brandon Tarr?”</p>
-
-<p>“Guess not,” responded Don, wiping the last dish
-and hanging up the towel to dry. “You must think
-<i>me</i> crazy, however. Do you s’pose I’d stayed here
-this season without wages?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wages!” again shrieked the old man, to whom the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-thought of paying out a penny was positive pain,
-“Wages! an’ you a beggar—yes, sir, a beggar!—’pendent
-upon my bounty, as it were.”</p>
-
-<p>Don smiled at this.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a pretty sturdy beggar, as they used to call
-’em in the old days,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, any way, I’m your guardeen, an’ I’ll see if
-you’re goin’ jest when you like.”</p>
-
-<p>Don laughed outright now.</p>
-
-<p>“My guardian!” he responded. “I’d like to know
-<i>why</i> I should have any guardian. I’ve no property,
-goodness knows. And as you said about the board
-receipts, <i>where are your papers giving you any legal
-control over me?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The old man was utterly taken aback at this and
-sat down again, glowering at his nephew angrily,
-while the latter put on his hat and coat and departed
-on his errand to Mrs. Hemingway’s.</p>
-
-<p>But Arad Tarr was not the man to see either money
-or its equivalent slipping his grasp without strenuous
-efforts to retain it. His nephew represented to him
-just so much hard cash saved, for if Brandon went
-away Uncle Arad realized that the hiring of an extra
-hand would be an absolute necessity.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, the boy had not been gone long before
-the old man decided on a line of action. He struggled
-into his own coat, locked up the house, and harnessed
-a horse to a dilapidated light wagon. He was too
-careful of his good vehicles to take anything but this
-out on such a nasty day.</p>
-
-<p>“That boy is a-gettin’ too upstartish!” he declared,
-climbing into the wagon and chirruping to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-horse. “He’s jest like Anson an’ Horace. There
-was no livin’ with <i>them</i>, an’ now <i>he’s</i> got this fool
-notion inter his head erbout goin’ away!</p>
-
-<p>“But I’ll git <i>that</i> aout o’ him,” he added, with emphasis.
-“If I hain’t got no legal right ter his services,
-I <i>will</i> have, now I tell ye! Arter all I’ve done
-fur him an’ fur his shif’less, no ’count pa, I ain’t goin’
-ter let go o’ him till he comes of age—mos’ five
-years yet.”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head slowly at that thought. Five
-years of Brandon’s services on the farm would be
-worth all of twenty-five hundred dollars!</p>
-
-<p>He clucked to the horse and drove on the faster at
-that. Suppose the boy should take it into his head
-to go before he obtained the papers which he was
-sure he could have made out? The idea was quite
-agonizing.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon Squire Holt kin fix it up for me in short
-order,” he muttered, as he urged his horse into a
-faster trot. “I’ll show that boy ’t he ain’t his own
-master, by no means!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-
-<small>RELATING A MEETING BETWEEN UNCLE ARAD AND THE
-SAILOR</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> old man drove on through the mud and slush
-of the country road, the wheels of the rickety vehicle
-first rattling over outcropping rocks and boulders, and
-then splashing half way to their hubs in the yellow
-mire.</p>
-
-<p>A mile beyond his own farm he turned into a
-broader highway which trended to the right—the
-city “pike.” Woods bordered the way on either
-side and although the rain had ceased, the drops fell
-in showers from the trees. It was a nasty day and
-the horse splashed itself to the belly with the mire.</p>
-
-<p>Not many rods beyond the turn old Arad overtook a
-man walking in the same direction that he was driving,
-and as the farmer rattled up, the man stepped to
-one side and hailed him.</p>
-
-<p>He was a bronzed and bearded fellow, dressed in
-garments about as seedy as the miser’s own clothing,
-and although he lacked all of twenty years of Arad’s
-age, his back, as he stood there beside the cart path,
-seemed almost as bent.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, shipmate!” was the man’s greeting, raising
-his hand for the farmer to stop. “Goin’ toward
-the city?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>“Wal, I be a piece,” replied Arad grudgingly.</p>
-
-<p>It was something of an effort for him to speak
-civilly to a casual stranger. I presume he was afraid
-of wearing out the small stock of civility he possessed.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re goin’ in ballast, I see,” said the stranger.
-“Can’t ye stow me away there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hey?” responded the farmer, who did not understand
-the other’s figure of speech.</p>
-
-<p>“I say ye’re goin’ in ballast,” repeated the man;
-“yer wagon’s empty, ye know. Give me a ride,
-will ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, I dunno,” said Arad slowly, with a sudden
-avaricious twinkle in his eye. “I know the team’s
-empty, but th’ mare ain’t s’ limber ’s she might be, an’
-it’s hard trav’lin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Got an eye on the main chance, ain’t ye, ye old
-land shark?” muttered the man. Then he said aloud:
-“How fur ye goin’ on this road?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Bout three mile furder.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’ll ye take me that fur, for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wall, I dunno,” began Arad.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, I’ll give ye a quarter,” said the stranger,
-fishing a handful of silver from the depths of his
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>The old man’s eyes flashed.</p>
-
-<p>“Jump aboard,” he said briefly, and the black
-bearded man sprang to the seat with great agility.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re some limber,” said the old farmer, in admiration,
-pocketing the quarter and starting up his
-horse again.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>You’d</i> be if ye’d shinned up as many riggin’s as
-I hev.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>“Ye’re a sailor, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I be. No landlubber erbout me, is ther’? I
-reckon ye don’t see many sailors in these parts?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ya-as we do,” snarled Arad impolitely; “more’n’
-we wanter sometimes. I got a nevvy who was a
-sailor—a cap’n. Lost at sea erbout two months ergo.
-Lef’ me er great, hulkin’ boy ter take keer of.”</p>
-
-<p>“Great Peter!” exclaimed the sailor, with some
-astonishment. “Ye don’t mean Cap’n Horace Tarr?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do mean Cap’n Horace Tarr,” growled
-Arad. “He was my nevvy, an’ it’s his no ’count,
-wuthless boy I’ve got on my han’s. My name’s Arad
-Tarr—’n’ th’ only Tarr ’t ever knew ’nough ter make
-money an’ keep it.”</p>
-
-<p>The sailor looked at the weazened old figure curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t favor you none,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Who didn’t? Horace Tarr? I reckon he
-didn’t!” exclaimed Arad. “He favored a ca’f more’n
-he did anything else, ’cordin’ ter <i>my</i> notion. Did ye
-know him?” added the old man curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“In course I did. I sailed with him—er—lots.
-Why, I was with him this ’ere las’ v’y’ge o’ his.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye don’t mean it!”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, wal!” exclaimed Uncle Arad, roused out of
-himself for a moment. “So you was on that raf’ fur
-so long, eh? Must er been quite an experience. An’
-Horace is really dead, is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dead’s a door nail,” the sailor declared. “Can’t
-be no mistake erbout <i>that</i>. We had ter pitch him
-overboard—er—another feller and me; ’cause ’twas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-so all fired hot, ye know. Him and Paulo Montez
-both went ter the sharks.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man shuddered.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ he died without leavin’ a cent, eh? Poor’s
-poverty! I allus knew how ’twould be. ’N’ I s’pose
-Anson—fur he mus’ be dead by this time—died
-poor, too.”</p>
-
-<p>The sailor looked at the old man sharply out of the
-corners of his eyes, and after a minute spoke again.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said slowly, in confirmation of Uncle
-Arad’s remark. “I was with the cap’n at the last.”</p>
-
-<p>“What ye doin’ ’way up here?” inquired the
-farmer, with sudden interest.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I come up ter see Cap’n Tarr’s boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hey?” ejaculated the farmer. “Come ter see
-Brandon?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” said the sailor, nodding.</p>
-
-<p>“But ye didn’t see him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I did; over yonder in the woods.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, he didn’t say nothin’ erbout it ter me,”
-gasped the old man.</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe ye ain’t seen him since,” suggested the
-sailor.</p>
-
-<p>“When was yer er-talkin’ with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Long erbout two hours back, ’r so.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Fore dinner?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon so. I seen him over in the woods yonder,
-an’ talked with him quite a spell. I started ’long
-back towards the city a’gin, but I found out I’d lost—er—somethin’,
-an’ went back ter hev er look
-fur it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was it ye lost?” asked Uncle Arad, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-perhaps a momentary thought that, if it was of value
-and had been lost on his farm, he might be able to find
-it himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’ but a piece of paper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Find it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me. Must ha’ blowed away. Howsomever,
-that ain’t ter the p’int. It’s funny yer nevvy never
-tol’ erbout meetin’ me.”</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad was silent for a minute.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish ye hadn’t come ’round here, fillin’ up his
-head with fool notions,” he grumbled. “Seein’ you
-must be what set him up ter leavin’ so sudden.”</p>
-
-<p>“Goin’ to leave ye, is he?” asked the sailor quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“He <i>thinks</i> he is,” returned the farmer, with a snarl.
-“Th’ little upstart! But I’ll l’arn him who’s who,
-now I tell ye? Goin’ ter New York, is he? Wal, I
-reckon not.”</p>
-
-<p>“To New York? What’s he goin’ there fur? I
-sh’d think ye’d want him right here on th’ farm,” said
-the sailor, with a cunning smile.</p>
-
-<p>“So I do—an’ right here is where he’s goin’ ter
-stay,” declared Uncle Arad wrathfully. “I’m er-goin’
-down ter Square Holt’s ter see erbout it now.
-I’m either goin’ ter hev him bound ter me till he’s
-twenty-one, ’r git p’inted him gardeen. <i>Then</i>, I
-reckon he won’t talk no more erbout runnin’ off ter
-New York.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I reckon this place is the best fur a boy like
-him,” acquiesced the sailor. “An’ then, ye orter be his
-guardeen. S’posin’ he had prop’ty fallin’ to him now—you’d
-orter hev th’ handlin’ of it till he’s of age.”</p>
-
-<p>“Prop’ty! I guess ther’ won’t be none ter fall to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-him,” sniffed Uncle Arad. “<i>I</i> ain’t a dyin’ man, by
-no means, an’ his pa didn’t leave a cent. Didn’t even
-hev that brig o’ his’n insured.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno erbout that,” said the sailor shrewdly.</p>
-
-<p>“What don’t ye know erbout?” demanded Arad
-suspiciously. “The Silver Swan wasn’t insured, were
-she?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then what d’ye mean?”</p>
-
-<p>Arad’s piercing eyes were fixed searchingly on his
-companion’s face, but the sailor was not easily disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now, I’ll put a case to ye—jest a s’posin’
-case, now mind ye,” he said calmly, as Arad, now
-thoroughly interested in the matter, let the old horse
-walk along the muddy highway. “S’posin’ now this
-’ere Cap’n Tarr had knowed erbout a buried treasure,
-’r some sich thing, an’ he’d writ erbout it, an’ give the
-papers ter another man—his mate, fur instance—ter
-be given ter his son.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, nat’rally, if ther’ was any money in it fur
-this Brandon, <i>you’d</i> orter know erbout it, hadn’t ye?
-You bein’ th’ boy’s guardeen, you’d orter handle that
-money; un’ if <i>I</i> could help you ter the gettin’ o’ that
-money, <i>I’d</i> orter hev a part of it, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad stared at him with wide open eyes, and
-the hand which held the reins trembled visibly.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, s’posin’ the mate sends them papers to
-Brandon through the mail, ’r writes a letter erbout
-’em—<i>you’d</i> orter know it, hadn’t ye? You’d orter
-see that letter, or them papers, an’ you’d jest drop me
-a line, an’ <i>I</i> c’d help ye get ’em, ’cause I know all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-erbout sich things, bein’ a sea farin’ man fur thirty
-year.”</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Arad moistened his trembling lips before he
-could speak.</p>
-
-<p>“But this is only s’posin’,” he said quaveringly.</p>
-
-<p>“But, <i>s’pose ’twas so!</i> S’pose I seen them papers
-passed, an’ s’pose I heered Cap’n Tarr say with his
-own lips ther’ was ’nough suthin ’r other (I couldn’t
-ketch th’ word—gold, mebbe) there ter make a man
-fabulously rich?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fabulously rich!” repeated Arad.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it; fabulously rich, is wot he said. An’ if
-it’s so, <i>you</i> orter to get the letters from the post office,
-an’ open every one of ’em, hadn’t ye?”</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Arad nodded quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“O course ye had; and if the letter or papers sh’d
-come from Caleb Wetherbee—thet’s the mate’s name;
-he’s in the ’orspital yet—you’d let me know, an’ then
-we’d see wot we sh’d see, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>The sailor poked the old man familiarly in the ribs
-and slapped his own knee.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s wot we’d do, shipmate,” he said. “Wot
-say ye? Ye’ll need me, fur I reckon wherever th’
-money’s hid, ye’ll need a sailor ter go ’long with ye—er
-ter git it fur ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I couldn’t go; my health ain’t good ’nough,”
-declared the farmer. “Then—then—mebbe there
-ain’t nothin’ in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, mebbe there ain’t,” said the sailor calmly,
-preparing to dismount as the old man pulled up before
-a house; “an’ then ag’in mebbe there is. Leastways,
-I adwise ye ter jest keep yer eyes open fur letters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-f’om New York. An’ when one comes from
-Caleb Wetherbee, p’r’aps ye’ll want ter talk with me
-furder.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where—where kin I find ye?” Arad asked, in
-a shaking voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Jest write ter Jim Leroyd, New England Hotel,
-Water Street, New York—that’ll fetch me,” declared
-the sailor briskly. “Now remember, old feller,” he
-added meaningly, “ye won’t be able ter do nothin’
-with them papers ’thout me. If ye try it ye’ll be up a
-stump ter oncet. Now, take keer o’ yerself!”</p>
-
-<p>He turned away and rolled along the road toward
-the distant city, while Uncle Arad climbed down from
-the wagon.</p>
-
-<p>“Fabulously rich!” he muttered to himself, as he
-fastened the horse to the hitching post with trembling
-hands.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-
-<small>INTRODUCING “SQUARE” HOLT AND HIS OPINIONS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">“Square” Holt</span>, who was a justice of the peace as
-well as the judge of the probate court of the town,
-was a very tall and very angular individual with a
-massive development of nose (old Arad Tarr’s was
-as nothing beside it) and a wide mouth continually
-drawn into a grim line, as though such a thing as a
-smile had never crossed his imagination—if, indeed,
-he had an imagination.</p>
-
-<p>He had no children of his own (which was an exceedingly
-fortunate thing for the unborn generations)
-and had apparently forgotten his own boyhood. Boys,
-in his estimation, were made to work—the harder
-the better. In this he was of the same opinion as
-Uncle Arad Tarr.</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad was at once admitted to the front parlor
-of the house at which he had stopped, which was
-used by the judge as his office when he was not at the
-town hall. Here, seated in one of the prim hair cloth
-chairs, with which his soiled and badly fitting garments
-hardly harmonized, the old man told his story.</p>
-
-<p>“That boy, square, comes o’ the shif’lessest kind o’
-stock, ye know, ef his gran’father <i>was</i> my own
-brother,” he said, in conclusion. “You ’member
-Ezra?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>“Oh yes, I remember Ezra,” said the judge, grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, then, ye know what a shif’less loose j’inted
-critter he was in business matters, an’ Anson an’ Horace
-was as like him as two peas aout o’ the same pod.
-An’ now this ’ere Brandon hez got th’ same traits o’
-no ’count shif’lessness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely, very likely,” said the other, with sternness.
-“I’ve seen the youth, I think, out gunning quite
-frequently—a most objectionable practice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re right, square,” old Arad exclaimed, with
-eagerness. “Jest er firin’ erway good powder an’
-shot ’t cost money. Thet boy hez airnt money erhelpin’
-of the neighbors lots o’ times, ter waste on
-powder an’ shot. He’s a dretful bad boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“From what you say, neighbor,” said the judge,
-with confidence, “I should say that the proper place
-for the young rascal was the State reform school——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, no, square,” exclaimed Arad, in sudden
-terror at the thought of losing Don’s services in this
-way. “’Tain’t as bad as that. I kin manage him,
-once give me legal ’thority.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see, his pa left him ’ithout a cent, an’ I thought
-it didn’t make a bit er diff’rance ’bout his havin’ a
-guardeen—’twould er been some expense, ye know,
-ter hev th’ papers made aout; but since he’s got this
-’ere wild goose notion o’ leavin’ me, I begin ter see
-that I sh’d hev some holt on him fur—hem!—fur
-his own good, as it were.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite right,” declared the judge confidently.
-“And so the boy—this Brandon—proposes to go
-away at once, does he?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>“So he has th’ audacity ter tell me,” responded old
-Arad. “He declared he was goin’ termorrer mornin’.
-Ye know, square, I’m too broke up ’ith the rheumatiz
-ter tackle him as he’d orter be tackled. A good hidin’
-would be th’ best thing fur him, in <i>my</i> ’pinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“And in my opinion, too,” quoth the judge.
-“Now, of course this matter will have to be done
-when the court meets next week, Mr. Tarr; but I’ll
-come up and see the youth tonight, and I think that
-between us we can make him see that this is the place
-for him to stay, and that there is to be no running
-away from it,” and the judge shut his thin lips together
-very grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it, square; thank ’ee,” said the old man,
-shambling out of the house. “Dretful weather we
-been havin’, ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>Then he climbed into his wagon and drove back
-toward home, chuckling as he went.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I’ve put a spoke in <i>his</i> wheel,” he muttered,
-referring to his nephew.</p>
-
-<p>As he pursued his homeward way, however,
-thoughts of the sailor with whom he had so recently
-conversed, and of that conversation itself, filled his
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t persume thet ther’s anythin’ in it,” he muttered,
-thoughtfully stroking the wisp of beard on his
-pointed chin. “Horace Tarr never had no luck no-how,
-an’ I don’t see how he’d come ter know anythin’
-erbout this ’ere treasure. P’r’aps that sailor was
-jest a yarnin’ ter me.”</p>
-
-<p>Still, the old man could not drive the thought out of
-his mind.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>“Fabulously rich!” he repeated. “That’s what he
-heard Horace say. This ’ere mate of the Silver Swan
-was a chum er Horace’s, like ’nough, an’ I s’pose if
-ther’ <i>is</i> anythin’ in it, he’ll jes’ try ter git it himself.
-An’ then—er—Brandon’ll never see a cent of it.</p>
-
-<p>“It really is my duty ter look aout fur th’ boy’s
-int’rest,” continued the old hypocrite. “’F I’m goin’
-ter be his guardeen, I’d orter know what’s goin’ on;
-an’ this <i>may</i> mean money fur—fur Brandon.”</p>
-
-<p>He wiped his wrinkled brow with a soiled handkerchief,
-the reins lying idly on his knee the while.
-Somehow, despite the chilliness of the day, the perspiration
-stood in great drops upon his forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“S’posin’,” he thought, “ther’ should be a letter
-at Sam Himes’ fur him now, f’om that Wetherbee
-feller? ’Twouldn’t no way do fur a boy ter git letters
-that his guardeen didn’t know nothin’ erbout, an’
-ther’ ain’t no doubt thet, if Brandon got it, he wouldn’t
-show it ter me. I—I b’lieve I’ll drive ’round thet
-way an’ see.”</p>
-
-<p>He touched up the mare again and, upon reaching
-the forks of the road, turned to the north once more
-and drove along the ridge until he reached a little
-gambrel roofed cottage on the westerly side of the
-highway.</p>
-
-<p>This was the post office where Sam Himes held
-forth, and to which the lumbering old stage brought
-one mail each day.</p>
-
-<p>Here he dismounted from the wagon again, and
-went into the house, being greeted at the door by the
-customary “Haow air ye?” of the postmaster.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>“I was jes’ thinkin’ er sendin’ daown ter your
-haouse, Arad,” declared the postmaster, who was no
-respecter of persons, and called everybody by his first
-name, being familiar with them from the nature of his
-calling. “Here’s a letter fur yeou an’ one fur th’ boy—Don.”</p>
-
-<p>He thrust two missives into the old man’s hand, and
-Arad stumbled out to his wagon again, his fingers
-shaking with excitement. Glancing at the two envelopes
-he recognized one at once, and clutched it
-avariciously. It was from a brokerage firm in New
-York, and contained his monthly dividend for certain
-investments which he had made.</p>
-
-<p>The other letter, however, he did not look at until
-he had turned his horse about and started her jogging
-along toward home again. Then he drew forth the
-envelope and studied it carefully.</p>
-
-<p>It was addressed in a big, scrawling hand to:
-“Master Brandon Tarr, Chopmist, Rhode Island,”
-yet, despite the plainness of the address, old Arad,
-after a hasty and half fearful glance around, broke the
-seal and drew forth the inclosed page.</p>
-
-<p>He looked first at the signature, and finding it to
-be “Caleb Wetherbee,” he began to peruse the epistle,
-looking up from time to time to glance along the road,
-that nobody might catch him in the act of reading the
-letter intended only for his nephew’s eye.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Arad’s sight was not so keen for written
-words as it once had been, but he managed to stumble
-through the document, which read as follows:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">New York Marine Hospital</span>,<br />
-<span class="indentright">April the 2d, 1892.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Master Brandon Tarr</span>,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>:—As I am laid up in dry dock, as you might say, and
-can’t get up to see you right off as I promised your poor
-father, I am taking the first chance these swabs of doctors
-have given me, to write this.</p>
-
-<p>Me and another man was all that was saved off the raft,
-as you probably know now, for your father was hurt so bad
-that there wasn’t any chance for him. He died ten days after
-we left the brig.</p>
-
-<p>I want you should pack up your togs, leave that farm
-where no son of Captain Horace Tarr ought to dig all his
-life, and come down here to New York to see me. I shall
-be out of this hospital before long, and then we’ve got some
-work to do, like I promised your father before he died.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Tarr put some papers in my hands which is of
-great value, providing they can be used at once. It seems
-your uncle Anson died several months ago in Kimberley,
-South Africa, and while he was at Cape Town loading up
-the brig, a fellow come aboard and told your father about it,
-and brung these papers.</p>
-
-<p>Among the papers (though the fellow didn’t know it, so I
-understood from the few words poor Captain Tarr let drop)
-was a package of diamonds which he hid aboard the old brig,
-and was afraid to take with him on the raft for fear of the
-sailors that was with us. These papers I’ve got he said
-would tell where the diamonds was hid. I ain’t opened them
-yet, so I don’t know.</p>
-
-<p>Now you may think this here is no use because the Silver
-Swan is wrecked; but I don’t believe she has gone to pieces
-yet; nor your father didn’t think she would right off. We
-would have done better by sticking to her, any way, I reckon.
-She was driv upright onto the reef, and I’ll bet she’s sticking
-there yet.</p>
-
-<p>If you come down here to once, and I can get onto my old
-timber leg again, we’ll charter a boat and go down there and
-see about it. If it is as your father said—and I believe it—there’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-enough of them diamonds to make you another Vanderbilt
-or Jay Gould.</p>
-
-<p>Just you leave the land shark of an uncle that you’re staying
-with, and trust yourself to</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright2">Your true friend,</span><br />
-<span class="indentright"><span class="smcap">Caleb Wetherbee</span>,</span><br />
-Mate of the Silver Swan.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-
-<small>SOMETHING ABOUT LEAVING THE FARM</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Certainly</span> Uncle Arad Tarr had never been so
-filled with astonishment in his life as he was upon
-reading the letter of the mate of the Silver Swan to
-the captain’s son.</p>
-
-<p>Diamonds enough to make Brandon a second Vanderbilt!
-The thought almost made Arad’s old heart
-stand still.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’d er-thought it—who’d ever er-thought
-it?” he muttered weakly, folding the letter once more,
-and thrusting it into the pocket of his patched coat.</p>
-
-<p>Then he picked up the reins and drove on, shaking
-his head slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Diamonds enough ter make him rich!” he murmured,
-with an avaricious contortion of his face.
-“Jest ter think o’ Anson Tarr ever gittin’ more’n his
-bread and butter. It don’t seem ter me he c’d ha’ got
-’em honest.”</p>
-
-<p>He was very ready now, considering the guilty
-thoughts there were in his own heart, to declare the
-fortune gained by his nephew Anson to be dishonestly
-obtained.</p>
-
-<p>“It jest stands ter reason,” he went on, “that this
-’ere Caleb Wetherbee isn’t er—er trustworthy person
-to hev charge o’ Brandon—or them di’monds either.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-I mus’ hev them papers made out jes’ as soon as th’
-square kin do it, an’ then I kin find that ’ere wreck—er
-hev it found—m’self.”</p>
-
-<p>His mind at once reverted to Jim Leroyd, the sailor
-with whom he had entered into a compact to “divide
-the spoils,” and he shook his head again doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“He ain’t jes’ th’ man I’d er chosen ter do th’ work
-fur me,” muttered the old sinner; “but then, he’s the
-old sailor I know, an’ it’s got ter take a sailor, I
-s’pose, ter go ter them furrin parts.</p>
-
-<p>“He knows suthin’ erbout it already, too, an’ it
-wouldn’t do ter let him git mad an’ go an’ tell this
-’ere Wetherbee; then mebbe I couldn’t git th’ papers
-from him. But th’ fust thing is ter hev thet ’p’intment
-as guardeen fixed up.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon was in the yard when he arrived, and
-good naturedly put up the horse for him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve seen Mrs. Hemingway, uncle,” he said cheerfully,
-“and she’ll be up here tomorrow morning. I
-shall take the stage to town in the morning, and go to
-New York on the evening train, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye will, eh?” returned Uncle Arad, showing his
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Now you mustn’t get uppish, uncle. You
-didn’t suppose I would stay here very long any way,
-did you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I s’pect ye’ll stay here a spell,” replied the old
-man, with a cunning leer. “I ain’t fed an’ su’ported
-ye in lux’ry fur nigh four year fur nothin’. Ye’ll
-stay here as my ward fur yer minor’ty, now I tell ye.”</p>
-
-<p>But Brandon was laughing over the thought of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-Uncle Arad’s “luxury,” and did not hear the last of
-his speech.</p>
-
-<p>He did the most of the chores about the house and
-barn, as was usual, and helped prepare the extremely
-frugal meal which Uncle Arad’s larder afforded.</p>
-
-<p>“By George!” he thought, as he set about this latter
-task, “if I was in the forecastle of some old
-‘hooker’ I shouldn’t have worse fare than this. I
-declare I’ll go off tomorrow before breakfast. This
-will be my last meal at Uncle Arad’s table for one
-spell at least.”</p>
-
-<p>But he said nothing further about going away,
-knowing that it would only anger the old man. Before
-the dishes were cleared away after the meal, there
-was the sound of wheels at the gate, and in a moment
-somebody knocked sharply.</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad himself arose and hobbled to the door,
-admitting “Square” Holt into the miserable den of
-a kitchen. If it had been the President himself, the
-old man would not have opened the “best room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go aout an’ take the square’s boss ’roun’ ter the
-shed,” harshly commanded Uncle Arad, and Brandon
-did as he was bidden, vaguely suspecting that something
-was brewing.</p>
-
-<p>When he came into the kitchen again after doing
-the errand, the parrot beaked judge was ready for him.</p>
-
-<p>“Young man,” began the judge severely, “your
-uncle, Mr. Tarr, who has done so much for you for
-the past four years, tells me that you have made a
-sorry return for all his kindness and bounty.”</p>
-
-<p>“In what?” demanded Brandon rather sharply, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-he considered this interference on the justice’s part
-as wholly uncalled for.</p>
-
-<p>“Is <i>that</i> the way you speak to your elders, young
-man?” cried the judge, aghast. “Have you no respect
-for gray hairs?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not see why I should respect <i>you</i>, Mr. Holt,”
-replied Don, with some temper. “You’ve never given
-me cause to and I consider that your questions and
-remarks are entirely unwarranted. I propose to go
-away from my uncle’s house (to whom, by the way,
-my father paid three dollars per week board for me
-up to last fall, and for whom I have done the work
-of a regularly hired hand during most of the time I
-have been here) I propose to go away, I say, and
-nothing <i>you</i> or uncle can say will stop me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hoighty toighty, young man!” cried the judge;
-“do you realize to whom you are speaking?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do,” responded Brandon hotly. “To one
-who is known, far and wide, as the meanest man in
-Scituate!”</p>
-
-<p>The judge’s ample nasal organ flushed to the color
-of a well grown beet; but before he could reply old
-Arad put in <i>his</i> oar:</p>
-
-<p>“What d’ye mean, ye little upstart?” (Fancy his
-calling Brandon <i>little</i>, who already stood a good three
-inches taller than himself!) “What d’ye mean, sayin’
-that I was ever paid fur yer keep? Ye’ve been nuthin’
-but an expense an’ trouble ter me ever since ye come
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s an untruth, and you know it,” declared
-Don, who had quite lost his temper by this time, and
-did not behave himself in just the manner I should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-have preferred my hero to behave; but Brandon Tarr
-was a very human boy, and, I have found, heroes are
-much like other folks and not by any means perfect.</p>
-
-<p>“Young man, mark my words!” sputtered
-“Square” Holt, “you will yet come to some bad
-end.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll git all this aout o’ ye, afore I’m done with ye,
-Brandon Tarr,” declared Uncle Arad, “if I hev ter
-hire somebody ter lick ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“You wouldn’t do that—you’re too stingy to hire
-anybody to ‘lick’ me,” responded Don tartly. “Now
-I don’t propose to listen to any more of this foolishness.
-I’m going away, and I’m going away tomorrow
-morning. I’ve eaten my last meal at this house,
-Uncle Arad!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that the way to speak to your guardian?” said
-the judge, with horror in his tone. “Mr. Tarr, you
-are too lenient with this young scoundrel. He should
-be sent to the State reform school as I suggested.”</p>
-
-<p>“But then I wouldn’t get no work aout o’ him,”
-the farmer hastened to say. “I—I’ve got ter git the
-money back I’ve spent on him, ye know.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon laughed scornfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to know by what right you call him
-my guardian, Mr. Holt?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, I’m goin’ ter be yer guardeen—right off,”
-Arad hastened to inform him, before the “square”
-could reply. “The square’s goin’ ter make the papers
-aout ter oncet.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll be funny looking documents, I reckon,”
-said Don, in disgust. “I understand that Mr. Holt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-has done several pretty crooked things since he’s been
-in office, but this is going a little too far.”</p>
-
-<p>“Young man!” cried the judge, trying to wither
-the audacious youth with a glance.</p>
-
-<p>But Don didn’t “wither” at all.</p>
-
-<p>“If you know anything at all about law,” he said
-to the judge, with sarcasm, “you know that a guardian
-can’t be appointed in an hour. Legal notice
-must be given and reason shown <i>why</i> a guardian
-should be appointed. I’ve no property, and Uncle
-Arad only wants to control me so as to have my work.
-And, besides all that, I am old enough to choose my
-own guardian, and you can bet your last cent that I
-shouldn’t choose Arad Tarr.”</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t so! ’tain’t no sich thing, is it, square?”
-cried old Arad, in alarm. “Ain’t I th’ proper person
-to be ’p’inted over my own nevvy? Ther’ ain’t nobody
-else got anythin’ ter do with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“He can tell you what he likes,” responded Brandon
-quickly; “but I’ve given you the facts. Now
-I’ve heard enough of this, and I’m going to bed.”
-Then he added, turning to Holt: “When you go out
-to fleece a lamb next time, Mr. Holt, be pretty sure
-that the lamb is just as innocent as you think it.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned away without another word then and
-left the kitchen, mounting to his bedroom in the second
-story of the old house, leaving the baffled conspirators
-in a state of wrathful bewilderment.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-
-<small>ANOTHER LETTER FROM NEW YORK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Mr. Tarr</span>,” declared the judge, when Brandon
-had, for the moment, so successfully routed them and
-retired, “you are doing a very wrong thing in shielding
-that young reprobate from the reform school.
-That’s where he belongs. Send him there, sir, send
-him there!”</p>
-
-<p>“I never thought he’d ha’ shown disrespect fur the
-law,” gasped Uncle Arad weakly.</p>
-
-<p>“Disrespect!” cried the judge, “I never was so
-insulted in all my life. That boy will be hung yet,
-you mark my words!”</p>
-
-<p>“I never thought it of Brandon,” said the farmer,
-shaking his head.</p>
-
-<p>He seemed quite overcome to think that his nephew
-had dared defy the law, or its representative. To
-Uncle Arad the law was a very sacred thing; he always
-aimed to keep within its pale in his transactions.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll never be able to do anything with that boy
-here,” declared “Square” Holt. “A strait jacket is
-the only thing for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if he goes there what’ll be the use o’ my bein’
-his guardeen?” queried Arad.</p>
-
-<p>Then he hesitated an instant as a new phase of the
-situation came to him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>“If Brandon was under lock an’ key—jes’ where
-I c’d put my han’ on him when I wanted him—I c’d
-go right erbout this ’ere treasure business, an’ git it
-fur—fur <i>him</i>,” he thought, yet shivering in his soul
-at the thought of the wrong he was planning to do his
-nephew.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I dunno but ye’re right, square,” he said
-quaveringly. “I—I don’ wanter see th’ boy go right
-ter perdition, ’fore my very eyes, as ye might say,
-an’ if ye think the reformin’ influences o’ the institution
-is what he needs——”</p>
-
-<p>“The best thing in the world for him,” declared the
-judge, drawing on his driving gloves. “The <i>only</i>
-thing, I might say, that will keep him out of jail—where
-he belongs, the young villain!”</p>
-
-<p>“But—but haow kin it be fixed up?” asked Arad,
-in some doubt.</p>
-
-<p>“You leave that to me,” said the judge pompously.
-“I’ll show that young reprobate that he has defied the
-wrong man when he defies <i>me</i>. I’ll give him all the
-law he wants—more, perhaps, than he bargained
-for.”</p>
-
-<p>“But s’pose he tries to run away in th’ mornin’, as
-he threatened?”</p>
-
-<p>“All you’ve got to do, Mr. Tarr,” said the judge,
-shaking one long finger at the farmer, “is to keep a
-close watch on that young man. Don’t give him a
-chance to run away. Lock him into his room tonight
-and keep him there till we can—er, hem!—straighten
-this out. I think it will be a very easy matter to place
-the case before the court in such manner that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-necessity for immediate action will be at once admitted.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” declared the judge, warming up to his
-subject, “I wonder, sir, how you—an old man” (Uncle
-Arad winced at that), “and in feeble health—have
-been able to remain here alone with that young
-scoundrel all this winter. I wonder that he has not
-laid violent hands on you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, he <i>has</i> been some abusive, square, but I
-wouldn’t say nothin’ erbout that,” said Uncle Arad
-hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t compound villainy by shielding it,” responded
-the judge, with righteous indignation.
-“This matter has already gone too far. When our
-quiet town is to be aroused and made a scene of riot,
-such as has been enacted—er—<i>here</i> tonight, sir, it
-is time something was done. Such young hoodlums
-as this Brandon Tarr should be shut up where they
-will do no harm to either their friends or neighbors.</p>
-
-<p>“If I had <i>my</i> way,” added the judge viciously,
-“I’d shut up every boy in town in the reform school!”</p>
-
-<p>Then he marched out to his carriage, and Uncle
-Arad, after locking the door, sat down to think the
-matter over.</p>
-
-<p>If he was successful in his nefarious plan of shutting
-Brandon up in the reformatory institution of the
-State, the getting of the diamonds, which Captain
-Tarr had hidden aboard the Silver Swan, would be all
-plain sailing.</p>
-
-<p>Of course he would have to lose Brandon’s work
-on the farm; but he had seen, by the boy’s open defiance
-of “Square” Holt, that he cared nothing for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-the law or its minion—and Uncle Arad dared not allow
-his nephew out of his sight for fear he would run
-away.</p>
-
-<p>To <i>his</i> mind there was very little doubt that the attempt
-to shut Brandon up would be successful. Judge
-Holt was a most powerful man (politically) in the
-town, and he would leave no stone unturned to punish
-the youth who had so fearlessly defied him.</p>
-
-<p>Judge Holt, although disliked by many of his
-townsmen who realized that some of his methods and
-actions were illegal, still swayed the town on election
-days, and carried things with a high hand the remainder
-of the year. Old Arad chuckled to think how
-easily Brandon’s case would be settled by the doughty
-“square.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, remembering the suggestion the judge had
-made just before his departure, he rose hastily from
-his chair and quietly ascended to the floor above.
-Here Brandon and himself slept in two small bedrooms
-on opposite sides of the hall.</p>
-
-<p>The doors were directly opposite each other, and,
-although such things as locks were unknown in the
-house on any except the outside doors, the old man
-quickly lit upon a scheme that he thought remarkably
-clever.</p>
-
-<p>He obtained a piece of stout clothes line and fastened
-it back and forth from handle to handle of the
-two bedroom doors, which, opening into their respective
-rooms, were now arranged so that the occupants
-of neither apartment could open the portals.</p>
-
-<p>Then, chuckling softly over his sharp trick, the old
-farmer crept down the stairs once more to the kitchen,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-feeling moderately sure of finding Brandon in his
-room in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>But one narrow window, looking out upon the
-barnyard, was in his nephew’s apartment, and as the
-sash had long since been nailed in, and the shutters
-closed on the outside, Uncle Arad felt secure on this
-score.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll starve him inter submission, ef I can’t do it
-no other way,” he muttered angrily.</p>
-
-<p>Seating himself once more in his old armchair, he
-drew forth the two letters obtained that day at the post
-office, adjusted his steel bowed spectacles which, in
-a moment of extravagance, he had purchased of a
-traveling peddler, and opened the epistle from his
-brokers which, heretofore, he had not read.</p>
-
-<p>He slit the envelope carefully with the blade of his
-jack knife. More than one man had torn or otherwise
-mutilated a check by opening an envelope too carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>But instead of the printed form and generous draft
-which was the usual monthly inclosure of the firm,
-all the envelope contained was a typewritten letter,
-which the old farmer read with something like horror:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright5">Office of</span><br />
-<span class="indentright3"><span class="smcap">Bensell, Bensell</span> &amp; <span class="smcap">Marsden</span>,</span><br />
-<span class="indentright">513 Wall St., New York,</span><br />
-April 2, 1892.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Arab Tarr,<br />
-<span class="indentleft4">Chopmist, Rhode Island.</span></span></p>
-
-<p>Dear Sir:</p>
-
-<p>We beg to announce that owing to several accidents, causing
-a large loss of rolling stock of the road, the B. P. &amp; Q.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-has dropped several points on the market and has passed its
-monthly dividend.</p>
-
-<p>We would suggest that you hold on to your stock, however,
-as this is a matter which will quickly adjust itself.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright5">Yours sincerely,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Bensell, Bensell</span> &amp; <span class="smcap">Marsden</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The letter fluttered to the floor from Uncle Arad’s
-nerveless fingers. To lose money was like losing his
-very life, and this was no inconsiderable sum that had
-gone. He had invested a large amount in B. P. &amp; Q.
-stock, and up to the present time it had paid large interest.</p>
-
-<p>“Them brokers air thieves! I know they be,”
-cried the old man, breaking forth into vituperations
-against the innocent firm of Bensell, Bensell &amp; Marsden.
