The thought of the race which was
to take place within a few days and in which both
the Black Growler and the Varmint II were to be contestants
was in the mind of every one. In spite of the
unwillingness of Sam to express his opinion as to
the outcome, Fred insisted repeatedly upon asking
what he thought. Again and again Sam evaded a
direct reply as in one form or another he explained
that all he did know was that the Black Growler would
win if she could run more swiftly than the Varmint
II.
As to the possibility of developing
the required speed he was non-committal.
Conversation did not lag on the voyage
down the river. The presence of Mr. Button as
well as the fact that Fred apparently was somewhat
reserved and uncommunicative concerning his recent
experiences in Cape Vincent, caused the Go Ahead boys
to neglect the topic of conversation which just then
was uppermost in their thoughts. Time did not
drag, however, and it was a merry party on the motor-boat
which attracted the attention of many of the parties
they met. In the most informal manner salutes
were given and whistles were tooted whenever boats
large or small passed.
In spite of Miss Susie’s apparent
carelessness she had provided a most excellent luncheon,
to which ample justice had been done by all on board,
including Mr. Button.
It was late in the afternoon, however,
when the two girls were left at their cottage and
the Black Growler sped forward toward Chestnut Island.
As soon as a landing was made Mr.
Button at once started for the cottage.
Left to themselves Fred’s three
friends quickly turned upon him and eagerly began
to question him concerning his experiences at Cape
Vincent.
“Where’s your man that wanted the bond?”
demanded George.
“Did you get the bond?” asked Grant.
“Did you find out who that fellow is?”
inquired John.
“Hold on, fellows,” laughed
Fred. “I’ll take you one at a time,
but I don’t want you all together. Now
then speak up, one of you. What is it you want
to know?”
“Did you find out who that man is?” asked
John.
“I fancy you’re referring
to the gentleman who requested us to deliver to him
that five thousand dollar bond?” answered Fred.
“You catch my meaning exactly,” answered
John solemnly.
“Well, then, let me say that
he is just as big a mystery to me as he is to you.”
“Did he get the bond?” demanded Grant.
“I don’t know.”
“Weren’t you with him?”
“I was, but not all the time.”
“Did he go to the bank?”
“He certainly did.”
“Weren’t you there, too?
Couldn’t you see whether they gave him the bond
or not?”
“Not being able to see through
a foot wall, and a door still stronger, I am unable
to give you the information you so courteously request.”
“What do you mean? Can’t you speak
in plain English?”
“I’ll do my best,”
laughed Fred, who so often had been the object of
attention from his friends that now he was rejoiced
that in a measure at least the tables were turned.
“Well, we were at the bank,” he continued.
“My grandfather told me to stay outside while
he went into Mr. Reese’s office. They were
in there about five minutes and then Mr. Reese came
out and asked me to tell our canal-boat friend that
his presence was desired in the office, so I went
outside the bank and found the man they were looking
for, gave him the message and then I went back.”
“Didn’t they want you in the office too?”
inquired John.
“I didn’t receive any
strong urging to enter,” laughed Fred, “so
I decided it was better for me to stay outside.”
“How long were they in there?” inquired
Grant.
“I suppose it was about half an hour, but it
seemed a good deal longer.”
“Who came out first?”
“The canal-man.”
“Was he alone?”
“Yes.”
“How long before any one else came out?”
“Five minutes anyway, perhaps ten.”
“What did your friend do?”
“He went out of the bank and that’s the
last I saw of him.”
“You don’t know then whether
he went to the hotel or the station, or came down
the river.”
“I have told you just what I know and all I
know. I can’t do any more.”
“So we’re just as wise
as we were when we began,” laughed George.
“We don’t know what has become of our
bond nor where the man that wanted it went. We
don’t even know whether or not it is in the bank
yet.”
“Don’t begin on the list
of things you don’t know, George,” said
Fred soberly. “It’ll take too much
time.”
“It’s a good thing to
know that you don’t know. Some people that
don’t know, don’t know that they don’t
know. Now, I know some things and among the things
I know, I know that I don’t know some things
that I think I know.”
The Go Ahead boys laughed as they
all started toward the cottage to prepare for dinner.
The following morning Fred and George
were the first to dress and together they made their
way once more to the boat-house.
In a room above the slip, in which
the graceful little motor-boat was resting, Sam Hodge
was found. He had arisen two hours before this
time and already had eaten his breakfast and was preparing
for the duties of the coming day.
