For some moments Kendrick watched
him as he moved cautiously from one vantage point
to another, not a little surprised to discover that
the intruder was spying upon the cottage. Some
belated camper, probably.
But there was no harm in making sure.
Phil crept noiselessly off the balcony and slipped
quietly downstairs and out the back way. It was
his idea to come upon the man from behind and demand
what he wanted; but a careless step revealed his approach
and sent the fellow running at top speed through the
bush to the edge of the lake, where he jumped into
a small launch which he must have paddled inshore very
quietly. No such caution marked his actions now,
however. He started his engine and went putt-putting
madly out across the lake.
Thoroughly aroused, Kendrick ran to
the little landing where the launch rented for the
season was moored. He leaped for the engine,
a moment later had swung clear and was off in full
chase.
As he nursed the engine to top speed
it soon became apparent that his was much the superior
boat. Added to this he had the advantage of a
complete knowledge of the inlets and topography of
Sparrow Lake. He knew for instance, that the
long neck of heavily wooded peninsula which jutted
out for some distance in the immediate vicinity was
bisected by a narrow channel of deep black water where
a motor boat could negotiate a passage without difficulty.
Kendrick headed straight for the half
concealed entrance to this channel. The stranger
had gone tearing off to round the point. The
result of the channel manoeuvre was that Phil came
out into open water directly in the path of the fleeing
launch just as it had rounded the point.
At once the intruder shut off his
engine, put a foot on the gunwale and took a header
into the lake, swimming vigorously for the shore close
by. This was confession of an intense anxiety
to escape and for the moment it did look as if his
chances of getting away were excellent; the unexpectedness
of the action made it necessary for Phil to make a
wide parabola to bring his boat equally close inshore
and to check its speed. Without a moment’s
hesitation, however, Kendrick also shut off his engine
and dove overboard as he swept by. A strong swimmer,
he was soon climbing ashore.
By this time the man he was after
had started away, swish-wish through the underbrush;
but he was only a few rods in the lead, and one of
thickset build was no match for Kendrick in a footrace.
As Phil overhauled him he turned suddenly and fiercely
grappled with his pursuer.
This again was something at which
Kendrick was proficient and he threw the man easily
enough with a half-nelson. They were wrestling
it out in an open space in the bushes where the light
was not quite so dim, and at last Phil had the hold
for which he had been playing.
“I can break your arm quite
easily,” he panted in sharp warning. “Are
you ready to behave if I let you up?”
Upon receiving a strangled grunt of
affirmation he released his antagonist.
“Gee! ‘bo, aint there
nothin’ y’ aint good at? That’s
second time y’ve got my nanny fer
fair!”
At sound of a familiar voice Phil
opened his waterproof match-safe and struck a light.
He found himself gazing with some amazement into the
grinning homely face of “Iron Man” McCorquodale,
the ex-pugilist with whom he had exchanged sparring
compliments the night of the fog.
“McCorquodale! How’d you get here?”
“On the too-too,” responded
the Iron Man, rapidly recovering both breath and good
humor.
“Don’t get fresh, McCorquodale.
What were you doing just now, sneaking around our
cottage over there?”
“Dry up, kid, on that ‘sneak’
stuff. I ain’t answerin’ a damn thing,
see, not till we gets over to where I’m
campin’. An’ if that aint suitin’
you, y’knows what y’can do, don’t
youse?”
“You seemed keen enough to get away.”
“I had m’reasons,”
grunted McCorquodale. “I ast you to
dry up, didn’t I?”
“I’d sooner dry off,”
smiled Phil, pulling at his wet trousers. “Where’s
this camp of yours?”
“Over that way,” said
McCorquodale, pointing. “We’d better
get them boats first, ’fore they drifts too
far away.”
They found them floating close together,
down near the point, and McCorquodale undertook to
swim out and bring them in. It was a tribute
to him that he was permitted without demur to have
such a golden opportunity of escaping and a tribute
to Kendrick’s judgment that he took no advantage
of it.
He had pitched his small tent back
from the lake about a quarter of a mile in a gully,
where it was hidden completely by thick undergrowth.
A spring bubbled not far away and the music of the
tiny creek that trickled from it through a bed of
water-cress provided a pleasing lullaby. His
visitor nodded approval of the snug arrangements.
Apparently McCorquodale was an old hand at this sort
of thing.