-“Ye can’t trust ’em—not an inch! I don’t
-b’lieve none o’ their lyin’ stories erbout the railroad’s
-passin’ its div’dend. I—I’ll go ter New York m’self,
-I declare I will!”</p>
-
-<p>He got up and paced the floor wrathfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Jes’ as soon as I git this matter o’ Brandon’s settled,
-an’ git th’ farm work started with Jim Hemin’way
-fur foreman, I’ll go. I ain’t er-goin’ ter be
-cheated bare faced like this ’ere.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he thought a moment, and pulling Caleb
-Wetherbee’s letter from its envelope again, read it
-once more carefully.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I might look inter this w’ile I was there too,”
-he muttered slowly. “I reckon I kin fin’ thet feller
-I saw terday—Leroyd, his name was, an’ his address
-was New England Hotel, Water Street. I shan’t furgit
-thet right off.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>He shook his head slowly, thrust both letters into
-his pocket, and then shambled off to bed in the room
-off the kitchen as, having locked his nephew in, he
-had also locked himself <i>out</i> of his usual bed chamber.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-
-<small>BRANDON’S ARRIVAL AT THE METROPOLIS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Long</span> habit had made Uncle Arad Tarr an extremely
-early riser, and it had been his custom to
-arouse Brandon as early as half past three or four
-during the summer months, and never later than five-thirty
-in winter. On the morning after he had fastened
-the door of his nephew’s room, however, the
-old man did not seek to disturb the boy, but rising
-himself before five he went about the customary duties
-of the house and barn.</p>
-
-<p>In this work he missed Brandon sadly; but having
-made up his mind that the boy was bound to leave
-him any way, old Arad was determined that he
-should go to the reform school, and therefore he
-would have to learn to do without his valuable services.</p>
-
-<p>To his unsophisticated mind, it seemed a very simple
-matter indeed for a powerful local politician like
-“Square” Holt to send his nephew to the State reformatory
-institution, “and no questions asked.”</p>
-
-<p>But under our present system of humane laws, and
-with our enlightened legal executives, an undeserved
-incarceration in prison or reform school is seldom
-known—outside of story books. Judge Holt was a
-large man in his own community (and in his own estimation)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-but he had never been beyond that community
-far enough to learn how very small a man he
-really was.</p>
-
-<p>After the arduous labor of feeding the stock and
-poultry, drawing water and bringing in wood, old
-Arad hardly felt equal to either the task of preparing
-breakfast, or eating the same; but he did at last sit
-down to what he termed “a cold snack” about seven
-o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>“That ’ere boy sleeps like a pig,” he muttered,
-with a groan, twisting about in his chair to get an
-easy position for his rheumatic limbs. “I wonder
-he hain’t begun er-kickin’ on th’ door, er suthin’, yit.”</p>
-
-<p>At that moment there was a noise behind him, and
-turning about he beheld the subject of his thoughts
-standing in the doorway leading to the floor above.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Arad gave a shout expressing surprise and
-anger, and sprang to his feet. Brandon had been surveying
-him coolly, with a smile on his face, and now he
-laughed outright.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, uncle,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>He was fully dressed in his best suit, hat, overcoat
-and all, and carried a traveling bag in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“How—how did ye git aout?” sputtered Uncle
-Arad, in wonder.</p>
-
-<p>“How did I get out?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—haow did ye git aouto’ yer room?” cried
-the old man.</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t in, therefore I didn’t have to get out,” responded
-Brandon calmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye warn’t in?” repeated his bewildered relative.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I said. I wasn’t in. When you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-crawled up stairs last night and took all that trouble
-with the clothes line, I wasn’t in my room at all. I
-expected some such delicate attention as that on your
-part, uncle, so I took the trouble to remove my things
-to the spare room at the other end of the hall, and
-slept there.”</p>
-
-<p>The farmer fairly gnashed his teeth in rage.</p>
-
-<p>“Where be yeou goin’?” he demanded, planting
-himself between his nephew and the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, uncle, I thought you knew that,” said Brandon,
-raising his eyebrows in apparent surprise. “I
-told you last night that I was going to New York.
-I haven’t changed my mind since then, though I’ve
-modified my plans somewhat. It’s such a pleasant
-morning, I believe I’ll walk down to Rockland, take
-the stage from there to Hope, and go to town on the
-train.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yeou will, hey? Wal, I guess not!”</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad backed up against the door as though to
-guard that way of escape. His lean form was trembling
-with excitement, and he was really in a pitiable
-state for so old a man.</p>
-
-<p>“Think not, eh?” said Brandon coolly.</p>
-
-<p>He came into the kitchen and deposited his traveling
-bag on a chair, and then stepped across the room
-and took his rifle down from the two hooks upon
-which it rested.</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad uttered a shout of alarm and darted away
-from the door to the opposite side of the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Goodness me! would you shoot me?” he gasped,
-fairly white to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be a fool, uncle,” responded Brandon with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-asperity, opening the hall door again and bringing in
-a gun case which had been standing in the corner of
-the other apartment. “The rifle isn’t loaded, and,
-besides, what do you suppose I’d want to shoot you
-for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you young villain, you!” groaned old Arad,
-paying for his agile movements of the moment before
-by several rheumatic twinges.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks! Well, uncle, I guess I’ll be off. I don’t
-suppose you’ll shake hands with a fellow?” and Brandon
-stopped, with his hand on the door latch.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have ye a’rested afore ye git ter Rockland!”
-the old man shouted, shaking his clenched fist at him.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better not try it,” the boy declared, with
-flashing eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Arad followed him outside, sputtering.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll live ter rue this day, ye young villain!” he
-cried. “I’ll show ye no mercy.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right; it’s all the same to me,” Brandon returned,
-and whistling cheerfully, he went out of the
-gate and started down the road with his burden of
-traveling bag and gun case.</p>
-
-<p>It was a beautiful morning, despite the rain of the
-day before. True, there were puddles of muddy water
-standing in the road and patches of dirty snow in
-the fence corners and under the hedges. But these
-drawbacks did not serve to cloud either the clear azure
-sky or Brandon’s bright hopes.</p>
-
-<p>Looking back at the old farm house once, before
-turning the bend in the road, he had a glimpse of old
-Arad driving furiously out of the yard.</p>
-
-<p>“He is going to see his familiar spirit, Holt,” muttered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-Don, with a smile, “and lots of good may it
-do him. I’ll be in town before they catch me, and
-Judge Ebenezer Holt isn’t anywhere near as big a
-man in town as he is here. I’ll risk all the harm they
-can do me now.”</p>
-
-<p>He arrived at Rockland in time for the stage to
-Hope, and at the latter village took the train for Providence.
-Neither his uncle nor Holt had appeared, and
-he made up his mind that he was well rid of them.</p>
-
-<p>Once aboard the cars he settled himself back in
-his seat, and drew forth the scrap of newspaper which
-had dropped from the old sailor’s note case the day
-before. He read it through again carefully.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got nearly fifty dollars (wouldn’t uncle be
-crazy if he knew it?) and although that isn’t a fortune,
-still it ought to keep me for some time,” he
-thought. “But, the question is, after I pump all I
-can out of that Wetherbee, what had I better do?”</p>
-
-<p>He mused a moment in silence, and then took up the
-connected train of his reflections again.</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty dollars ought to last me quite a spell—and
-take me quite a way, too. Of course, I can’t hire a
-boat in New York to go in search of the Silver Swan
-with it; but I can watch the Hydrographic Office reports,
-and find out in what general direction the brig’s
-headed. Then I’ll get as near to her as possible and
-see—what I shall see!</p>
-
-<p>“I’d give a cent” (probably he would have given
-a good deal more) “if this Wetherbee was a different
-sort of a man. It’s a mystery to me how father
-ever trusted the fellow. I always supposed that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-father had a keen insight into human nature; but a
-man will be deceived at times, I suppose.</p>
-
-<p>“But I won’t let this treasure idea keep me from
-going to work, and working hard, too. If I don’t
-get the money, why I don’t want to be roaming about
-the world like Uncle Anson, with nothing to do in
-life but hunt for wealth. I believe I’ll get a place
-on some vessel any way, for there’s a good deal of
-the sailor in me as there was in father. We get it
-from grandfather’s folks—the Brandons—I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>He arrived at Providence before noon, and spent
-the time until evening in looking about the business
-portion, of the city, and especially about the wharves.
-Then late in the afternoon he took the cars for New
-York, arriving in the metropolis at such an hour that
-to go to a hotel near the station seemed necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Although a country boy by bringing up, Brandon
-was not easily disturbed by the magnitude of life in
-the great city. In fact, he rather enjoyed it, and
-after retiring to his room at the hotel, he went to sleep
-without one apprehensive thought of what the morrow
-might bring forth.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_084.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">“GOODNESS ME! WOULD YOU SHOOT ME?”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-
-<small>THE FIRM OF ADONIRAM PEPPER &amp; CO.</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Leaving</span> his bag and gun case at the hotel. Brandon
-Tarr started out by nine o’clock on the following
-morning, his first aim being to find and interview the
-sailor who had already visited Chopmist for the purpose
-of seeing him.</p>
-
-<p>“Caleb Wetherbee, New England Hotel. Water
-Street,” was the address, and after considerable inquiry
-he found the street in question.</p>
-
-<p>It was, however, the Battery end of it and no one
-seemed to know anything about the New England
-Hotel. Still, Don was not dismayed and pursued his
-way, keeping his eyes open and himself alert among
-the many new sights and sounds of the metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>The locality grew worse as he pursued his way, but
-he was not to be frightened off by gangs of street
-gamins, or crowds of half drunken men. Still, in
-these days, Water Street isn’t as bad as it was once—at
-least, not by daylight.</p>
-
-<p>As he wandered along he could see down the cross
-streets to the wharves and water beyond, where all
-sorts and conditions of seagoing craft were gathered
-from all parts of the world. He sniffed the sea breeze,
-too, which, to him, killed all the odor of the filth about
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I want to be—a sailor,” he muttered.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>Just then something caught his eye and he stopped
-motionless on the sidewalk.</p>
-
-<p>On the opposite side of the street (the river side)
-as though crowded off Front Street by its more pretentious
-neighbors, was the office of a shipping firm.
-It was in a low brick building, dingy and dirty as were
-the structures about it, and a much battered sign over
-the door read:</p>
-
-<p class="center">ADONIRAM PEPPER &amp; CO.,<br />
-SHIPPING MERCHANTS.</p>
-
-<p>The name was what attracted Brandon’s attention
-first. He had heard his father speak of it and of the
-man who was “Adoniram Pepper &amp; Co.,” and from
-his description he had a desire to see this eccentric
-personage.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps, also, Mr. Pepper would know the locality
-of the New England Hotel, and therefore Brandon
-crossed the street and entered the dingy little front
-office.</p>
-
-<p>On a high stool by a high desk just beside the window,
-sat a man with a wonderful development of leg,
-a terrific shock of the reddest hair imaginable, and a
-shrewd, lean face, lit up by sharp, foxy eyes. His
-face was smoothly shaven and the yellow skin was
-covered with innumerable wrinkles like cracks in the
-cheeks of a wax doll; but whether this individual was
-twenty-five, or fifty-five, Brandon was unable to
-guess.</p>
-
-<p>The man (a clerk, presumably) looked up with a
-snarl at Brandon’s appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what do <i>you</i> want?” he demanded.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>“Is the firm in?” asked Don, almost laughing in
-the other’s face, for the red haired clerk had a huge
-daub of ink on the bridge of his nose and another on
-his shirt front.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>I’m</i> the firm just now,” declared the man, glowering
-at him as though he was a South Sea Islander
-with cannibalistic tendencies.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you are, eh?” returned Brandon. “Well, I
-want to see Mr. Pepper.”</p>
-
-<p>“You do, eh?” The clerk eyed him with still
-greater disfavor. “You do, eh? Well you can’t see
-Mr. Pepper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, for one reason he isn’t here—he ain’t down
-yet—he’s gone away—he’s <i>dead</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>He slammed down his pen and jumped off the high
-stool.</p>
-
-<p>“Git out o’ here you little rapscallion!” he roared,
-evidently expecting Brandon to be frightened by his
-vehemence. “We don’t allow no loafing ’round this
-office. Git, I say, or——”</p>
-
-<p>At that instant the street door behind the amused
-Brandon was opened, and with one glance at the
-newcomer the clerk’s jaws shut together like a trap,
-he turned about and bounded to his seat on the stool
-with great ability, and seizing his pen went to work on
-his books with monstrous energy.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon turned about also, surprised at these proceedings,
-and found a short, pudgy looking little man
-standing in the doorway of the office, gazing at the
-clerk with a broad smile on his red face; but upon
-looking closer the boy discovered that, although the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-mouth was smiling, the gentleman’s eyes were very
-stern indeed behind the gold rimmed eye glasses.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the meaning of this unseemly conduct,
-Weeks?” he asked in a tone of displeasure.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I was just showin’ this—this young friend of
-mine how—how a feller up to the Bow’ry acted
-t’other night,” murmured the clerk, a sort of ghastly
-red color mounting into his withered face beneath the
-parchment-like skin.</p>
-
-<p>“The Bowery?” repeated the gentleman, severely,
-and Brandon decided that this was no other than Mr.
-Adoniram Pepper himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; Bowery Theater, you know,” responded
-the clerk glibly, with an imploring side glance at
-Brandon. “’Twas in the play, ‘The Buccaneer’s
-Bride,’ you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I <i>don’t</i> know,” replied Mr. Pepper, in disgust.
-“So this is your friend, is it?” and he turned
-his gaze upon Brandon genially.</p>
-
-<p>“Our friendship is of rather short duration,” said
-Don, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“So I presume,” returned Mr. Pepper. “Did you
-wish to see me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just a moment, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll give you two moments if you like.” Then he
-turned again to the clerk and shook one fat finger at
-him. “One of these days I’ll discharge you, Weeks,”
-he said sternly.</p>
-
-<p>“I expect so,” groaned the clerk. “And then
-what’ll I do?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pepper looked at him a moment silently.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you’ll go and lie somewhere else, I suppose.
-You <i>will</i> lie, Alfred Weeks, and I suppose I might as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-well keep you here and let you lie to me, as to turn
-you loose upon your fellow men. Well, well! Now,
-young man;” he turned with a sigh from the clerk
-and again looked at Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you are Mr. Pepper?” began Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“I—sup—pose—I—am,” replied the gentleman,
-with great care, scrutinizing the face of the captain’s
-son with marked interest.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s see, what is your name?” he said: “or, no,
-you needn’t tell me. I know it already. Your name
-is Tarr, and you are Captain Horace Tarr’s son!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, I am,” Brandon replied in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew it, I knew it!” declared Mr. Pepper, shaking
-both the boy’s hands so violently that the eye
-glasses, which had a hard enough time generally in
-staying on the little man’s nose, tumbled off, and were
-only caught and saved from destruction by great
-agility on Mr. Pepper’s part.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear boy! I’d have known you if I’d met
-you in Timbuctoo!” he declared. “Come into my office
-and tell me all about yourself. I’ve been thinking
-about you ever since—er—your poor father’s death.
-I’ve got something to tell you, too.”</p>
-
-<p>He led Brandon toward the inner door, marked
-“Private,” and opening it, disclosed a comfortably
-furnished room with a fire in the grate, and a general
-air of cheerfulness about it.</p>
-
-<p>“Come right in,” he repeated, and then shut the
-door behind his visitor.</p>
-
-<p>But no sooner was the door closed than the acrobatic
-clerk was off his stool, and had his ear fitted to
-the keyhole with a celerity which denoted much practice
-in the art of eavesdropping.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH BRANDON VENTURES INTO RATHER DISREPUTABLE
-SOCIETY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My</span> dear boy, sit down!” exclaimed Mr. Pepper,
-motioning Brandon to a chair. “Sit down and let
-me look at you.”</p>
-
-<p>He himself took a chair at a desk by the window
-and studied the boy intently for several moments.
-Meanwhile Brandon was making a mental examination
-of the shipping merchant as well.</p>
-
-<p>Adoniram Pepper was a little, rotund man with a
-good deal of color in his face and very little hair on
-his head. His mouth was always smiling, but at
-times, as Brandon had already seen, the gray eves
-could be very stern indeed behind the gold rimmed
-glasses, which latter had such hard work remaining
-upon Mr. Pepper’s squat nose.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, you are the perfect picture of your
-father,” declared the shipping merchant at last. “I
-thought when I read of his death that we should never
-see his like again; but you have the promise of all
-his outward characteristics, at least. I hope you’ve
-his inner ones, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope so,” replied Brandon, pleased indeed at
-such praise of his father.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>“He was a good man,” continued Mr. Pepper ruminatively.
-“By the way, what’s your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Brandon, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, I remember now. Your father talked to
-me of you. He wanted you to follow the sea, too, and
-I suppose that is what you’ve come down here to New
-York for, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I hope to go to sea,” responded Brandon
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>Had he not remembered his experience with Caleb
-Wetherbee, without doubt Brandon would have opened
-his heart to the eccentric merchant and told him all;
-but bearing in mind the (to him) evident treachery of
-the mate of the Silver Swan, he was not ready to take
-into his confidence every friend of his father who happened
-to turn up.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought so, I thought so!” exclaimed Mr. Pepper,
-rubbing his fat hands softly together. “The sea,
-by all means, my boy. That’s where I’ve obtained my
-living—and something beside—for many years,
-though in a little different way from your father.
-Captain Tarr commanded one of my vessels before he
-purchased the Silver Swan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, so he has told me,” responded Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a sad thing—his loss at sea,” said Mr.
-Pepper.</p>
-
-<p>He still smiled, but there was moisture on his eye
-glasses, and he removed and wiped them gently on a
-silk handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>“And he left you hardly a penny’s worth?” he
-continued interrogatively.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>“I have only about fifty dollars,” Brandon replied
-briefly.</p>
-
-<p>“Only fifty dollars,” repeated the shipping merchant
-softly. “Not much—more than I had, though, when
-I went out to seek my fortune; but I had friends—powerful
-friends—and so have you, Brandon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not many of them, I fancy,” Don returned, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Not many, perhaps: but <i>some</i>,” the other declared
-with confidence, “and one of them is Adoniram Pepper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Mr. Pepper,” said Don. “I hope I
-shall be worthy of your kindness.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt of that—no doubt of that,” rejoined
-the merchant, beaming upon him benignantly. “But
-to <i>talk</i> isn’t enough for Adoniram Pepper; I want to
-<i>do</i> something for you, my boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I don’t know just what you can do for me,
-sir,” said Brandon doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know? Why, you want to go to sea, don’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; I think I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I <i>can</i> help you,” declared the merchant.
-“I’ve several vessels—three are in port at the present
-time—and it will be strange indeed if I can’t find
-a berth on one of them for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m no sailor yet; I’ve got to learn,” objected
-Don.</p>
-
-<p>“So I suppose; but I’ll risk your learning fast
-enough. Now, where would you like to go, and what
-position shall I give you?” and Mr. Pepper settled
-himself deeper into his chair, and looked as though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-he was prepared to offer Don any position he craved,
-from cook’s assistant to captain.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon felt just a little bewildered by all this, and
-probably showed his bewilderment on his face.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you what I have now,” went on Mr. Pepper.
-“There’s the brig Calypso, loading for Port
-Said—she sails tomorrow; and the clipper ship
-Frances Pepper (my sister’s name, you know) unloading
-from Rio, and bound back there and to Argentine
-ports in a fortnight; and then there’s the whaleback,
-Number Three.”</p>
-
-<p>“The whaleback?” queried Brandon in perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, whaleback; a whaleback steamer, you
-know. Didn’t you ever see one?”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ll have a chance to,” declared Mr. Pepper.
-“These whalebacks are something new. Lots
-o’ folks don’t believe in ’em; but I do. I bought the
-third one the company ever built, and it lies at one of
-my wharves now, being fitted up.”</p>
-
-<p>“But where will <i>that</i> go?” Brandon inquired with
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pepper rubbed his bald pate reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he said, “that I don’t know yet. I haven’t
-decided. I’ve got a scheme, but whether ’twill work
-or not, I can’t say. I must find a man to command her
-first. I don’t suppose <i>you’d</i> feel like doing that, would
-you?” and the ship owner laughed jollily.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid not; perhaps, though, there’d be some
-other place on her I could fill with satisfaction to
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps so. If I put her in the passenger trade,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-how would you like to be purser—assistant purser, of
-course, till you learn the duties?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I should like it,” replied Brandon, with
-some hesitation, however; “provided, of course, that
-I could take it at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? Not take it? Why not?” demanded Mr.
-Pepper.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, first I want to see my father’s old mate—one
-of the men saved from the raft, you know—about—well,
-about a matter concerning the wreck. Perhaps,
-then, if you can give me a berth, I’ll be able to
-accept it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Going over to the hospital to see him, eh? I know
-Caleb Wetherbee.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he’s out of the hospital now. He gave me
-his address—New England Hotel, on this very street—and
-hunting for the place is what brought me here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bless my soul!” cried the ship owner; “Caleb
-out of hospital? Why, I didn’t expect he’d be ’round
-for some time yet. The papers said he was pretty
-nearly done for when he got to New York. It went
-harder with him than it did with the other sailor—a
-good deal harder.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon looked at him curiously. If Caleb Wetherbee
-was a particular friend of Mr. Pepper, the captain’s
-son began to feel some doubt as to the latter’s
-sincerity.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you can tell me where the New England
-Hotel is?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it’s right along here on this side of the
-street; several blocks away, perhaps. But,” he added,
-“you don’t tell me that Caleb is <i>there</i>? Why, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-must be ’way down on his luck. I must see about
-this.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pepper wrinkled his brow nervously and Brandon
-rose.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you going?”</p>
-
-<p>“Up to see this man—this mate of the Silver
-Swan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes. Well, you tell him I’m coming up to
-see him myself, today. It’s a mystery to me why he
-should go to <i>that</i> place. I don’t understand it. How
-was he looking when you saw him—for I take it you
-<i>have</i> seen him?”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean—sick or well?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he appeared in pretty fair health, I should
-say,” replied Brandon, beginning to think that there
-was something queer about it all.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll see him myself,” declared the merchant,
-rising and giving the boy his hand. “I tell you what
-we’ll do, Brandon. If you don’t get back here by
-noon, I’ll step up and get you, and we’ll go to lunch
-together; then afterward we’ll take a look at the
-whaleback, if you like.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon thanked him and opened the door into
-the outer office, almost falling over Mr. Alfred Weeks,
-who had his head suspiciously near the keyhole.</p>
-
-<p>“Lo—looking for my ruler that I dropped,” declared
-the red haired clerk, as his employer’s eyes
-rested sternly upon him.</p>
-
-<p>But as he passed out, Brandon noticed that the ruler
-was on the high desk holding open the leaves of a
-much tattered paper novel.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>“Funny sort of fellow for a respectable ship owner
-to employ,” Brandon decided, as he made his way
-along the crowded thoroughfare. “In fact, I guess
-I’ll withhold my opinion of all three of these people
-till I know ’em better—Wetherbee, Pepper, and his
-clerk.”</p>
-
-<p>By closely scanning the signs on the buildings as he
-passed, the captain’s son finally discovered the place
-he sought. He came within an ace of not doing so,
-however, for the words “New England Hotel” were
-simply painted on a small strip of tin on one side of
-the doorway, the rest of the sign space being devoted
-to the words: John Brady, Wines, Liquors, and
-Cigars.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon hesitated a moment before entering the
-place. It was plainly a saloon of the worst type, the
-“hotel” part evidently being but a “blind” by means
-of which the bar could be kept open all night.</p>
-
-<p>Two or three disreputable men—sailors or longshoremen
-by appearance—were hanging about the
-door, but Brandon Tarr had a good deal of confidence
-in his ability to take care of himself, and finally ascended
-the steps.</p>
-
-<p>A sickening odor of stale tobacco smoke and bad
-liquor assailed his nostrils as he stepped within the
-room, and he was almost tempted to back out and give
-up his intention of seeing Wetherbee. But the man
-behind the bar—a villainous looking fellow with a
-closely cropped head and red face—had seen him and
-came briskly forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, young felley, what kin I do fur ye?” he
-asked, in what was intended as a pleasant tone.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>Deciding that he was in for it, the captain’s son
-walked forward to the bar and replied:</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to drink, thank you. I’m looking for a
-man who’s stopping here—Caleb Wetherbee.”</p>
-
-<p>The bartender eyed him curiously and repeated:</p>
-
-<p>“Caleb Wetherbee, eh? Well, I’ll see ’f he’s here.”</p>
-
-<p>He stepped back to a door leading into an inner
-room and, opening it a crack, called to somebody inside.
-There was a whispered conversation between
-the men, and the bull necked individual came back to
-the bar.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, m’ duck; he’s in dere,” he said, with a
-grin, and a motion of his thumb toward the inner door.
-“Yer don’t have ter send in no kyard.”</p>
-
-<p>Taking this as a permission to enter, Brandon
-walked across the long saloon, littered with tables and
-chairs, and its door covered with sawdust, and opened
-the door.</p>
-
-<p>The apartment beyond was as badly furnished as
-the outer room, there being only a square deal table
-and several wooden bottomed chairs. In one of these
-chairs before the table, with his head bowed upon
-his arms, was the sailor whom Brandon had seen two
-days before in the woods on his uncle’s farm back in
-Chopmist, the only occupant of the place.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-
-<small>THE OLD SAILOR WITH THE WOODEN LEG</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was only in the country—in the woods and
-sheltered fence corners—that the patches of snow
-still remained on this sixth day of April. In New
-York the sun shone warmly upon the sidewalks,
-washed clean by the shower of the night before, and
-the tiny patches of grass in the parks and squares
-were quite green again.</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of the forenoon a man stumped
-along a street leading to what remains of the Battery
-park—a man dressed in a half uniform of navy blue,
-and with a face (where the beard did not hide the
-cuticle) as brown as a berry.</p>
-
-<p>At first glance one would have pronounced this person
-to be a sailor, and have been correct in the surmise,
-too.</p>
-
-<p>The man’s frame was of huge mold, with massive
-development of chest and limbs, and a head like a
-lion’s. But his bronzed cheeks were somewhat hollow,
-and his step halting, this latter not altogether
-owing to the fact that his right leg had been amputated
-at the knee and the deficiency supplied by an old
-fashioned wooden leg.</p>
-
-<p>Still, despite his evident infirmity, the old seaman
-looked cheerfully out upon the world on this bright<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-April morning, and pegged along the sidewalk and
-into the park with smiling good nature.</p>
-
-<p>Not a beggar had accosted him during his walk
-down town without having a nickel tossed to him, and
-it was with vast contentment that the wooden legged
-sailor at length seated himself upon a bench, from
-which vantage point he could overlook the bay and
-its multitudinous shipping.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” he exclaimed, sniffing the air which blew
-in from the sea, like a hungry dog. “This is <i>life</i>,
-this is! Thank heaven I’ve got away from them
-swabs of doctors at last. Another week at that ere
-hospital would ha’ been the death o’ me. Still, I
-reckon they meant well ’nough.”</p>
-
-<p>He sat there for some time in cheerful silence, and
-drank in the exhilarating air, his pea cloth jacket
-thrown open to the breeze, baring the broad expanse
-of flannel shirt beneath.</p>
-
-<p>“A few days o’ this’ll put me right on my feet,” he
-said, with delight, “better’n all the tonics the old sawbones
-ever invented. Lord! if I’d had this breeze
-a-blowin’ inter my winder up there to the hospital, I’d
-been out a fortnight ago.</p>
-
-<p>“The old man ain’t dead yet. It was a pretty hard
-tug, I admit; but here I be!”</p>
-
-<p>He slapped his leg with such vigor that a flock of
-sparrows flew up with sudden affright from the path;
-but this energetic gesture was taken in another sense
-by the group of urchins which had gathered near by
-to talk and fight (much after the manner of their
-feathered prototypes, by the way) over the morning’s
-sale of papers.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>At the old man’s motion half a dozen of these sharp
-eyed little rascals broke away from the group, and ran
-shrieking toward him, wildly waving their few remaining wares
-in his face.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ere you are, sir! <i>Tribune</i>, <i>Sun</i>, <i>World</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Tribune</i>,” said the old sailor, laughing heartily as
-though he saw something extremely ludicrous in their
-mistake.</p>
-
-<p>“My last ’un, sir. Thankee!”</p>
-
-<p>The successful Arab pocketed his money and went
-back to his friends, while the sailor slowly unfolded
-the sheet and took up the thread of his reflections
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“Once I get my sea legs on,” he thought, fumbling
-in his pocket for a pair of huge, steel bowed spectacles,
-which he carefully wiped and placed astride his nose
-“once I get my sea legs on, I’ll take a trip up ter
-Rhode Island and see the cap’n’s boy, unless he turns
-up in answer to my letter.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor lad! he’s doubtless heart broken by Cap’n
-Horace’s death, and won’t feel much like goin’ into
-this ’ere treasure huntin’ business; but for his own
-good I’ll have ter rouse him up. It would be what the
-cap’n would wish, I know.”</p>
-
-<p>He let the paper lie idly on his knee a moment, and
-a mist rose in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind if the old brig <i>has</i> gone to pieces before
-we get there,” he muttered. “I’ve got a little
-shot in the locker yet, an’ the boy shan’t come ter
-want. I’ll do my duty by him as though he was my
-own son, that I will!”</p>
-
-<p>He picked up the paper again, and turned naturally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-to the shipping news, which he ran over carelessly,
-smiling the while. Finally his eye was attracted by
-something near the bottom of the column.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh, what’s this?” he exclaimed. “What’s this
-about the Silver Swan?”</p>
-
-<p>With great excitement he read the following news
-item, following each line of the text with his stumpy
-forefinger:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Captain Millington, of the English steamer Manitoba, which
-arrived here yesterday from Brazil, reports that he passed a
-very dangerous wreck in latitude 22:03, longitude 70:32. It
-was the hull of a brig, apparently in good condition, but with
-her masts snapped off close to the decks, and all her rigging
-carried away. The name on her stern was Silver Swan,
-Boston.</p>
-
-<p>This is the same derelict reported by the steamer Montevideo
-at Savannah several weeks ago. According to Captain
-Millington, the wreck of the brig is a great menace to all vessels
-plying between this and South American ports, as its
-course seems to be right across the great highway followed
-by most of the steamship lines.</p>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that the Silver Swan was wrecked
-over two months ago on Reef Eight, southwest of Cuba,
-grounding, according to the report of the survivors of her
-crew, upright on the rock. The captain of the Montevideo
-sighted her not far from the reef, from which she was doubtless
-loosened by the westerly gale of February 13th; but since
-that time she has floated some distance to the north and east,
-and if she follows the same tactics as many of her sister
-derelicts, she may zigzag across the course of the South
-American steamers for months.</p>
-
-<p>The cruisers Kearsarge and Vesuvius are both lying in port
-at present, and it will be respectfully suggested to the Navy
-Department that one or both of those vessels be sent to destroy
-this and several others of the most dangerous derelicts
-now floating off our coast.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>“Shiver my timbers, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>With this forcible and exceedingly salty ejaculation,
-the old sailor with the wooden leg dropped the newspaper
-to the walk, and his spectacles along with it, and
-springing up, trampled upon them both.</p>
-
-<p>But in his great excitement he noticed neither the
-torn paper nor the ruined glasses. He stumped up
-and down the walk for several moments before he became
-calm enough to think coherently.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, the blue-coated policeman on the corner had
-begun to eye him suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>“The Silver Swan afloat—a derelict!” he muttered.
-“This ’ere is a sitiwation I didn’t look for.
-An’ then, them blasted cruisers are liable to go down
-there and blow her into kingdom come any minute.
-The Silver Swan on Reef Eight was bad enough, but
-the Silver Swan afloat, at the mercy of the gales as
-well as other vessels, is worse!</p>
-
-<p>“Now, what in creation’ll I do about it? I haven’t
-heard from the boy yet, and there’s little enough time
-as it is. Why, she might sink ’most any time with
-all them di’monds the cap’n told about aboard her!</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take a steamer to get down there ahead of
-them confounded iron pots” (by this disrespectful
-term did he designate Uncle Sam’s cruisers), “but
-who under the canopy’s got a steamer to charter?</p>
-
-<p>“By the great horn spoon, I have it!” he exclaimed,
-after a moment’s thought. “Adoniram Pepper
-is just the fellow.”</p>
-
-<p>With this declaration he jammed his hat on his
-head, and stumped off as rapidly as one good leg and
-one wooden one could carry him, toward the shipping
-merchant’s office on Water Street.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-
-<small>THE OLD SAILOR’S EXCITEMENT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> the old sailor hurried along the street toward
-the ship owner’s office he became calmer, and, being
-a person who had all his life been taking greater or
-less chances in his business of seagoing, he began to
-look at the situation more composedly.</p>
-
-<p>The Silver Swan was without doubt in far greater
-danger of destruction now than she had been while
-hard and fast on the reef, but no amount of worrying
-would better the matter, and therefore one might
-accept the fact coolly. Then, besides, she had floated
-unmolested for over six weeks already, and there was
-a big chance for her doing so for six weeks or more
-to come.</p>
-
-<p>“Blast these navy vessels any way, I say!” the old
-man muttered, stumping along now at a moderate
-gait. “They probably won’t be able to find her. And
-if nothing collides with her, I reckon she’ll keep
-afloat for one while, for I can swear myself that the
-old brig warn’t injured none below the water line—she
-went on that reef jest as easy!</p>
-
-<p>“She’s got the same chance o’ staying above board—the
-Silver Swan has—as any other craft that’s
-become a derelict. Look at the schooner W. L. White,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-abandoned by her crew during the great storm of ’88.
-She floated about the North Atlantic for the better
-part of a year, before she went ashore at last on the
-Hebrides.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ then there was the Weyer G. Sargent, mahogany
-laden, floated fifty-five hundred mile, or more,
-’cording to the pilot chart, a-swingin’ ’round the Atlantic
-from New Foundland to the Azores for two
-years. An’ there may be many another good ship
-that’s got a bigger record ’n that at this very day,
-down in the Sargasso sea. Oh, it might be worse.”</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, despite this cheerful view, the old
-sailor’s forehead was knotted into a scowl as he opened
-the door of the ship owner’s dingy office and entered.
-The red haired clerk was alone at the desk and the
-door of the private office was shut.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you jail bird, are you here yet?” demanded
-the visitor impolitely, eying the clerk with exceeding
-disfavor.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is that you, Mr. Featherbee——”</p>
-
-<p>“Wetherbee, you scoundrel!” roared the sailor, in
-a voice like a bull.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes! I should say Wetherbee—er—that’s
-what I meant,” the clerk hastened to say.</p>
-
-<p>It was remarkable to notice the difference between
-the greeting accorded to Caleb Wetherbee and that
-given young Brandon Tarr shortly before.</p>
-
-<p>“So you haven’t managed to get at Pepperpod’s
-till and clear out, yet, eh?” demanded Caleb jocularly.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Weeks scowled and grinned at the same time,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-a feat that very few men can perform; but he made
-no verbal reply to the question.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?” queried the sailor, nodding toward
-the inner office. “In his den?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s busy—engaged,” Mr. Weeks hastened to
-say.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe you’re lying to me, Weeks,” returned the
-sailor, after eying the fellow a moment. “You’d
-rather lie than eat. Where’s Pepperpod?”</p>
-
-<p>“He—he really <i>is</i> engaged, sir,” declared Weeks,
-who stood in mortal fear of the brawny sailor. “That
-is, he told me to say so to anybody that called——”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t doubt it—that’s what’s taught you to
-lie,” cried Caleb, in disgust. “Well, I’m going to see
-him if he’s engaged fifty times. Cut along now and
-tell him I’m here.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Weeks slowly descended from his stool, evidently
-unwilling to comply with the request.</p>
-
-<p>“Get a move on you,” the sailor commanded. “If
-you don’t I’ll roast you over a slow fire. I’m just out
-of the hospital and I’ve got an appetite like an ostrich—or
-I’d never think of eating <i>you</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Weeks unwillingly went to the inner door and
-rapped on the panel. Then he turned the knob and
-went in, remaining a few moments, and on making his
-appearance again, held the portal open for Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor entered without a word and the clerk
-closed the door behind him; then, as on the former occasion,
-he applied his ear to the keyhole with a diligence
-worthy of a better cause.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pepper was sitting before his desk, which was
-piled high with papers and letters. The day’s mail<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-had just been sent up from the wareroom office by
-Mr. Marks, the ship owner’s trusted manager, or
-“steward,” as Adoniram was in the habit of calling
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Beginning business life more than fifty years before
-in this very office, Mr. Pepper could not bring himself,
-as his trade increased, to leave his old quarters,
-and having found his manager to be a most trustworthy
-man, he had shifted the burden of the more
-arduous duties upon his younger shoulders, and himself
-reposed contentedly amid the dust, the gloom, and
-the cobwebs of the Water Street office.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it was that few people ever saw “Adoniram
-Pepper &amp; Co.” to know him; but to his old friends,
-those of his boyhood and young manhood, Adoniram
-was always the same.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally his acquaintance was mostly among seafaring
-people, and it was no uncommon sight to see
-old hulks of sea captains and ship owners, long past
-their usefulness, steering a course for the Water Street
-office on pleasant days, where they were sure to receive
-a pleasant word from the little old gentleman,
-if he was in, and not uncommonly a bit of silver to
-spend for luxuries which “sailors’ homes” do not
-supply.</p>
-
-<p>The old gentleman sprang up at once at Caleb’s
-appearance, the unfortunate eye glasses jumping off
-the chubby little nose as though they were endowed
-with life. Mr. Pepper gave both his hands to the
-huge sailor, who indeed looked gigantic beside the little
-man, and begged him to sit down.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Pepperpod, how are ye?” cried the sailor,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-in a hearty roar that shook the light pieces of furniture
-in the room, just as his bulk shook the chair he
-had seated himself in.</p>
-
-<p>“First rate, old Timbertoes!” declared the old gentleman,
-laughing merrily. “So you’re out of the hospital,
-at last?”</p>
-
-<p>“I be, Adoniram, I be!” cried Caleb with satisfaction.
-“Never was so glad o’ anythin’ in my life.
-Them sawbones would have killed me if they’d kep’
-me there much longer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well, Caleb, you was a mighty sick man—a
-mighty sick man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I was,” responded the sailor reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>“The doctor wouldn’t let me come in to see you,”
-said the merchant, smiling jovially; “so I had to content
-myself with sending up things.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you did,” said Caleb, turning on him sternly.
