Duke Barrows was waiting at the hangar
when Rick and Scotty got out of the Cub. “I
can see the headlines now,” he greeted them with
a grin. “Young Birdmen Fly by Night.
Subhead: Get Up Early to Catch Worms Who Break
Law.”
“Speaking of getting up early,”
Rick retorted. He pointed to where growing paleness
in the east announced the coming of daylight.
“How did you know we’d be landing?”
“My house is near here,”
Duke reminded them. “I heard you buzz the
field a while ago and I knew you must have gotten the
call. So I dressed and came over. I hadn’t
gone to sleep after getting home, anyway. Editors
of morning papers are night owls, remember. Well,
how did it go?”
Rick reached into the Cub and drew
out his camera. He held it up triumphantly.
“The evidence is in here,” he said happily.
“We caught ’em in the act, Duke.”
Then he sobered. “But we’re worried.”
He told the editor about their misgivings.
“Hmmmm.” Barrows
gazed at the night sky reflectively. “I
agree that Marbek probably wouldn’t throw the
stuff overboard, but he might streak for port.
I think we’d better give Captain Douglas a call.
We want state troopers waiting at Creek House when
the Albatross arrives.”
Scotty groaned. “If they
go now, that means we won’t get any sleep.”
“You hadn’t better plan
on going with the troopers,” Duke said.
“They probably prefer to handle things their
own way. Besides, it might mean waiting all day.
I’d say it was more important for you to get
that film developed. I don’t suppose you
saw the name of the ship Marbek was getting his stuff
from?”
“I didn’t even think about
it,” Rick confessed. “I planned to,
then when the time came it slipped my mind completely.
I was too busy flying the plane and taking pictures.”
Duke looked at the camera curiously.
Rick had described it to him. “It’s
hard to believe that you actually got pictures at night.
I’m anxious to see them.”
“Me, too,” Scotty agreed.
“Let’s get organized,”
Barrows said. “First of all, how do you
plan to get the film developed?”
“There’s a lab in New
York that gives 24-hour service. They can develop
infrared, too. I hate to think how much they will
charge me.”
“Can individual frames of the
film be blown up and made into decent pictures?”
Rick nodded. “The result
looks a little grainy, but it can be done.”
“All right. Give me exclusive
rights to use the pictures and the paper will pay
for them. Let me have the film and the address
of the lab. I’ll send Jerry to New York
with them first thing this morning. Then we can
have them back tomorrow. Is that okay with you?”
“Swell.”
“Good. Now let’s
hop into my car and take a run over to the State Police
Barracks. We’ll get Captain Douglas out
of bed and you can tell him your story. He’ll
know how to carry the ball from there.”
Scotty got the binoculars from the
Cub. He and Rick staked the plane down, then
hurried to the editor’s car.
The police barracks were just outside
of town on the Newark turnpike. Captain Douglas
was in bed, but he got up quickly enough when the
sergeant on duty gave him the names of the three visitors.
Rick described their night’s work while the
officer finished dressing. When he had finished,
Captain Douglas, a strapping man who had been a Marine
officer before retiring and joining the state force,
nodded briskly.
“Good work, Rick. I want
to see that film the minute you know whether your
camera worked well enough for evidence. Now, m’lads,
I’ve got to get to work. Instead of barging
into Creek House with sirens wailing, I just think
I’ll put a pair of my boys in civilian clothes
on the job, one on the water front and the other at
the bridge. I have a pair of squad cars without
insignia or state license plates that will be useful,
and both of them are radio-equipped. The minute
this trawler shows up, we’ll know about it and
we’ll move in on them. I’ll ask for
a search warrant soon as I can get someone on the phone
at the main office. How does that strike you?”
“It sounds all right,”
Rick said. “But where do we come in?”
“You don’t,” Captain
Douglas retorted. “You go home and go to
bed. The only thing you could do would be to
hang around here all day waiting, because we couldn’t
let you go to Seaford and perhaps tip off the gang
by accident. They must know it was your plane,
and they’re crazy if they don’t assume
you’ll call the police. If no police show
up and you don’t either, it may lull their suspicions
somewhat. Tell you what. I’ll phone
Duke, or have the desk man do it, the minute we hear
anything and he can phone you.”