“Seem to have prepared for quite
a stay,” remarked Phil, turning from inspection
of the “kitchen,” which had been built
into the embankment and which, with its sheet-iron
stove-top and all, afforded culinary facilities of
a practical kind. “I suppose you have your
refrigerator sunk beside the spring, eh?”
“Got a tin box there yep,”
confirmed McCorquodale as he fed the fire he had started
in front of the tent. “I’ve been
here goin’ on two weeks an’ I figger to
make m’self comfortable when I goes fishin’.”
“Fish much at night?” inquired Kendrick
suspiciously.
“Yep. Night’s best
time to catch my kind o’ fish,” grinned
his host. “You come on over here to the
fire an’ get dried an’ if y’ll promise
to keep it to y’rself, I’ll put you wise.”
So while Kendrick sat on the opposite
side of the fire McCorquodale volunteered the information
that he was a detective in short, that he
was attached to the Special Service Department of the
Canadian Lake Shores Railway.
“You’ll be interested
in that, then,” said Phil as he selected an
envelope from the papers which he had spread out to
dry by the fire.
“Sort o’ related, you
an’ me, by employment,” grinned
McCorquodale as he passed back the credentials.
“I knowed already you was Wade’s new
secretary. Got a letter from the Chief himself
‘s mornin’, so advisin’. Fine
man to work for, Wade is. He never overlooks
nothin’ an’ I guess he figgered you’n
me might meet up here, seein’s it’s my
special job just now to watch your aunt’s cottage.”
Since Kendrick had seen him last the
“Iron Man” had grown a little moustache,
a weird affair of reddish bristles which a scar on
his lip compelled to lean mostly in one direction
with a windswept appearance. It looked like an
old toothbrush which has had desperate adventures in
an overpacked travelling bag. This hirsute anomaly
Mr. McCorquodale now stroked complacently, enjoying
the effect of his surprising speech.
“The reason I beats it just
now,” he went on, “is ’cause I thought
’twas Long Jawr, the butler, as was after me.
I gotta keep incog with the servants, see.
If I’d ‘a’ knowed it was you as was
chasin’ me that’s different,
see.”
Kendrick’s questions came in
a fusillade. He was more than surprised; he
was vaguely alarmed. Wade had said nothing about
having placed one of the C.L.S. detectives at Sparrow
Lake and the knowledge that such a course had been
deemed advisable was disturbing. Why was it necessary
to watch the Waring cottage at this peaceful summer
resort? The thing was ridiculous.
The detective was ready enough to
answer to the best of his ability, but it was soon
evident that his own information was limited.
Cranston had called him in off another job to tell
him that the “Old Man” wanted him for
some personal work, and therefore he was excused from
officially reporting for an indefinite period.
Mr. Wade merely had told him to go and take a holiday
at Sparrow Lake camp out and fish; incidentally,
to keep an eye on the cottage which the Warings occupied.
He was to report instantly to the president personally
if he noted any suspicious characters hanging around
and to trail the stranger or strangers without fail.
He knew nothing of the reasons for these instructions.
He wished all his assignments were “as big a
cinch” as this one.
Phil knew that McCorquodale was not
concocting a yarn and his face showed his anxiety.
He questioned the detective so closely that that
worthy was moved to protest.
“Hot tamalies! Y’r
auntie aint goin’ to get croaked n’r nothin’
like that, kid! Not with me here, lookin’
after her. What’s eatin’ y’anyways?
Everythin’s ridin’ along Jake, see.
An’ speakin’ of eatin’, s’pose
we has a bite. I can give you toast, tea an’
a Welsh rabbit or hot dogs, dill pickles
Phil smiled at his host’s efforts
to reassure him. Certainly there was something
so quizzically human about the whimsical McCorquodale
that in his presence it was difficult to entertain
thought of impending trouble. But as Phil toasted
the bread on the end of a stick his mind was busy
beneath the surface of his camaraderie. He was
trying to recall everything Ben Wade had told him
that morning they had ridden on the back platform
of the president’s private car and the exact
way he had said it; but there was little which could
have any possible bearing upon the need of posting
a man at Sparrow Lake.
“Wade’s got you workin’
on that Nickleby dope, aint he?” enquired McCorquodale
after the fire was going beneath the kettle to his
satisfaction. “He had me moochin’
around on it fer a while, but they’re a
pretty smooth bunch, them fellers, an’ I had
to quit final.”
“How was that?” asked
Kendrick with interest. “Did they catch
you at it?”