-“I <i>did</i> think, Adoniram, that you wouldn’t waste your
-money on such truck as that—a-sendin’ me white
-grapes, an’ jellies, an’ bunches o’ posies.”</p>
-
-<p>He snorted in veriest scorn.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, er—er—you see, Caleb, I told Frances
-about you and she took over the things herself,” said
-Adoniram hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Hem!”</p>
-
-<p>The old sea dog flushed up like a girl and mopped
-his suddenly heated face with a great bandanna, finally
-saying gruffly:</p>
-
-<p>“You tell your sister, Miss Frances, that I am
-mightily obleeged for ’em, Adoniram. They—er—jest
-went to the right spot, you tell her; jest what I
-needed to tone me up!”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>“You’d better come up and tell her yourself, Caleb,”
-said the merchant, with a sly smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—er—mebbe I will. Thankee, Adoniram.”</p>
-
-<p>He was silent a moment, and then, suddenly bethinking
-himself of the errand which had brought him
-there, he turned upon the little merchant with a slap
-of his knee which sounded throughout the office like a
-gun shot.</p>
-
-<p>“But this ’ere ain’t what brought me here—not by
-a long chalk. Ye know the Silver Swan, Adoniram?
-Cap’n Horace Tarr’s brig ’t I was with when she
-grounded on Reef Eight, two months and more ago?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pepper nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, she’s afloat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Afloat!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I said; afloat! A-f-l-o-t-e,” responded
-the sailor, spelling the word very carefully,
-if a trifle erratically.</p>
-
-<p>“How—how can that be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ye see she went aground jest like she was
-goin’ inter stocks for repairs, and if we’d stuck by
-her, it’s my opinion Cap’n Tarr’d ha’ been alive now.”
-He stopped and blew his nose hastily. “Well, what
-is, can’t be bettered, so we’ll say no more o’ that.</p>
-
-<p>“But what I’m gettin’ at is this: she went aground
-all standin’, an’ the storm wot come up right arterwards,
-blew her off ag’in. She’s been floating, according
-to this morning’s paper, ever since.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” exclaimed Adoniram. “It’s too bad
-her hull can’t be secured for the boy. If it’s still
-sound——”</p>
-
-<p>“Sound as a dollar!”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is it floating?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>“’Cordin’ to the report of a cap’n wot sighted her,
-she’s somewheres about latitude 22, longitude 70.”</p>
-
-<p>“A pretty valuable derelict, eh, Caleb?” said the
-merchant, reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>“Valible? Well, I should say!” The old sailor
-looked at his friend curiously a moment, and then
-leaned forward and rested his huge hand on Adoniram’s
-knee. “Besides a valible cargo wot we took
-on at the Cape and Rio, <i>there’s enough diamonds hid
-aboard that brig to make the boy a second Vanderbilt</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Mercy me!” exclaimed the merchant, and this
-time the eye glasses leaped off their insecure resting
-place and fell with a crash to the floor, the splintered
-crystal flying in all directions.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’ve done it, Adoniram!” ejaculated Caleb
-in disgust. “What under the canopy a man
-like you—with no nose to speak of—wants to try
-to wear such tackle as them for, is beyond me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—er—Frances thinks they look better on
-me than other kinds of glasses,” remarked the merchant
-meekly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—hem!—I s’pose they <i>do</i> look some better
-on ye,” declared Caleb loyally, and then a slight noise
-from the other side of the door caused him to jump up
-and spring hastily to it.</p>
-
-<p>When he flung the door open, however, the red
-haired clerk was astride his high stool with a look
-of perfect innocence on his face; but Caleb was not
-reassured. He shook his huge fist at the fellow, and
-then shut the door again, turning the key in the lock
-and hanging his hat upon the door knob for further
-precaution.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-
-<small>CALEB RECEIVES A STARTLING COMMUNICATION</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Some</span> of these days,” said Caleb, with decision,
-when he had taken these precautions, “I shall wring
-that scoundrel’s neck, Adoniram. I wonder at your
-keeping him here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see, nobody else would have him,” responded
-the merchant, as though that fact was reason
-enough for <i>his</i> keeping the objectionable Mr. Weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Ya-as—one o’ your blasted philanthropic notions,”
-declared Caleb, with a snort denoting disgust.
-“Well, he’ll rob and murder you some day and then
-you’ll wish you’d heard to me. If ‘jail bird’ ain’t
-written on <i>his</i> face, then I never saw it on no man’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Caleb, what do you mean by the astounding
-remark you just made about the Silver Swan?” asked
-the merchant, drawing the sailor’s mind away from the
-subject of Mr. Alfred Weeks and his frailties.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you about it,” said Caleb, in a lower tone,
-seating himself by the desk again. “What I said is
-straight, Pepper. There is hidden inside that hulk of
-the Silver Swan, a lot o’ di’monds—how many, I
-don’t know—but enough, according to Cap’n Horace’s
-own words to make a man fabulously rich.
-They belong to his boy, Brandon, and <i>we</i> must get ’em
-for him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>“I never knew a word about the stones till we was
-on the raft. Cap’n Horace was pretty fur gone—any
-one with half an eye could see <i>that</i>—and when
-we’d been out several days an’ hadn’t sighted no ship,
-he wrote a long letter to Brandon an’ give it to me
-with a package of other papers.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got them papers right here at this identical
-minute; but I ain’t opened ’em, ’cause it ain’t my
-place to do so. They tells all about the di’monds an’
-how they come into Cap’n Horace’s han’s.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems that just afore we left the Cape a man
-come aboard the Silver Swan and brought a package
-of wot <i>he</i> thought was papers, to Cap’n Horace, from
-his brother Anson.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Anson was dead long ago, I thought,” interrupted
-Mr. Pepper.</p>
-
-<p>“So did everybody else think so; but he wasn’t.
-He was dead, though, when this feller seed Cap’n
-Horace, for he’d give the package into the man’s hands
-when he was dying, for <i>him</i> to send to Cap’n Tarr.
-But we put into the Cape afore the man got ’round
-to sendin’ ’em to the States.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>He</i> never knew what a valible thing he was a
-carryin’ ’round; but when the cap’n come to open
-the package he found a lot o’ di’monds done up in a
-separate wrapper. These he hid somewhere about
-the brig—he tells about it in this letter to Brandon,
-I b’lieve.</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted to know why he didn’t take ’em on the
-raft when we left the brig, but it seems he misdoubted
-himself about a rascally sailor we had with us—one
-Jim Leroyd.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>“This ’ere Leroyd had been snoopin’ around the
-cabin when the cap’n was given the diamonds, and he
-thought the feller suspected something. So, not
-knowing how it might go with any of us, he left the
-gems on the brig, preferring to risk losin’ ’em altogether,
-rather than to cause strife an’ p’r’aps bloodshed
-on that raft.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ I reckon ’twas lucky he did so, fur we had
-trouble enough with that swab Leroyd.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, wasn’t he the man who was saved with
-you?” asked the merchant.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s who.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me, Caleb,” said Mr. Pepper earnestly, “why
-was it he stood the experience so much better than
-you? Why, he was discharged from the hospital in
-a week, so I understand, while you show traces of
-the suffering you underwent even now.”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb closed his lips grimly and looked at the little
-man in silence for several moments. Then he leaned
-further forward and clutched his arm with one great
-brown hand.</p>
-
-<p>“He had food that I didn’t have,” he whispered
-hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>“What!” cried Adoniram, shrinking back, his eyes
-abulge.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb nodded slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“There were four of us on that raft. Paulo Montez—he
-went first. We divided the food and water, an’
-that villain Leroyd ate his all up. Then we had ter
-drive him behind his chest at the other end of the
-raft, an’ keep him there at the point of our pistols.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the cap’n went, an’—an’—<i>I had to throw<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-him to the sharks to keep him out o’ the clutches o’
-that cannibal Leroyd!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“Great heavens!” exclaimed the ship owner, shrinking
-back into his chair, his face the picture of horrified
-amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” whispered Caleb; “he dragged poor
-Paulo’s body back o’ that chest—an’—well, ’taint
-no use talkin’! I ain’t said a word about it before to
-any living creature. It’s only my word ag’in his,
-at best. But I swear, Adoniram, I’d kill the hound
-with as little compunction as I would a rat.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been sneaking ’round the hospital, inquiring
-about me, too,” continued the sailor. “He’s got his
-eye on these papers, for he see Cap’n Horace give
-’em to me. I reckon he don’t know what they’re
-about, but he suspects there’s money in it. He was
-’round to the hospital only last night, so the doctor
-told me.</p>
-
-<p>“And now, Adoniram, wot I want o’ you is to help
-me find this derelict before some o’ Uncle Sam’s
-blasted iron pots go out after her. We must get the
-boy down from that uncle’s place in Rhode Island——”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, didn’t you see him this morning?” asked
-Mr. Pepper, in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“See who?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, the boy—Captain Tarr’s son, Brandon?”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” roared the sailor. “Then he’s here in
-New York, is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—of—course,” responded the merchant, in
-bewilderment. “I thought you’d seen him again. He
-started out to call on you not two hours ago. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-said you’d given him your address—at the New England
-Hotel, just below here.</p>
-
-<p>“And what I want to say, Caleb is that I don’t
-consider it a great proof of friendship on <i>your</i> part,
-for you to go to such a place as that, even if you were
-low in finances. I’d only be too glad to have you
-come to my house and stay the rest of your natural
-life—and so would Frances.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me!—at the New England Hotel!—why the
-man’s crazy!” declared Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you stopping there?” gasped the merchant.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I? Well. I guess not! I ain’t but just got
-out o’ the hospital this blessed morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, he said he’d seen you once, and you’d told
-him to call at the New England Hotel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” roared Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>“Brandon Tarr.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, man alive, I never saw the lad in all my
-life!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” declared Adoniram with energy, “there’s
-foul play about it. When I came down this morning
-I found the captain’s son waiting to see me. He’d
-just come down from Rhode Island, I believe, and
-he’d got your address—said he’d already seen you
-once, mind you—and was going up to this place to
-see you again.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought ’twas funny you should put up at such
-a house, Caleb; but I didn’t know but perhaps you
-were ‘on your uppers’” (Caleb snorted at this), “and
-had gone there for cheapness. I told Brandon I’d
-come up after him this noon and take him to lunch.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>But Caleb was on his feet now, and pacing the floor
-like a caged lion.</p>
-
-<p>“I see it all—I see it all!” he declared. “It’s some
-o’ that swab Leroyd’s work. Why, man alive, do you
-know what the New England Hotel is? It’s one o’
-the wickedest places in New York. I know the den
-well, and the feller as runs it, too. Why, the boy’s
-in danger every moment he stays there!”</p>
-
-<p>He seized his hat and jammed it on his head again.</p>
-
-<p>“Ef anything’s happened to that boy, I’ll break
-every bone in that scoundrel’s body!” he exclaimed,
-seizing the door and throwing it wide open without
-the formality of unlocking it.</p>
-
-<p>The splintered wood and broken lock flew in all
-directions as he dashed through the doorway and
-flung himself into the street, while Mr. Pepper remained
-weakly in his chair, too utterly bewildered to
-move, and the festive Mr. Weeks dodged behind the
-high desk with alacrity, as the sailor went through
-the outer office like a whirlwind.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-
-<small>TELLING HOW BRANDON BEARDED THE LION IN HIS
-LAIR</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> Brandon Tarr entered the apartment behind
-the bar room of the New England Hotel, the man
-at the table raised his head and surveyed him surlily.
-Evidently he had been drinking, and the liquor had
-changed his mood greatly from that of the affable
-sailor who had accosted the captain’s son in the Chopmist
-woods.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, how came <i>you</i> here?” inquired the sailor,
-in no very friendly tone, gazing at Brandon, with
-bloodshot eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I came down on the train.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you lost?”</p>
-
-<p>“Guess not,” responded the boy.</p>
-
-<p>The man shifted his position uneasily, keeping his
-eyes fixed upon his visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t say as I expected to see you—just yet,
-any way.”</p>
-
-<p>“No?” returned Brandon coolly.</p>
-
-<p>“Say! wot the blazes do you want, any way?” demanded
-the sailor fiercely, after an instant’s silence.
-“It won’t pay you to be sassy here, my lad, now I
-can assure ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think so? Seems to me you’re not as glad to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-see me as I reckoned you would be. It didn’t exactly
-pay you to come ’way up to Rhode Island to pump
-me, did it?”</p>
-
-<p>The fellow hissed out an oath between his teeth
-and clinched his fist angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re too fresh, you are!” he declared.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I went up there to pump you, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what did <i>you</i> come down here for?”</p>
-
-<p>“To pump you,” responded the captain’s son, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor stared at him in utter amazement for a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Of all the swabs——” he began, but Brandon
-interrupted him.</p>
-
-<p>“See here, Wetherbee, I’ve come here for a purpose.
-My father intrusted you with some papers for
-me (though why he ever did so <i>I</i> don’t see—I mistrusted
-your ugly face the first time I ever saw it),
-and now you are trying to play me false.”</p>
-
-<p>“You know too much!” roared the sailor, rising
-and thumping the table with his clenched fist.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I <i>do</i> know too much for your good—or for
-the success of your plot,” Brandon replied, with cool
-sarcasm. “See this?”</p>
-
-<p>He took the bit of newspaper from his pocket and
-tossed it upon the table before the man.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” demanded the sailor, clutching at the
-clipping.</p>
-
-<p>“The newspaper item stating that the Silver Swan
-is a derelict, instead of being sunken, as you declared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-to me. Had I not found it in the woods after you
-left, I might have still believed your lying yarn, Wetherbee.”</p>
-
-<p>The sailor crumpled the bit of paper in his fist and
-shook the clenched member in the boy’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“Young man,” he said with emphasis, “ye think
-ye’re smart; but do ye know that ye’re likely ter git
-inter trouble ’fore ye get out o’ this place? I don’t
-’low no boy ter sass me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry for that,” said Brandon, thinking the
-fellow’s threat but mere bombastic eloquence; “for I
-reckon you’ll have to stand it.”</p>
-
-<p>His very fearlessness caused the man to hesitate
-ere he used violence, for it <i>might</i> be that the boy had
-friends within call. The sailor therefore bit his thick
-lip in fury, and poured a shower of vituperations upon
-his visitor’s head.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me tell you something else, also,” continued
-Brandon. “I propose to have those papers that
-father gave you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you do?” half screamed the man, stamping
-up and down the room in ungovernable rage.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; and no amount of swearing will scare
-me. Those papers are mine and if you won’t give
-them up peaceably, the law will make you.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the man stopped storming and became
-more tranquil.</p>
-
-<p>“So you’re goin’ ter law erbout it, be ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t think I’ll have to; I think you’ll see
-plain enough that it will be best for you to give them
-up. By your own confession you don’t know where
-the treasure is hid; <i>but I do</i>. Somehow I’m going<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-to find the wreck of the brig and get—whatever it
-was father hid. But first, I want those papers that I
-may know <i>what</i> the—the treasure consists of.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ye do? Well, how be ye goin’ ter prove that
-I’ve got the docyments?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very easily indeed,” Brandon responded frankly.
-“I’m going to look up the sailor who was with you on
-the raft. If father gave you the papers <i>he</i> doubtless
-knows it, and I don’t believe that there are <i>two</i> men
-as dishonest as you, Wetherbee.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you know where the old man has hid the stuff,
-hey? An’ yer goin’ ter see th’—th’ other sailor an’
-git his evidence, be ye?”</p>
-
-<p>The man’s ugly face turned a deep reddish hue and
-he reached out his hands and clutched the empty chair
-as though he were strangling somebody. The gesture
-was so terribly realistic and the man’s face so diabolical,
-that Brandon involuntarily shrank back.</p>
-
-<p>“You little fool!” hissed the other slowly.
-“You’ve put yourself right inter my han’s an’ let me
-tell ye I’m a bad man ter monkey with. I’ve let ye
-hev it all your own way so fur, but now ’twill be <i>my</i>
-turn, an’ don’t you forgit it! Ye know where thet
-treasure is hidden aboard the brig, hey? Then, by
-the great jib boom, ye’ll tell me or <i>ye’ll never git out
-o’ here alive</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>As he uttered the threat he sprang upon the boy
-so suddenly that Brandon was totally unprepared for
-the assault. His victim was no match for his great
-strength, and was borne to the floor at once.</p>
-
-<p>The villain’s hand upon his throat deprived the boy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-of all power of utterance, and he felt himself being
-slowly choked into insensibility.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the door between the apartment and the
-bar room was flung wide open as though a small
-hurricane had descended upon the establishment of
-the New England Hotel. Don’s villainous assailant—big
-and burly though he was—was seized in a grip
-of iron, pulled from his victim, and thrown bodily to
-the other side of the room.</p>
-
-<p>“You scoundrel!” roared Caleb (for it was he)
-in a voice that made the chandelier tremble. “Would
-you kill the lad?”</p>
-
-<p>But Brandon, now that the pressure was removed
-from his throat, was on his feet in a moment, staring
-curiously at the big, wooden legged sailor.</p>
-
-<p>“Just saved you from adding murder to your other
-sins, did I?” continued the mate of the Silver Swan.
-“Did he hurt you, lad?”</p>
-
-<p>“Guess I’m all right,” responded Brandon, feeling
-of his throat as his assailant arose to his feet, scowling
-ferociously at the newcomer.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll live to see you hung yet, Jim Leroyd!” Caleb
-declared, shaking his huge fist at the sailor.</p>
-
-<p>“Great Scott!” exclaimed Brandon; “is <i>that</i> his
-name? Why, he told me he was Caleb Wetherbee!”</p>
-
-<p>“He did, eh? Blast his impudence! Let me tell
-you, lad, if Cale Wetherbee looked like that scoundrel,
-he’d go drown himself for very shame. <i>I’m</i> Caleb
-Wetherbee, myself, and <i>you</i>, I reckon, are Brandon
-Tarr.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon was fairly stupefied by this announcement.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>“But what about the—the papers father put into
-his hands for me?” he asked, breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Your father give <i>him</i> papers, lad? Well, I reckon
-not! He’s lied to ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then he hasn’t them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not he. I’ve got ’em myself, safe and sound.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have them?” repeated Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“That I have,” replied the mate confidently, “and
-what’s more, I’ve got ’em right here!”</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture the door behind them opened and
-the red faced barkeeper came into the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Look er-here, wot’s de meanin’ of all dis, hey?”
-he demanded, eying Caleb with disfavor.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s you, is it?” said the wooden legged sailor,
-in disgust. “I know <i>you</i>, Jack Brady. Get out
-here, you walking beer keg! I’m having a private
-seance with this gentleman,” intimating the cowed
-Leroyd.</p>
-
-<p>A quick look of intelligence passed between Leroyd
-and the bartender.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re tryin’ ter kick up a shindy in dis place, dat’s
-wot ye’re at!” declared the latter, rolling up his
-sleeves, belligerently.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and I’ll kick up a bigger row before I’m
-through,” Caleb replied threateningly. “Now you
-run out and play, sonny, while I talk to my friend,
-Mr. Leroyd, here.”</p>
-
-<p>This so angered the pugilistic looking man that he
-made a dash at the big sailor; but the consequences
-were exceedingly unpleasant.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb’s hammer-like fist swung round with the force
-of a pile driver, and an ox would have fallen before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-that blow. As Mr. Brady himself would have put
-it, he was “knocked out in one round.”</p>
-
-<p>But the treacherous Leroyd, taking advantage of
-his friend’s attack on the mate, sprang upon Caleb
-from the other side. This flank movement was totally
-unexpected, and, weakened by his long confinement
-in the hospital, the mate of the Silver Swan could not
-hold his own with his former shipmate.</p>
-
-<p>Both went to the floor with a crash, and as they
-fell Leroyd tore open his antagonist’s coat and seized
-a flat leather case from the mate’s inside pocket.
-Dealing one heavy blow on the other’s upturned face,
-the scoundrel sprang up and disappeared like a shot
-through the door at the opposite end of the apartment.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop him!” roared Caleb, and Brandon, who had
-stood utterly bewildered and helpless throughout the
-scene, sprang forward to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“The papers! He’s stolen the papers!” he gasped,
-seizing the knob and trying to pull open the door.</p>
-
-<p>But the key had been turned in the lock and the
-stout door baffled all his attempts upon it.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-
-<small>HOW THE OMNIPRESENT WEEKS PROVES HIS RIGHT TO
-THE TERM</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Hampered</span> as he was by his wooden leg, it was
-several moments before the old sailor could get upon
-his feet, and the festive Mr. Brady, maddened and almost
-blinded by the blow he had received in the first
-of the fracas, would have pitched into him had not
-Brandon threatened the fellow with one of the heavy
-chairs with which the room was furnished.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll make dis the sorriest day er your life, ye
-bloomin’ big brute!” declared Mr. Brady, holding one
-hand to his bruised face, and shaking the other fist
-at the sailor. “I’ll have ye jugged—that’s wot I’ll
-do——”</p>
-
-<p>And just then he stopped, for in the doorway leading
-to the bar room stood Adoniram Pepper, flushed
-and breathless, and behind him the burly forms of
-two blue-coated policemen.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank goodness, the boy is safe!” gasped the
-little merchant. “Are <i>you</i> hurt, Caleb?”</p>
-
-<p>“Some shaken up, but that’s all, shipmate,” declared
-the mate of the Silver Swan. “I got here just
-in time to keep that brute Leroyd from choking the
-lad to death.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mercy! and where is he now?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>“Skipped, I reckon,” responded Caleb briefly,
-brushing the sawdust off his clothing.</p>
-
-<p>“But he’s stolen the papers,” said Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“Not the papers your father gave Caleb?” cried
-the little man. “He must be captured at once!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he robbed me,” said Caleb slowly; “but
-whether he got anything o’ much value or not is another
-question. Let’s get out o’ here, ’Doniram, and
-take account o’ cargo.”</p>
-
-<p>Just here the policemen crowded into the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Has your man got away, sir?” one of them asked
-Mr. Pepper.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid he has, officer—unless you want this
-fellow arrested, Caleb?” indicating the saloon keeper.</p>
-
-<p>At this Brady began to storm and rave disgracefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, quit that, Brady!” commanded officer Mullen.
-“You’re deep in this, I’ve no doubt. You want
-to walk a chalk line now, or I’ll have your license taken
-away. D’ye understand?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Brady subsided at this threat, and the party
-filed out.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right now, officer,” said Adoniram, slipping
-something into Mr. Mullen’s hand. “We won’t
-trouble you further. If anything more comes of it,
-I’ll step around and see the captain myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The two policemen nodded and Mr. Pepper led his
-friends back to his office.</p>
-
-<p>On the way Brandon explained his previous connection
-with the villain Leroyd, and recounted what
-had occurred at the New England Hotel before Caleb’s
-timely appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon you were just what Leroyd told<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-you—a little too fresh,” was the comment of the mate
-of the Silver Swan. “’Twas only by luck that ye
-warn’t garroted by that scoundrel. There’s been more
-than one man gone into that dive that never come out
-arterwards, now I tell ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are wrong, Caleb,” declared Mr. Pepper confidently
-“It was not luck—’twas Providence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe you’re right, old man,” returned the mate.
-“Now, lad, come in here and tell us all about yourself
-before we do anything further. We want to get a
-thorough understanding o’ the case.”</p>
-
-<p>They had arrived at the shipping merchant’s office,
-but it was locked and Mr. Pepper had to use his own
-private pass key.</p>
-
-<p>“Weeks has gone out,” the old gentleman explained,
-ushering them in. “It’s his dinner hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad the swab’s out of the way,” growled the
-sailor. “I don’t see what you keep that prying, sneaking
-rascal about here for any way. He’ll do you some
-damage some time, ’Doniram.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I should dislike to discharge him,” said the
-old gentleman gently. “He—he is an unfortunate
-fellow——”</p>
-
-<p>“Unfortunate!” snorted the mate in disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, unfortunate, Caleb. Even his face is against
-him. Who would want such a looking fellow around
-an office? And office work is all he knows how to do.
-Marks wouldn’t keep him down to the other office, so
-I <i>had</i> to take him up here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Had to!”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb stared at his old friend in pitying surprise.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>“’Doniram,” he said, “you—make—me—weary!”</p>
-
-<p>Then he shook his head sadly and dropped heavily
-into a chair he had formerly occupied near the merchant’s
-desk.</p>
-
-<p>“Come,” he said, turning to Brandon, holding out
-his hand affectionately, “come and sit down here beside
-me, my lad. We want to know each other better—you
-and I—and I’ve got a good deal to say to ye.</p>
-
-<p>“Your father’s last words to me was ‘Remember,
-Cale!’ an’ they referred to the fac’ that he’d left me
-in charge o’ you—an’ of your property. An’ I’m
-rememberin’, though that hospital business delayed me
-a good bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Caleb,” said the merchant nervously, “what
-will you do about those—those diamonds,” and he
-looked at Brandon smilingly, “now that that scamp
-has stolen the captain’s papers?”</p>
-
-<p>“Diamonds?” echoed Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, diamonds—lashin’s of ’em!” the sailor declared
-earnestly. “If yer father was ter be believed—an’
-<i>you</i> know whether or not to believe him as well
-as <i>I</i>—there’s di’monds hid aboard that brig, enough
-to make you a rich man, my lad.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the papers?” repeated Mr. Pepper.</p>
-
-<p>“Blast the papers!” exclaimed the sailor, slapping
-his thigh impatiently. “They don’t amount to a row
-of pins.”</p>
-
-<p>“But they’ll tell that Leroyd all about the treasure
-and just where to find it,” said Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“And you won’t know <i>where</i> to look for it aboard
-the Silver Swan,” Mr. Pepper chimed in.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>“I won’t hey?” responded Caleb with a snort of
-disgust. “Sure of that, be ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I know where father would place the gems
-for safe keeping,” said Brandon, slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, an’ I reckon <i>I</i> know, too,” the mate declared.
-“There’s a sliding panel in the cabin—eh,
-lad?”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon nodded acquiescence.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that’s it,” went on the sailor; “it come to me
-just now when I was a-thinkin’ of the matter. We
-useter keep our private papers in that ’ere hole in the
-bulkhead. It’s the third panel on the port side front
-the companionway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sh!” exclaimed the merchant, “suppose somebody
-should overhear you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that sneak Weeks isn’t here,” replied Caleb
-carelessly. “You don’t have anybody else working
-for you here who would snoop like him, do you, ’Doniram?”</p>
-
-<p>The merchant shook his head with a mild smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said the mate of the Silver Swan,
-“we can get down to business. We understand each
-other, eh, lad? Ye’ll put yourself under our care, an’
-’Doniram an’ I’ll see you through this thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m only too glad to have your help,” cried Don
-warmly. “Alone I can do nothing; but with you to
-help me, Mr. Wetherbee——”</p>
-
-<p>“Drop that!” thundered Caleb. “Don’t you ‘mister’
-me, blast yer impudence! I’m Cale Wetherbee
-to <i>you</i>, as I was to yer father.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he added more mildly:</p>
-
-<p>“You can count on me, Don. And you can count<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-on Pepperpod, here, every time, eh?” and he nodded
-to the ship owner.</p>
-
-<p>“That you can, Don,” rejoined Mr. Pepper. “And
-already I have a vessel I can place at your disposal.
-It is the whaleback steamer I spoke of this morning.
-You shall have her and go in quest of the Silver
-Swan.”</p>
-
-<p>“A whaleback, hey?” repeated Caleb quickly, with
-a doubtful shake of his head. “I don’t know much
-about them new fangled things.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you shall before long,” Mr. Pepper declared.
-“With her you can beat any of these cruisers to the
-brig, and get the diamonds before they blow her sky
-high.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, let us go out to lunch; it is long past my
-regular hour,” he continued. “I will close the office
-for the day and you must both go home with me.
-Wait, I’ll telephone to Marks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me git my clo’es brushed before we go up
-town, ’Doniram,” exclaimed Caleb, in sudden haste.
-“I’ve got sawdust all over me.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” the merchant responded, giving the
-call for the wareroom office (it was a private line);
-“you’ll find a whisk broom in that wardrobe there.
-Don can brush you.”</p>
-
-<p>The sailor arose and walked over to the wardrobe.</p>
-
-<p>“Dem the thing! how it sticks,” he remarked impatiently,
-tugging at the handle.</p>
-
-<p>Then he exerted his great strength and the door
-flew open with surprising suddenness, and with it,
-to the startled amazement of the entire party, came the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-red haired clerk, Alfred Weeks, clinging vainly to the
-inner knob.</p>
-
-<p>The momentum of his exit fairly threw him across
-the small room, where he dropped into a chair which
-happened to stand handy, gazing, the picture of fright,
-at the infuriated sailor.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-
-<small>BRANDON LISTENS TO A SHORT FAMILY HISTORY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Weeks!</span> Weeks! I wouldn’t have thought it of
-you,” exclaimed Adoniram Pepper sorrowfully, turning
-away from the ’phone to gaze sternly at the rascally
-clerk.</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t have thought it of him?” roared Caleb.
-“’Doniram, you’re a fool! It’s just exactly what you
-might have expected of him. Oh, you—you swab,
-you!” he added, shaking his fist at the trembling culprit.
-“I wish I had you aboard ship. If I wouldn’t
-haze you!”</p>
-
-<p>Then he sprang at the fellow, and seizing him ere
-he could escape, tossed him face downward over his
-knee, and, while he held him with one hand, delivered
-a most energetic spanking with the other huge palm,
-to his squirming prisoner’s manifest discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! oh! oh!” roared Weeks, almost black in the
-face. “Oh, he’s a-murderin’ me I Let me go! Oh!
-oh!”</p>
-
-<p>“Stop your bawling, Alfred,” Mr. Pepper commanded,
-as the breathless sailor released the scamp
-and placed him upright with no gentle force.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon, who had been well nigh convulsed with
-laughter at the mode of punishment the clerk had received,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-had not thought it possible for the jolly Adoniram
-to ever appear so stern as he did now.</p>
-
-<p>“Weeks,” continued the merchant, the customary
-smile totally eradicated from his features, “Weeks, I
-have done my best for you for ten years. I’ve helped
-you the best I know how. I have shielded you from
-those who would have given you over to justice more
-than once, for your petty crimes. Now, sir, I am
-through with you!</p>
-
-<p>“This offense is unpardonable. You may go down
-to the other office and draw your salary to the end of
-the month, and never let me see you again until you
-have become a respectable member of society, and
-shown by your actions, not by words, that you are
-such. Go at once, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>Weeks hesitated an instant as though he contemplated
-making an appeal to his old employer for mercy;
-but the look on Mr. Pepper’s face forbade that. The
-old merchant was an embodiment of justice now;
-mercy for the rascally clerk had flown.</p>
-
-<p>Picking up his hat, he limped silently to the door,
-but ere he disappeared he turned and looked at Brandon,
-who, in spite of himself, was unable to keep his
-face straight. He glared at the laughing youth an instant,
-and then the real nature of the fellow flashed
-out from beneath the veneer of apparently harmless
-impudence and cunning.</p>
-
-<p>His dark, old looking face flushed deeply red, his
-narrow eyes flashed with sudden rage, and he shook
-his clenched fist at Brandon Tarr with insane fury.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll even things up with <i>you</i>, you young whelp!”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-he hissed, and in another moment limped out of the
-place.</p>
-
-<p>“A nice fellow you’ve harbored, there, ’Doniram,
-just as I told you,” Caleb declared. “He’ll knife you
-some dark night, if you’re not careful.”</p>
-
-<p>But Adoniram only shook his head sadly and returned
-to the telephone. After talking to his manager
-several minutes, he picked up his hat and gloves and
-led the way out of the office, locking it behind him.</p>
-
-<p>“Adoniram Pepper &amp; Co. will take a holiday today,”
-he said, his old jovial smile returning. “First
-let us go to lunch.”</p>
-
-<p>They were all too hungry by this time to go far
-before attending to the wants of the inner man; but
-notwithstanding that they were so far down town,
-Adoniram was able to introduce them to a very comfortable
-looking little chop house. He also, despite
-their protestations, settled the checks himself, and then
-telephoned to Brandon’s hotel and to the Marine Hospital
-for the luggage of both his guests to be sent to
-his up town residence.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll go up leisurely and give the baggage a
-chance to get there before us,” said the merchant, as
-they left the restaurant; “then Frances will know that
-company is coming.”</p>
-
-<p>So they saw a bit of New York for Brandon’s benefit,
-arriving at the large, though plain looking house
-in which the merchant resided, just before six o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon noticed, as they neared their destination,
-that the old sailor seemed ill at ease, and that the conversation
-was being mostly carried on by Mr. Pepper
-and himself. He did not understand this until they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-were in the house, and the old merchant had gone to
-summon his sister to meet his guests.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb seemed terribly nervous. He sat on the edge
-of the substantial, upholstered chair and twisted his
-hat between his huge hands, his face and neck of
-flaming hue, while his eyes were downcast, and he
-started at every sound.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, as the merchant did not return at once,
-Caleb drew forth his bandanna and blew his nose furiously.</p>
-
-<p>“This ’ere is terrible, isn’t it, lad?” he muttered
-hoarsely, to Brandon, who had been eying him in great
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“What is, Caleb?”</p>
-
-<p>“This ’ere meeting ladies, ye know,” responded the
-mate of the Silver Swan in a mild roar, laboring under
-the delusion that he was speaking very low indeed.</p>
-
-<p>“There isn’t but one, Caleb,” replied Don encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I know it,” said Caleb, with a groan; “but
-she’s—she’s th’ spankin’est craft ever yer see! Sails
-allus new and fresh, riggin’ all taut—I tell ye, lad,
-it allus rattles me for fear I ain’t all trim.”</p>
-
-<p>“You look first rate, Caleb,” Brandon assured him,
-stifling a desire to laugh as the old seaman evidently
-considered the occasion so serious. “I wouldn’t
-worry.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s easy enough for <i>you</i> to say,” returned
-Caleb, with another shake of his head. “You
-wouldn’t be Cap’n Horace’s son if ye didn’t find it all
-plain sailin’ in a city droorin’ room, same’s on th’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-ship’s deck; but with me it’s different. Oh, Lordy!
-she’s hove in sight.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a rustle of silken skirts, and Brandon
-looked up to see Miss Frances Pepper entering the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>She was short and plump like her brother, though
-of considerable less weight, and she smiled like him.
-But otherwise Miss Pepper was rather prim and exact
-in her appearance, manner, and dress. As the sailor
-had said “her rigging was all taut,” and she looked
-as though she had just stepped out of a bandbox.</p>
-
-<p>“My old friend. Mr. Whitherbee!” she exclaimed,
-holding out her hand to Caleb with unfeigned warmth.</p>
-
-<p>“Wetherbee—Caleb Wetherbee, ma’am,” responded
-Caleb, in a monotone growl, seizing the tips
-of the lady’s fingers as though they were as fragile
-as glass, and he feared to crush them in his calloused
-palm.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes—Mr. Wetherbee,” she replied brightly,
-gazing frankly into the old seaman’s face, which naturally
-added materially to poor Caleb’s confusion. “I
-was very sorry to hear about your illness, and am glad
-you have at length been released from the hospital
-ward.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she turned to Brandon who had also risen.
-She went up to him, and seizing both his hands imprinted
-a motherly kiss upon his forehead.</p>
-
-<p>The youth saw that her soft brown eyes, which could
-not possibly look stern as could her brother’s gray
-ones, were filled with tears.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless you, my boy!” she said, in a low tone.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-“I knew your father, Captain Tarr, and a very nice
-man he was. You are like him.</p>
-
-<p>“And now, brother,” added Miss Frances briskly,
-“if you will take Mr. Wetherbee to his room to prepare
-for dinner, I will show Brandon to <i>his</i> apartment.
-Dinner will be ready in twenty minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pepper, who had entered behind his sister, bore
-Caleb off as she had commanded, to a room on the
-lower floor, while Brandon was led up stairs by Miss
-Frances. The house was nicely though plainly furnished,
-evidences of comfort rather than of great
-wealth being apparent.</p>
-
-<p>Everywhere, on mantel and table, and in the niches
-of the hall, were innumerable curiosities in the line
-of shells and coral brought from all parts of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Frances ushered Brandon into a very prettily
-furnished chamber on the second floor—almost too
-daintily furnished for a boy’s room, in fact. Innumerable
-bits of fancy work and the like, without doubt
-the work of feminine fingers, adorned the place: yet
-all was fashioned in a style of at least twenty years
-back.</p>
-
-<p>Above the bed, in a heavily gilded frame, was a
-large portrait of a young woman—not exactly a beautiful
-woman, but one with a very sweet and lovable
-face—which smiled down upon the visitor and attracted
-his attention at once.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Frances noticed his glance, and lingered a
-moment at the door.</p>
-
-<p>“It was our little sister Milly,” she said softly.
-“This was her room years ago. She was more than
-twenty years younger than Adoniram and I.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>“Then she died?” queried Don softly, still gazing
-up at the smiling face.</p>
-
-<p>“No, she married against father’s wishes. Father
-was a very stern, proud man; not at all like Adoniram,
-who, I am afraid, is not stern enough for his good,”
-and she smiled a little; but there was moisture in her
-eyes as she gazed up at the portrait.</p>
-
-<p>“She was a lovely girl—at least <i>we</i> thought so—and
-she was father’s favorite, too. But she married
-a poor sea captain by the name of Frank, in direct opposition
-to father’s command, and so he cast her off.</p>
-
-<p>“He forbade Adoniram or me having anything to
-do with her, or to help her in any way, and she herself
-put it out of our power to do so, by going to the
-other side of the world with her husband. Several
-years later we heard of her death, and were told that
-there was a child; but although Adoniram has done
-all he could he has never been able to find this Captain
-Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>The old lady wiped her eyes before continuing.</p>
-
-<p>“After father died we had this room fixed just as
-she used to have it, and had that picture hung there.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Brandon, I won’t bother you longer. There
-is your satchel, which the expressman brought an hour
-ago. If you want anything, please ring.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she departed, and left the captain’s son to
-make ready for dinner.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-
-<small>TELLING A GREAT DEAL ABOUT DERELICTS IN GENERAL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Although</span> there seemed to be everything for comfort
-about the Pepper mansion, the habits of the household
-were most simple. Miss Frances was evidently
-a woman of very domestic tastes, and had a vital interest
-in all her household arrangements. Yet there
-appeared to be plenty of servants about.</p>
-
-<p>When dinner was over, the merchant had a short
-conference with his manager, Mr. Marks, who always
-came to report on matters at the close of the day;
-after which he took his two guests into the library,
-and the all absorbing topic of the search for the Silver
-Swan was broached by Caleb, who had now regained
-some of his wonted confidence.</p>
-
-<p>“This ’ere delay is a bad thing,” the old sailor declared,
-when Miss Frances had left them to talk the
-matter over. “If I hadn’t been laid up all these
-weeks in the hospital, I sh’d ha’ follered up the brig
-long before, and had the di’monds. Now we’ve got
-two—yes, three—circumstances against us.</p>
-
-<p>“First and foremost is the fact that the Swan has
-already been afloat ’most two months, an’ that’s longer
-than the majority of derelicts last. Then these confounded
-cruisers may get after her any minute, which
-will be remarkably bad for our plans. And thirdly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-as the parsons say, there’s that rascal Leroyd. He’s
-not the man I think him if he doesn’t make a break
-for the wreck at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he’s got the papers, too,” interjected Mr. Pepper.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb smiled at this, but said nothing in reply, continuing
-his remarks:</p>
-
-<p>“Now, I’ve seen a good many derelicts in my time—a
-good many—but if the Silver Swan is in the
-shape I think her, she’s liable (setting aside accident)
-to float for months. And she’s got lots of company,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think these derelicts would be dreadfully
-dangerous,” suggested Brandon, with all the curiosity
-of a boy about anything pertaining to sea and sea going.</p>
-
-<p>“They are,” declared Caleb; “more dangerous, it’s
-likely, than anybody dreams of. Many a good ship—steamers
-and sailing vessels both—has doubtless gone
-to Davy Jones’ Locker because of them. Take one o’
-these ’ere European steamships making time across
-the ocean; she strikes a derelict—a coal laden one,
-mebbe; they’re the most dangerous—and we never
-hear of her again.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll never forget something that happened when
-I was mate of the American bark Neptune, several
-years ago. The Neptune were a mighty speedy craft,
-an’ Cap’n Tollman was a terror for crowding on all
-sail.</p>
-
-<p>“We was scuddin’ along one dark night before a
-stiff easterly gale, an’ I had the deck. It was just before
-eight bells—half past three o’clock, mebbe—when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-all to onct the man on lookout gave a yell that
-fairly riz my hair on end.</p>
-
-<p>“‘A wreck! dead ahead!’ he yelled. ‘Down with
-your helm! hard down!’</p>
-
-<p>“I jumped to the wheel myself an’ helped the helmsman
-swing ’er over. Right up before us loomed the
-dim, black form of a vessel—her stern under water,
-an’ her bowsprit straight up. I tell ye, for about two
-minutes I was dead sure ’twas all day with the old
-Neptune, and us along with her.</p>
-
-<p>“However she did it I dunno, but she answered her
-helm quicker ’n she did afore or since. She jest
-shaved the wreck, some of the cordage fastened to the
-upright bowsprit catching in our spars an’ being torn
-away, an’ we slipped by without any damage. But
-I don’t want to have a closer shave than <i>that</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was a close call, Cale,” said Mr. Pepper reflectively.