And with that, the two boys had to
be content. Rick ran the rest of the film through
his camera, unloaded it, and handed the can of film
to Duke Barrows. The editor drove them to the
boat landing. “With any luck,” he
said as they got from the car, “we may let folks
read all about it within a couple of days. See
you later, fellows.”
Although it was scarcely daylight,
Mr. and Mrs. Brant were already up and having an early
breakfast. Rick knew it was just that they had
worried about Scotty and him, and he felt a little
thrill of pride in them. Even though they had
worried, they had confidence in him and so they had
let him go. He was glad that he and Scotty always
had played square with them, sharing their adventures
and discussing their problems.
Over breakfast, the boys related the
story of their night flight while the Brants listened
with interest. “It wasn’t bad at all,”
Rick finished. “I did have one tough moment
when we landed the first time, because I was a little
too tense. But the second time was smooth as
anything.”
“I’m glad you went right
to Ed Douglas,” Hartson Brant said approvingly.
“These kinds of jobs belong to the law, Rick.
An amateur can go only so far, and then if he’s
wise, he calls the police.”
They had barely finished breakfast
when the phone rang. It was Cap’n Mike.
He said that he had been standing on first one leg
then the other ever since he first phoned, and would
they please tell him what had happened.
Scotty obliged with a dramatic report
and Cap’n Mike exclaimed his delight so loudly
that Rick could hear him half the room away. Scotty
hung up and grinned. “He’s going to
sort of wander over to that part of town himself,
just to keep track of what’s going on.”
“Hope he doesn’t attract any attention,”
Rick said.
“He’s too smart for that.
Well, what now? To bed to catch up on that sleep
we missed?”
Rick couldn’t have slept a wink,
and he said as much. He was too wound up.
“Let’s go back to Whiteside,” he
suggested. “It’s full daylight now
and one of us might as well bring the Cub back.”
“I’ll do it,” Scotty
offered. “You’ve been getting all
the practice, and you’re the one who doesn’t
need it.”
On the way over by boat, Rick reviewed
again the events of the night. “Funny that
the freighter was heading south,” he said.
In the cold light of day, his speculation that there
might be a whole smuggling ring up and down the coast
didn’t look too sensible. “Of course
she may have reached there before Brad showed up and
circled while she was waiting. We didn’t
hang around to see if she headed north again after
they finished unloading.”
“That could be it,” Scotty
nodded. “Probably is. Listen, what
happens to the freighter if the police catch Brad
with the goods?”
“Can’t say. Ordinarily,
I’d think the police would call for the Coast
Guard to go intercept them. But we’re not
sure of the identity of the ship.”
“We missed there,” Scotty
said. “Has it occurred to you that we’re
going to be the star witnesses if this comes to trial?”
Rick shook his head. “Not
necessarily. If the State Police catch Brad and
the Kelsos with the goods, they won’t need us
for anything. But if they identify the ship that
supplied them, they may need us there.”
“Unless it’s a foreign ship.”
“What do you mean?”
“They were outside the twelve-mile
limit,” Scotty pointed out. “That’s
the high seas. I’m not up on my international
law, but I doubt if the United States could do much
about something done by a foreign ship on the high
seas.”
“Never thought of that,” Rick admitted.
He dropped Scotty at the landing,
then turned the launch back to Spindrift. Once
in his own room, however, he was too restless to do
anything, even to sleep. He walked out to the
lab building and sat down on the steps, looking out
to sea. It was a beautiful morning. Soon
as Scotty got back he would suggest a swim.
In a short time he looked up to see
Scotty approaching from Whiteside. He watched
critically as Scotty swung wide and banked into the
approach over the lab building, then settled smoothly
to the grass. He nodded approval. Scotty
was a natural flier. He excelled at anything
requiring a high degree of co-ordination between body
and mind.
Rick walked to meet him. “What kept you?”
Scotty climbed out and they staked
the plane down. “Jerry picked me up on
the way to the airport. We talked for a while.
He had the film and was taking it into New York.”