“Catch me?” repeated McCorquodale
with an injured air. “Not me, kid!
Y’see, I hires out to that Brady Detective Agency
that Nickleby does business with, thinkin’ to
get right into the middle o’ things walk
right in through the front door an’ pick up whatever
I wanted. But the very first job they puts me
on gets me in bad with Brady. They ast me
to trail a kid with a tan satchel from the Alderson
Construction Company’s office over to a lawyer’s
office an’ I did; then they turns around an’
says somebody’s gone an’ swiped what was
in the satchel an’ blames me for not lookin’
after it. But there wasn’t nothin’
taken out o’ that there satchel for I was right
behind it all the way. Somethin’ damn
funny ’bout that.”
“What was in it? in the satchel?”
“Oh, just some legal papers
o’ some kind. Say, d’you like y’r
tea pretty black, Mr. Kendrick?” He got out
the dishes and took another look at the kitchen fire.
“Wasn’t my fault I had to get off that
job. I’d ‘a’ hooked them fellers
up with this here whisky-runnin’ gang up north
as sure as shootin’ if I’d had a chanst.
They’re in it somewheres. But I didn’t
get a look-in.”
“What makes you think they’re
in it? Who do you mean? Nickleby?”
“Nick don’t work straight
from the shoulder, Mr. Kendrick; but he’s got
a long arm with a lot o’ elbows in it.”
McCorquodale shook his head. thoughtfully and looked
serious. “There was a guy named Weiler
hangin’ around I dunno. It’s
just one o’ them hunches a feller gets now ‘n’
then.”
“But a financier with the standing Nickleby
has
“Excuse me, but y’re startin’
off with the wrong foot,” corrected McCorquodale.
“Nickleby aint no financier; he’s a smooth
pebble, that’s all. His standin’s
faked an’ behind it he’s layin’ low
or I misses my best guess. If he aint a crook
I never seen one.”
Phil was silent for a moment.
Apparently McCorquodale had not been informed as
to the real contents of that tan satchel he had been
assigned to guard. Wade and Cranston were following
that line of investigation under cover for the time
being. But it was likely that the bootlegging
operations had no connection whatever with the missing
money and that the evidence Wade wanted was merely
an additional net with which to close in on this man
who had usurped control of the Interprovincial Loan
& Savings Company misuse of trust funds
or something like that.
“Listen to me, Cork. I’ve
been thinking out a plan for getting to the bottom
of this law-breaking booze business that we’ve
got a line on, but I need another man to work it out
right, and you’re elected.”
“Attaboy!” cried McCorquodale enthusiastically.
“We can’t get busy on
it till Mr. Wade gets back from Montreal in a few
days. I’m going to find out what lies back
of the instructions you got to come here and watch
our cottage, then ask him to let you join me on the
investigation. I’m going back to town to-morrow,
and if anything happens here in the meantime you’re
to wire me at once. I can rely on you?”
“Say, kid, y’lays a bet
on a sure thing when y’lays it on y’r Uncle
Dudley. I aint no Little Fatima fer looks;
but I knows it, see. Young McKilligan bent me
bugle in a ten-round go wunst; I gets this here split
whistler the time I licked Kay-O Bergey, an’
I’s born with this here wheeze in me pipes,
an’ with that bum layout I aint buttin’
into no cynthia ortchesstra, believe me. But
I knows it, see, an’ I got a kick in each mitt
an’ I aint never renigged on a pal, Mr. Kendrick,
an’ I goes to church reg’lar every damn
Sunday, see. Y’r auntie’ll be safer’n
if she was at home; fer there aint no danger
here o’ gettin’ knocked down by street-cars
‘n’ autermobiles. Now, fer Gawd’s
sake, c’m on an’ eat.”
“All right,” laughed Phil.
“Toast’s just done. An’ while
we eat perhaps you won’t mind telling me why
you think my uncle’s a grafter.”
“Aw, nix, nix! Don’t
go rubbin’ it in, kid!” protested Mr.
McCorquodale hastily. “Y’r lamp’s
quit smokin’, aint it? Ferget it.
Them two guys I was with that night was a couple o’
bums as was workin’ fer Nickleby on a job
an’ I was just stringin’ ’m along
nice when you comes buttin’ in an’ rings
down the curtain on me, see. I’s workin’
fer Brady then. An’ when I says the
Honorable Milt has white wings folded acrost his back
I says it sincere, believe me. Him ‘n’
me went fishin’ together in the same punt last
week!”