-“I’ve a man in my employ—Richards his
-name is; he sails this trip as captain of the Calypso—who
-came originally from New Brunswick. A regular
-‘blue-nose’ he is, and a good sailor.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he was one of the crew of the ‘Joggins
-raft’ as it was called, that left the Bay of Fundy for
-New York several years ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“And a mighty foolish thing that was, too,” interrupted
-Caleb, shaking his head. “It’s a merciful
-Providence that that thing didn’t occasion half a
-dozen wrecks; but it didn’t, as far as anybody knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“Richards tells a pretty thrilling story of his experience,”
-the merchant continued, seeing that Brandon
-was interested in the tale. “Lumber and coal
-laden derelicts are considered the most dangerous, eh,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-Caleb? And this Joggins raft was probably the most
-perilous object that was ever set afloat.</p>
-
-<p>“The raft was composed of 27,000 great tree trunks,
-bound together with chains, and it weighed something
-like eleven thousand tons. The hawsers by which it
-was towed, parted in a hurricane, and the raft went to
-pieces south of Nantasket. For a good many months
-the logs were reported as scattered over a great portion
-of the North Atlantic. As Caleb says, however,
-they did no damage, but the hydrographic charts during
-the time were plentifully decorated with them.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are these hydrographic charts?” asked
-Brandon, with interest. “That clipping Leroyd lost
-and which I found, mentioned the matter of the Swan’s
-being reported to the Hydrographic Office at Washington.
-What did it mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” responded Mr. Pepper, while Caleb, at the
-little merchant’s request, filled and smoked his evening
-pipe, “when these abandoned wrecks are sighted by
-incoming steamers, they are reported at once to the
-Hydrographic Office at the capitol, the latitude and
-longitude, name of the vessel if known, and her position
-in the water, being given.</p>
-
-<p>“As fast as messages of this kind are received at
-the office they are posted on a big blackboard on which
-is inscribed an outline map of the North Atlantic.
-The position of each derelict is indicated by a pin stuck
-into the board, and thrust at the same time through a
-square scrap of paper.</p>
-
-<p>“On this bit of paper is inscribed in red ink the
-name of the deserted craft, if it is known, together
-with a minute picture showing the attitude of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-vessel, whether bottom up, sunken at the stern, or
-what not.</p>
-
-<p>“These little pictures are reproduced on the next
-pilot chart (which is a monthly publication), and
-changes are made in the chart as frequently as the
-derelicts are reported.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to me, ’Doniram,” remarked Caleb, puffing
-away with vast content at the pipe—“seems to me
-you know a good deal about this derelict business.”</p>
-
-<p>The little man seemed strangely confused at this,
-and his jolly face blushed a deep red as he shifted his
-position restlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he said slowly. “I <i>have</i> been looking it
-up lately. I—I had an idea—a scheme, you know—that
-caused me to study the matter some. Seems
-odd, too, doesn’t it, with the matter of the Silver Swan
-coming right on top of it?”</p>
-
-<p>But here Brandon, whose thoughts had been wandering
-a little, interrupted any further questioning on
-the sailor’s part.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m dreadfully sorry that that rascally Leroyd got
-away with the letter father wrote me,” he said reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb looked at him with a smile, and removed his
-pipe from between his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Did I say he <i>had</i> got away with it?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?” interjected Adoniram, quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” queried Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” said Caleb, enjoying their surprise,
-“You’ve been running this pretty much by yourselves.
-<i>I</i> haven’t said that the swab got away with the papers,
-have I?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>“For pity’s sake, what <i>did</i> he steal then?” demanded
-Brandon, springing to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” returned the mate of the Silver Swan, “by
-my reckoning he got an old pocketbook with some
-worthless bills of lading in it and about ten dollars in
-money—an’ much good may it do him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—why—” sputtered Mr. Pepper, staring at
-the smiling sailor in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, don’t be in a hurry,” urged Caleb. “I
-<i>didn’t</i> say the papers were stolen, so don’t ye accuse
-me o’ that. Ye both jumped at that conclusion and
-I let you think so, for as I’d made a fool of myself
-once by lettin’ folks know I had ’em, I reckoned I
-wouldn’t do it again.</p>
-
-<p>“But now,” he added, “if ye think this is the time
-and place to see them papers, I can perduce ’em ter
-oncet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are they? Let’s see ’em,” urged Brandon,
-in excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, my lad. If you says the word, why
-here goes.”</p>
-
-<p>The old sailor laid his pipe down, and coolly began
-to unstrap his wooden leg. The implement was an old
-fashioned affair, consisting of a smoothly turned stick
-at the lower end hardly larger than a broom handle,
-but swelling as it rose, to the semblance of a leg.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment he had it off and to the surprise of his
-two friends this swelled portion of the imitation limb
-was hollow. From this cavity he drew forth first a
-bulky wallet and then a package of papers wrapped in
-oiled paper.</p>
-
-<p>“There ye be,” he declared, with satisfaction. “If<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-<i>I’d</i> known about them di’monds afore we left the brig,
-I sh’d have had the cap’n let me hide ’em in this ’ere
-timber leg. Then we’d have been saved a mighty
-sight o’ bother.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XX<br />
-
-
-<small>THE CONTENTS OF SEVERAL INTERESTING DOCUMENTS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Well</span>, of all things!” ejaculated Mr. Pepper, as
-the old sailor produced the papers from their queer
-repository, while Brandon burst out laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s some reasons for being grateful for even
-a wooden leg,” remarked Caleb grimly. “I hid those
-papers there when I was aboard the raft, and if I’d
-passed in my checks I reckon papers an’ all would
-have gone to the sharks, for Leroyd would never have
-thought to look there for ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he strapped the artificial limb in place again,
-and gravely handed the package to Brandon. The boy
-had lost all desire to laugh now, for he was in possession
-of the last written words of his father, and for a
-moment his hands trembled and his eyes filled with
-tears.</p>
-
-<p>“Open it, my lad,” said the sailor. “I haven’t
-touched the wrapper since Cap’n Horace gave it to
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon untied the string which bound the package,
-and removed the oiled paper. There were several
-folded documents within and one was marked:</p>
-
-<p class="center">“To my son, Brandon,<br />
-<span class="indentleft2">Horace Tarr.”</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>Don quickly opened the paper, recognizing the chirography
-of the dead captain at once, although much
-of the writing was blurred and illy formed, showing
-how great a tax the effort had been for the injured
-and dying man. It read as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright"><span class="smcap">On Board the Raft,</span></span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Tuesday Noon.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My Beloved Son</span>:</p>
-
-<p>We have now been on this raft two days, and I feel that
-my end is drawing near, although my companions will doubtless
-escape. But I have received a terrible blow on the head,
-and my sufferings at times are frightful; therefore I know I
-am not long for this world.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, that I might see you again, my son! That I might be
-spared to reach you, and to put into your hand the power to
-make you the wealthy man I should have been had I lived.
-But no; it could not be. Fortune has at last come to the
-Tarrs, but I shall not share it; your uncle Anson was not
-benefited by it, and death will overtake me soon, too. But
-you, my son, I pray may regain the fortune which I have
-hidden aboard the brig.</p>
-
-<p>We committed a grave error in leaving the wreck; I know
-that now. The hull of the Silver Swan was uninjured, and
-she may outlast many gales. I shall put these papers into
-Caleb Wetherbee’s hands ere I am called, and he, I know,
-will help you to regain the fortune which first belonged to
-Anson. Be guided by him, and trust him fully.</p>
-
-<p>The letter from your uncle will explain all about the diamonds,
-and how he came in possession of them. I dared not
-take the gems with me from the brig, for Leroyd knew about
-them, or suspected their presence, and he would have killed
-us all for them, I fear.</p>
-
-<p>But they are hidden in the steel lined closet—the one I
-showed you in the cabin. Caleb knows where it is. Go to
-the reef at once and get the jewels, before some one else gets
-there. There are diamonds enough to make you fabulously
-rich, if Anson appraised them rightly.</p>
-
-<p>I am so weak that I cannot write longer.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>These will probably be my last words on earth to you, my
-son. Live uprightly; fear God; and hold sacred your mother’s
-memory. God bless you, my boy! Farewell!</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright4">Your loving father,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Horace Tarr</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Tears fairly blinded Don’s eyes as he finished reading
-the missive. He passed it to Mr. Pepper, who,
-in turn, passed it to Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>“He was a good man,” declared Adoniram softly,
-while the old sailor blew his nose loudly, and wiped
-the suspicious moisture from his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“That he were!” responded the latter. “Cap’n
-Horace were all that he tells you to be, Don.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please God, I’ll be worthy of his memory,” said
-Brandon quietly. “If we are fortunate enough to
-obtain any of this treasure he speaks of. I hope I
-shall use it wisely, and as he would wish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you fear—we’ll get it, lad,” Caleb assured
-him earnestly. “I feel it in my bones we will.”</p>
-
-<p>“What else was there in the package?” asked the
-merchant curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“There were two other papers,” Brandon replied.
-“One is my father’s will.”</p>
-
-<p>He picked that up from his lap and opened it.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” he exclaimed, “you are named as executor,
-Mr. Pepper.”</p>
-
-<p>He passed the legal document to Adoniram who adjusted
-the eye glasses (of which a new pair had been
-purchased), and examined it with manifest surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“This is a legal will, as sure as I am alive!” he
-exclaimed. “It was drawn up at Rio by an American
-lawyer—a Mr. Bromley. Properly signed and witnessed.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>“Well, you’ll look out for it, won’t you?” said
-Caleb, who was eager to hear the other paper—the
-letter from Anson Tarr to his brother—read.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course. But let me tell you its contents,” replied
-the merchant. “It is short and to the point,
-Caleb. <i>You</i> are given the Silver Swan, in fee simple,
-and everything else goes to Brandon, here.”</p>
-
-<p>He read the paragraph which secured all the property
-of which Captain Tarr had been possessed, excepting
-the brig, to Brandon, including “certain uncut
-diamonds, roughly estimated at two hundred thousand
-dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two hundred thousand!” repeated Brandon, in
-bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite a pile, my boy,” said Caleb. “That is, if
-we get ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you and I, Caleb,” concluded Mr. Pepper,
-“are joint guardians of Don.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, all right,” cried the impatient sailor.
-“But let’s hear the other letter, my lad. Read it out.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus urged, Brandon unfolded the third paper, and
-read its contents aloud:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“<span class="smcap">Kimberley, South Africa</span>,</span><br />
-“November the 27th, 1891.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Brother Horace</span>:</p>
-
-<p>“Probably you have long since believed me dead, and I
-have given you good reason for that belief, for, if I am not
-mistaken, it was eight years ago, after my miserable failure
-at the Australian gold diggings, that I last wrote to you.</p>
-
-<p>“I intended then that you should never hear from me again.
-I was a failure—a complete failure, I believed—and I determined
-to tempt fortune no further. With this intention
-I went to an island in the Pacific, and buried myself there,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-with only natives and one other white man for company, for
-six years.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the old roving spirit awoke in me again, and I
-longed to try my luck once more where other men were gaining
-wealth. The news of the rich finds here in the diamond
-fields reached even our lonely isle, and finally I could not
-resist the temptation longer, and came here, leaving my companion
-to dwell alone among the natives. I have been here
-now the better part of a year and, at last, have been successful!</p>
-
-<p>“Two months ago I struck a pocket in the hills, and out
-of a trench less than two rods in length, I have dug what I
-believe to be at least forty thousand pounds’ worth of diamonds
-of exceptional purity. But the diggings have now
-petered out.</p>
-
-<p>“I kept the find a secret, and got all there was myself, excepting
-a small number which my black digger ran away with,
-and now I am afraid I shall not live to enjoy my riches.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps it is as well. You know that riches have ever
-taken wings with us, and I should probably lose all in some
-other venture. I hope that you, Horace, will do better with
-them than I, for to you, brother, and to your boy, if he has
-lived, I bequeath the gems.</p>
-
-<p>“I have been very ill now several days and the physician
-tells me that I am in a very bad way. Exposure to all sorts
-of weather in every kind of climate, is telling on me. Therefore
-I do write this to you, my brother, and take precaution
-to have the letter and the package of uncut stones sent to
-you.</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody here knows of my find. It is safest to trust nobody
-in such a place as this. I propose to give the letter and
-the gems, all in a sealed packet, to a friend, who is the most
-trustworthy man I know, and have him give them to you.
-He will believe the package to contain nothing but papers,
-and therefore you will stand a good chance of getting the
-diamonds safely.</p>
-
-<p>“Good by for this world, Horace. May the luck of the
-Tarrs be changed with this find of mine.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright3">“Your brother,</span><br />
-“<span class="smcap">Anson Tarr</span>.”</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>“Well,” exclaimed Caleb, with a sigh, as Brandon
-folded the document, “we’ve got the rights of it at
-last. Two hundred thousand dollars wuth o’ di’monds—for
-that’s what forty thousand pounds mean, I take
-it, eh, ’Doniram?”</p>
-
-<p>“About that,” said the merchant. “You will be a
-very rich man, Don.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s not count our chickens too soon,” said the
-youth, trying to stifle his excitement. “It seems too
-bewilderingly good to be true.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a good idea about not countin’ our chickens,”
-said Caleb. “But we’ll have a whack at ’em
-just as soon as possible, my lad.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you’ll let me furnish the vessel,” the merchant
-added.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s see,” said the old sailor. “You was saying
-something about havin’ one all ready. ’Doniram,
-wasn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“One that can be ready in a week’s time, any way;
-and the craft you want, too—a whaleback.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno,” said Caleb slowly. “I don’t fancy them
-new fangled things. What under the sun did you ever
-get a whaleback steamer for?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pepper looked at his old friend curiously, and
-his little eyes twinkled.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he said reflectively, “oddly enough, I
-purchased Number Three from the American Barge
-Company for the very purpose for which you wish to
-use it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” shouted Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>“Not to go in search of the Silver Swan?” cried
-Brandon, in wonder.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>“No, not exactly that; but to go in quest of derelicts
-in general.”</p>
-
-<p>“Another of your crazy ideas, ’Doniram!” Caleb
-declared finally.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps; but I notice that most of my ‘crazy
-ideas’ turn out pretty successfully, old Timbertoes,”
-said the little merchant jovially. “If you’ll give me
-a chance, though, I’ll explain how I came to think of
-<i>this</i> ‘crazy idea.’”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXI<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH MR. PEPPER MAKES A PROPOSITION TO CALEB
-AND DON</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">You</span> see,” the ship owner began, as soon as he
-was assured of the attention of his audience, “I have
-had my eye on these whaleback steamers from the
-start. Three years ago, you know, nobody but Captain
-Alexander MacDougall, the inventor, knew anything
-about them.</p>
-
-<p>“We are altogether too conservative here in the
-East,” continued Adoniram warmly. “It takes the
-Westerners to get hold of new things, and practically
-test them. These whalebacks are a Western idea
-and were first used and tested on the Great Lakes.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t seem to realize, Caleb, that the boat
-was never built which could sail as easily as those
-whalebacks. In the heaviest gales they only roll
-slightly, as a log would at sea. The waves can beat
-against the curved steel sides of the craft as much as
-they like, or wash clean over her; but the boat is not
-affected by them in the least.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the most wonderful thing I ever heard of,”
-Brandon declared.</p>
-
-<p>“They <i>are</i> wonderful boats, as you will declare,
-yourself, when you see Number Three, tomorrow,”
-Adoniram returned. “My whaleback is 265 feet long,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-38 feet beam, and 24 feet deep. She is warranted to
-carry 3,000 tons of grain on a sixteen and one half foot
-draft. You see, for her size, she carries an enormous
-cargo, for between the collision bulkhead forward, and
-the bulkhead in front of the engine room aft, the whole
-inside of the craft is open for lading.</p>
-
-<p>“But my scheme—the reason I bought this vessel,
-in fact—is this,” went on Mr. Pepper.</p>
-
-<p>He hesitated a moment, and looked just a little
-doubtfully at Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>“I presume this <i>is</i> what you will call a ‘crazy idea,’
-Caleb,” he said. “Several months ago my attention
-was drawn to the fact that great numbers of these
-derelicts now afloat in the Atlantic, north of the
-equator, are richly laden merchant vessels on whose
-cargoes and hulls a large salvage might be demanded
-by any vessel towing them into port.</p>
-
-<p>“Now and then, you know, it happens that somebody
-<i>does</i> recover a derelict with a valuable cargo.
-In these times, when the crews of American ships,
-and even many of the officers, are ignorant and untrustworthy
-fellows, lacking altogether the honor arm
-perseverance which were characteristics of sailors
-forty years ago (I don’t say that <i>all</i> are so, but many)
-under these circumstances, I say, many a vessel which
-might be worked safely into port, is abandoned in
-mid ocean by the frightened crew.</p>
-
-<p>“With a vessel like Number Three one could recover
-and tow into port many of these hulks, and net
-a large salvage from the owners. Vessels which
-would not be worth saving themselves, might still contain
-articles which it would pay to transfer to the hold<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-of the whaleback, before they were sunk; for it was
-my intention to have Number Three destroy all the
-wrecks which are not worth saving.</p>
-
-<p>“I have even sounded the Washington officials in
-the matter of aiding me in the work of destroying
-these derelicts; but I find that the Hydrographic Office
-is trying to get an appropriation from Congress to
-build a vessel of about 800 tons burden, especially for
-the work of blowing up these wrecks. Until that
-matter is decided, of course I can get no bonus on
-what I do.</p>
-
-<p>“Nevertheless,” Mr. Pepper continued, “I believe
-that there is money enough in it to amply reward me
-for my outlay. Why, look at that New England
-whaler which found the British ship Resolute fast in
-the ice of Melville Bay in the summer of ’55.</p>
-
-<p>“She was one of three vessels sent out by the British
-government to find Sir John Franklin. She was
-‘nipped’ by the ice in the winter of ’51 and was abandoned.
-The whaler brought her to New London, and
-Congress bought her for $200,000 salvage and sent
-her to England. Of course, I shouldn’t expect to get
-many such prizes as that,” and the little man laughed,
-“but I do expect to make a handsome profit on the
-venture.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take, for instance, the case of the Silver Swan.
-I’ll make you a proposition, Brandon, and you see if it
-isn’t a fair one. Caleb shall judge himself. I’ll send
-the whaleback out after the brig at my own expense.
-If we are successful and find the derelict and tow her
-to port, I will take the cargo (I know it to be a valuable
-one) for my pains—of course, not including the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-diamonds, which are your own personal property, my
-boy. The brig herself is Caleb’s, any way, according
-to the terms of your father’s will. Now what do you
-say?”</p>
-
-<p>“I say it’s a good offer!” exclaimed Caleb, slapping
-his thigh heartily. “You’re a man and a gentleman,
-Adoniram. And far from thinking this scheme
-of yours crazy, I think well of it—mighty well.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s because it ‘hits you where you live,’ as the
-saying is,” returned Mr. Pepper, smiling slily.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know anything about whalebacks,”
-began Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>“But you will,” the merchant declared, interrupting
-him. “I haven’t got through with my proposition yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fire ahead, old man,” said Caleb puffing steadily
-on his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, first I want you for the captain of the
-steamer, Caleb.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, so I supposed,” remarked the mate of the
-Silver Swan imperturbably. “What else?”</p>
-
-<p>“I want Brandon for second mate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me?” exclaimed Don. “Why, I never was
-aboard a steamship in my life.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that doesn’t make any difference, Don,” returned
-Caleb sarcastically. “It would be just like
-him (if he wanted to) to send the vessel out with
-every blessed one of the crew landlubbers. It don’t
-make a particle o’ difference.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Caleb,” said the merchant deprecatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Adoniram, we can’t do it. The boy knows
-nothing at all about a steamship, and I know but little
-more.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>“You’ve been mate on a steamer, Caleb.”</p>
-
-<p>“On a dredger, you mean,” returned the old sailor,
-in disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no reason why you can’t do it—both of
-you,” the ship owner declared. “If I’m satisfied, <i>you</i>
-ought to be. I’ve already engaged Lawrence Coffin
-for mate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Coffin!” ejaculated Caleb, his face lighting up,
-as he forgot to pull on his pipe in his interest. “Got
-<i>him</i>, eh? Well, that puts a different complexion on
-the matter. I could sail the Great Eastern with Lawrence
-Coffin for mate.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought so,” said Mr. Pepper, laughing gleefully.
-“Then I’ve got a man by the name of Bolin for third.
-He’s a good man, and knows his business, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“That would make Don’s duties pretty light,” said
-Caleb reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course. I shall put in rather a larger crew
-than a whaleback usually carries—fourteen at least,”
-Mr. Pepper added; “to handle the cargoes I shall
-expect the steamer to recover.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well,” said Caleb, rising; “let’s sleep on it.
-It’s never best to decide on anything too quickly.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you’ll take up with my offer,” concluded the
-merchant, rising, too, “the craft can be made ready,
-and you can get away this day week.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s think it over,” repeated the old sailor, bound
-not to be hurried into the business; but Don went to
-bed so excited by the prospect that it was hours before
-he was able to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>“Did a fellow <i>ever</i> have a better chance for fun
-and adventure?” was his last thought as he finally
-sank into a fitful slumber.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXII<br />
-
-
-<small>INTO BAD COMPANY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">If</span> I were to follow up my own inclinations I should
-much prefer to stay in the company of Brandon Tarr
-and of his two good friends, the honest, hearty old
-seaman, Caleb Wetherbee, and the jovial, philanthropic
-ship owner, Adoniram Pepper. And I feel sure that
-the reader, too, would much prefer to remain with
-them.</p>
-
-<p>But, for the sake of better understanding that which
-is to follow, I shall be obliged for a short time to request
-the company of the reader in entirely different
-scenes, and among rather disreputable characters.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Alfred Weeks, who had been in receipt of so
-many favors in times past from the firm of Adoniram
-Pepper &amp; Co., is the first person who will receive our
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>Weeks was “an effect of a cause.” He was of the
-slums, his ancestry came from the slums; he was simply,
-by accident of education (compulsory education,
-by the way) once removed from the usual “gutter
-snipe” of the city streets.</p>
-
-<p>Who his parents were, he could not, for the life of
-him, have told. I do not mean to suggest for an instant
-that Weeks was not to be pitied; but that he was
-deserving of pity I deny. He had been saved from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-the debasing influences of the reform school in his
-youth by a philanthropic gentleman (who might have
-been the twin of Adoniram Pepper), and sent to a
-Western State where he was clothed, fed, and educated
-by a kind hearted farmer, whom he repaid by theft
-and by finally running away.</p>
-
-<p>Then he went from one thing to another, and from
-place to place, and you may be sure that neither his
-morals nor his habits improved during the progression.
-Finally at twenty-five, he drifted back to the
-metropolis, and quickly found his old level again—the
-slums. Here he likewise discovered many of the
-acquaintances of his youth, for he had been a boy of
-twelve when he had been sent West.</p>
-
-<p>Among these old friends he was known as
-“Sneaky” (a very appropriate appellation, as we have
-seen), “Alfred Weeks” being the name given him
-by his Western benefactor. The fellow was a most
-accomplished hypocrite and it was by the exercise of
-this attribute that he had obtained the situation as
-Adoniram Pepper’s clerk, and kept it for ten years,
-despite many of his evil deeds coming to the knowledge
-of the shipping merchant.</p>
-
-<p>Not one of the three persons who had been in the
-office that afternoon when his presence in the wardrobe
-was discovered, realized how thoroughly bad at
-heart Weeks was, or how dangerous an enemy they
-had made. Even Caleb Wetherbee did not fully recognize
-it.</p>
-
-<p>But they <i>had</i> made an enemy, and within twenty-four
-hours that enemy was at work to undermine and
-thwart their plans.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>Weeks had overheard enough of the story of the
-Silver Swan and her valuable cargo to make it an
-easy matter for him to decide on a line of action which
-might lead to his own benefit, as well as to the compassing
-of his much desired revenge.</p>
-
-<p>He solaced his wounded feelings the evening after
-his dismissal from the ship owner’s office by a trip to
-his favorite resort—the Bowery Theater—where he
-again drank in the highly colored sentences and romantic
-tableaux of that great drama “The Buccaneer’s
-Bride.” Unfortunately, however, he was
-forced to remain standing during the play for obvious
-reasons; the seats of the theater were not cushioned.</p>
-
-<p>The next forenoon he adorned himself in the height
-of Bowery style, and strolled down past the scene of
-his former labors and on toward that rendezvous
-known as the New England Hotel. He had his plans
-already mapped out, and the first thing to do was to
-join forces with Jim Leroyd, whom he knew very well
-by reputation, at least, as did a great many others
-among the denizens of lower New York.</p>
-
-<p>But as he strolled along Water Street he discovered
-something which slightly changed his plans. Perhaps,
-to be exact, I should say that he discovered <i>somebody</i>.</p>
-
-<p>On the opposite side of the thoroughfare was a
-weazen faced old man, with bowed shoulders, and not
-altogether steady feet. He was dressed in rusty black
-clothes of a pattern far remote from the present day.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently he was quite confused by his surroundings
-and by the crowd which jostled him on the walk.</p>
-
-<p>“What a chance for a ‘bunco man,’” exclaimed the
-festive Alfred, under his breath. “That’s country,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-sure enough. I wonder how it ever got here all
-alone,” and the philanthropic ex-clerk crossed the
-street at once and fell into the old man’s wake.</p>
-
-<p>Despite his countrified manner, however, there was
-an air of shrewd, suspicious intelligence about the man
-of the rusty habiliments. Fortunately for the success
-of his further plans, Weeks did not seek to accost him
-at once.</p>
-
-<p>Had he done so he would have aroused the countryman’s
-suspicions. The latter had come warned and
-forearmed against strangers who sought his acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>As they went along, the old man ahead and Weeks
-in the rear, the latter discovered that the countryman
-was seeking for something. He went along slowly,
-with his eyes fixed on the signs on either side, studying
-each new one as it came in view with apparent interest.</p>
-
-<p>Finally he stopped on the corner of a cross street
-and looked about him at the rushing, hurried life
-in perplexity. Now was Mr. Week’s chance.</p>
-
-<p>He strolled slowly along toward the old fellow, the
-only person without an apparent object, in that whole
-multitude.</p>
-
-<p>As the ex-clerk expected, the countryman accosted
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, mister,” he said, in his harsh, cracked voice,
-which rose plainly above the noise of the street, “kin
-you tell me the whereabouts of the New England Hotel?”</p>
-
-<p>“Whew!” thought Mr. Weeks. “Pretty shady locality<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-for a respectable farmer. Wonder what the old
-fellow wants <i>there</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>Then aloud he said:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going along there myself, sir; it is several
-blocks yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, ’t seems ter me,” snarled the other, taking
-his place by the side of Weeks, “thet this ’ere street
-hain’t got no end, nor no numbers ter speak of. I
-looked in one o’ them things over at the hotel—a
-d’rectory I b’lieve the clerk called it—but I don’t see
-as it helped me any.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s pretty hard for a stranger to find his way about
-New York, that’s a fact.”</p>
-
-<p>The old fellow flashed a sudden look at his companion,
-which was not lost on the sly Weeks. The
-farmer had “read up” on “bunco men” and their
-ways, and expected that the polite stranger would suggest
-showing him about the city a little.</p>
-
-<p>But Weeks didn’t; he wasn’t that kind.</p>
-
-<p>Finding that the fellow seemed totally uninterested
-as to whether he found his way about the metropolis
-or not, the countryman gained a little confidence in his
-new acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>“New York streets hain’t much like Providence
-streets,” he said. “Ye <i>kin</i> find yer way ’round them;
-but I defy any one ter know whether they’re goin’
-straight here, or not.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Weeks smiled and nodded, but let the other do
-most of the talking. He went on the principle that
-if you give a fool rope enough he’ll hang himself;
-and although the old fellow thought himself
-exceedingly shrewd, and took pains to dodge the real<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-object of his visit to New York, in seeking to be pleasant
-to his new acquaintance he “gave the whole thing
-dead away,” as the astute Alfred mentally expressed it.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see,” said the old man. “I’m down here
-a-lookin for my nevvy, Brandon, who’s run away from
-me. Nothing else would ha’ got me down here right
-in the beginnin’ of the spring work.”</p>
-
-<p>Weeks started slightly, but otherwise showed no
-signs of special interest; but as the old fellow ran on
-about the terrible state he expected his affairs would
-be in because of his absence, Mr. Alfred Weeks did
-some pretty tall thinking.</p>
-
-<p>“Brandon is no common name,” so the ex-clerk
-communed with himself. “I bet there hasn’t been <i>two</i>
-Brandons come to New York within the past few
-days—both from Rhode Island, too.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the old uncle I heard the young chap
-mention. He’s down here after the boy, eh? But
-I’m betting there’s something else behind it. Now,
-let’s see; what does he want at the New England Hotel?</p>
-
-<p>“Leroyd, so young Tarr said, had been up to Rhode
-Island to see him.” Weeks thought, continuing his
-train of reasoning. “Passed himself off to <i>him</i>, at
-least, as old Wetherbee. Oh, Jim’s a keen one, he is!
-Now Leroyd’s at the hotel—at least, he <i>has</i> been.
-What is this old scarecrow going there for?</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a great big rat in the toe of this stocking,”
-Mr. Weeks assured himself. “This uncle is an old
-scamp, that’s <i>my</i> opinion.” (Mr. Weeks knew a
-scamp when he saw one—excepting when he looked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-in the glass.) “I’d wager a good deal that he and
-Jim understand each other pretty well.</p>
-
-<p>“Probably Jim has let the old fellow into the fact
-that there’s treasure aboard that brig, hoping to get
-him to back him in an attempt to find it. By the cast
-in the old man’s eye, I reckon he’s always on the
-lookout for the almighty dollar. Now, he and Jim
-are going to try and hitch horses together, I bet. And
-am I in this? I betcher! with both feet!”</p>
-
-<p>With this elegant expression, Mr. Weeks drew up
-before the uninviting resort known as the New England
-Hotel.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-
-
-<small>MR. ALFRED WEEKS AT A CERTAIN CONFERENCE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Here</span> we are, mister,” said the ex-clerk; “see,
-there’s the sign—New England Hotel. Did you expect
-to find your runaway nephew here?”</p>
-
-<p>“No-o,” replied old Arad Tarr, eying the place with
-a good deal of disfavor.</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” said Weeks slowly, “I’ve been trying
-to remember whereabouts I’ve heard that name ‘Brandon’
-before. It’s not a common name, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, ’taint common. D’ye thing ye’ve seen
-Brandon since he’s been here in New York? He’s
-only been here two days, I reckon,” said old Arad
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where was he?” queried the old man. “I’m his
-lawful guardeen, an’ I’m a-goin’ ter hev him back,
-now I tell ye!”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s see; his name is Brandon Tarr, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it; that’s it,” Arad declared.</p>
-
-<p>“And he came from Chopmist, Rhode Island?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin. You must have seen him, mister.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I have,” said Weeks reflectively. “He
-was the son of a Captain Horace Tarr, lost at sea on
-the Silver Swan not long ago, eh?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>“The very feller!” cried Arad, with manifest delight.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I guess I can help you find him,” declared
-Weeks cheerfully. “Let’s go inside and I’ll tell you
-how I happened to run across him. It’s not a very
-nice looking place, this isn’t; but they know me here
-and it won’t be safe for them to treat any of my friends
-crooked.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man, who had forgotten all about bunco
-men and their ilk in his anxiety to recover his nephew,
-followed him into the bar room. The place was but
-poorly patronized at this hour of the day, and with a
-nod to Brady, who, his face adorned with a most beautiful
-black eye, was behind the bar, Weeks led the
-way to an empty table in the further corner.</p>
-
-<p>“What’ll you an’ your friend hev ter drink?” inquired
-Mr. Brady, with an atrocious grin.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a bottle of sarsaparilla,” responded Weeks
-carelessly, and when the bull necked barkeeper had
-brought it, the ex-clerk paid for the refreshment himself.</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad had looked rather scared at the appearance
-of the bottle. His mind at once reverted to the
-stories he had read in the local paper at home (which
-paper he had borrowed from a neighbor, by the way)
-of countrymen being decoyed into dens in New York
-and treated to drugged liquor.</p>
-
-<p>But as Weeks allowed the bottle to stand on the
-table between them untouched throughout their conference,
-the old man felt easier in his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye say ye’ve seen Brandon?” inquired Arad,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-when Jack Brady had returned to his position behind
-the bar, and there was nobody within earshot.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I’ll tell you how it was. You see, Mr.
-Tarr—that’s your name, isn’t it?—I have a position
-in a shipping merchant’s office as clerk. The
-office is—er—closed today, so I am out. This
-office is that of Adoniram Pepper &amp; Co. Ever hear
-of them?”</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad shook his head negatively.</p>
-
-<p>“Pepper was a great friend of this Brandon’s
-father, so I understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe,” snarled the farmer. “Cap’n Tarr’s
-friends warn’t <i>my</i> friends.”</p>
-
-<p>“No? Well, your nephew steered straight for
-Pepper’s office, and I believe that he’s staying at the
-old man’s house now—he and a man by the name of
-Caleb Wetherbee.”</p>
-
-<p>“Caleb Wetherbee? Gracious Peter!” ejaculated
-the old man. “Hez he found <i>him</i> so soon.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Weeks nodded briefly.</p>
-
-<p>“This Wetherbee was mate of the Silver Swan.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the man,” muttered Arad hopelessly.</p>
-
-<p>“I take it you didn’t want your nephew and this
-Wetherbee to meet?” suggested Weeks shrewdly.</p>
-
-<p>“No—o——well, I dunno. I—I’m erfraid
-’twon’t be so easy to git Brandon back ter the
-farm ef he’s found this mate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps we can fix it up,” said Weeks cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>“D’ye think so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s see; are you his legal guardian?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I be,” declared Arad savagely; “on’y the
-papers ain’t made aout.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>“I don’t really see, then, how you can bring it about
-until you are appointed,” said Mr. Weeks slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“I jest kin!” asserted Arad, with confidence. “I
-gotter warrant here for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whew!” The astute Weeks looked at the old sinner
-admiringly. “Well, well! you <i>are</i> a smart one.
-What’s the charge?”</p>
-
-<p>“Robbing me,” responded the old man. “The day
-he run away he took ’most fifty dollars outer a—a
-beury droor. Dretful bad boy is that Brandon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I should think so. Well, with that warrant
-I should think you had him pretty straight.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’ye think I kin find him all right?” asked Arad
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“If you can’t, I can,” responded Weeks. “I know
-where to put my hand on him.”</p>
-
-<p>At that moment a door at the rear of the room
-(within a few feet of the table at which they were
-seated, in fact) opened, and a man entered. Weeks
-recognized him at once as Jim Leroyd; he had seen
-him before, although he could claim no speaking acquaintance
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad also saw and recognized the newcomer,
-and as the sailor passed along the room, he caught
-sight of the old farmer.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, dash my top lights!” he exclaimed, in surprise.
-“Ef here ain’t Mr. Tarr!”</p>
-
-<p>He stepped back to the table and grasped the
-old man’s hand most cordially, at the same time casting
-a suspicious glance at Weeks. He knew the ex-clerk
-by reputation, as Weeks knew <i>him</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ye be up ter any funny biz with this gentleman,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-Sneaky,” he said, with a scowl. “He’s my
-friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you fret,” responded Weeks. “He and I
-were talking about his nephew, Brandon Tarr, who
-was up to see you yesterday——”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Leroyd uttered a volley of choice profanity
-at this, and Arad was greatly surprised.</p>
-
-<p>“Came ter see yeou?” he gasped. “Er—erbout
-that matter we was a-talkin’ of, Mr. Leroyd? Ye
-know I—I’m his legal guardeen——”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ye be scared, Mr. Tarr,” said Weeks, who
-understood the circumstances pretty well, “I can vouch
-for Jim, here, not playing you false.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you know about it, anyway?” growled
-Jim uglily.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, sit down and keep cool, Leroyd,” urged
-Weeks. “I know <i>all</i> about it. I know about your
-little scheme to gobble the—the <i>treasure</i> aboard the
-Silver Swan——”</p>
-
-<p>“Sh!” exclaimed Leroyd fiercely. “You know too
-much, young feller.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I know just enough, and I’ll prove it to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I s’pose ye think ye kin force yer way inter this,
-but ye’re mistaken. This is the private affair o’ Mr.