Both of them walked with less spring
in their steps than usual. Knowing that nothing
was in sight but waiting was a letdown after the activity
of the predawn hours. But Captain Douglas had
spoken and that was that.
“Wonder if we’ll ever
be able to prove that the Kelsos wrecked the Sea
Belle?” Rick mused. “Even if the
police catch them cold on a smuggling charge that
won’t necessarily tie them up with Captain Tyler.”
“That’s right.”
Scotty bent and plucked a sprig of mint from the patch
next to the house and chewed it absently. “But
we’ll be able to show motive and method once
they’re in jail and Tyler can talk. And
with Captain Killian’s evidence, that will clear
Tyler anyway. Why should we worry whether the
Kelsos get caught for that as long as he’s cleared?
We’ll have them on the smuggling charge.”
“I guess so.” Rick
felt tired. “How about a quick swim?
Then we can crawl into bed and take a nap.”
“Good idea. What are we waiting for?”
The water was too good to abandon
after a few quick dips, however, and they alternately
swam and lazed in the sun until lunchtime. Only
after a good lunch of several sandwiches and almost
a quart of milk apiece did they feel like taking a
nap. Then Rick said, “No word. I guess
that does it. Either Brad is ignoring our flying
over him or he has dumped his cargo. I’d
like to know which. Otherwise, he would have put
into Creek House long ago.”
“Looks that way. But I’m
too drowsy to care. Go on to bed and let me do
likewise. We’ll know soon enough what happened.”
Rick undressed, drew his shades and
crawled in, luxuriating in the comfort of cool sheets.
But it wasn’t easy to drop off to sleep.
His active mind persisted in going over and over the
events at Seaford like a record stuck in a groove,
but after a while he slept.
He didn’t even hear the phone
when it rang. Scotty had to wake him. Then,
drowsily, he and Scotty went down the hall.
“It’s Mr. Barrows,” Mrs. Brant called
from below.
“I’ll take it,”
Rick said. He picked up the phone. “This
is Rick, Duke.”
“Bad news,” the editor
said. “It’s all over, and nothing
came out of it.”
Rick woke up sharply. “What?
But, Duke, we saw them load!”
“Tough luck. Brad came
in at the usual time and Douglas was waiting for him.
They went over that ship from stem to stern and didn’t
turn up a single thing.”
Rick realized that it was dark outside.
Mother had let them sleep right through dinner.
“But the crates in the marsh,”
he exclaimed. “How about those?”
“Gone,” Duke said.
“There wasn’t a thing but flattened reeds
and muddy water.”
Scotty had been holding his ear close
to the phone. “Brad must have jettisoned
his cargo,” he said. “We didn’t
think he would.”
Duke heard him. “Was that
Scotty? Well, Rick, if the pictures prove out,
we’ll know he must have thrown the stuff overboard.
Captain Douglas has faith in you. He says not
to be discouraged.”
“Thanks,” Rick said hollowly.
“Oh, one other item of news.
I talked with the agent who rented the Creek House
to the Kelsos. They’ve given him notice
that they’re moving out next Saturday.
What do you think about that?”
Rick’s shoulders slumped.
“Unless they try to pull something between now
and then, we’re sunk. Duke, do you realize
this may have been their last load? We might
have scared them off with flying over Brad and then
having the police raid them.”
“I’m afraid so, too.
But Captain Douglas says they seemed pretty smug.
They may try it again. By the way, Jerry says
the film will be ready at five tomorrow night.
I’ll send him into New York early tomorrow and
he can do a few errands for me, then pick up the film
on his way home.”
“Thanks, Duke,” Rick said.
He replaced the receiver and looked at Scotty.
“Did you get all that?”
Scotty nodded silently.
Mrs. Brant called from downstairs.
“I saved dinner for you, boys. Want to
come get it now?”
“Right away,” Rick called. “Thanks,
Mom.”
He and Scotty slipped robes over their
pajamas and walked slowly down the stairs. Neither
of them felt much like eating after the phone call.
They had, with undue optimism, written the case off
as practically closed. But now everything seemed
as far from a solution as ever.