-Tarr an’ me, an’ I warn ye ter keep yer nose out.”</p>
-
-<p>He arose as he spoke, his fierce eyes fixed threateningly
-upon Weeks’ impassive face.</p>
-
-<p>“You come with me, Mr. Tarr, where we can talk
-the matter over privately. We don’t want nothin’ o’
-that swab.”</p>
-
-<p>The red headed ex-clerk fairly laughed aloud at
-this.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>“See here, Leroyd,” he said, still coolly: “you made
-a break for those papers yesterday, I believe. What
-did you get?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hey?” roared the sailor.</p>
-
-<p>“I said that you made a break for those papers of
-Cale Wetherbee’s yesterday,” repeated Weeks, slowly
-and distinctly. “Now, what did you get?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a blamed thing,” responded the sailor frankly,
-after an instant’s hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I thought. I thought Cale Wetherbee
-took it altogether too coolly if you <i>had</i> made a
-haul worth anything. Now, I could tell you something,
-if I thought ’twould be worth my while.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know what the treasure hidden aboard
-the brig consists of?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Leroyd shortly, while old Arad gazed
-from one to the other in bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I do,” declared Weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. I heard that Wetherbee and the boy and
-old man Pepper talking it over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s Pepper?” growled Leroyd.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s the feller who is going to back ’em in this
-hunt for the brig. He’s going to furnish the vessel
-and all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Curses on the luck!” growled the sailor again.</p>
-
-<p>Here old Arad interposed. The old man’s hands
-were trembling violently, and his face was pale with
-excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“We—we must stop ’em—they ain’t got no right
-ter do it,” he sputtered. “Horace Tarr was my nevvy,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-an’ I’m the guardeen o’ that boy. There hain’t nobody
-else got no right to go arter them di’monds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Diamonds!” exclaimed Leroyd. “Is <i>that</i> the
-treasure?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye—es,” replied Arad hesitatingly, looking at
-Weeks. “I—I found a letter from this Wetherbee,
-the mate of the Silver Swan, an’ it says so. Horace’s
-brother Anson got ’em in South Afriky.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good for you, old feller,” said Leroyd admiringly.
-“Ye did take my advice, didn’t ye?”</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad rubbed his hands together as though
-washing them with imaginary soap, and grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, diamonds is the treasure,” Weeks rejoined
-calmly. “Now, you’ll start right off to find the brig
-with Mr. Tarr here to back you with money, eh,
-Leroyd?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never ye mind <i>what</i> I’ll do,” returned Jim, uglily.
-“I tell ye this hain’t none o’ your funeral, so you keep
-out of it, Sneaky.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure?” asked Weeks, with a tantalizing
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’m sure!” roared the enraged sailor.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, don’t holler so loud,” the red haired one
-admonished him. “But I think you’re mistaken.”</p>
-
-<p>Leroyd glared at him like an angry bull dog but
-said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Now I s’pose,” continued Weeks, cocking his eye
-at the smoke begrimmed ceiling of the bar room,
-“that you expect to get a vessel an’ go in pursuit of
-the Silver Swan; and that when you’ve got her you’ll
-tow her in port, an’ you’ll have the salvage—that’ll
-be a pretty good sum.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>“And the di’monds,” interjected Arad, with an avaricious
-chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, will you?” said Weeks with cool sarcasm.
-“That remains to be seen. You’ll have the brig fast
-enough: but how’ll you get the stones?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, ef we git the brig won’t the diamonds be
-aboard her?” queried Arad.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they will; but <i>where will they be</i>, aboard her?
-Can you tell me that?”</p>
-
-<p>Arad’s jaw fell and he stared blankly at the shrewd
-Weeks. Even Leroyd was visibly moved by this
-statement.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t know where the diamonds are hidden,”
-continued Weeks, pursuing his advantage. “You
-might tear that whole brig to pieces an’ not find ’em,
-<i>but I know just where they are and I can put my
-hand right on ’em</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“You kin?” gasped old Arad.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that straight, Sneaky?” demanded Leroyd, with
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>Weeks nodded calmly.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe you’re lying,” the sailor declared.</p>
-
-<p>“Well you can think so if you want to,” said the
-ex-clerk, rising, “and I’ll go now and find somebody
-to go in with me on this scheme, and I’ll run my
-chances of getting to the brig first. You can have the
-old hulk and welcome after I’ve been aboard her five
-minutes, Leroyd.</p>
-
-<p>“But, if you’ll let me in on the ground floor of this,”
-he continued, “and give me one third of all there is
-in it, why all right. If you don’t, probably you’ll get
-nothing, while me and the other fellow’ll get it <i>all</i>,”
-and Mr. Weeks smiled benignantly upon his audience.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-
-
-<small>HOW A NEFARIOUS COMPACT WAS FORMED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">But</span> yeou can’t do that!” cried old Arad Tarr,
-the first to break the silence after Mr. Weeks had delivered
-what might be termed his “ultimatum.”
-“There hasn’t anybody got airy right ter go arter them
-di’monds, but them I send.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is where you make an error, Mr. Tarr,” responded
-Weeks cheerfully. “This is what is called
-‘treasure trove;’ the fellow who gets there first has
-the best right to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It ben’t so, is it?” whined the old man, appealing
-to Leroyd.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I s’pose it is,” admitted the sailor, with a
-growl. “He’s got us foul, old man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, don’t talk that way, Leroyd,” exclaimed
-Weeks briskly. “We three must strike hands and share
-evenly in this thing. You need me, any way, though
-I can get along without either of you; for you know
-it wouldn’t take me long to find a man to back me
-with a couple of hundred dollars against the chance
-of winning thousands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’re right,” said the sailor, seeing that it
-would be for his advantage to make terms with
-“Sneaky Al,” as the red haired Weeks was familiarly
-called.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>“Two hundred dollars is an awful lot of money ter
-risk,” muttered old Arad, knowing that he was the
-one who would be expected to furnish the “sinews of
-war.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tain’t much compared with mebbe three hundred
-thousand dollars. I heered Cap’n Tarr say, myself,
-that there was enough o’ them di’monds, ter make a
-man fabulously rich,” responded Leroyd quickly.
-“That’d be a clean hundred thousand for each of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“But ef I furnish the money I’d oughter hev more
-o’ th’ returns,” declared the farmer, who was quite
-as sharp as either of his companions.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, we won’t quarrel over that,” the sailor declared,
-rising again. “But we want to talk this matter
-over where it’s more quiet like. I’ve got a room
-here. Let’s go up to it, where we shan’t be disturbed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’re talking sense,” Weeks declared, rising
-gingerly from the chair in which he had again
-seated himself.</p>
-
-<p>At that instant Mr. Brady, who had been kept busy
-at the bar by transient customers for the past half
-hour, called Leroyd over to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, look a-here, Jim,” he said, in a hoarse aside,
-“wot be you an’ Sneaky Al up to? Dere ain’t goin’
-ter be no game played on dat countryman here, see?
-Ye got me inter ’nough trouble yest’day. Ef I hadn’t
-a pull in dis ward, dey’d er—nabbed me, sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you fret, Jack,” responded Leroyd reassuringly.
-“We ain’t inter any bunco business. The old
-man knows what he’s about, ef he <i>does</i> look like a hay-seed.
-Ef he don’t do <i>us</i>, it’ll be lucky.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>“Well, what’s de game?” Brady demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Never you mind, old man. We’re just going up
-stairs for a private confab, an’ ef things turn out right,
-I kin promise a cool hundred for keeping your mouth
-shut. Savey?”</p>
-
-<p>Brady nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m mum,” he said, with satisfaction. “On’y I
-don’t want dem cops down on me ag’in, so mind yer
-eye.”</p>
-
-<p>Armed with a bottle and glasses, Leroyd led the way
-into a small room a good deal nearer the roof of the
-building, in which the New England Hotel was located.
-His two companions, however, left the sailor
-to dispose of the refreshments alone; the old farmer
-because he had never used liquor in any shape at home,
-and Weeks because he proposed to keep his brain perfectly
-clear that he might be sure to retain the “whip
-hand” of the other conspirators.</p>
-
-<p>It is not my purpose to report verbatim the plans of
-the three villains. Let it suffice to say that after much
-discussion, and by virtue of coaxings, threatenings,
-promises, and what not, the sailor and Weeks (who
-saw at once that it would be for their mutual advantage
-to play into each other’s hands) obtained old
-Arad Tarr’s consent to furnish them with the sum of
-over two hundred dollars (and more if it was found
-to be actually needed) with which to charter the
-vessel.</p>
-
-<p>You may be sure that the two rascals never worked
-harder (with their tongues) for two hundred dollars
-in their lives, for the amount looked as large to old
-Arad as ten thousand would to almost any other man.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>The plot of the conspirators likewise included the
-discovery of Brandon’s whereabouts and his arrest on
-the charge of robbery, as set forth in the warrant
-with which Arad supplied himself before he left
-Rhode Island. This part of the scheme Weeks proposed
-to attend to.</p>
-
-<p>Then, with a great deal of flourish and legal formula,
-the astute Mr. Weeks drew up a most wonderful
-document (he was well versed in legal phrases),
-which bound each of the three, Arad Tarr, James Leroyd,
-and Alfred Weeks, to a co-partnership, the object
-of which was to seek and obtain the floating hulk
-of the Silver Swan, and the treasure thereon, the profit
-of the venture to be divided equally between them,
-excepting the sum of one thousand dollars which was
-to go to Arad Tarr under <i>any</i> circumstances. And,
-of course, the document wasn’t worth the paper on
-which it was written.</p>
-
-<p>But the old man didn’t know this. He was a great
-worshiper of the law, and he trusted in the legality of
-the paper to hold his partners to their promises. He
-lost sight, however, of the fact that the two men were
-going together on the quest for the Silver Swan, and
-that he—well, <i>he</i> was to stay at home, and <i>wait</i>.
-Waiting isn’t very hard work, to be sure; but it is
-terribly wearing.</p>
-
-<p>These several things having been accomplished, and
-it being long past noon, the conspirators went their
-different ways—old Arad to interview the brokerage
-firm of Bensell, Bensell &amp; Marsden, which, he was
-sure, was cheating him out of his dividends: Weeks
-to hunt up a scaly friend of his to serve the warrant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-upon unsuspicious Brandon; and Leroyd to look about
-for a vessel which could be converted to their purpose
-in the shortest possible time.</p>
-
-<p>And now, let us return to Brandon and his two
-good friends, Caleb Wetherbee and Adoniram Pepper,
-and find out how much progress <i>they</i> have made in the
-quest of the Silver Swan.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXV<br />
-
-
-<small>UNCLE ARAD MAKES AN ANNOUNCEMENT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">If</span> Caleb Wetherbee passed as sleepless a night as
-did his young friend, Brandon, he showed no signs
-of it when he appeared the next morning. They were
-a very jolly party indeed at the breakfast table, for
-the old sailor had recovered, to some extent at least,
-his equanimity when in the presence of Miss Frances.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Caleb, have you decided to accept my offer
-of last evening?” Adoniram inquired, as they arose
-after the meal.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s see the steamer,” returned the sailor, noncommittally;
-so the merchant and his two guests went
-down to the docks at once.</p>
-
-<p>To a person who has never seen a whaleback
-steamer, the first view of one is certainly a most surprising
-sight. He is at once reminded of Jules Verne’s
-great story of the Nautilus, the wonderful steel ship
-which could sail equally well below and upon the
-surface of the ocean.</p>
-
-<p>Number Three was more than two hundred feet in
-length, and was shaped like a huge cigar, the blunt
-end, oddly enough, being the bow. This blunt “nose”
-is what suggested the term “pig,” as applied to the
-whalebacks when first they appeared on the Great
-Lakes.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>At the forward end of the steamer a turret arose
-from the curved deck, furnished with one of the
-American Ship Windlass Co.’s steam windlasses (with
-the capstan above), and with hand steering gear, the
-shaft and hub of the wheel being of brass to avoid
-affecting the compass.</p>
-
-<p>The cabin aft, which was fifteen feet above the
-deck, and therefore presented a most astonishing appearance,
-was supported by two turrets, and several
-strong ventilating pipes, the latter connecting with the
-engine room, fire hold, and cargo hold.</p>
-
-<p>A low rail ran from bow to stern of the steamer,
-on either side, inclosing the turrets within its shelter,
-thus making it possible for the crew to go from the
-aft to the forward turrets.</p>
-
-<p>The deck, however, was so curved that the feat
-would not be easy to perform in rough weather, if
-the whaleback <i>did</i> roll as do other vessels.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye call that a steamer, do ye?” demanded Caleb,
-in disgust, when he first caught sight of Number
-Three; but after he had gone aboard, and seen and
-understood the advantages the whaleback possessed
-over the other seagoing craft, he no longer scoffed.</p>
-
-<p>Adoniram first led them to the officers’ quarters.
-These were finished in oak, and furnished almost as
-sumptuously as the cabin of a fancy yacht. The suite
-contained a dining room of comfortable size, and a
-chart room and offices on the port side of the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Below deck were the quarters of the crew, forward
-and aft, and they were as comfortable as those on a
-palatial ocean steamship.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>“It’s a wonderful boat,” Brandon declared, as they
-examined the engine.</p>
-
-<p>“It is that,” the ship owner assented. “I paid a
-pretty penny for her, but she’s worth it—every cent.
-She’ll outride any gale that ever blew, as long as you
-keep her in deep water. ’Twould be hard to sink her.</p>
-
-<p>“In the matter of ballast,” he continued, “there are
-arrangements for carrying eight hundred ton of water—water
-is used altogether for ballast in these whalebacks.
-Then the engines are of the newest build, too,
-you see.</p>
-
-<p>“The steam is generated from these two steel
-boilers, each eleven and a half feet in diameter by the
-same in length, possessing a working pressure of one
-hundred and twenty-five pounds. If the engine goes
-back on you, you will have to get out the oars and
-row ashore, for there is no chance for raising a sail,”
-and the jolly ship owner laughed good naturedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve been to sea on a good many craft—most
-anything that would float, in fact, from a torpedo
-boat to a Chinese junk—but this takes the bun,”
-Caleb declared as they stepped upon the dock again.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I take it you’ll try your hand at this?”
-Adoniram asked slily.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, I s’ppose so, Pepperpod—and the boy,
-too. By the way, does Lawrence Coffin know anything
-about this craft?”</p>
-
-<p>“He went to West Superior (where she was built)
-and came down in her,” declared the merchant.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right, then. He’ll know what to do if we
-get to sea and the blamed thing should roll over.”</p>
-
-<p>But despite the fact that he scoffed at the vessel,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-Caleb set to work with his customary energy to make
-ready for the voyage.</p>
-
-<p>The ship owner gave him <i>carte blanche</i> to provision
-the whaleback and secure the crew. The engineers
-and firemen were already engaged and the work of
-making ready for sea went on rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb being a worker himself, expected a good deal
-of everybody about him and Brandon found himself
-with plenty to do during the next two days. He ran
-errands, and bought provisions under the old sailor’s
-directions, and saw to the storing away of the articles
-purchased.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the third day, however, came
-an interruption, and one which promised to be most
-serious.</p>
-
-<p>In these times of hurried preparation Caleb and his
-young second mate made the Water Street office of
-Adoniram Pepper &amp; Co. their headquarters. They
-were in and out of the place a score of times a day to
-the satisfaction of Adoniram, but, if the truth were
-told, to the great annoyance of the solemn faced young
-man whom Mr. Marks had sent up from the other
-office to take the place of the departed Weeks.</p>
-
-<p>About ten o’clock on this forenoon Brandon ran in
-to see if he could find Caleb, as that individual was not
-at the dock where lay the whaleback, and where the
-boy had expected to meet him.</p>
-
-<p>“Where do you suppose he has gone?” Don asked
-of Mr. Pepper, who, good soul, seemed to have no
-other business on hand but the getting ready of the
-steamer.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know, I’m sure. You’d better sit down,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-my boy, and wait for him,” advised Adoniram kindly.
-“He’s sure to turn up here, first or last.”</p>
-
-<p>So Brandon sat down, striving to stifle his impatience.
-He had not waited ten minutes, however,
-when the door of the outer office was opened, and
-somebody entered.</p>
-
-<p>“Here he is now,” exclaimed the youth, thinking he
-heard Caleb’s voice.</p>
-
-<p>He threw open the door between the two offices,
-gave one glance into the apartment beyond, and staggered
-to the nearest chair in utter amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Great Peter! it’s Uncle Arad!” he gasped, in
-answer to Adoniram’s questioning exclamation, and
-the next instant Uncle Arad himself appeared at the
-open portal of the private office.</p>
-
-<p>“Thar ye air, ye young reskil!” exclaimed the old
-man, shaking his bony forefinger at the youth.</p>
-
-<p>Behind him was another man—a clean shaven,
-foxy looking fellow, who, when old Arad had pointed
-the boy out, stepped quickly into the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” exclaimed Brandon, recovering in
-part from his surprise. “Who’d have thought of
-seeing <i>you</i> here, Uncle Arad!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yeou, I warrant!” cackled the old man shrilly.
-“I s’pose ye thought ye c’d git off scott free with yer
-ill gotten gains, didn’t ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon’s face flamed up redly, and he sprang to
-his feet in rage.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ye let him escape, officer!” the farmer exclaimed,
-shrinking back. “He’s quick’s a cat.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>But here Adoniram took a hand in the proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to know, sir, what you mean by
-this?” he said, his gray eyes flashing behind the tip
-tilted eye glasses. “Brandon is under <i>my</i> care, sir, and
-I will not allow such remarks to be addressed to him.”</p>
-
-<p>No one would have believed that it was the jolly
-Adoniram, to see his face now. The habitual smile
-had disappeared entirely.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno who yeou be,” Arad replied defiantly;
-“but I kin tell ye who I be, purty quick. I’m Arad
-Tarr; this young reskil here is my nevvy; an’ I’m his
-nateral an’ lawful guardeen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” said Mr. Pepper, with quiet sarcasm. “So
-you are his guardian, are you? How long since?”</p>
-
-<p>“How long since?” repeated the old man, in a
-rage. “I’ll show ye! I’ve <i>allus</i> been his guardeen—leastways,
-since his pa died.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which occurred a little over two months ago,”
-said Adoniram briefly. “Now, Mr. Tarr, for I suppose
-that is your name, where are your papers making
-you this lad’s guardian? Who appointed you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m his nateral guardeen now,” old Arad declared
-slowly; “but I’m goin’ to be ’p’inted by the court.”</p>
-
-<p>“What court?”</p>
-
-<p>“The Court o’ Probate, o’ Scituate, R. I.,” responded
-the farmer pompously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I think not,” said Adoniram, who was probably
-never more angry in his life than at that moment.
-“You have made a slight mistake, Mr. Tarr.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hey?” returned the farmer, growing red in the
-face, and looking daggers at the little merchant.</p>
-
-<p>“I say you have made a slight mistake. You will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
-<i>not</i> be appointed guardian of Brandon, by any court
-in the land. Did it ever occur to you that Captain
-Horace Tarr might have made a will?”</p>
-
-<p>“A will?” gasped the old man.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, a will.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he didn’t hev nothin’ ter will, ’ceptin——”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, excepting what?” Mr. Pepper demanded, as
-the other hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he <i>did</i> have something to will, and he appointed
-me joint guardian, with another gentleman,
-and <i>you</i>, Mr. Tarr, are <i>not</i> the party named to assist
-me. We have already made application in the New
-York courts to have the appointment allowed and the
-will has been presented for probate.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I don’t believe it!” shouted Arad.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not obliged to. But that doesn’t affect
-the facts of the case, just the same.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the farmer was quite nonplussed:
-but then he looked at the man he had brought with
-him again, and his faith revived.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye can’t escape me this way, ye young varmint!”
-he exclaimed, turning upon Brandon as though he
-were some way at fault for the wrecking of his plans.
-“Mebbe I hain’t your guardeen, but I’ve power
-’nough right here ter lug ye back ter Scituate an’ put
-yer through fur stealin’ that money.”</p>
-
-<p>“What money?” demanded Brandon, white with
-rage. “To what do you refer?”</p>
-
-<p>“That fifty dollars ye stole f’om me—that’s what
-I mean,” old Arad declared. “Th’ money ye stoled
-f’om my beury droor. I gotter warrant right here fur
-ye, ’n’ this officer ter serve it!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-
-
-<small>CALEB WETHERBEE OBSTRUCTS THE COURSE OF THE LAW</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Brandon</span> was fairly paralyzed by Uncle Arad’s announcement.
-He had realized that the old man was
-sorely disappointed at his inability to keep him on the
-farm. He had not, however, believed he would follow
-him clear to New York, and hatch up such a scheme as
-this to get him again in his power.</p>
-
-<p>“You old scoundrel!” he exclaimed, too enraged
-for the moment to remember that he was speaking to
-a man whose age, if not his character, should command
-his respect.</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, Don,” commanded Adoniram Pepper admonishingly.
-“It will not better matters to vituperate.
-Mr. Tarr,” he added, turning to the farmer, “do
-you realize what a serious charge you have made
-against your nephew?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I do,” Arad declared with vigor. “I
-got it all down here on er warrant—Squire Holt
-made it aout hisself. I’m er-goin’ ter hev that boy
-arrested for burglarizing me. Now you go erhead,
-Mr. Officer, an’ arrest him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a moment,” and Adoniram stepped quickly
-in front of Don before the foxy looking man could lay
-his hand upon the boy’s shoulder.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>“Let me see that warrant?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>The officer passed the paper over with a flourish,
-and Adoniram examined it closely.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” he exclaimed, shortly, “this is returnable
-to the Rhode Island courts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it is,” snarled old Arad.</p>
-
-<p>“But do you propose taking the boy back to Rhode
-Island?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“But can’t this be settled here, officer?” asked
-Adoniram nervously, knowing that any such delay as
-this would ruin their plans for an early start after the
-Silver Swan.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir; the robbery was committed in Rhode
-Island—it must be tried there,” replied the officer,
-with a crafty smile.</p>
-
-<p>Adoniram handed the warrant back in utter bewilderment;
-but at that juncture the door opened
-again, and Caleb Wetherbee himself stumped in.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey! what’s this?” the old seaman demanded,
-seeing instantly that something was up.</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad tried to shrink out of sight behind the
-officer’s back as he viewed Caleb’s fear inspiring proportions.</p>
-
-<p>“This is my <i>dear</i> Uncle Arad, Caleb,” Brandon
-hastened to say, “and he has come all the way from
-Rhode Island to arrest me and take me back.”</p>
-
-<p>“For what?” cried Caleb, aghast.</p>
-
-<p>“For robbing him; so he says. Isn’t he kind?”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon was fairly furious, but he trusted in the
-old seaman to get him out of his relative’s clutches.</p>
-
-<p>“Robbing him!”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>Caleb’s face grew red with rage.</p>
-
-<p>“What d’ye mean, ye old scamp?”</p>
-
-<p>“He <i>hez</i> robbed me,” Arad shrieked.</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” Caleb said coolly, “this looks to me like
-petty persecution, don’t it to you, ’Doniram? I reckon
-the courts would see it that way, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“The courts’ll send that reskil ter the State reform
-school—that’s what they’ll do,” Arad declared.</p>
-
-<p>“So it’s locking him up you’re after, eh?” returned
-Caleb. “Now, Brandon, don’t you worry about this.
-We kin have it fixed up in no time.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the boy’s got to be taken to Rhode Island,”
-exclaimed Adoniram. “It will be a matter of weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Weeks?” roared Caleb. “Why, the steamer sails
-Tuesday. He can’t go.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess, mister, that you won’t have much to do
-with it,” remarked the man with the warrant officiously.
-“This warrant is returnable to the Rhode Island
-courts, and to Rhode Island he must go. If the boy
-had wanted to go on a voyage he shouldn’t have stolen
-the money.”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb actually roared at this and shook his huge fist
-in the fellow’s face. Adoniram hastened to keep the
-peace.</p>
-
-<p>“How do we know you are an officer?” he demanded
-sternly. “This is a most atrocious action on
-Mr. Tarr’s part, and for all we know you may be
-party to it.”</p>
-
-<p>The officer smiled slily, and throwing back his coat
-showed his badge.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a dep’ty sheriff an’ don’t you fear,” he said.
-“The boy must come along.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>But as he reached out to clutch Don, the big sailor
-seized the youth and whirled him in behind him, placing
-himself between the officer and his prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be too fast,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you dare resist arrest?” the officer demanded
-angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody’s resisted you, yet.”</p>
-
-<p>His huge bulk, however, barred all approach to
-Don, who was now between all the others and the
-outer door.</p>
-
-<p>“If you arrest this boy you’ll seriously inconvenience
-our plans, an’ we’ll make you sweat for it, now
-I tell ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care; I’m er—goin’ ter hev him took up!”
-shrieked old Arad, to whom all this delay was agonizing.</p>
-
-<p>“You shut that trap of yours!” roared Caleb, turning
-upon the old man in a fury. “Don’t ye dare open
-it ag’in w’ile ye’re here, or there’ll be an assault case
-in court, too.”</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad dodged back out of range of the sailor’s
-brawny fist with great celerity.</p>
-
-<p>“Do——don’t ye let him tetch me, officer,” he implored,
-jerking his bandanna from the pocket of his
-shiny old black coat, and wiping his face nervously.</p>
-
-<p>With the handkerchief came forth a letter which fell
-at Mr. Pepper’s feet; but for the moment nobody but
-the merchant himself saw it.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon, who was directly behind the seaman,
-leaned forward and whispered something in Caleb’s
-ear. The old seaman’s face lit up in an instant, and
-he changed his position so that his burly form completely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-blocked the doorway leading into the outer
-office.</p>
-
-<p>“So you won’t settle this thing out o’ court, eh?”
-he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>The officer shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s gone too far,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“It has, hey?” Caleb exclaimed in wrath. “Well,
-so’ve <i>you</i> gone too far.” Then he exclaimed, turning
-to Don: “Leg it, lad! We’ll outwit the landlubber
-yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hi! stop him! stop him!” shrieked Uncle Arad,
-for at the instant Caleb had spoken, Don had
-darted back to the street door and thrown it open.</p>
-
-<p>“Good by, Uncle Arad!” the captain’s son cried
-mockingly. “I’ll see you when I’ve returned from
-the West Indies.”</p>
-
-<p>He was out in a moment, and the door slammed behind
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The deputy sheriff sprang forward to follow, but
-Caleb managed to get his wooden leg in the way, and
-the officer measured his length on the office floor, while
-Uncle Arad, fairly wild with rage, danced up and
-down, and shrieked for the police.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-
-
-<small>WHEREIN BRANDON TARR CONCEALS HIMSELF</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> doughty deputy sheriff was on his feet in an
-instant, and with a wrathy glance at Caleb, dashed out
-of the office after the fleeing Brandon. If he did not
-make the arrest he would fail to get his money, and
-he did not propose to lose that.</p>
-
-<p>But Uncle Arad could not get to the door without
-passing Caleb and he hardly dared do that. Just
-then the big seaman looked in no mood to be tampered
-with. The farmer, however, <i>did</i> sputter out something
-about having the law on everybody in general.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring on all the law you want to, you old scarecrow,”
-responded Caleb, vigorously mopping his face.
-“I reckon we kin take care of it. What ye got there,
-Adoniram?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pepper had picked up the letter which had
-fallen from old Arad’s pocket, and was looking at the
-superscription in a puzzled manner.</p>
-
-<p>Arad caught sight of the epistle as quickly as did
-Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s mine! give it here!” he cried, making a
-snatch at the paper.</p>
-
-<p>But Adoniram held it out of his reach.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see how you make that out, Mr. Tarr,” he
-said quietly. “This letter is not addressed to you.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-It is in <i>your</i> handwriting, Caleb, and is addressed to
-‘Master Brandon Tarr, Chopmist, Rhode Island.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you swab!” exclaimed the old tar, with a
-withering glance of contempt at old Arad, as he seized
-the letter. “This ’ere’s what I wrote the boy w’en
-I was in the hospital—w’ich same he never got.
-Now, how came <i>you</i> by it? You old land shark!”</p>
-
-<p>Arad was undeniably frightened. Although he
-might explain the fact of his opening Don’s letter as
-eminently proper, to himself, he well knew that he
-could not make these friends of his nephew see it in
-the same light.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I—it came arter Brandon went away,” he
-gasped in excuse.</p>
-
-<p>“It did, hey?” exclaimed Caleb suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pepper took the envelope again and examined
-the postmark critically.</p>
-
-<p>“Hum—um,” he said slowly, “postmarked in New
-York on the third; received on the afternoon of the
-fourth at the Chopmist post office. I’m afraid, my
-dear sir, that that yarn won’t wash.”</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Arad was speechless, and looked from one
-to the other of the stern faced men in doubt.</p>
-
-<p>“He—he was my nevvy; didn’t I hev a right ter
-see what he had written ter him?”</p>
-
-<p>“You can bet ye didn’t,” Caleb declared with confidence,
-and with a slight wink at Adoniram. “Let
-me tell ye, Mr. Tarr, that openin’ other folks’ correspondence
-is actionable, as the lawyers say. I reckon
-that you’ve laid yourself li’ble to gettin’ arrested yourself,
-old man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye—ye can’t do it,” sputtered Arad.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>“If that monkey of a sheriff finds Brandon (w’ich
-same I reckon he won’t), we’ll see if we can’t give
-<i>you</i> a taste of the same medicine.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man was undeniably frightened and edged
-towards the door.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I better go,” he remarked hesitatingly.
-“I dunno as that officer’ll be able ter ketch thet reskil.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t b’lieve he will myself,” Caleb declared.
-“And if you want to keep your own skin whole, you’d
-best see that he doesn’t touch the lad.”</p>
-
-<p>Old Arad slunk out without another word, and the
-two friends allowed him to depart in contemptuous
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>When he had disappeared Adoniram turned to the
-sailor at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Where has Don gone, Caleb?” he asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got me. He told me he was goin’ to skip,
-and for us to go ahead with the preparations for getting
-off next week, just the same. He’d lay low till
-the old scamp had given it up, and then slip aboard
-the steamer. Oh, the boy’s all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is, if that sheriff doesn’t find him,” said the
-merchant doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll risk that,” responded Caleb, who had vast confidence
-in Brandon’s ability to take care of himself.</p>
-
-<p>But Adoniram shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“New York is a bad place for a boy to be alone in.
-Where will he go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Down to the pier, I reckon, and hide aboard the
-steamer. I’ll agree to put him away there so that no
-measly faced sheriff like <i>that</i> fellow can find him.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>“It’s a bad business,” declared Mr. Pepper, shaking
-his head slowly. “If he hadn’t run off there might
-have been some way of fixing it up so that he wouldn’t
-have had to go back to Rhode Island, and thus delay
-the sailing of the steamer. We might have scared the
-uncle out of prosecuting him. He was badly frightened
-as it was.”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb gazed at his friend for several moments with
-a quizzical smile upon his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know, Adoniram,” he said at length, “I
-b’lieve you’re too innocent for this wicked world.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean?” asked the merchant, flushing
-a little, yet smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you don’t seem to see anything fishy in all
-this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fishy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, fishy,” returned Caleb, sitting down and
-speaking confidentially. “Several things make me believe
-that you (and me, too) haven’t been half awake
-in this business.”</p>
-
-<p>“I certainly do not understand you,” declared
-Adoniram.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, give me a chance to explain, will you?” said
-the sailor impatiently. “You seem to think that this
-old land shark of an uncle of the boy’s is just trying to
-get him back on the farm, and has hatched up this
-robbery business for that purpose? I don’t suppose
-you think Don stole any money from him, do you?”
-he added.</p>
-
-<p>“Not for an instant!” the merchant replied emphatically.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I thought. Well, as I say, you suppose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-he wants Brandon back on the farm—wants his
-work, in fact?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye—es.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, did it ever strike you, ’Doniram,” Caleb
-pursued, with a smile of superiority on his face—“did
-it ever strike you that if he was successful in
-proving Brandon guilty, the boy would be locked up
-and then <i>nobody</i> would get his valuable services—nobody
-except the State?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that’s so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it’s so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, what is his object in persecuting the poor
-lad? Is he doing it just out of spite?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, see here; does that look reasonable? Do
-you think for a moment that an old codger like him—stingy
-as they make ’em—d’ye think he’d go ter the
-expense o’ comin ’way down here to New York out
-of revenge simply? Well, I guess not!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, what is he up to?” demanded Adoniram,
-in bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, of that <i>I’m</i> not sure, of course; but,” said
-Caleb, with vehemence, “I’m willing to risk my
-hull advance that he’s onter this di’mond business.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Pepper, how could he help being? Didn’t
-he get that letter of mine, an’ didn’t I give the hull
-thing away in it, like the blamed idiot I was? Man
-alive, a sharper like that feller would sell his immortal
-soul for a silver dollar. What <i>wouldn’t</i> he
-for a big stake like this?”</p>
-
-<p>“But—” began Adoniram.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on a minute and let me finish,” urged Caleb.
-“That scoundrel Leroyd was up to Chopmist, mind ye.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>
-Who knows but what he an’ old Arad Tarr have
-hitched hosses and gone inter this together? I haven’t
-told either you or Brandon, for I didn’t want to worry
-you, but I learned yesterday that Jim is tryin’ ter charter
-a craft of some kind—you an’ I know what for.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s got no money; what rascal of a sailor ever
-has? He must have backing, then. And who is more
-likely to be the backer than the old sharper who’s
-just gone out of here! I tell ye, ’Doniram, <i>they’re
-after them di’monds</i>, and it behooves us ter git up an’
-dust if we want ter beat ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>The ship owner shook his head unconvinced.</p>
-
-<p>“You may be right, of course, Caleb; I don’t say
-it is an impossibility. But it strikes me that your
-conclusions are rather far fetched. They are not
-reasonable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ll see,” responded the old seaman, pursing
-up his lips. “I shall miss Brandon’s help—a
-handier lad I never see—but he will have to lay low
-till after the whaleback sails.”</p>
-
-<p>He went back to the work of getting the steamer
-ready for departure, expecting every hour that Brandon
-would appear. But the captain’s son did not
-show up that day, nor the next.</p>
-
-<p>Monday came and Number Three was all ready for
-sailing. Her crew of twenty men, beside the officers,
-were aboard.</p>
-
-<p>The first and third mates were likewise present, the
-former, Mr. Coffin, being a tall, shrewd looking, pleasant
-faced man, who eternally chewed on the end of a
-cigar (except when eating or sleeping) although he
-was never seen to light one; and Mr. Bolin, the third,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-a keen, alert little man who looked hardly older than
-Brandon himself.</p>
-
-<p>But Brandon did not come. The new captain of
-the whaleback, and the owner himself, were greatly
-worried by the boy’s continued absence.</p>
-
-<p>They had already set on foot inquiry for the youth’s
-whereabouts, but nothing had come of it.</p>
-
-<p>They did discover that Uncle Arad had gone back
-to Rhode Island, and gone back alone. The “scaly”
-ward politician who held the onerous position of
-deputy sheriff, and who had sought to arrest the boy,
-had not been successful, Brandon’s friends knew,
-for the man haunted the pier at which the whaleback
-lay, day and night.</p>
-
-<p>“If he don’t come tonight, Adoniram,” Caleb declared,
-“we shall sail in the morning, just the same—and
-that by the first streak of light, too. <i>You</i> will be
-here, and I can trust you to look out for the lad. <i>I</i>
-must be away after those di’monds. Don’ll turn up
-all right, I know right well; and we mustn’t let them
-swabs get ahead of us, and reach the brig first.”</p>
-
-<p>He had taken the precaution ere this to have his own
-and Brandon’s effects brought down to the boat. He
-was ready, in fact, to cast off and steam away from
-the dock at a moment’s notice.</p>
-
-<p>As the evening approached Caleb ordered the fires
-built under the boilers, and everything to be made
-ready for instant departure. Adoniram Pepper came
-down after dinner and remained in the whaleback’s
-cabin, hoping to see Brandon once again before the
-steamer sailed.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb was too anxious to keep still at all, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-tramped back and forth, occasionally making trips to
-the wheelman’s turret in which he had stationed Mr.
-Coffin and one of the sailors, so as to have no delay
-in starting, no matter what should happen.</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove, this beats blockade running at Savannah
-in the sixties,” muttered the first mate, after one of his
-commander’s anxious trips to the forward turret to see
-that all was right. “This youngster they’re taking
-all this trouble for must be a most remarkable boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s two fellows watching the steamer from
-the wharf,” Caleb declared, entering the cabin again.</p>
-
-<p>Just then there was a sound outside, and a heavy
-knock sounded at the cabin door. Caleb pulled it
-open in an instant.</p>
-
-<p>Without stood three burly police officers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” exclaimed Mr. Pepper, in wonder.</p>
-
-<p>“What do <i>you</i> want?” Caleb demanded, inclined to
-be a little combative.</p>
-
-<p>“Beg pardon, sir,” said the spokesman of the two,
-nodding respectfully to Mr. Pepper, “but we’ve been
-sent to search the steamer for a boy against whom
-this man holds a warrant,” and the officer motioned to
-a third individual who stood without. It was the
-deputy sheriff.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Mr. Pepper quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“Search and be hanged,” growled Caleb, glowering
-at the man with the warrant. “If you can find him
-you’ll have better luck than we.”</p>
-
-<p>He refused to assist them in any way, however, and
-Mr. Bolin politely showed the party over the whole
-steamer. But of course, they found not a sign of
-Brandon.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>After nearly an hour’s search the officers gave it
-up and departed, Caleb hurling after them several
-sarcastic remarks about their supposed intellectual
-accomplishments—or rather, their lack of such accomplishments.</p>
-
-<p>The deputy sheriff, whose name was Snaggs, by the
-way, would not give it up, however, but still remained
-on the wharf.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Coffin, who had begun to take a lively interest
-in the proceedings, was pacing the inclined deck of
-the whaleback on the side furtherest from the pier,
-a few minutes past midnight (everybody on board
-was still awake at even this late hour) when his ear
-caught the sound of a gentle splash in the black waters
-just below him.</p>
-
-<p>He stopped instantly and leaned over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Hist!” whispered a voice out of the darkness.
-“Toss me a rope. I want to come aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Coffin was not a man to show his emotions,
-and therefore, without a word, he dropped the end of
-a bit of cable into the water, just where he could see
-the faint outlines of the owner of the voice.</p>
-
-<p>Hidden by the wheelhouse from the view of anybody
-who might be on the wharf, he assisted the person
-aboard, and in a minute the mysterious visitor
-stood upon the iron plates at Mr. Coffin’s side.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
-
-
-<small>THE DEPARTURE OF THE WHALEBACK, NUMBER THREE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">No</span> emergency was ever too great for Lawrence
-Coffin. The appearance of the stranger whom he had
-lifted over the rail to the steamer’s deck may have
-surprised him; but he gave no visible sign.</p>
-
-<p>The instant the fellow was on his feet, Mr. Coffin
-slid open the door of the wheelhouse and pushed the
-newcomer in.</p>
-
-<p>“Jackson,” he said sharply, to the man inside, “go
-for Captain Wetherbee.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he turned to the dripping figure that stood
-just within the door of the turret.</p>
-
-<p>The stranger was a youth of fifteen or sixteen, with
-a sharp, intelligent face, and his saturated clothing
-was little more than rags.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!” said the mate, “<i>you’re</i> not Brandon
-Tarr, I take it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You kin bet on that, mister,” responded the youth
-grinning. “An’ you, I reckon, ain’t Cale Wetherbee.
-He’s got a wooden leg.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve sent for Mr. Wetherbee,” replied Mr. Coffin.
-“What do you want?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell th’ boss, wot I was told ter see,” declared
-the fellow shrewdly.</p>
-
-<p>The youth was evidently of that great class of individuals<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-known as “street gamins” who, in New York
-City, are numbered by the thousand.</p>
-
-<p>He was thin and muscular, quick in his movements,
-and his eyes were shifty and uneasy, not from any
-lack of frankness or honesty, perhaps, but because
-his mode of life forced him to be ever on the watch for
-what might “happen next.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Coffin had hardly made this mental inventory
-of the fellow, when Caleb, accompanied by Mr. Pepper,
-came forward. The strange youth evidently recognized
-the captain of the whaleback at once as the
-individual he wished to see.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re Captain Wetherbee,” he said quickly fumbling
-in the inside of his coarse flannel shirt (the shirt
-and trousers were all he had on) “I got somethin’
-fur you from Brandon Tarr.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?” cried Mr. Pepper, in great excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone to sea, boss,” responded the boy calmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey!” roared Caleb, and then the messenger
-brought forth that which he was fumbling for—a
-little waterproof matchbox.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone to sea?” repeated Adoniram, in bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>“Dat’s it,” said the boy. “He went day ’fore
-yest’day mornin’ in de Success.”</p>
-
-<p>But Caleb had opened the matchbox and drawn
-forth the folded paper it contained.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a letter—the young rascal! Why didn’t he
-come himself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t I tell ye he’d gone ter sea?” demanded the
-youth in disgust.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>“Listen to this,” exclaimed Caleb, paying not the
-least attention to the messenger’s words, and he read
-the closely written page aloud:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Dear Caleb</span>—Swivel is going to make a break with this
-letter for me, although the Success sails, we understand, in
-an hour or two. He can tell you how I came aboard here, so
-I won’t stop to do that.</p>
-
-<p>“What I want to say is, that Leroyd is aboard and that the
-brig will touch at Savannah for Mr. Pepper’s old clerk, Mr.
-Weeks, who is in the plot to find the Silver Swan, too. I
-shall leave her at Savannah if it is a possibility.</p>
-
-<p>“If you get into Savannah while she is there, however, and
-I don’t appear, try to find some way of getting me out. I’m
-afraid of Leroyd—or, that is, I should be if he knew I was
-here.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got enough to eat and drink to last me a long time
-and am comfortable. I can make another raid on the pantry,
-too, if I run short.</p>
-
-<p>“Look out for Swivel; he’s a good fellow. He can tell
-you all that I would like to, if space and time did not forbid.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright2">“Yours sincerely,</span><br />
-“<span class="smcap">Brandon Tarr</span>.</p>
-
-<p>“P. S. We’ll beat these scamps and get the Silver Swan
-yet.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” commented Mr. Pepper, in amazement.
-“What will that boy do next?”</p>
-
-<p>“The young rascal!” Caleb exclaimed in vexation.
-“What does he mean by cutting up such didoes as
-this? Aboard the very vessel the scoundrels have
-chartered, hey?”</p>
-
-<p>“But how did he get there?” cried Adoniram wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“This young man ought to be able to tell that,”
-suggested Mr. Coffin, referring to the dripping youth.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb looked from the open letter to the boy.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>“So you’re Swivel, eh?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>The lad grinned and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suppose you explain this mystery.”</p>
-
-<p>But here Adoniram interposed.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us take him to the cabin, and give him something
-dry to put on. He’ll catch his death of cold
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Nough said. Come on,” said Caleb leading the
-way.</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen minutes later the youth who rejoiced in the
-name of Swivel was inside of warm and dry garments,
-several sizes too large for him, and was telling his
-story to a most appreciative audience.</p>
-
-<p>I will not give it in detail, and in Swivel’s bad grammar;
-a less rambling account will suffice.</p>
-
-<p>When Brandon Tarr had made his rapid retreat
-from the office of Adoniram Pepper and Co. he had
-run across the street, dodged around the first corner,
-and then walked hastily up town. He determined to
-keep away from the office for the remainder of the
-day, hoping to tire out both Uncle Arad and the deputy
-sheriff.</p>
-
-<p>Finally he took a car and rode over to Brooklyn,
-and it was there that he fell in with Swivel, who was a
-veritable street gamin—a “wharf-rat” even—though
-a good hearted and not an altogether bad principled
-one.</p>
-
-<p>It being a time in the day when there were no papers
-to sell, Swivel (wherever the boy got the name
-he didn’t know, and it would have been hard to trace
-its origin) was blacking boots, and while he shined
-Brandon’s the two boys scraped up an acquaintance.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>Fearing that Uncle Arad or the officer, or perhaps
-both, would be on the watch about the shipping merchant’s
-office, or the steamer dock, Brandon decided
-that Swivel would be a good one to have along with
-him to send ahead as “scout,” and for a small sum the
-gamin agreed.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon was a country boy, and was unfamiliar
-with city ways or city conveniences. It never crossed
-his mind to use the telephone communicating with his
-friends, and Swivel knew very little about telephones,
-any way.</p>
-
-<p>So they waited until toward evening and then
-came back to New York.</p>
-
-<p>Water Street and its vicinity, and the docks, were
-as familiar to Swivel as were the lanes and woods
-of Chopmist to Brandon. By devious ways the gamin
-led the captain’s son to the ship owner’s office, but it
-was quite dark by that time and the place was closed.</p>
-
-<p>So they went to the pier at which the whaleback
-lay, and here Swivel showed that he was of great use
-to Brandon, for had it not been for him, his employer
-would have run straight into a trap. The deputy
-sheriff, Snaggs, was watching the steamer, and no
-less a person than Mr. Alfred Weeks himself, was
-talking with him.</p>
-
-<p>By careful maneuvering the two boys got into a position
-from which they could hear some of the conversation
-of the two rascals; but the way to the steamer
-was right under Snaggs’ eye, and Brandon dared not
-attempt it.</p>
-
-<p>By intently listening, the captain’s son heard several
-important items of news, and, greatly to his astonishment,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-discovered that Uncle Arad, Leroyd, and Mr.
-Weeks himself were playing right into each other’s
-hands, and that their object was to keep Brandon
-from getting back to his friends, and thus delay the
-sailing of the whaleback so that the craft on which the
-plotters expected to sail might get away first.</p>
-
-<p>Snaggs was to keep a sharp lookout from the shoreward
-side of the whaleback and there was already a
-man in a boat patroling the riverside that Brandon
-might not return from that direction, and a third person
-was “shadowing” Adoniram Pepper’s residence.
-The ship owner’s office would be watched during the
-day.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Brandon made his appearance he was to
-be seized at once on the strength of the Rhode Island
-warrant and sent back to Chopmist. This, the conspirators
-hoped, would keep Caleb Wetherbee from
-sailing for several weeks, and by that time Leroyd
-and the ex-clerk expected to overhaul the Silver Swan—that
-is, this is what Weeks and Leroyd themselves
-were planning to do; but the former took care to say
-nothing about the Silver Swan to the deputy sheriff.</p>
-
-<p>Finding that there was no chance to get aboard the
-whaleback just then, and having heard Weeks say that
-he was going to meet Leroyd and that they two were
-to go that night and see the vessel and her commander,
-Brandon decided to follow them, and find out the name
-of the craft and where she lay, believing that the information
-would be of value to himself and to his friends.</p>
-
-<p>Piloted by Swivel, Brandon followed “Sneaky Al”
-to the New England Hotel and while the ex-clerk
-went inside for Leroyd the two boys waited without,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-and then took up the trail again when the two conspirators
-appeared.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor and Weeks went over to Brooklyn and
-after two hours’ dodging and running and hiding, they
-tracked the rascals to the brig Success, lying at a
-Brooklyn wharf.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon decided that it would never do to be so
-near and not hear the plans the villains made with the
-captain of the Success, so he rashly crept aboard and
-listened to the conversation at the cabin skylight. And
-this was when he got into trouble.</p>
-
-<p>He heard the two plotters agree with the captain
-of the vessel (who was not in the scheme at all) to pay
-two hundred dollars for six week’s use of the brig,
-providing the Success put to sea at once.</p>
-
-<p>She already had a very fair cargo for Savannah,
-and the agreement was that she should put in at that
-port for the time necessary for the cargo to be landed.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, of course, the captain, who was the owner as
-well, was going to make a very good thing out of it,
-indeed. He asked no questions as to what use the brig
-was to be put to; and he agreed to allow Leroyd to
-accompany him to Savannah, where Weeks would
-meet them.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon made a shrewd guess that the ex-clerk was
-to remain in New York until he was certain of <i>his</i>
-capture and incarceration; then he would reach Savannah
-by steamer.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite evident that the two rascals had managed
-to “boil” more money out of old Arad Tarr than
-they had first expected, and could afford to be more
-lavish with their funds.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>But, as I said, the boys, by venturing aboard the
-Success, got into trouble. Somebody came aft while
-they were listening to the conference below, and to
-escape discovery, they dodged down the after hatch.</p>
-
-<p>The crew of the Success were already aboard, and
-the two men who constituted the “anchor watch”
-remained near the open hatchway (the other hatches
-were battened down), and the two boys were unable
-to leave the hold.</p>
-
-<p>Morning came, and found them still there. The
-cargo was nearly all in, and the crew went to work
-to finish the lading by daylight. Brandon and Swivel
-retreated into the bows of the vessel, and managed to
-remain hidden all day.</p>
-
-<p>They did not dare leave the hold, although they
-suffered extremely from lack of food and water, for
-Leroyd had come aboard to superintend the work, and
-would have seen them.</p>
-
-<p>At evening the hatches were battened down, and the
-unintentional stowaways were left in darkness. But
-Swivel, who a shrewd and sharp eyed lad, had noticed
-a small door in the cabin bulkhead by which the cook
-doubtless entered the hold for provisions from time to
-time.</p>
-
-<p>With their pocket knives they forced the fastenings
-of this door and Swivel made a raid into the pantry,
-which was left unguarded, and returned laden with
-provisions enough to last them a week if need be. He
-secured a big “beaker” of water, too.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon also discovered the ship’s provisions stored
-near the bows, and was sure that he could stand a
-siege.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>Leroyd, they ascertained, hardly ever left the cabin
-or deck of the Success, and Brandon dared not venture out.
-At last, after talking the whole matter over,
-Swivel agreed to take the risk of giving himself up
-as a stowaway, and thus get put ashore before the
-brig started.</p>
-
-<p>Then he was to make his way to the whaleback and
-explain Brandon’s situation to Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>The captain’s son wrote his letter and placed it
-in the matchbox, which Swivel in turn had hidden
-in the breast of his shirt. Then the gamin pounded
-on the hatch until the crew heard him and let him out.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally the captain of the Success was angry
-enough, for the brig was already to sail, and they were
-getting the lines cast off, so he summoned a night
-watchman from the dock, who took the unlucky Swivel
-in charge and handed him over to a policeman.</p>
-
-<p>This was a phase of the situation which neither of
-the boys had considered. But there was no way out
-of it, and the gamin spent the day in the police station,
-for it was Sunday.</p>
-
-<p>He was brought before the magistrate the next
-morning, but of course there was nobody to appear
-against him, so he was discharged with a reprimand.
-The police captain, however, kept him busy about the
-station until late in the afternoon, before he would let
-him go.</p>
-
-<p>“He kep’ me jugglin’ wid er mop er wipin’ up de
-floor,” as the gamin expressed it to his hearers.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as he was free he had hurried to the New
-York side; but upon reaching the vicinity of the whaleback<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-he discovered that the “patrol line” was drawn
-even closer than before.</p>
-
-<p>Snaggs and two of his friends were on duty, for as
-the time approached for the sailing, they decided
-that if Brandon came back he would do so very soon.</p>
-
-<p>Swivel had seen the raid the policemen made under
-the deputy’s instigation, and after the bluecoats were
-safely out of the way, he had slipped into the water
-and made for the steamer.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ here I is,” he said, in conclusion. “Dey
-didn’t ketch me, nor dat Brandon Tarr, nuther. We’s
-too fly for ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of all the scrapes I ever heard of, this is the
-worst,” Adoniram exclaimed in comment.</p>
-
-<p>But Caleb, now that his fears for Don’s safety were
-somewhat allayed, seemed rather to enjoy the situation.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that boy’s smart,” he declared, with a chuckle.
-“I’ll risk him even if he is in that vessel’s hold. Leroyd
-won’t get the best of <i>him</i>. Probably, too, the
-captain of the Success is not a bad sort of a fellow,
-an’ he won’t see the boy maltreated.</p>
-
-<p>“I feel better, ’Doniram, and with your permission
-we’ll get under way at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what shall we do with this lad?” asked the
-little merchant, nodding and smiling at Swivel. “He’s
-deserving of much praise for his honesty and faithfulness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, take me along, will yer?” exclaimed the
-gamin, with eagerness. “I’ll work <i>hard</i> ef ye will!
-I jest wanter see dis thing out, I do! I like dat
-Brandon Tarr, an’ I wanter see him git the di’monts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-wot he said was on dat wreck yer arter. Say, lemme
-go, will yer?”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb looked at the ship owner in perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, take him, Caleb,” said Adoniram quickly.
-“It may be the making of the lad to get him off the
-city streets. He deserves it.”</p>
-
-<p>“So be it then,” said Caleb, rising. “Now, Mr.
-Coffin and Mr. Bolin—to work! You’ll have to go
-ashore at once, Adoniram. I shall have Number
-Three out of her berth in half an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>Steam was got up, the crew flew about their several
-duties under the energetic commands of the officers,
-and within a short time the whaleback, to the manifest
-disappointment of Mr. Snaggs, who watched proceedings
-from the shadow of the wharf, cast off her
-lines and steamed down the bay into the darkness of
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>Thus did she begin the voyage whose object was the
-finding of the wreck of the Silver Swan.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIX<br />
-
-
-<small>THE STOWAWAY ABOARD THE SUCCESS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> we know, Brandon Tarr had no intention of remaining
-long away from his friends when he slipped
-out of Adoniram Pepper’s office to escape arrest on
-the fraudulent charge of robbery, concocted by Uncle
-Arad.</p>
-
-<p>The events which followed, however, made it necessary
-for him to remain away, and, finally, to go to
-sea as a stowaway in the hold of the Success, the vessel
-chartered by the conspirators to make search for
-the Silver Swan.</p>
-
-<p>After the friendly street gamin, Swivel, left him in
-the hold, in the early hours of Sunday morning, Brandon
-of course had no means of knowing what had become
-of him—whether he had accomplished his purpose
-of getting away from the brig before she sailed,
-or whether, because she was short handed, the captain
-of the Success had retained him.</p>
-
-<p>After Swivel was let up on deck, and the hatch
-closed, however, Brandon heard nothing further, except
-the heavy tramping of the sailors, the creaking of
-the ropes, and the hoarse roars of command from the
-officers.</p>
-
-<p>The work of getting the Success away from the
-dock went rapidly on.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>Quite fortunately for the stowaway, the hold of the
-Success was little more than two thirds filled with
-Savannah goods. In the bows, beside a great many
-bags and boxes and barrels of provisions for the use
-of the crew, there were likewise spare sails, cordage,
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>It would be a very easy matter indeed for him to
-hide among the stuff if any one came into the hold.</p>
-
-<p>The scent of bilge water was not at all strong, for
-the Success was a comparatively new vessel and had
-evidently been recently pumped out.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon judged her to be about the size of the
-Silver Swan, much the same sort of craft in fact, and,
-like his father’s vessel, the Success was a “tramp.”</p>
-
-<p>It was night—or at least a gloomy twilight—at
-all times in the hold; but Brandon thought that it was
-surely daylight by the time the brig was under way.</p>
-
-<p>She was taken down the river by a fussy little steam
-tug and then, meeting the swells of the Atlantic, and
-a brisk gale springing up, she shook out her sails and
-dropped the tug astern.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon was fearful that he might be sick, for he
-had never really been to sea and the brig pitched not
-a little in the waves of the ocean.</p>
-
-<p>To reduce the possibility of this misfortune to a
-minimum, he ate but sparingly the first day or two
-out, and by that time all “squeamish” feelings passed
-away.</p>
-
-<p>It was dreadfully dull in the dark hold, however.
-Of food and water he had a sufficiency, although the
-latter was warm and brackish; but there was absolutely
-nothing for him to do to pass away the time.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-There was not even the spice of danger about his situation,
-for nobody came into the hold.</p>
-
-<p>He dared not explore much at first, for he was
-afraid that he might be heard from the cabin or forecastle.</p>
-
-<p>During a slight blow which came up the fourth day,
-however, while the spars and cordage were creaking
-so that all other sounds were drowned, he felt perfectly
-safe in moving about. If he could not hear
-what went on outside, nobody outside would be likely
-to hear him.</p>
-
-<p>On this day, however, he received several tumbles,
-for the ship occasionally pitched so suddenly that he
-was carried completely off his feet. Nothing worse
-happened to him, though, than the barking of his elbows
-and knees.</p>
-
-<p>Gaining confidence in his ability to get around without
-being discovered, he changed his position more
-frequently after this. The weather remained fair for
-some time following this small blow, and Brandon
-hung about the cabin bulkhead, striving to hear more
-of Leroyd’s plans, if possible.</p>
-
-<p>It was plain that the captain of the brig knew nothing
-of the real plans of the conspirators. They had
-told him what they pleased, and he was to ask no questions.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long, however, before the stowaway discovered
-something which was quite a surprise to him.
-There was a woman on board the brig; he heard the
-rustle of her garments, and occasionally the tones of a
-female voice.</p>
-
-<p>At first he thought her to be the captain’s wife, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-because of the youthfulness of her tones and some
-words which the captain addressed to her, he changed
-this opinion, and decided that she was his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon was quite interested in her, for a girl on
-a sailing vessel was certainly a novelty. He was sure
-she must be a “jolly one,” as he expressed it, to sail
-with her father on a merchantman. Not many girls
-would have the pluck to do that.</p>
-
-<p>As the days passed by, and the Success fled on before
-the favoring gales, drawing nearer and nearer to
-Savannah, Brandon became correspondingly worried
-over the obstructions to a safe escape from the brig,
-which were presented to his mind.</p>
-
-<p>Once the brig reached port and the hatches were
-opened, it would be “all day” with him. Nothing
-but a miracle would save him from falling into the
-hands of Jim Leroyd, and he didn’t like to think of
-that.</p>
-
-<p>He had good reason to believe that the rascally
-sailor would not hesitate to injure him in any way
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally his mind reverted to the trap in the cabin
-bulkhead by which Swivel had gained access to the
-cook’s galley, as a possible means of escape before the
-hatches were removed. If the brig reached Savannah
-late in the day, doubtless the hatches would remain
-battened down till the next morning. In that case
-the trap might be his salvation.</p>
-
-<p>Several times during the voyage the steward, sometimes
-with a seaman with him, entered the hold by
-this door, for something among the stores. At such<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-times Brandon “laid low” and his presence was not
-discovered.</p>
-
-<p>What little food he had purloined from the stores
-was not noticed either.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, as the brig drew nearer to her destination
-Brandon set about studying the topography of
-the cabin—its entrances and exits—and how he
-could best pass through it and reach the deck without
-attracting the attention of anybody on board.</p>
-
-<p>All this scouting had to be done at night, of course,
-and many were his narrow escapes while engaged in
-this most perilous undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing ventured, nothing gained,” was the motto
-of the Tarrs, father and son. In Captain Tarr’s case,
-and in that of his brother Anson, it had been, as a
-usual thing, a good deal of <i>venture</i> and little <i>gain</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The same motive, however, was predominant in
-Brandon’s nature, and he took many risks in thus
-scouting about the brig’s cabin that almost any other
-boy would not have taken.</p>
-
-<p>One night he had cautiously set the narrow door
-leading into the steward’s pantry ajar, and sat just
-under it in the darkness of the hold, trying to discover
-if all but the officers, excepting the one in command
-of the watch, had turned in.</p>
-
-<p>There was a light in the outer cabin, but he could
-not see into the room from where he sat, and he dared
-not enter the pantry until he was sure that the cabin
-was unoccupied. Occasionally a sound of low conversation
-would reach his ears from the deck, but
-otherwise all was still.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_212.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">“I’M A STOWAWAY. I’VE BEEN IN THE HOLD SINCE<br /> WE LEFT
-NEW YORK.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>“I believe I’ll risk it,” he declared, after remaining
-in a listening attitude for nearly half an hour. “I
-need water badly—my throat is well nigh parched—and
-if I could learn whether the lamp was usually left
-turned up like that, whether the cabin was empty or
-<i>not</i>, I might know better how to act when I do try to
-escape.”</p>
-
-<p>Finally he crawled through the opening and crept
-softly to the cabin door. The apartment was empty—or
-it appeared to be—although there was a chair
-drawn up to the table, and some books lay there as
-though having been in recent use.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess I’d better not stay,” thought the stowaway
-nervously. “But I must have a drink.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned back into the cook’s galley, and took
-a deep draught from a bucket he found there. Just
-as he was about to leave the place he was electrified
-by hearing a voice say,</p>
-
-<p>“What are <i>you</i> doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon wheeled about like a flash. There framed
-by the cabin doorway was a young girl—the girl
-whose voice he had heard more than once since his
-incarceration in the hold of the Success—the captain’s
-daughter!</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you? What do you want!” she repeated,
-eying him fearlessly, though with a puzzled
-expression of countenance. “I never remember having
-seen <i>you</i> before.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon was suddenly conscious that his long captivity
-in the vessel’s hold had not improved his personal
-appearance, and with his feeling of fright at
-being discovered, there was also considerable vexation
-at being seen in such a plight by a lady.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>The girl was bright looking and intelligent, with
-a face which attracted the boy greatly; in fact, he was
-almost tempted to believe that he had seen her somewhere,
-so familiar did she appear.</p>
-
-<p>Dressed in a simple blue flannel yachting suit, trimmed
-with white braid, which set off her plump figure
-to great advantage, she was a pleasing picture.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you answer me?” she demanded in
-vexation, as Brandon continued silent.</p>
-
-<p>“Sh! don’t give me away,” begged the boy, taking
-a step nearer. “I’m a stowaway, I’ve been in the
-hold ever since we left New York.”</p>
-
-<p>“Another stowaway!” she exclaimed, but in a lower
-tone. “Why father found one just before we left
-port.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it,” returned Brandon. “He was with
-me. What did they do with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Father gave him into the hands of the police,”
-replied the girl gravely. “He’s very hard on stowaways.
-Why did you get into the hold?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I <i>had</i> to; yes, I did—actually had to,”
-declared Brandon, in a whisper. “I can’t tell you
-the whole story now; but I will some time. I haven’t
-done anything wrong—excepting taking a few provisions
-from the ship’s stores. Those I will pay you
-for now,” and he took his purse from the pocket of
-his stained and ragged coat.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no!” cried the girl, drawing back, “I do not
-want your money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I shall leave it, as I first intended, on the
-cabin table when we get to Savannah.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>“But the men will find you when we get in, even
-if I <i>don’t</i> tell father.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not,” Brandon replied, so earnestly that
-the captain’s daughter looked at him curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there anybody aboard whom you fear?” she
-asked shrewdly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there is. It is that evil looking man—the
-one who has chartered the brig—Jim Leroyd.”</p>
-
-<p>“He!” she exclaimed, in surprise. Then after a
-little silence she added:</p>
-
-<p>“He <i>is</i> an evil looking man; I’ve told father so
-more than once, but he says that a man is not always
-as bad as he looks. Father has seen so many people
-and so much of the world, that I seldom question his
-judgment; but I have been impressed from the first
-that there was something wrong about him—and
-about that Mr. Weeks, who is in partnership with
-him, and whom we expect to meet at Savannah.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a strange thing—this searching for a derelict
-brig—any way. I tell father that there is something
-wrong back of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“There <i>is</i>,” Brandon declared. “I don’t dare tell
-you about it now. You won’t let anybody know I’m
-here, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No—o, I’ll promise that. It wasn’t right to stow
-yourself away aboard the brig, but you look honest—although
-you <i>are</i> awfully dirty and ragged,” said this
-most plain spoken young lady.</p>
-
-<p>“I know it; I look terribly,” whispered Don, creeping
-through the door into the hold again. Then he
-turned about and asked, “What is your name, please?”</p>
-
-<p>“Milly Frank.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>“Thank you; and mine is Brandon Tarr. Some
-time I can explain all this to you, and you will see
-that I did the only thing I could in stowing myself
-away here.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how do you expect to get out?”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope we’ll get to port in the night. If we do,
-then I’ll try to slip out through the cabin.”</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody will catch you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not.”</p>
-
-<p>“We-ell, I <i>hope</i>, not, too,” said Miss Milly frankly.
-“I don’t suppose it is just right, but I’ll try to help
-you. If I see a chance for you to get away I’ll come
-to this door and knock—see, like this.”</p>
-
-<p>She knocked twice in succession, but lightly, so that
-nobody might hear her but the stowaway.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you—thank you!” murmured the boy,
-and then he shut the trap quickly, for a heavy step
-sounded from the cabin without.</p>
-
-<p>Somebody had come down from the deck—probably
-the officer of the watch.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXX<br />
-
-
-<small>SHOWING WHAT MISS MILLY DOES FOR BRANDON</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Brandon</span> crept away from the trap in the bulkhead,
-fearing that at any moment the person who had entered
-the outer cabin during his conversation with the
-captain’s daughter, might strive to capture him. He
-was afraid that the person had heard his movements
-in descending into the cargo hold again; but if the
-newcomer <i>did</i> hear anything, Milly evidently convinced
-him that there was nothing unusual going on,
-for Brandon was not disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>Then ensued for the stowaway a period of anxious
-waiting. The very fact that some hope of successful
-escape had been held out to him, made the waiting
-all the harder to bear.</p>
-
-<p>Each hour was bringing the Success nearer to Savannah,
-and Brandon remained near the bulkhead all
-the time, so as to miss no communication from his
-fair assistant.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Milly seemed to really enjoy her secret knowledge
-of the stowaway’s presence, and before the Success
-reached port she several times called him to the
-bulkhead, ostensibly for the purpose of finding out
-if he was all right, and was not going hungry. She
-supplied him with water, too, these last two or three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-days, and he no longer had to leave the hold on midnight
-foraging expeditions.</p>
-
-<p>“We shall be in this evening—perhaps before dark—so
-father told me last night,” she whispered to him
-one morning, and Brandon’s heart leaped for joy at
-the information.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, indeed, did that day pass.</p>
-
-<p>The Success was beating up toward Savannah
-against a light head wind, which gave promise of
-becoming an off shore gale before it was through with.
-Fortunately, the brig escaped it, taking a tug about
-the middle of the afternoon, and pulling into her dock
-about dark.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank Heaven!” was Brandon’s mental ejaculation,
-when this information was whispered through
-the crack in the bulkhead door to him, and he was
-indeed devoutly grateful.</p>
-
-<p>His life in the hold from the time of departure
-from New York, had been a continual fever of impatience
-and doubt, and now that the real danger of
-attempting to escape was at hand, he was rejoiced.
-In a short time he would know whether he was to be
-free, or in Jim Leroyd’s power.</p>
-
-<p>Milly had informed him that Captain Frank was
-exceedingly hard on all stowaways (as sea captains
-usually are, in fact), and he had no doubt but that he
-would be placed in a very uncomfortable, if not dangerous,
-position if the doughty captain should discover
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Leroyd, of course, would step forward at once and
-declare that he (Brandon) was wanted in New York
-for robbery, and that fact could be proved by telegraphing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-should the Savannah officers desire to do
-so. Then, if the whaleback steamer was not in, he
-should be absolutely friendless, and at the mercy of
-the vindictive sailor.</p>
-
-<p>He lay close up against the door of the bulkhead
-all through the early evening. Some of the crew, he
-judged by what he heard, were allowed to go ashore
-for a few hours, and a part of the officers went with
-them—which officers, however, he could not tell.</p>
-
-<p>There was both a first and second mate on the Success.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon had no means of telling the time, but it
-must have been well along towards ten o’clock—perhaps
-later—when he heard the two gentle raps for
-which he had been so anxiously listening.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you there, Brandon?” whispered the captain’s
-daughter, and as Don pulled the door slightly
-ajar, she seized his hand, and aided him through the
-opening.</p>
-
-<p>“Is the coast clear?” he asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Sh! Yes, father and Mr. Marsh have gone up
-town with some of the men, and Mr. Barry has finally
-gone to bed.” (Mr. Barry was the second officer.)
-“I was afraid that he’d never stop talking to me. I
-had to fairly <i>freeze</i> him out,” and the merry girl
-laughed softly.</p>
-
-<p>“But Leroyd?” pursued Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“To bed?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; up the street. I hope you can get off the
-brig before any of them get back. Now hurry.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>“You’re a good girl, Miss Milly. I hope I shall
-be able to repay you some time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush! go along now,” she said, smiling, but pushing
-him toward the companionway. “What’s that
-for?” for Brandon had thrust a little wad of bank
-notes into her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“It is to pay for the stores I broke into below.
-Take it, and put it where your father will see it.
-Good by.”</p>
-
-<p>He started up the ladder, but came back again to
-ask,</p>
-
-<p>“Is there a steamer in the bay? Did you get in
-time enough to see?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lots of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I should have said a whaleback steamer?”</p>
-
-<p>“What are those—oh, I know what you mean. A
-great long, steel boat, with cabins way up above the
-hull, and no deck to speak of.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” said Brandon eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there <i>is</i> one here. I saw it and meant to
-ask father what it was. I thought it was a dredger
-of some kind,” and Milly laughed again gleefully.
-“Is that a steamer?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. My friends are aboard her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you will find them,” she returned delightedly.
-“That funny boat lies not far from our dock.
-Now go, or somebody will catch you.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon crept noiselessly up the steps at this command,
-and peered out across the deck. A sailor sat
-on the rail some rods away, but his back was towards
-him; nobody else was in sight.</p>
-
-<p>“Now’s my chance,” muttered Don, and springing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-quickly up the remaining steps, he darted as noiselessly
-as a shadow across the deck, and leaped upon
-the pier. An instant later he was on the street, and
-slinking along in the shadow of the buildings, hurried
-away from the vicinity.</p>
-
-<p>He did not know in which direction the “funny
-boat” Milly had seen, lay, but went blindly along, his
-only care for the moment being to escape from the
-neighborhood of the Success and from his enemy,
-Jim Leroyd.</p>
-
-<p>The street he followed kept close to the wharves—skirted
-the waterfront in fact—and he passed many
-sailors; but he kept in the shadow as much as possible
-and nobody remarked about his apparel or the grime
-on his face and hands.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, as he approached a great pier, where
-several large vessels were lying, he caught sight of
-a familiar figure coming down the street toward him.
-There was no mistaking that rolling, peculiar gait,
-nor the sound of the sharp “tap, tap” of the steel
-shod leg on the wooden pavement.</p>
-
-<p>It was Caleb Wetherbee!</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Cale!” Brandon almost shouted, and running
-forward fairly threw himself into the sailor’s arms.</p>
-
-<p>“By the jumping Jehosophat!” cried the startled
-Caleb, and then, recognizing the boy, despite his rags
-and dirt, he uttered a loud “hurrah!” which left no
-doubt in Brandon’s mind as to the sailor’s satisfaction
-at seeing him once more.</p>
-
-<p>But in a moment, he pushed the boy away from
-him and holding him by both shoulders, peered down
-upon him curiously.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>“Well, well!” he exclaimed. “Where in the name
-o’ Davy Jones have you been? Ye look as though
-you’d been stowed away in the hold o’ a coal barge
-for a month.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I <i>have</i> been stowed away in a brig’s hold—she
-got in only this evening. I’ve just got away from
-her. Did you get my note by Swivel?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did, my lad.”</p>
-
-<p>“And Swivel himself?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s aboard the steamer.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad of that,” declared Brandon. “I hoped
-you’d be kind to him. He did me a lot of favors, and
-I shan’t be able to repay him for some time to come.
-Now, have you heard anything further from the Silver
-Swan?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have, my lad, this very afternoon. She was
-sighted two weeks ago by a steamship from Rio to
-New York. Adoniram telegraphed me. But there’s
-something else that ain’t so pleasin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that, Caleb?”</p>
-
-<p>“The Kearsarge has been ordered to destroy several
-of these derelicts, the Silver Swan included, on
-her way down the coast to Havana. She sails tomorrow,
-I hear.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we haven’t any time to lose,” Brandon exclaimed.
-“Let’s go aboard at once, Cale. The first
-thing I want is a wash—I’m as dirty as a pig—and
-then I’ll tell you the whole story.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll do so right now,” declared the big captain.
-“Come on. My boat’s down here. Number Three
-lays off some way.”</p>
-
-<p>He hurried Brandon down to the dock, and they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-were quickly seated in the steamer’s small boat, and
-the men pulled out to the long, low, odd looking craft,
-which, since her arrival in the bay three days before,
-had attracted an enormous amount of attention.</p>
-
-<p>“She sails like a swan, Don,” declared Caleb, who,
-from openly scoffing at the whaleback, had begun
-fairly to worship her. “I never see anything beat it.
-She can outsail any cruiser in the navy, I believe, an’
-if we don’t reach the Silver Swan in her first, it’s
-because somethin’ busts!” with which forcible declaration
-he helped the boy over the low rail to the iron
-deck of the steamer.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXI<br />
-
-
-<small>WHEREIN NUMBER THREE APPROACHES THE SUPPOSED
-VICINITY OF THE SILVER SWAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">We’ll</span> be off at once,” Caleb Wetherbee declared,
-as soon as he had stepped upon the deck of the whaleback.
-“Go up to the cabin, Don, and tell the steward
-to fix you out with a bath and some clean clothes.
-You know which stateroom yours is.”</p>
-
-<p>Gladly did Brandon avail himself of this opportunity,
-and while Caleb was personally seeing to the matter
-of getting under way, he indulged in the luxury of a
-bath and a full change of clothing.</p>
-
-<p>Before he was presentable again, Number Three
-had steam up (the fires had only been banked), and
-was moving slowly away from Savannah.</p>
-
-<p>“Quick connections on this trip, eh, lad?” Caleb
-said, rubbing his hands gleefully, as he entered the
-cabin and found Brandon “clothed and in his right
-mind” again, as the youth himself expressed it.
-“Three hours ago you were in the hold of the brig,
-wasn’t you? Now, let’s hear your yarn.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon complied with his request, giving fullest
-details of his incarceration in the hold of the Success.</p>
-
-<p>“That ’ere is a mighty plucky girl,” was Caleb’s admiring
-comment when the tale was finished. “What
-d’ye say her name was?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>“Milly Frank; the cap’n is her father, and he owns
-the brig himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Frank—Frank,” repeated Caleb slowly. “That
-has a familiar sound.”</p>
-
-<p>“It has to me, too,” said Brandon slowly. “I’ve
-been trying to think, ever since I met the girl, where
-I had heard her name and seen her face, too, for both
-seem familiar.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have it!” suddenly exclaimed Caleb, smiting his
-thigh.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?”</p>
-
-<p>“Frank was the name of the chap as Adoniram’s
-sister married—the little one, ye know.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right. And her name was Milly, too,”
-Brandon rejoined eagerly. “Bet you this was a
-daughter of hers. I thought her face looked familiar,
-and now I think of it, it was because she looked so
-much like the face of Milly Pepper—her picture
-hung in the room they gave me at Mr. Pepper’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Twould tickle ’Doniram ’most to death to know
-he had a niece,” Caleb said.</p>
-
-<p>“And Miss Frances, too. As soon as we find the
-Silver Swan we must look up the Success....
-And that reminds me, Caleb. You say you’ve heard
-of the wreck again?”</p>
-
-<p>The captain of the whaleback drew a telegram from
-his pocket and passed it over to his young second officer.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s from ’Doniram. As I said, I got it this
-afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>This was the message:</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>Rio steamship Creole Prince arrived this a. m., reports Silver
-Swan as being sighted March 23rd, latitude 27:18, longitude
-68:30.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Still moving northeast, isn’t she?” Brandon said,
-handing back the yellow slip.</p>
-
-<p>“In course.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what was that you told me about the Kearsarge?”</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s the evening paper,” responded Caleb, handing
-over a folded sheet. “There’s the item,” and he
-pointed with his stumpy forefinger to a marked passage
-which read as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The Department has ordered the Kearsarge to leave the
-Chesapeake tomorrow on her trip to the West Indies. Her
-commander has received special orders to destroy several of
-the most dangerous derelicts which are at present infesting
-the coast below Hatteras, and especially off the Bermudas.
-The hull of the Hattie Marvin, floating bottom upwards north
-of Bermuda, and that of the Silver Swan, south of the same
-islands, both of which have been frequently reported of late
-and are exceedingly dangerous, will have the early attention
-of the midshipmen, who consider the excitement of blowing
-up derelicts a boon indeed.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“We have a good start of her,” Brandon declared
-with satisfaction. “It will be because we’re not smart
-if we can’t find the Silver Swan first.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right, lad. An’ we <i>will</i> find her, too,” said Caleb
-hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>“And about Swivel,” went on Don, changing the
-subject; “where is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s below with the men. Smart lad, he is, an’
-I reckon we’ll make quite a man of him yet.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>“I must do something for him—if I get those diamonds,”
-Brandon added. “Now, Captain Wetherbee,
-with your permission I’ll turn in and get some
-sleep, for I haven’t slept decently for a week, I was
-so worried.”</p>
-
-<p>At sunrise the whaleback had left the mouth of the
-Savannah river, and the shores were low down on the
-horizon behind them. At sunset, when Brandon finally
-arose from a long slumber, the steamer was alone
-on a vast extent of heaving, restless sea. The land
-had entirely disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon took up his duties of second officer with
-enthusiasm. He had everything to learn—or about
-everything—but the work was right along the line
-of his strongest taste. He loved it, and therefore went
-about it earnestly, and learned rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>Messrs. Coffin and Bolin assisted him in every way
-possible, for they were greatly attracted to the boy.
-Of course, Caleb was ever his faithful mentor and
-teacher, and Brandon soon fell into the ways and
-duties of the ship, and accredited himself very well,
-indeed.</p>
-
-<p>The swift steamer kept on her southeasterly course
-for several days without incident of importance. No
-derelicts were sighted, and but few vessels.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon was told, however, that coming down from
-New York the whaleback had sighted two wrecks, but
-the captain dared not delay to investigate them until
-the principal object of the voyage was accomplished.
-Caleb determined to let all other derelicts but the
-Silver Swan severely alone.</p>
-
-<p>The whaleback passed the Bermudas low down on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-the sea line, and being well supplied with fuel kept
-on toward that portion of the ocean where the hull
-of the Silver Swan was supposed to be making her objectless
-voyage.</p>
-
-<p>A sharp lookout was kept day and night, but it was
-not until after the Bermudas had faded from sight
-that anything other than passing sailing vessels and
-steamers were sighted. At night the whaleback ran
-very slowly, indeed, so that naught might escape her,
-but during the day she traveled at a high rate of
-speed.</p>
-
-<p>Just before sunrise one morning Brandon was
-aroused by a commotion on deck. He leaped from
-his berth at once, and having been to sea long enough
-now to know how to dress quickly, was outside in less
-than a minute. Then he made out what the lookout
-on the top of the forward turret was shouting:</p>
-
-<p>“Wreck—dead ahead, sir!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXII<br />
-
-
-<small>RELATING HOW THE SILVER SWAN WAS HEARD FROM</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> the sun rose and lit up the sea more fully Brandon
-could plainly view the wreck which the steamer
-was now rapidly approaching.</p>
-
-<p>It was not, he believed at first glance, the Silver
-Swan. It was the hull of a vessel, sunk a good deal
-at the stern; but one mast was standing, and a great
-tangle of cordage and torn sails was still attached
-to it.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s never the Silver Swan, lad,” Caleb declared.
-“She was swept as clean as a whistle. This
-was a square rigged vessel, however.”</p>
-
-<p>The steamer ran in very close to the wreck, and
-Brandon made out the words, “Porpoise, New
-Haven,” under the bows.</p>
-
-<p>The derelict gave every appearance of being what
-Mr. Coffin called “an old stager,” and labored in the
-seas most heavily.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a mighty dangerous wreck,” Caleb declared
-reflectively, as the whaleback steamed slowly by. “It
-wouldn’t take long to sink her, although ’twould cost
-something. What d’ye say, Mr. Coffin—will you
-go aboard her, and if she isn’t worth towing in, drop
-enough dynamite into her hold to blow her up? You<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-know how to run that battery Mr. Pepper had put
-aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, aye, sir,” the first officer replied, and bustled
-away to order a boat launched at once.</p>
-
-<p>By special request Brandon was allowed to accompany
-the expedition. The old hulk was found to be
-in ballast, and Mr. Coffin therefore placed a quantity
-of the powerful explosive in her hold, attached the
-wire, and they pulled back toward the steamer.</p>
-
-<p>When the small boat was out of danger the officer
-touched the button and an instant later the still morning
-air was shattered by a terrific roar.</p>
-
-<p>The wreck seemed almost to rise from the sea, a
-great volume of fire and smoke issued from her amidships,
-and she broke in two, the water rushing in and
-filling the interior with a sound like the echo of the
-explosion.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the derelict settled, her stern going first, until
-the very tip of the tottering mast disappeared below
-the surface. Only a few splintered deck timbers,
-which would soon follow the ship to the bottom, remained
-to show where the hulk had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“Good job, that,” Caleb declared, when the boat
-had returned to the steamer, “though it cost us three
-hours’ time. That hulk had been floating for nearly
-a year, according to the pilot charts.”</p>
-
-<p>The second day after the blowing up of the derelict
-Porpoise, a steamship was sighted by the whaleback.
-It was the City of Havana, of the James E. Ward line,
-and, by running in close, Caleb was able to hold converse
-with the ship’s captain.</p>
-
-<p>To the satisfaction of the captain of Number Three,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-the City of Havana’s commander could, and did, give
-him some information about the derelict brig of which
-they were in search.</p>
-
-<p>The steamship had sighted the Silver Swan in latitude
-28, longitude 69:13, and reported the vessel in
-a remarkable state of preservation. The spring storms
-had not appeared to damage her much.</p>
-
-<p>This news was hailed joyfully by Caleb and Brandon,
-and the course of the whaleback was changed a
-little more to the east.</p>
-
-<p>The weather, however, which had been all that they
-could wish thus far since leaving Savannah, began to
-get nasty. The sea became short and choppy, though
-without apparently affecting the sailing of the whaleback,
-and the sky looked bad.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, after a day or two of this, a dead calm occurred,
-and Caleb shook his head sagely.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re goin’ to ketch it,” he declared, “an’ we’ll
-have a chance to find out how the steamer rides in a
-gale, whether we want to or not.”</p>
-
-<p>And he was right. While the whaleback steamed
-slowly ahead, a heavy swell came on, although there
-was not a breath of air stirring. The sea heaved and
-rolled, seemingly in throes of agony.</p>
-
-<p>At first the cause was entirely submarine. At
-length, however, there was a groaning, moaning sound,
-which gradually increased in volume, until, with a
-sudden roar, the hurricane swooped down upon them.
-The waves were tossed toward the wind driven, leaden
-clouds with awful fury, breaking like surf over the
-whaleback; but the steamer withstood the fearful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
-shocks as easily as she had the choppy waves which
-preceded the gale.</p>
-
-<p>She kept but little headway, however, and as the
-black night shut down about the craft, Brandon
-realized fully the terrible risks and hazardous chances
-taken by “those who go down to the sea in ships.”</p>
-
-<p>For two days the gale continued, but with less fury
-than signaled its first appearance. Number Three
-might have put back into Bermuda, but she acted so
-well that Caleb decided to stay outside and thus lose
-no possible opportunity of sighting the Silver Swan.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon had never contemplated what a storm at
-sea meant before and he was thankful indeed that he
-was not upon a sailing vessel.</p>
-
-<p>During the first of the gale they had sighted several
-vessels, with close reefed sails, scudding before the
-wind, but all were riding the sea well.</p>
-
-<p>Late in the afternoon of the second day, however,
-the lookout, who was lashed to the top of the wheelhouse,
-reported a wreck ahead.</p>
-
-<p>At first Caleb and Brandon, who were both armed
-with glasses, could not make it out clearly enough to
-decide what it was.</p>
-
-<p>Finally the old seaman declared with conviction.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the hull of a vessel an’ her masts have been
-carried away sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think it is the brig, Caleb?” the young
-second mate asked eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye got me there. It <i>may</i> be, and then ag’in it
-may not. We’ll run down an’ see.”</p>
-
-<p>The storm was by no means abating and Caleb
-dared not run very close to the wreck.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>As they approached it, however, the former mate
-of the Silver Swan became convinced that it was not
-the wreck they sought. He was familiar with every
-line of Captain Horace Tarr’s vessel and this, he declared,
-was not it.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Swivel’s sharp eyes caught sight of something
-which the others had not seen.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something tied to that stump of a mast,
-sir,” he exclaimed, pointing toward the forward part
-of the wreck. “It’s a flag o’ some kind.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a signal!” Mr. Coffin declared. “There’s
-some poor soul on the wreck. See—there he is.”</p>
-
-<p>At the instant he spoke they all descried a moving
-figure on the derelict—some one, who, clinging
-with one hand to the cordage which still hung to the
-mast, with the other waved a signal frantically at the
-approaching steamer.</p>
-
-<p>“Great Heavens!” exclaimed Mr. Coffin, strongly
-moved by the scene. “What shall we do? No mortal
-man can help him in this gale.”</p>
-
-<p>“We must do something,” Caleb replied.</p>
-
-<p>“A boat couldn’t live in this sea, sir,” said the first
-officer despairingly.</p>
-
-<p>“We must try to throw him a line.”</p>
-
-<p>But upon trial it was found that it would be exceedingly
-hazardous to run down near enough to the
-wreck for that. The hull was rolling so frightfully
-that it might turn completely over at any moment and
-carry the steamer to the bottom with it should they run
-in too near.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXIII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH COMRADES IN COURAGE LAUNCH THEMSELVES
-UPON THE DEEP</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Brandon’s</span> glass had been turned upon the figure
-on the wreck for the few moments during which the
-others had been discussing the possibility of saving
-the poor creature. Now he exclaimed hurriedly.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not a man—it’s a woman! Don’t you see
-her skirts blowing in the gale? She is alone on the
-wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb seized his own glass again, and Mr. Bolin
-dived into the cabin for his.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right, lad,” the captain declared. “Either
-all the men have been swept overboard, or the white
-livered rascals have taken to the boats and abandoned
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>But Brandon was making other discoveries. As the
-steamer cut through the huge waves, approaching
-nearer and nearer to the wreck, something about the
-outlines of the female figure seemed familiar to him.</p>
-
-<p>He knew the face which was turned pleadingly
-toward the steamer—the powerful glass revealed
-every feature clearly.</p>
-
-<p>It was Milly Frank!</p>
-
-<p>At the instant of Brandon’s discovery, the steamer
-gave a sudden roll, and he was thrown partially from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-his balance and his glass wavered an instant from the
-girl’s face.</p>
-
-<p>In that instant the stern of the fated vessel came
-within range of his vision and he plainly saw the word
-“Success” painted in tarnished gold lettering upon it.</p>
-
-<p>“Caleb! Caleb!” he cried, forgetting for the moment
-to apply the proper term of respect to the captain
-which, according to the quarter deck etiquette, he
-should have done, “that’s the Success, and the <i>girl</i>
-is the captain’s daughter!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it can’t be, lad!” cried the old man, unwilling
-to believe such a fact possible.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the Success—I see her name,” Mr. Bolin
-declared.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor little girl! poor little girl!” exclaimed the
-honest old sailor brokenly. “We can’t stand here and
-see her perish.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shan’t,” Brandon affirmed, passing his own glass
-to Mr. Coffin.</p>
-
-<p>“What can you do, lad?” queried Caleb. “The
-gale’s not abating a mite.”</p>
-
-<p>“All that we can do I see, sir, is to stand by till
-the sea goes down, and then, God willing, take her
-off,” said Mr. Coffin.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that old hulk may sink at any moment!”
-cried Brandon. “I won’t stay idle and see that girl
-drown after all she has done for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ it’s Adoniram’s niece—no doubt of it,” murmured
-Caleb.</p>
-
-<p>“That is another reason why we should try to save
-her. I haven’t forgotten all that Mr. Pepper has done
-for me,” declared Brandon decidedly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>“But, lad, lad, what can we do?” gasped the captain.
-“It’s not a living possibility to send a boat to
-that brig, and I dare not risk the lives of all these
-men in my care by running in near enough for a
-cable to be thrown.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the girl probably couldn’t fasten it, if we
-did,” added Mr. Bolin.</p>
-
-<p>“Then we must do something else. Run by her,
-Caleb, and I’ll carry a rope to the brig.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re crazy!” cried Mr. Coffin.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I am,” Brandon returned, his face white
-and set; “but I shall do it.”</p>
-
-<p>Swivel, who was clinging to a guard rope within
-hearing, struck in with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Lemme do it, Brandon—I mean Mr. Tarr. I kin
-swim like a fish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody shall go but myself,” the boy declared,
-with emphasis. “I won’t suggest a perilous undertaking
-and not be the one to carry it out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cap’n Tarr right over again,” Caleb muttered.</p>
-
-<p>Then he turned suddenly upon his young second
-officer.</p>
-
-<p>“Kick off your shoes, lad, and try it. If it’s the
-Lord’s will that you accomplish it, well and good; if
-you can’t, we’ll haul you back. Quick, now! I’ll
-order Mike to go ahead full speed.”</p>
-
-<p>Before the words were scarcely out of the captain’s
-mouth, Brandon had kicked off his light shoes.</p>
-
-<p>Swivel, who could not be taught strict quarter deck
-manners, followed the young officer’s example.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you about, you young limb o’ Satan?”
-demanded Mr. Coffin, catching hint at this.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>“Ef he goes, I’m goin’ an’ you ain’t goin’ ter stop
-me, Mr. Coffin,” announced the gamin. “I’m in dis!”</p>
-
-<p>“Behave yourself,” Brandon commanded, quickly
-knotting a light, strong cable about his waist, while
-Mr. Bolin fastened a life preserver beneath his arms.
-“One is enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Den I’m de one!” the boy declared vehemently,
-and dodging Mr. Coffin’s outstretched arm, he seized
-a second coil of rope, one end of which was fastened
-to a ring in the deck, and ran to the stern of the
-steamer.</p>
-
-<p>“Come back here!” roared the first mate angrily.
-“I’ll rope’s end you, you little scamp!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have ter do it when I get back from dat
-wreck!” returned the boy, with an impish grin, and
-the steamer having now forged ahead of the laboring
-brig, and Brandon being all ready, the fearless Swivel
-also dropped over the rail, and clinging with one
-hand a moment, let go simultaneously with his friend
-and patron.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon tried to send him back, but it was too late
-then. The first wave seized them in its embrace and
-they were carried far out from the steamer’s stern.</p>
-
-<p>The cork belt kept the young second mate above
-the waves, but even with this assistance, he found himself
-much less able to cope with the heavy seas than
-was his companion.</p>
-
-<p>Swivel dived through the rollers like a gull, keeping
-faithfully by his friend’s side; and had it not been for
-the street gamin, Brandon afterward declared that he
-should never have reached the wreck alive.</p>
-
-<p>He had no idea how furious the waves were until<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-he was among them, battling for his life, and trying
-to reach the distant brig.</p>
-
-<p>It was a terrific struggle, lasting perhaps not five
-minutes, but a few more seconds would have completely
-exhausted him.</p>
-
-<p>A great wave suddenly swept them directly under
-the brig’s bows. Swivel seized Brandon’s hand with
-one of his own and with the other grabbed a rope
-trailing over the rail of the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately the other end of the rope was securely
-fastened, and with an almost superhuman effort Swivel
-raised Brandon until the second mate of the whaleback
-could grasp the rail.</p>
-
-<p>In another moment Brandon was aboard the brig,
-and had pulled Swivel over the rail after him.</p>
-
-<p>“Wot—did—I—tell—ye?” gasped the gamin,
-whose spirit no amount of danger could quench.
-“Two heads <i>is</i> better’n one, ef one <i>is</i> a cabbage head.
-Where’s de girl?”</p>
-
-<p>But Milly was already creeping forward to their
-position on her hands and knees.</p>
-
-<p>“How can you take me back?” she asked at once,
-her voice sounding as firmly above the gale as though
-danger was the farthest of anything from her thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>Then she recognized Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>“You?” she exclaimed, in surprise. “I never
-thought of you being on that steamer.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t forget what you did for me,” Brandon
-said in reply. “I’d have risked a good deal more
-than this for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You couldn’t risk any more,” she declared firmly;
-“for you’ve risked your life.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Swivel was signaling to those on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-steamer to attach a heavier cable to the one tied about
-his waist. This was done in a short time, and then
-all three of the endangered ones laid hold and pulled
-the cable in, hand over hand.</p>
-
-<p>It was hard work. The heavy rope was wet and
-unmanageable, and the strain on their young muscles
-was terrible.</p>
-
-<p>Milly worked as unceasingly as did the two boys,
-but the cable came across the tossing waves but slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are the crew—where is your father?”
-asked Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>The girl’s face worked pitifully at this question.</p>
-
-<p>“Father is dead,” she sobbed, “and the crew took
-to the boats while I was below. That was early this
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you’ve been here alone ever since!” said
-Brandon pityingly.</p>
-
-<p>At that instant there was a slight exclamation from
-Swivel, and the small cable by which they were endeavoring
-to gain the larger one, came in over the rail
-with fearful suddenness.</p>
-
-<p>All three were sent sprawling on the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” gasped Milly.</p>
-
-<p>“The rope’s parted,” cried Brandon in horror.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind; don’t you give up, missy,” Swivel
-exclaimed. “We’ve got anoder rope yet. Where’s
-de end o’ dat rope you had tied ’round you, Brandon?”
-he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon only groaned.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is it?” shrieked the other lad, fairly shaking
-him in his impatience.</p>
-
-<p>“I cast it loose,” was the disheartening reply. “It
-is gone!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXIV<br />
-
-
-<small>THE INCIDENTS OF A NIGHT OF PERIL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Night</span> was shutting down over the face of the
-storm tossed ocean—night of the blackest and wildest
-description. Already the outlines of the steamer
-ahead were scarcely visible from the bows of the
-water logged brig.</p>
-
-<p>By a series of misfortunes (Brandon Tarr bitterly
-accused himself of causing the crowning mischance of
-them all) the three unfortunates on the Success were
-entirely cut off from escape.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” cried Milly, in bitterness of spirit second
-only to Brandon’s own, “you have lost your lives for
-me—both of you. I am not worthy of it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ye lose heart, missy,” Swivel declared, with
-a courage he was far from feeling. “Th’ ship hain’t
-sunk.”</p>
-
-<p>“No one but God Himself knows how long it will
-keep afloat, though,” Brandon returned despairingly.</p>
-
-<p>“And the gale is increasing again, too,” added Milly
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the last end of it, that’s wot I think,” declared
-Swivel cheerfully. “It’ll blow itself out now
-purty soon.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon could not look at the situation thus hopefully,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-but he determined to say nothing further to make
-the girl despair.</p>
-
-<p>Swivel’s tone shamed him into thinking of her
-rather than of himself.</p>
-
-<p>The men on board the steamer, had ere this discovered
-what had happened, but they could do nothing
-to assist the three on the brig.</p>
-
-<p>It was absolutely necessary to keep some headway—considerable,
-in fact—on the whaleback, to prevent
-her from swinging around into the trough of the
-waves. Every moment they were getting farther and
-farther away from the doomed derelict.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb roared something to them through the trumpet,
-but the distance and the howling of the gale prevented
-them from making out what he said. The
-wind and spray beat upon them alternately as they
-crouched together in the high bows, and every other
-sound but that of the elements was drowned.</p>
-
-<p>“Come back in the shelter of the mast,” Brandon
-shouted at last. “We can do nothing further here.
-Our position is so exposed that we may be washed off
-before we know it.”</p>
-
-<p>Each of the boys grasped an arm of the captain’s
-daughter and with no little trouble they managed to
-reach the great tangle of rigging and shreds of canvas
-which hung about the one remaining mast.</p>
-
-<p>The topmast had long since been carried away, but
-the main spar still defied the storm, writhing and twisting
-like a thing of life in the fierce grasp of the gale.</p>
-
-<p>Here, crouching under its lee, the shipwrecked boys
-and girl clung to the stiffened ropes with hands little
-less stiffened by the cold and water.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>As an extra precaution they bound themselves together,
-and then fastened the same rope to the mast,
-knowing that a wave might board the lumbering brig
-at any moment and sweep everything on it that was
-not fastened, into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally, as the wreck climbed heavily to the
-summit of an enormous roller, they could catch a
-glimpse of the steamer’s lights; but as the hours
-dragged slowly on, these became less and less distinct.</p>
-
-<p>Without doubt the whaleback was drawing slowly
-away from the wreck, and the worst of it was, those on
-the steamer probably did not suspect it.</p>
-
-<p>The castaways had no means of showing their
-whereabouts by lights, and the steamer was too far
-away, and had been since the darkness shut down, for
-those aboard her to see the outlines of the brig.
-Therefore Caleb Wetherbee and his officers had no
-means of knowing that the steamer was traveling
-nearly two miles to the brig’s one.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly there was a flash of light from the
-steamer’s deck, and a rocket went hurtling upwards
-into the leaden sky, to fall in showers of sparks into
-the sea. It was a message of hope to the unfortunates
-on the brig—it was meant as such, at least—but
-they had no way of replying to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t there any rockets aboard?” asked Brandon
-of the captain’s daughter.</p>
-
-<p>“There may be, but I do not know where,” the girl
-replied; “and the cabin is half filled with water, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind if it is; I believe I’ll try to find them.
-There must be something of the kind aboard.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>“Ye’d better stay here,” Swivel warned him anxiously.
-“I don’t like ter see ye git out o’ sight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you think I can take care of myself?”
-Brandon demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Not alone,” was the prompt reply. “I reckon
-’at none of us can’t take very good keer of ourselves
-in this gale. We’d best not git too fur apart.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m going to try to get into the cabin,”
-Brandon added. “Nothing ventured, nothing
-gained.”</p>
-
-<p>He unfastened the rope from about his waist, and
-in spite of the objections of his two companions, crept
-aft toward the cabin companionway.</p>
-
-<p>The feat was not of the easiest, as he quickly found;
-but once having determined to do it, he would not give
-up.</p>
-
-<p>The door of the cabin was jammed fast, but after
-some little maneuvering he was able to force an entrance
-and descended into the apartment, which was
-knee deep with water washed in from the heavy seas
-which had broken over the brig during the day.</p>
-
-<p>There was no means of lighting a lantern, however,
-and after rummaging about in the darkness for half
-an hour, he had to return to the deck without having
-accomplished anything.</p>
-
-<p>As he stepped outside again, he found the brig pitching
-worse than ever. The gale was full of “flaws”
-now—a sure sign that it was blowing itself out—but
-occasionally it would rise to greater fury than
-it had shown in all the two previous days.</p>
-
-<p>Just as he reached the deck one of these sudden
-squalls occurred, and a huge green roller swept in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-over the stern of the brig, and advanced with lightning
-speed along the deck, sweeping wreckage and all else
-before it.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon had just closed the door, and by clinging
-to the handle, was able to keep himself from being
-washed overboard; but he was almost drowned during
-the few moments while the wave filled the companionway.</p>
-
-<p>As it passed, there was a sudden crack forward, and
-even above the shriek of the gale, he heard Swivel’s
-cry of alarm.</p>
-
-<p>With a rush and roar like the fall of a mighty forest
-tree, the mast, splitting at the deck, toppled over
-across the rail.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon uttered a despairing shout, for it seemed
-impossible for the wreck ever to right herself, the
-weight of the fallen spar dragged her over so far.</p>
-
-<p>But providentially the mast had split clear off at
-the deck, and after staggering a moment from the
-blow, the brig shook off her incumbrance, and came to
-an even keel again.</p>
-
-<p>But following the falling of the mast came a shriek
-from Milly Frank which pierced his very soul.</p>
-
-<p>“Brandon! Brandon! Help!”</p>
-
-<p>With that cry ringing in his ears, the boy dashed
-forward along the slippery deck and reached the spot
-where he had left his companions.</p>
-
-<p>“Quick! this way!” called the girl’s clear voice, and
-darting to the rail he was just able to grasp the captain’s
-daughter and drag her back from the cruel sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Now him!” commanded the girl, and pulling in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-the line which was still attached to her waist, Brandon
-drew the form of Swivel out of the waves.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he is dead!” cried Milly in agony. “He
-saved me, Brandon. When the mast fell he cut the
-rope and took me in his arms and ran, but one of the
-ropes tripped him up and we were washed to the rail
-by that great wave.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope he isn’t dead—oh, I hope not!” Brandon
-returned, kneeling down beside the motionless boy,
-and chafing his forehead tenderly.</p>
-
-<p>Milly took one of the poor street gamin’s hands in
-her own and chafed it likewise.</p>
-
-<p>Probably never before during his miserable, eventful
-existence had Swivel known such gentleness. His
-life had been hard indeed, and it looked as though its
-lamp had gone out now in the performance of a noble
-and courageous deed.</p>
-
-<p>There on the storm swept deck Milly and Brandon
-knelt for nearly an hour before the unconscious boy
-showed the least sign of life.</p>
-
-<p>Then the eyelids fluttered a little and he drew in his
-breath with a slight sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s coming to!” Brandon exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>But although poor Swivel opened his eyes once or
-twice, it was a long time before he seemed to realize
-where he was or what had happened.</p>
-
-<p>At last he whispered brokenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t—don’t—fret yerself—missy—I’m—I’m
-goin’ ter be all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you in pain, Swivel?” queried Brandon, having
-almost to shout to make himself heard.</p>
-
-<p>Milly was crying softly. The strain of the last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-twenty hours was beginning to tell on even her bravery
-and fortitude.</p>
-
-<p>“Dret—dretful!” gasped the injured boy weakly.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon had to place his ear almost to his lips to
-distinguish his words.</p>
-
-<p>“Right—here,” and he laid his hand feebly on his
-chest.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s where he struck across the rail,” declared
-Milly, when Brandon had repeated these words to
-her. “Oh, the poor fellow has been hurt internally.
-<i>Do</i> you think the morning will ever come, Brandon?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid it will come very soon for him, poor
-boy,” replied Don meaningly, and there were tears in
-his own eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Swivel had closed his eyes and a strange, grayish
-pallor was spreading over his drawn features.</p>
-
-<p>His hearing seemed wonderfully acute, however.
-He heard the word “morning” at least, and his eyes
-flew open again and he struggled to raise himself on
-his elbow.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Is</i> it morning now?” he asked feebly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no,” replied Brandon soothingly. “Not yet,
-Swivel. Don’t exert yourself. Lie down again.”</p>
-
-<p>The injured youth strove to speak once more, but
-suddenly fell back upon the rude pillow Don had made
-of his coat, and a stream of blood flowed from his
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>Milly uttered a startled gasp, but Brandon hastily
-wiped the poor fellow’s lips, and after a moment the
-hemorrhage ceased.</p>
-
-<p>But they looked at each other meaningly. They
-had lost all hope now of the shock not proving fatal.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>While they had watched Swivel, the gale, as though
-at last satisfied with its cruel work, had gradually lessened.
-The wind ceased almost wholly within the next
-hour, although the waves did not entirely go down.</p>
-
-<p>Swivel lay motionless during all this time, occasionally
-opening his eyes to gaze up into the faces of his
-two friends, whom he could see quite clearly, but
-otherwise showing no sign of life.</p>
-
-<p>Finally he attempted to speak again.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s—it’s hard—on me—ain’t it?” he gasped,
-in Brandon’s ear. “I—I—don’ wanter die.”</p>
-
-<p>His friend did not know what to say in reply to
-this, but Milly seized his hand and tried to comfort
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be afraid. Swivel,” she said, trying to make
-her own faith serve for the dying fellow too. “It will
-be better over there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbee—mebbee they won’t let me come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you may, if you ask, Swivel. Don’t you love
-God?”</p>
-
-<p>“I hain’t—hain’t never—heered—much erbout
-Him,” returned the lad. “I heered the chap at the
-mission—school talk erbout—erbout Him some. I—I
-never paid much ’tention.”</p>
-
-<p>His voice was stronger now, but in a moment the
-blood gushed from his lips again.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk—oh, don’t talk, Swivel?” cried Brandon
-beseechingly.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twon’t matter—not much,” the boy returned, after
-a few minutes.</p>
-
-<p>He felt blindly for Brandon’s hand and seized it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-tightly. Milly, still kneeling on the opposite side, held
-the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t ye say a prayer, like—like that feller in the
-mission did—er one o’ them hymns?” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p>The boy and girl crouching above him looked into
-each other’s faces a moment in silence.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon Tarr might have faced a thousand dangers
-without shrinking, but he could not do this. It remained
-for Milly to comply with the poor boy’s request.</p>
-
-<p>After the terrific howling of the gale, the night
-seemed strangely still now. The hurrying, leaden
-clouds were fast breaking up, and here and there a
-ray of moonlight pierced their folds and lit up the
-froth flecked summits of the tossing billows.</p>
-
-<p>One narrow band of light fell across her pale face
-as she raised it toward the frowning heavens and began
-to sing:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“Jesus, Saviour, pilot me,</div>
-<div class="verse">Over life’s tempestuous sea;</div>
-<div class="verse">Unknown waves before me roll,</div>
-<div class="verse">Hiding rock and treach’rous shoal:</div>
-<div class="verse">Chart and compass come from the Thee:</div>
-<div class="verse">Jesus, Saviour, pilot me.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“When at last I near the shore,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the fearful breakers roar</div>
-<div class="verse">Twixt me and the peaceful rest,</div>
-<div class="verse">Then, while leaning on Thy breast,</div>
-<div class="verse">May I hear Thee say to me,</div>
-<div class="verse">‘Fear not, I will pilot thee’!”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Faintly at first, but mounting higher and clearer,
-rose the sweet girlish voice, and not only the poor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>
-street gamin, but Brandon himself listened entranced.</p>
-
-<p>When the beautiful hymn was finished, Brandon felt
-that it was a prayer not only for him whose spirit
-might at any moment depart, but for Milly and himself,
-who should remain behind at the mercy of the
-storm tossed sea.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXV<br />
-
-
-<small>SHOWING HOW CALEB APPEARED ON THE SCENE JUST
-TOO LATE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> anxiety of Caleb Wetherbee for Brandon’s
-safety was really pitiful to behold. When the cable
-parted which attached the wrecked brig to the steamer,
-the captain at once realized that his ward and his two
-companions were in a very serious predicament.</p>
-
-<p>There was absolutely nothing that those aboard the
-whaleback could do in that howling gale to assist in
-the rescue of the castaways.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally Caleb had a rocket fired to show the
-unfortunate trio that he was remaining near them;
-but, as we know, that was very sorry comfort to Brandon
-and his two companions. It simply served to convince
-them how rapidly Number Three was leaving
-them astern.</p>
-
-<p>On one point Caleb’s calculations were very much
-amiss. He was running the whaleback as slowly as
-practicable, keeping just enough headway on to keep
-her from broaching to; but he failed to realize that
-even at that speed he was sailing two miles or more
-to the brig’s one.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, when once the night had shut down it
-was impossible for anybody aboard the steamer to
-see the outlines of the wreck, and therefore this fact<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-escaped their attention. The water logged Success
-moved at a snail’s pace, and all night long the steamer
-drew away from her, so that, after the storm had
-cleared away and the sun rose, not a sign of the brig
-appeared.</p>
-
-<p>“Has she sunk?” queried Caleb in distress, as, in
-company with his two remaining officers, he swept
-the horizon with his glass.</p>
-
-<p>“Rather, we have left her behind,” declared Mr.
-Coffin, making a shrewd guess as to the real facts
-in the case. “The brig must have sailed slower than
-we supposed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we must turn about at once and run back,”
-Caleb declared, and the necessary orders were given.</p>
-
-<p>The day following the cessation of the gale was
-most beautiful, but Caleb cared nothing for that. He
-neither ate nor slept, but remained on deck nearly all
-the time, scanning the wide stretch of sea visible from
-the top of the after cabin.</p>
-
-<p>The day passed and night came on, however, without
-a sign of the wreck appearing.</p>
-
-<p>During this time the steamer had been running in
-a direction generally south; while the gale was on
-she had run northeast. The whole day being spent
-in fruitless search in this direction, however, Caleb
-commanded the steamer to be put about again at
-evening.</p>
-
-<p>All that second night she ran slowly to the eastward,
-thus allowing for the supposed drift of the
-Success, but they saw no signs of the derelict, although
-the night was clear and the moon bright.</p>
-
-<p>The day following they spoke several partially dismantled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
-vessels whose crews were beating into the
-Bermudas for repairs. None of these, however, had
-sighted the wreck of the Success.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve gone to the bottom,” groaned poor Caleb
-that afternoon, as he sat on the edge of the berth in
-his stateroom.</p>
-
-<p>He could not sleep, but had taken Mr. Coffin’s advice
-and tried to.</p>
-
-<p>“All gone—Brandon, whose dead father I promised
-I’d look out for him, an’ that other poor lad, an’
-the little girl. God help me! how can I go back and
-tell Adoniram about this?</p>
-
-<p>“An’ then, we’ve not found the Silver Swan yet—nor
-air we likely to after this gale. She’s gone to
-the bottom, too, mayhap, and Brandon’s fortune along
-with her. Well——”</p>
-
-<p>Just here he was interrupted in his soliloquy by the
-hurried entrance of Mr. Bolin.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you please come on deck, sir?” said the
-third officer, evidently somewhat excited. “We have
-sighted what appears to be a steamer and a dismantled
-vessel with her. Mr. Coffin wishes you to come up
-and see if you can make her out.”</p>
-
-<p>But Caleb was out of the cabin before Mr. Bolin
-had finished speaking, glass in hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is she?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Right ahead, captain,” replied Mr. Coffin.
-“There! you can see the black smoke rising from the
-steamship’s funnels now. The wreck, if it is a wreck,
-is between her and us.”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb got the range of the two vessels almost immediately,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-and it did not take a very long look to assure
-him that his mate was right.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a wreck, sure enough,” he declared, paying
-but very little attention to the steamship. “Order
-the engineer to go ahead at full speed.”</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen minutes later they were near enough to see
-the wreck quite plainly. The steam vessel seemed
-to be lying quietly upon the sea now, and as they
-looked a boat was lowered and pulled toward the dismantled
-hulk.</p>
-
-<p>They were still several miles away, however, and
-could not see whether the wreck was boarded by those
-in the small boat or not.</p>
-
-<p>“It strikes me,” began Mr. Coffin after a prolonged
-gazing through his glass at the wreck, “that that
-doesn’t have the same appearance as that vessel the
-boys are on. What do you think, Mr. Wetherbee?”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb had doubts in that direction himself.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell ye what it is,” he said: “the Success had
-a mast for’ard. This one hain’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s my opinion that’s the hull of a brig, just the
-same,” Mr. Coffin declared.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Caleb uttered an exclamation.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s no steamship,” he declared. “See her
-colors and open ports. Why, it’s a man o’ war!”</p>
-
-<p>“Right you are,” returned the mate.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the Kearsarge,” added Mr. Bolin. “She was
-to come down this way, you know. Going to the West
-Indies.”</p>
-
-<p>“One of her duties was to blow up derelicts—the
-Silver Swan among them. Suppose this hull is the
-Swan!” cried Mr. Coffin.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>Caleb had fairly grown white in spite of his tan.</p>
-
-<p>“Great Peter!” he ejaculated. “Look-er-there!”</p>
-
-<p>The small boat had left the side of the wreck, and
-was now some distance away from her.</p>
-
-<p>The whaleback was near enough to see that the officer
-commanding the cutter had ordered the men to
-cease rowing and was standing up in the bow of the
-boat.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re going to blow her up!” shouted Caleb.
-“Crowd on every ounce of steam she’ll hold. We
-must stop it! Suppose that it is the Silver Swan!”</p>
-
-<p>He fairly groaned aloud, and in his excitement allowed
-the costly glass to fall upon the deck, which
-treatment did not materially benefit it.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Bolin darted away to the engine room, and in
-another moment the funnels of the whaleback began
-to pour forth the blackest kind of smoke, and the
-water beneath her stern was churned to foam by the
-rapid beats of the propeller.</p>
-
-<p>They were all of a mile away from the wreck yet,
-and every instant was precious. Caleb stumped up
-and down the deck, fairly wild with apprehension, his
-eyes fixed on the cruiser’s cutter, in the bow of which
-the officer seemed to be adjusting something.</p>
-
-<p>If the whaleback had been armed Caleb would have
-fired a shot to attract the attention of the cruiser’s
-people, but there wasn’t a weapon larger than Brandon’s
-rifle on the steamer.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Coffin looked at his commander anxiously. He
-did not fully understand why the captain wished to
-reach the Silver Swan and save it, if <i>this was</i> the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-Silver Swan; but he did not believe that they could
-accomplish it. And he was right.</p>
-
-<p>The whaleback was still half a mile away from the
-scene of operations when suddenly the officer in the
-cutter sat down, and the instant following there was a
-loud explosion.</p>
-
-<p>A column of smoke and flame shot into the air, and
-when the smoke cloud rose, only a few harmless
-splinters on the surface of the sea remained to show
-the former position of the wreck!</p>
-
-<p>And then, when it was too late, the officer in the
-small boat discovered the approach of the whaleback.</p>
-
-<p>Number Three was still driving ahead at full speed,
-and when her steam was shut off she had such headway
-that she nearly passed the cruiser’s cutter.</p>
-
-<p>Caleb, his voice trembling with apprehension, leaned
-over the rail and shouted his question to the officer
-who had just “touched off” the charge that had
-blown the derelict into atoms.</p>
-
-<p>“What craft is that you blew up?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“That was a derelict,” responded the officer, who
-was an ensign, in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“What was her name, d’ye know?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was sunken so low at the stern that we
-couldn’t read her name.”</p>
-
-<p>“But can’t you guess?” cried Caleb, in great exasperation.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, there’s not much doubt in our minds as to
-who she was. She was one we were ordered to
-destroy. The name on her bow was badly battered,
-but we could make out part of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, for heavens’ sake, what was it?” burst forth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-the wooden legged captain wildly. “Don’t beat
-’round the bush any longer.”</p>
-
-<p>The ensign began to grow as red as a peony. The
-old man’s manner of questioning ruffled his dignity
-sorely.</p>
-
-<p>“To the best of my belief it was the brig Silver
-Swan, of Boston, U. S. A.,” he declared stiffly.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXVI<br />
-
-
-<small>THE CASTAWAYS ON THE BRIG SUCCESS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">To</span> Milly and Brandon on board the water logged
-brig, it seemed as though the long night would never
-end. They crouched together over the body of poor
-Swivel, until his clasp relaxed from their hands and
-he sank into a deep sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon did not believe that the injured boy would
-ever awake from that unconsciousness; nevertheless,
-he made his way below to the cabin again and brought
-up an armful of blankets to add to his comfort.</p>
-
-<p>He wrapped one about Milly, and she made him
-share it with her, when Swivel was more comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>Thus sitting close together on the cold, wet deck,
-they conversed in whispers till dawn; Milly, at Don’s
-earnest solicitation, relating all that had occurred since
-the night he had escaped from the Success at Savannah.</p>
-
-<p>It was rather a disconnected story, for the poor girl
-often broke into weeping at the memory of her father’s
-violent death. She had sincerely loved him, although
-he was a stern, rather morose man.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that Leroyd had learned that the plans
-of himself and his friends to delay the departure of
-the whaleback from New York had failed, and that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-the steamer had touched at Savannah and departed
-the very night the Success got in.</p>
-
-<p>Finding that Sneaky Al had already arrived by
-steamship from New York, he promised Captain
-Frank an extra hundred dollars if he would land only
-a portion of his goods and set sail for the Bermudas
-again.</p>
-
-<p>The brig’s commander could not resist this temptation,
-and therefore the Success lay at Savannah
-but a day and two nights. Then, with Messrs. Weeks
-and Leroyd aboard, she had sailed directly for that
-part of the ocean in which the whaleback had run
-across her during the gale.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon also elicited the information that the brig
-had not been successful in her search—had not seen
-a derelict, in fact, since leaving Savannah—and that
-Leroyd was in a fiendish temper before the gale came
-up.</p>
-
-<p>When that began, he and his friend, Weeks, turned
-to with the brig’s crew and did all they could to keep
-her afloat. Captain Frank, however, was crushed under
-a falling spar and instantly killed when the gale
-first started in, and the first officer was washed overboard.</p>
-
-<p>When the brig became unmanageable and the crew
-rushed for the boats, nobody thought, or at least nobody
-stopped, for the bereaved girl in the cabin. She
-discovered that the crew had gone and left her only
-by coming on deck after the water had begun to fill
-the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon and the captain’s daughter had ample time,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-before the sun appeared, to get very well acquainted
-with each other.</p>
-
-<p>Don told her all about himself, about the object of
-the voyage of the whaleback, and of the plot concocted
-by his uncle Arad and Messrs. Leroyd and Weeks to
-find the Silver Swan and obtain the treasure aboard
-her themselves.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as it <i>did</i> grow light, Brandon made his way
-below again and after a great deal of trouble lit an oil
-lamp and heated a little water over its blaze. He was
-then able to make some warm drink for Swivel and
-Milly, denying himself until she had swallowed some,
-and between them they had forced a little of the mixture
-between the injured boy’s lips.</p>
-
-<p>After this Swivel brightened up a bit, and, as he
-did not try to talk, the hemorrhage did not return.
-But he was very weak.</p>
-
-<p>Milly and Brandon ate a little solid food too, but
-their companion was unable to do that.</p>
-
-<p>Now that it was light enough for them to see over
-the expanse of waters, they found as they had feared,
-that the whaleback had left them behind during the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>Not a sign of her presence nor of the presence of
-any vessel which might come to their assistance, appeared.</p>
-
-<p>The condition of the Success worried them a great
-deal—or worried Don and Milly at least—for she
-was gradually sinking at the stern, and the water
-was gaining more rapidly than they liked in the cabin.
-Whereas it had only been to Brandon’s knees when
-he had first gone below, it was now up to his waist.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>During one of these trips of his to the flooded interior
-of the brig, he heard Milly’s voice excitedly
-calling to him to come on deck.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” he asked, hastily making his appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“Look! look, Brandon!” cried the girl.</p>
-
-<p>She was standing up in the stern and looking over
-the starboard side.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon hurried toward her and followed the direction
-of her hand with his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Far across the tossing sea a dark object rose and
-fell upon the surface. It was not far above the level
-of the water, and therefore, though hardly three miles
-away, had until now remained unseen by the voyagers
-of the Success.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it a wreck like this?” she inquired eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“It must be,” said Brandon, after a careful examination.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring poor papa’s long glass up from his stateroom,”
-cried Milly. “You can see it then more
-plainly.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy hurried to obey this suggestion and quickly
-brought the instrument from the dead captain’s cabin.</p>
-
-<p>By the aid of the glass the shipwrecked boy and
-girl could quite plainly view the second wreck, for
-wreck it was. There was no room for doubt of that.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the hull of a vessel like this,” Brandon declared,
-“though it’s not sunken at the stern, and it
-rides the waves easier.</p>
-
-<p>“There isn’t a sign of a spar upon it—it’s swept
-as clean as this,” he continued. “There must have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-been many vessels treated that way in the storm.
-Derelicts will be plentiful enough.”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped with a startled exclamation, and stared
-at his companion in perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Brandon?” Milly asked, noting his
-change of manner.</p>
-
-<p>“I was thinking,” he said slowly, “that if the Silver
-Swan—my father’s old brig, you know—kept afloat
-through this last hurricane, she would likely be in just
-such shape as yonder hulk.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it couldn’t be possible, could it?” gasped the
-girl. “That would be too wonderful a coincidence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not as wonderful as you might think,” Brandon
-returned decisively, gaining confidence in the idea now
-that some one opposed him. “We are in the very
-part of the ocean—or at least, I have reason to think
-we are—in which the Silver Swan was last reported.
-I tell you, Milly, it may be she!”</p>
-
-<p>“If you could only get to her and see,” cried the
-young girl anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I will get to her!” declared Brandon, and
-then he handed the glass to her and went back to sit
-by poor Swivel and think it over.</p>
-
-<p>Milly, however, remained to watch the distant wreck
-through the instrument.</p>
-
-<p>By all appearances it was much more buoyant than
-the Success. Whereas the latter staggered up the
-long swells and labored through the trough of the sea,
-the strange derelict rode the waves like a duck, and,
-propelled by some current, moved a good deal faster,
-though in the same general direction as themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon, meanwhile, sitting beside the injured boy,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-who was now sleeping deeply, was turning over in
-his mind the project he had suggested.</p>
-
-<p>He knew, even better than Milly, that the Success
-was sinking deeper and deeper every hour, and that
-before evening the water might begin to wash in over
-the stern.</p>
-
-<p>The ocean was rapidly becoming smooth. Together
-they would be able to launch a small raft—a hatch
-covering, perhaps—place Swivel thereon, and by
-using oars, or perhaps a small sail, might reach the
-distant derelict quite easily.</p>
-
-<p>Whether it was the Silver Swan he had sighted, or
-not, it certainly rode the swells better and seemed to
-be far more seaworthy than the Success.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, when Milly came up from the stern, he
-broached his plan to her.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to force you into this, Milly,” he
-said. “You shall have the deciding vote. Perhaps I
-am influenced by the hope that yonder vessel is the
-Silver Swan, and maybe this is a dreadfully foolish
-plan for us to try. I think, though, that it is the best
-and wisest thing we can do.”</p>
-
-<p>“What can we use for a raft?” the girl asked
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“One of the hatch covers. I have found a tool
-chest below—I can get at it yet—and there are
-spars and pieces of canvas for a sail in the same place.
-I saw them only this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can we launch a raft?” asked the practical Milly.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe we can. It is growing calmer all the
-time, now, and the rail is so low at the stern that we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-can push a well balanced raft into the sea and load it
-afterward.”</p>
-
-<p>“And Swivel?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid,” said Brandon, looking down at the
-injured boy sadly, “that whatever we do cannot affect
-Swivel. We can make him as comfortable on the
-raft as elsewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then let us do it,” agreed Milly energetically.
-“I have been watching the other wreck and it seems
-to sail much better than the Success. The old brig
-may go down now at any time.”</p>
-
-<p>And so they set to work at once at the task of building
-a raft.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXVII<br />
-
-
-<small>LEFT IN DOUBT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> task they had set themselves was no child’s
-play, and this Brandon and Milly soon discovered.
-But they were working for their lives, for according
-to their reckoning, the Success would not remain above
-the surface many hours.</p>
-
-<p>The captain’s daughter showed herself not only
-capable of handling tools, but she was strong, too.
-For years she had sailed up and down the seas with
-her father—nearly all her life, in fact—for her
-mother, Brandon had discovered by questioning, had
-died when she was quite young.</p>
-
-<p>This information assured him that there could be
-no reasonable doubt of Milly Frank’s identity. But
-for the present he said nothing to the girl about her
-relatives in New York.</p>
-
-<p>Milly’s life, therefore, had made her hardy and
-strong, although her education was limited in many
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>But she had a good basis of hard, common sense to
-build upon, and with a few terms at a well conducted
-school, she would make as well informed a girl as
-one could find.</p>
-
-<p>With some trouble they managed to wrench away
-the fastenings of the forward hatch, and with a heavy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-bit which Brandon found in the captain’s chest ’tween
-decks, he was able to bore a hole of sufficient size to
-receive the butt of the small spar.</p>
-
-<p>He brought two oars on deck also, and a square of
-sailcloth which was bunglingly fashioned into a sail.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon proposed to leave nothing undone which
-would make the success of their undertaking more
-sure. Something <i>might</i> happen to keep them from
-reaching the other wreck, so he brought up several
-cans of sea biscuit and some canned meats from the
-cabin stores, and placed them in readiness for loading
-the raft after it was launched.</p>
-
-<p>Then with the aid of heavy rollers and a short bar
-they got the raft under way, and once it was started
-down the inclined deck they had no trouble whatever
-in keeping it going. The only bother was to keep it
-from moving too fast.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon found it impracticable to launch the raft
-from the stern, and therefore cut away a piece of the
-rail on the starboard side wide enough to admit of
-the passage of the lumbering hatch.</p>
-
-<p>They took the precaution to fasten a cable to the
-raft, that it might not get away from them in its
-plunge overboard, and then, by an almost superhuman
-effort, rolled the platform into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>It went in with a terrific splash, the sea water wetting
-both the castaways a good deal, for they had to
-stand at the rail to steady the raft’s plunge into the
-ocean.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah!” Brandon shouted. “It floats, and we
-shall be able to get away.”</p>
-
-<p>He hastened to pull the hatch up under the brig’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-rail; and, with Milly’s aid, stepped the short mast.
-Then he placed the boxes and provisions aboard and
-lashed them firmly, after which a bed was made for
-Swivel on the raft.</p>
-
-<p>Once more he descended into the half submerged
-galley and made some more warm drink for the injured
-boy, and this time Swivel was able to eat a
-little cracker with it.</p>
-
-<p>They told him what they were about to do, and he
-seemed to take more interest in the plan than he had
-in anything since the night before.</p>
-
-<p>“Can—can you carry me, Don?” he asked faintly.</p>
-
-<p>“I can if I don’t hurt you,” the other replied.
-“Now don’t try to talk, Swivel; but, if I hurt you
-badly, touch me so I’ll know.”</p>
-
-<p>With this he lifted the slight form of the lad in
-his strong arms, and carried him quickly, though easily,
-across the sloping deck and stepped aboard the raft,
-which floated almost even with the brig’s rail.</p>
-
-<p>The sea had gone down very much now, and it was
-therefore a simple matter to embark upon the hatch.</p>
-
-<p>Swivel was made comfortable among the blankets,
-his two friends hoisted the rule sail, the painter was
-cast off, and the castaways moved slowly away from
-the hulk of the Success.</p>
-
-<p>By this time it was quite late in the afternoon. Still
-there were several hours of daylight left them, for in
-this latitude the sun does not set very early, even in
-the spring.</p>
-
-<p>The time which had elapsed since they had first
-sighted the second wreck had given this latter an opportunity
-to sail by the Success, for she moved much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-faster than the water logged brig. The raft, however,
-wafted along by the brisk breeze, began to overhaul
-the stranger at once. By the aid of an oar, in
-lieu of a rudder, Brandon was able, with little difficulty
-to keep headed toward their objective point.</p>
-
-<p>Milly, who had brought her father’s glass along, as
-well as the log book of the Success, and all papers of
-any value belonging to her father, occupied her time
-in trimming the sail, under Brandon’s directions, and
-in gazing through the glass at the strange vessel.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the outlines of the latter became quite clearly
-visible.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a brig like papa’s,” declared the girl, scrutinizing
-the hull which, although denuded of every
-inch of spar and rigging, still rode the long swells as
-though perfectly seaworthy.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you see the stern, Milly?” Brandon asked,
-in excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there a name on it? The Swan had her name
-on the stern?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is something on the stern, but it’s too far
-off yet for me to be sure,” she replied.</p>
-
-<p>“The raft is behaving beautifully,” Brandon declared,
-“and we shall be near enough presently for
-you to be sure of what you <i>do</i> see.”</p>
-
-<p>Milly put down the glass and knelt by Swivel a
-moment, to place his head more comfortably. Then
-she went back to the instrument again.</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen minutes passed before she uttered a word,
-while Brandon watched her face with eager interest.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
-Finally she passed him the glass and seized the steering
-oar herself, although she said never a word.</p>
-
-<p>With hands that trembled slightly Brandon placed
-the instrument to his eye and ranged it upon the stern
-of the derelict. Long and earnestly did he examine
-the lettering upon it, and then closed the glass with a
-snap.</p>
-
-<p>“The Silver Swan—thank God!” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m so glad, for your sake, Don!” exclaimed
-Milly, tears of happiness shining in her eyes. “You’ll
-get your father’s diamonds and be rich.”</p>
-
-<p>“Riches on a wreck won’t do us much good,” returned
-Don grimly. “I’d rather be a pauper ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but somebody will come very quickly now to
-take us off,” she said confidently.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps. But, did you ever think, that perhaps
-somebody has been before us?”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I mean that perhaps somebody has boarded
-the brig already and secured the diamonds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” asked the girl doubtfully. “Who knows
-about it excepting your Mr. Wetherbee and that Leroyd
-and his friend Weeks?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody that I know of.”</p>
-
-<p>“And nobody else knew where the jewels were hidden?”</p>
-
-<p>“Probably not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then do you suppose the steamer has been here
-first?”</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_268.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">LONG AND EARNESTLY DID HE EXAMINE THE LETTERING<br /> UPON IT THEN CLOSED THE GLASS WITH
-A SNAP</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no; Caleb would have towed the old Swan to
-a place of safety if he had found her—especially if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>
-she is as seaworthy as she appears to be from this
-distance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then what <i>do</i> you mean?” demanded Milly in exasperation.</p>
-
-<p>“What about Leroyd and Weeks?” asked Brandon
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what about them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you suppose they are drowned?”</p>
-
-<p>“They may be.”</p>
-
-<p>“And then again they may not be. If they were
-picked up by some vessel they might have still continued
-their search for the derelict; might have found
-her by accident, in fact.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Don,” cried the girl, “you are supposing altogether
-too much. Don’t conjure up such disheartening
-ideas as that. Let us hope that we are the
-first, who know about the treasure, to find the Silver
-Swan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it doesn’t seem hardly possible that I should
-get the diamonds without any more trouble,” Brandon
-said, with a sigh. “I’m afraid there’s something
-wrong about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk that way, but be thankful that you
-haven’t had more trouble—though, I should say
-you’d had almost enough,” returned Milly, laughing
-a little.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXVIII<br />
-
-
-<small>HOW THE ENEMY APPEARED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Slowly</span> the rude craft drew near the hull of the
-Silver Swan. The brig floated as well as though she
-had never struck upon Reef Eight, nor been buffeted
-by the gales of this southern sea for well nigh three
-months.</p>
-
-<p>The recent storm had done little damage to her
-deck either, although the rails were smashed in one
-or two places. Her wheel had been lashed firmly,
-and strangely enough it still remained so, and now,
-in this quiet sea, the brig held as even a keel as though
-she was well manned.</p>
-
-<p>Within two hours of the time the castaways had
-been assured that the wreck they were nearing <i>was</i>
-the Silver Swan, the raft came up under her lee rail,
-and Brandon caught the bight of a cable over a pin
-on the quarter. Then he leaped aboard himself and
-made the rope secure.</p>
-
-<p>The rail of the Silver Swan was so much higher
-above the surface of the sea than that of the sinking
-Success had been that Brandon and Milly had to fashion
-a “sling” of the sail, in which to get Swivel
-aboard. The injured youth bore the pain this must
-have caused him uncomplainingly and was soon made
-comfortable on the deck of this, their new refuge.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>They did not let the raft float away, although they
-hoped that they should not need it again, and Brandon
-even took the precaution of fastening it with a
-second cable before they started to explore the brig.</p>
-
-<p>The Silver Swan had been almost uninjured by her
-long journey with no pilot but the fickle winds and
-currents of the ocean. The masts had, of course, all
-gone in the first gale, and her crew had cut away every
-bit of the wreckage before leaving her to her fate on
-the reef.</p>
-
-<p>The hatches had been battened down and the doors
-of the forecastle and cabin likewise closed, so that the
-occasional seas which had washed over her had done
-little toward injuring the interior.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Milly to look out for Swivel, Brandon
-forced open the cabin door (it had swelled badly during
-the long siege of stormy weather which the brig
-had withstood) and went below. Naturally everything
-was in confusion—tables, chairs, and what not
-overturned; but nothing about the cabin seemed injured.</p>
-
-<p>The cook’s quarters showed a bad state of affairs,
-however, for there wasn’t a whole dish (except the tin
-ones) in the place, and the stove lay on its back kicking
-its four feet in the air as though in its last expiring
-agonies.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon righted this useful utensil first, and mended
-the broken pipe as best he could. Then, when he had
-a fire started in the thing, he went on to examine the
-smaller cabins or staterooms.</p>
-
-<p>He knew his father’s well enough and looked in.
-But he could not bear to enter that just now, and so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-fixed upon one, which should have belonged to the second
-mate, for the use of poor Swivel.</p>
-
-<p>He went back to Milly and the injured boy then,
-and removed the latter to the brig’s cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Milly, who was a capable girl in more ways than
-one, went to work at once to get up a substantial meal
-from the stores which they had brought from the Success,
-with the addition of some eatables belonging to
-the provisions of the Swan.</p>
-
-<p>It was rapidly growing dark, and to prevent the
-liability of a collision, Brandon hunted out some of the
-ship’s lanterns and hung two in the bows, and another
-at the masthead, devoutly hoping that the lights, placed
-in these peculiar positions, would attract the attention
-of some passing vessel.</p>
-
-<p>Then the lamp in the cabin was filled and lighted,
-and for the first time in forty-eight hours or more,
-they sat down to a comfortable meal.</p>
-
-<p>At least, Milly and Brandon sat down; Swivel remained
-in his berth, with the door of the stateroom
-open, and watched them with a wan smile on his pale
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Brandon, why don’t you see if the diamonds
-are here?” asked the young girl, as they finished their
-supper. “I thought you would be eager to look as
-soon as you got aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>Don glanced across the table at her curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know,” he said hesitatingly. “I’m half
-afraid to. It would be a terrible disappointment if
-they should not be there—and perhaps they are not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come! don’t be foolish,” said practical Milly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-“Take a look in the secret closet—wherever it is—or
-I shall be tempted to do it myself.”</p>
-
-<p>Brandon, thus urged, rose and approached the companionway.</p>
-
-<p>“Third panel, on port side,” he repeated. “That
-was Caleb’s direction, if I remember rightly. Now
-let’s see.”</p>
-
-<p>He pressed on the designated panel, first one way
-and then another. It seemed a trifle loose, but otherwise
-refused to move.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I’ve made a mistake,” he muttered, when
-suddenly, on his pressing downward on the edge of the
-wood, a section of the panel dropped out leaving a
-shallow, metal lined cavity displayed to view.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring the lamp, Milly,” he cried eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>The girl obeyed and held the light so that it might
-illuminate the interior of the secret closet. There
-was something in the compartment!</p>
-
-<p>Brandon hastily thrust in his hand and drew forth
-a flat, heavy package, sealed in oiled silk and bound
-with a cord. Hurrying to the cabin table with his
-prize he tore off the cord, broke the seals, and unwound
-the outer wrappings.</p>
-
-<p>Milly, quite as excited as himself, held the lamp
-closer, watching his movements anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath the outer covering was a flat pouch of
-chamois skin, the flap sealed at one end. This seal
-the youth broke without hesitation, and in another instant
-had poured a glittering shower of gems upon the
-polished surface of the cabin table.</p>
-
-<p>“Diamonds! diamonds! thousands of dollars’
-worth!” cried Milly delightedly, running her fingers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-through the little heap of glittering stones and letting
-them fall in a flashing shower from her hands.</p>
-
-<p>The gems were uncut—at least by the hand of man—but
-even in their crude state they sparkled wonderfully.</p>
-
-<p>For several moments they feasted their eyes on the
-brilliant spectacle, and then Milly filled both hands
-with the precious gems and ran to show Swivel.</p>
-
-<p>“Whew!” whispered that youth, his eyes growing
-round with wonder. “Wot a lot of shiners!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t let him talk, Milly,” commanded Brandon,
-beginning to see that it would never do for them to
-excite the sick boy by the sight of the gems. “When
-he is better he can see them all.”</p>
-
-<p>The young girl came back with the jewels, smiling
-happily at her friend. She seemed quite as joyful because
-of his good fortune as though the gems were
-her own.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon took the precautions to close the door between
-the cabin and Swivel’s stateroom soon after
-this, that the boy might go to sleep, and then he and
-Milly sat down at the table and counted the diamonds.</p>
-
-<p>There were no very large gems among the lot, but
-they were of fair size and of the purest white.</p>
-
-<p>It was late that night before the two castaways retired.
-Brandon prepared what had once been Caleb
-Wetherbee’s quarters for Milly, but he himself slept in
-the cabin, rolled up in a blanket on the floor, that he
-might be near Swivel.</p>
-
-<p>They were so exhausted from their privations of
-the past day and a half that they slept until far into
-the next forenoon. Swivel was actually better, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-had no more sinking spells, so that Milly and Brandon
-began to hope for his recovery.</p>
-
-<p>Just after they rose Brandon saw a sailing vessel
-far down on the horizon; but it passed by without
-noticing the brig. And once during the day the smoke
-of a steam vessel blotted the lines where the sky and
-sea met, far to the eastward.</p>
-
-<p>These momentary glimpses of other craft gave them
-some hope, for it showed them that they were not entirely
-out of the track of shipping.</p>
-
-<p>That night Brandon hung the lanterns out again,
-and according to arrangement with Milly, remained
-on deck to watch. She was to watch days, and he at
-night, and he fulfilled his lonely vigil faithfully.</p>
-
-<p>But not a vessel appeared to gladden his lonely eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Milly rose early on that third day and prepared
-breakfast, after eating which Brandon went to bed.
-The sky remained beautifully clear, and they had nothing
-to fear from the elements, for the glass forecasted
-a continued spell of fine weather.</p>
-
-<p>Milly took up her position with the long spy glass
-on the deck, and swept the horizon for some sign of
-rescue. Occasionally she went down to look in on
-Swivel, and about noon to prepare the dinner.</p>
-
-<p>When the meal was nearly ready the young girl ran
-up the companionway stairs again for a final look before
-she summoned Brandon from his stateroom. As
-she put the glass to her eye and gazed toward the
-west a cry of surprise and joy burst from her lips.</p>
-
-<p>Approaching the derelict brig, with a great expanse
-of canvas spread to the fresh breeze, was a small<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>
-schooner, the water dashing white and frothy from her
-bows!</p>
-
-<p>“Saved! saved!” gasped the girl. “Oh, thank
-God!”</p>
-
-<p>While she had been below the vessel had come in
-sight, and was now less than half a mile from the
-wreck.</p>
-
-<p>What seemed strange, however, was that the
-schooner was laying a course directly for the brig as
-though it was her intention to board her.</p>
-
-<p>“Brandon! Brandon!” she cried, running back to
-the cabin and rapping on the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, aye!” he shouted, and was out of his berth
-in a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” he asked, appearing in the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a schooner coming right for us!” cried
-Milly, laughing and crying for joy. “I’ve just discovered
-it. It’s about here.”</p>
-
-<p>She was about to dart out upon deck again, but
-Brandon grasped her arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait, Milly,” he said cautiously. “Have they
-seen you yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but I want them to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet. We don’t know what they may be. Let
-me look at them,” said the boy rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>He seized the glass, and mounting to the top of the
-stairs, peered out from the shelter of the companionway
-at the strange schooner.</p>
-
-<p>She lay to about a quarter of a mile away from the
-derelict, and a boat was already half way between the
-vessel and the wreck. Brandon examined the men in
-it intently.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>Only a moment did he scrutinize them, and then he
-dropped the glass with a cry of alarm. He had
-recognized Jim Leroyd and the fellow Weeks among
-the crew of the small boat!</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXIX<br />
-
-
-<small>SHOWING HOW MR. WEEKS MADE HIS LAST MOVE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">What</span> is it, Brandon?” gasped Milly, seeing the
-look upon her companion’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“Look! look!” whispered the youth, thrusting the
-glass into her hands.</p>
-
-<p>Milly gazed in terrified silence at the approaching
-boat.</p>
-
-<p>She, as well as Don, at once recognized the villainous
-Leroyd and his friend, Sneaky Al, and her heart sank
-with fear.</p>
-
-<p>“What shall we do?” she inquired at last, turning
-to Brandon.</p>
-
-<p>The latter turned back into the cabin without a
-word, opened the secret closet and grasping the package
-of diamonds thrust it into the breast of his shirt.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll hide in the hold,” he said, appearing to grasp
-the situation at once. “I do not believe they’ll find
-me. Tell Swivel, and he’ll know what to tell and
-what not to tell, if they try to pump him.</p>
-
-<p>“They needn’t know that I’m here at all, or that
-you know anything about me. They’ll not dare to
-hurt you, Milly. But I shall be on hand in case they
-try it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what can you do against so many?” she returned,
-with a hysteric laugh.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>“Something—you’ll see. They shan’t hurt you
-while I’m alive,” he declared earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>“But suppose they take us off with them—Swivel
-and I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Go, of course,” returned Brandon promptly.
-“Leave me to shift for myself. When you get ashore
-communicate with Adoniram Pepper &amp; Co. of New
-York, and tell them how I’m fixed. Good by, Milly!”</p>
-
-<p>He wrung her hand warmly and disappeared in the
-direction of the booby hatch ’tween decks. At the
-same moment there were voices outside and the noise
-of the schooner’s small boat scraping against the
-side of the brig.</p>
-
-<p>Milly, with hands clasped tightly across her breast,
-as though in the endeavor to still the heavy beating
-of her heart, remained standing beside the cabin table
-as the men boarded the brig and entered the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>The first to come below was the ill featured Leroyd
-himself, and close behind him was Alfred Weeks and
-two other men from the crew of the schooner.</p>
-
-<p>“Dash my top lights!” cried the sailor, as he caught
-sight of the young girl standing there so silently.</p>
-
-<p>He retreated precipitately upon his friend Weeks,
-who was almost as greatly astonished as himself.</p>
-
-<p>“How under the sun came you here, Miss Frank?”
-demanded Sneaky Al, stepping forward.</p>
-
-<p>But Leroyd grabbed his arm and strove to drag him
-back.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, man! ’tis not a human!” he gasped, his usually
-red face fairly pallid. “It’s the spirit of the
-poor girl. I knowed how ’twould be we’en we left
-her aboard the Success.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>Weeks shook off his grasp in contempt.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m only too willing to meet such a charming ghost
-as this,” he said, with a smirk, smiling at the young
-girl. “Don’t be a fool, Jim. It is Miss Frank herself,
-though how she came here is the greatest of all
-mysteries.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis the work o’ Davy Jones hisself,” muttered the
-sailor.</p>
-
-<p>The other two men, both low browed, sullen appearing
-fellows looked on without comment.</p>
-
-<p>“How did you get here?” repeated Weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“We came from the Success just before she was
-about to sink,” Milly declared. “Did you come to
-save us?”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Us?</i>” cried Weeks, in utter amazement. “For
-goodness’ sake, who’s with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“After poor papa was killed,” there was a little
-choke in Milly’s voice here, “a vessel overhauled the
-Success and a boy tried to save me. He brought a
-rope to the wreck, but it parted before we could haul
-in a heavier cable, and the gale swept the other vessel
-away during the night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Brave chap!” muttered Weeks. “Where is he
-now?”</p>
-
-<p>“There,” she said, pointing to the open door of the
-stateroom in which Swivel was lying. “He is hurt.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that doesn’t explain how ye got here, miss,”
-said the sailor suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>“I hadn’t got to that, Mr. Leroyd. Had you been
-men, you would not have left me to drown as you did,
-and then there would have been no necessity for my
-remaining for three days on these two vessels.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>“You misjudge us, I assure you,” Weeks hastened
-to say, as Leroyd shrank back at the girl’s scornful
-words. “Both Leroyd and I were in one boat and
-the second mate was in the other boat. He declared
-you to be safe, and I thought, and so did Mr. Leroyd,
-that you were with him.</p>
-
-<p>“It was not until we were picked up by the schooner
-Natchez, of Bermuda, and carried to those islands,
-that we discovered your deplorable loss.”</p>
-
-<p>But Milly did not believe this plausible story. She
-had too vivid a remembrance of Leroyd and the cowardly
-Weeks during the gale, to be impressed by this
-tale.</p>
-
-<p>“This brig passed the Success on the second day
-after you left me, and we made a raft and came to it,
-because it was so much more seaworthy than papa’s
-vessel,” said Milly coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“You say this boy is hurt, eh?” said Weeks, stepping
-around to the stateroom door and peering in at
-Swivel, who was sleeping heavily despite the sound
-of voices. “Gee! he does look bad, doesn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, wot in thunder shall we do?” growled Leroyd
-at length. “We’ve got no time to spend in fooling,
-Al. No knowing what that—that other craft
-is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Milly,” Weeks assured her, without paying
-any attention to the words of his companion, “we
-shall have the pleasure of taking you and your brave
-young friend ashore with us—after we settle a little
-business here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m glad ter hear you gittin’ down ter business,”
-declared Leroyd, with satisfaction. “Come,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-now, skin out of here, you fellers,” he added, addressing
-the two men at the companionway. “We’ll come
-up or call for you when we want ye.”</p>
-
-<p>The men departed and the sailor turned again to his
-partner.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurry!” he exclaimed eagerly. “Where’s the
-place you said they were hid? It’s somewhere in the
-cabin here, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then send the gal on deck, too, and let’s rummage.”</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t be rude enough to do that,” said Weeks,
-with another smirk at Milly. “We will just request
-the young lady not to speak of what she sees us do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care. Anything, so long’s we get ’em and
-get out o’ here. Suppose—”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind supposing any longer. Let me see,
-now,” and Weeks walked slowly to the upper end of
-the cabin and counted off three panels from the companionway
-on the port side.</p>
-
-<p>Quickly his long finger touched the surface of the
-panel, pressing here and there and rattling the loose
-board, and finally the panel dropped down, disclosing
-the secret cupboard—empty!</p>
-
-<p>Leroyd darted forward.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it? Is it there?” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>“The infernal luck! it’s empty!” shouted Weeks,
-and with a volley of maledictions he staggered back
-and dropped into the nearest chair.</p>
-
-<p>Leroyd was fairly purple.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you tricked me!” he yelled, seizing his partner
-by the shoulders and shaking him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>“No, you fool! why should I trick you? That is
-where Caleb Wetherbee said the diamonds were hid.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sh!” growled the sailor. “D’ye want that gal ter
-know everything? She knows too much now.”</p>
-
-<p>“She doesn’t know anything about this; why should
-she?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, what’s become of them?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can tell you that,” returned Weeks. “Cale
-Wetherbee’s been here.”</p>
-
-<p>“And left the Silver Swan a derelict—almost as
-good as new—an’ him with a steamer?” roared Leroyd.
-“Man, you’re dreaming!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then—what—has happened!” asked Alfred
-Weeks slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“The gal—the gal here,” declared Leroyd, turning
-fiercely upon Milly. “She’s found ’em, I tell ye!”</p>
-
-<p>He advanced upon the shrinking girl so threateningly,
-that Milly screamed, and rushed to the companionway.
-Leroyd pursued her, and Weeks followed
-the angry sailor.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the deck darted the girl, and almost into the
-arms of one of the men whom Leroyd had driven out
-of the brig’s cabin. The fellow looked excited and he
-shouted to the angry sailor as soon as he saw him:</p>
-
-<p>“De steamer come—up queek. Mr. Leroyd! Dey
-put off-a boat already.”</p>
-
-<p>Milly, who had dodged past the speaker, turned her
-eyes to the east—the opposite direction from which
-the schooner had appeared—and beheld a steamship,
-her two funnels vomiting thick smoke, just rounded to,
-less than two cable lengths away.</p>
-
-<p>It was the whaleback steamer, Number Three!</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>Already a boat had put off from the whaleback and
-it was now being swiftly propelled toward the Silver
-Swan.</p>
-
-<p>The two men whom Leroyd and Weeks had brought
-with them from the schooner, had been smoking in the
-lee of the deck-house and had not discovered the
-steamer’s approach until she was almost upon the derelict.</p>
-
-<p>“Curses on it!” Weeks exclaimed as he took in
-the situation and recognized the steamer, whose smoke
-they had beheld in the distance, before boarding the
-brig.</p>
-
-<p>But Leroyd kept on after the fleeing Milly. He believed
-that she knew something about the missing
-gems, or had them in her possession, and he was determined
-to get them.</p>
-
-<p>Milly ran to the bows of the brig, with Leroyd close
-behind her.</p>
-
-<p>“Let that gal alone!” roared a voice from the approaching
-boat. “Give way, boys! I won’t leave a
-whole bone in that scoundrel’s body, once I get my
-paws on him.”</p>
-
-<p>In an instant the small boat was under the brig’s
-rail, and Caleb Wetherbee himself was upon her deck
-with an agility quite surprising. Mr. Coffin and two
-of the boat’s crew were right behind him.</p>
-
-<p>A moment later the panting girl, having eluded the
-clumsier sailor, was behind the shelter of Caleb’s towering
-form and those of his companions.</p>
-
-<p>Weeks stopped Leroyd in his mad rush for the
-girl, and whispered a few swift sentences in his ear.
-Then he stepped forward.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>“By what right do you board this brig, Mr. Wetherbee?”
-he asked. “This is a derelict. We have
-seized her and propose to tow her to port for salvage.
-I command you to leave her.”</p>
-
-<p>“How long since you boarded her for that purpose?”
-Mr. Coffin demanded, for Caleb was fairly
-purple with rage and surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Since half an hour ago,” replied Weeks calmly.</p>
-
-<p>“If that is the case, I think I have a prior claim,”
-suddenly interrupted a voice. “I came aboard two
-days ago and I claim the Silver Swan as mine by right
-of discovery!”</p>
-
-<p>The astounded company turned toward the cabin entrance
-and beheld Brandon Tarr just appearing from
-below.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XL<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH THE ENEMY IS DEFEATED AND THE QUEST OF
-THE SILVER SWAN IS ENDED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Brandon!</span>” shouted Caleb; “it’s the boy himself!”</p>
-
-<p>But Leroyd uttered a howl of rage and sprang toward
-the youth, his face aflame and his huge fist raised
-to strike. Caleb, however, despite his wooden leg, was
-too quick for him.</p>
-
-<p>He flew to Don’s rescue, and ere Leroyd could reach
-his intended victim, the old mariner felled the villain
-to the deck with one swing of his powerful arm.</p>
-
-<p>Weeks, who had also dashed forward to aid in
-Brandon’s overthrow, was seized by the doughty captain
-of the whaleback and tossed completely over the
-brig’s rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Git out o’ here, the hull kit an’ bilin’ of ye!” Caleb
-roared, starting for the two men belonging to the
-schooner.</p>
-
-<p>They obeyed with surprising alacrity, and the old
-man picked up the dazed Leroyd and tossed him into
-the boat after them. Weeks, dripping and sputtering,
-was hauled aboard by his companions, and the small
-boat was rowed back to the schooner, while Brandon,
-unable to restrain his emotion, threw up his hat
-and shouted, “Hurrah!” with all his might.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>It occupied the three castaways—Milly, Brandon,
-and Swivel—and Mr. Coffin and Caleb, fully two
-hours to straighten out matters satisfactorily. They
-had so much to tell and so much to explain for one
-another’s benefit, that the whaleback had run in and
-the crew passed a hawser from her stern to the bow
-of the brig, under Mr. Bolin’s directions, ere the conference
-was ended.</p>
-
-<p>Words cannot well express the astonishment that
-those on the whaleback felt at finding the castaways
-aboard the Silver Swan—or at finding the brig itself.
-For the past twelve hours they had all believed
-that the derelict was a victim of Uncle Sam’s feverish
-impatience to destroy all obstructions to commerce in
-his ocean.</p>
-
-<p>Upon figuring the whole matter up, it was pretty
-evident that it was the Success which the naval ensign
-had exploded, for she had been sunk at the stern
-sufficiently to cover her name, and had been so battered
-by the waves that the lettering on the bow was
-also probably unreadable.</p>
-
-<p>After believing, as they did, that the Swan was
-sunk and all her treasures with her, the whaleback had
-sailed about in circles, seeking the wreck of the Success,
-on which they believed Brandon and his two companions
-to be.</p>
-
-<p>It was only by providential fortune that the brig
-had finally been sighted, and the whaleback had
-steamed up just in time to wrest the Silver Swan from
-Messrs. Leroyd and Weeks.</p>
-
-<p>Swivel was taken aboard the steamer and carefully
-examined by Lawrence Coffin, who was no mean surgeon,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>
-and he pronounced the youth as seriously, if
-not dangerously, injured. He had burst a blood vessel
-and had sustained other internal injuries, and
-would probably be unfit for work of any kind for a
-long time.</p>
-
-<p>“Best place for him is the Marine Hospital,” declared
-Mr. Coffin to Brandon and Caleb that night in
-the steamer’s cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“Hospital nothin’!” exclaimed Caleb, with conviction.
-“The hospital is all right for them as hain’t
-go no homes—like as I hadn’t, nor no friends—a
-good deal as I <i>was</i>—nor nothing; but <i>that</i> boy ain’t
-goin’ to lack a shelter as long as <i>I’m</i> alive.”</p>
-
-<p>“Best not take him on a sea voyage just yet, Mr.
-Wetherbee,” responded Mr. Coffin seriously.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t intend to. He’s goin’ ter live with me,
-though.”</p>
-
-<p>“But won’t you sail the Silver Swan?” asked the
-first officer. “She’s as good as new and she’s yours,
-too, I understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I’m not. When the Silver Swan is in
-shape again, I shall put Mr. Bolin in command of her.
-I’ve already spoken to him about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whew!” whistled Mr. Coffin. “And the whaleback?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll command her; that was the agreement I
-made with Adoniram before we left New York.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Mr. Wetherbee,” exclaimed the first
-officer gratefully. “But may I ask what you propose
-to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall retire from the sea—that is, from commandin’
-a ship, any way.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>“So you’re goin’ to keep bachelor’s hall, and going
-to take this Swivel to it?” and Mr. Coffin shook his
-head gravely. “He really needs a woman’s nursing.”</p>
-
-<p>Caleb grew very red in the face, and blew his nose
-furiously.</p>
-
-<p>“He—he’ll get it, Mr. Coffin,” he said hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>Both Brandon and the first officer looked at the old
-tar in blank amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“I said he’d get it,” repeated Caleb solemnly, though
-with a rather shamefaced look. “He’ll get it, sir,
-an’ from the trimmest little woman ye ever see.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Miss Frances!” burst forth Brandon at
-length.</p>
-
-<p>“It is her, my lad. An’ hain’t I right erbout her
-bein’ a mighty trim one?”</p>
-
-<p>“She is, indeed! She’s splendid!” cried Brandon
-enthusiastically, seizing his friend’s mighty palm.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Coffin also offered his congratulations, but went
-away afterward with rather a dazed look on his face.</p>
-
-<p>He was pretty well acquainted with the old seaman,
-and he wondered, as did Brandon, how under
-the sun Caleb had ever plucked up the courage to ask
-Adoniram Pepper’s sister for her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, lad,” said the old man gravely; “I’ve been
-floating about from sea to sea and from land to land
-for the better part of fifty years, an’ now I’m goin’ ter
-lay back an’ take it easy for the rest of my days.”</p>
-
-<p>And as Brandon wrung his hand again he felt that
-the old seaman fully deserved it all.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In good time the whaleback, with her tow, the derelict
-brig, arrived in New York, where the Silver<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-Swan was at once sent to the shipyard for repairs, and
-is now doing her owner good service as a merchantman.</p>
-
-<p>Adoniram Pepper &amp; Co.’s scheme of recovering
-derelicts in general and towing them in for their salvage,
-has never amounted to anything yet, for directly
-following the trip of Number Three (rechristened the
-Milly Frank, by the way), the owner received a good
-offer for putting the whaleback in the European trade,
-and she is still carrying grain to England, with Mr.
-Coffin as commander.</p>
-
-<p>Milly Frank’s joy at finding her relatives, of whose
-existence her father had never told her, was only
-equaled by the joy of Adoniram and Frances Pepper
-themselves in recovering their “little sister” again—for
-as such Milly appears to them.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Frances is of course Miss Frances no longer;
-but with her husband, she still occupies her brother’s
-house in New York, and Milly dwells with them.</p>
-
-<p>Brandon, who is at present in the naval school, resides
-there also during vacation, and calls the company
-of assorted humanity there gathered “the happy
-family.”</p>
-
-<p>Swivel is in the West—that land of bracing and
-salubrious climate—for after he recovered from the
-accident he sustained on the wreck, the doctors told
-him that he could never live and be strong in the East
-again. So, with the assistance of Caleb, Adoniram,
-and Brandon, who quarreled not a little as to who
-should do the most for him, he was sent West, and a
-glorious start in business life was given him in that
-rapidly growing country.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>Brandon himself, though made independently rich
-by the sale of the diamonds found by Anson Tarr,
-loves the sea too well to give it up altogether, and, as
-I said, is in the naval academy at Annapolis. When
-he is through school and gets his appointment, he
-and Milly may—but I won’t anticipate.</p>
-
-<p>As for the disappointed Uncle Arad, he never
-pressed the matter of Brandon’s arrest after the failure
-of the plot (hatched up by himself and Messrs.
-Leroyd and Weeks) to convert his nephew’s property
-to his own use. He still remains on the farm at Chopmist,
-and by report is as crabbed and stingy as ever;
-but Brandon has had no desire to return to the farm
-since his Quest of the Silver Swan was ended.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
-</div></div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEST OF THE SILVER SWAN ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
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