It was because of Sam’s own
choice that the room he occupied had been assigned
him. And what a strange room it was. Sam
had brought many of his own belongings among which
were various pictures of the human anatomy, both external
and internal. A life-size dummy stood in one
corner of the room, the expression on its face being
almost human in its dolefulness. In other parts
of the room were legs, arms, feet and hands in various
stages of completion. Sam explained that his love
for the work which he did in the winter, when he was
employed in the factory on Broome Street, New York,
was present with him throughout the year.
“Yes, I like fooling around
a boat in the summer time,” he explained, “but
you can’t do that when the ice is about two feet
thick. And yet if I go back to New York then
I am all out of practice with my feet and legs and
arms, so the only thing for me to do is to keep in
the game. Besides, I like it and what a fellow
likes to do isn’t work, it’s play.
I’m finishing up that dummy,” explained
Sam to the boys when they entered. “One
arm is a bit too long and one of the feet ought to
have a number four shoe and the other about a number
nine. I have seen people that way, but not very
often.”
“I should think you would wake
up in the night with the nightmare,” laughed
George. “I think I should if I looked out
and saw somebody over in the corner of the room still,
staring and silent.”
“Yes, some folks is easily scared,”
acknowledged Sam. “I’ve been over
to Alexandria Bay,” he added.
“When?” inquired Fred quickly.
“Oh, I guess I’ve been
over two or three times. I’ve been asking
some questions about those men that run the Varmint
II.”
“What did you find out about
them?” inquired both boys eagerly.
“Accordin’ to what I heard they aren’t
much good.”
“What do you mean?”
“Why, I think they are a tough
lot,” said Sam, shaking his head. “The
two fellows that own the boat are both of them sons
of very rich men, who give them all the money they
want to use. It hasn’t done the youngsters
any good, I guess, from what I heard. They bought
the motor-boat expecting that there wouldn’t
be anything on the river that could touch her.
They say they are pretty sore now that they have found
that there is a boat which may give them a hard rub
and perhaps take the cup away from them after all.”
“Sam, if you win that race for us-”
began Fred eagerly.
“I’m not going to win
your race,” broke in Sam. “I’ve
heard you say that you’re going to do the steering
yourself and if you are, why the only thing I can
do is to be a sort of court of appeals. I’ll
be there to help you out if something goes wrong.
Now, we’re up against a pretty serious proposition.
Those fellows are bound to win that race and if they
can’t win it one way they are goin’ to
win it another.”
“I don’t see how they can win, Sam, if
they don’t go faster than we do.”
“Maybe they can win,” suggested Sam, “if
we go slower than they do.”
“That’s the same thing,” laughed
George.
“Not by a jugful.”
“Why isn’t it?”
“Why, they may not be goin’
so very fast and yet if our boat isn’t in good
shape it may be that they’ll keep ahead of us
and beat us.”
“Well, that’s just what
you’re here for,” said Fred; “to
see that nothing does happen to us or to our boat.”
“Are you goin’ to take
them girls along that you had yesterday?” inquired
Sam abruptly.
“Do you mean in the race?” asked Fred.
“What did you think I meant?”
“Well, we’re not going to take them.”
“Then maybe there’ll be
a chance to win out. I wouldn’t promise
anything with them on board, especially one of them.
She’s all right, but she would want to steer
the boat and talk to the crew when it might be that
the whole race was dependin’ on what we were
doin’ right then and there.”
“No, you can rest easy about
that,” said Fred. “There won’t
be anybody on board except the Go Ahead boys and you.”
“Well, then,” said Sam,
“if that’s the case then we’ll have
to keep a sharp watch on the Black Growler.”
Sam’s manner more than the words
he spoke impressed the boys with the fact that he
was holding back something that he had heard or knew
concerning the possibilities of trouble for the swift
little motor-boat. Just what they were, neither
Fred nor George could conjecture. Their confidence
in Sam was great and when they departed from the boat-house
they made light of his fears.
“Sam is a regular old kill joy,” laughed
George.
“There has to be somebody,”
said Fred, “to take the joy out of life.
It wouldn’t be worth living if that wasn’t
so.”
“Well, Sam does his best,”
said George with a laugh, “and the only reason
why he doesn’t succeed is because his bark is
worse than his bite. We know he doesn’t
mean half he says.”
“But why does he seem so worried
about something happening to the Black Growler?”
“Oh, I don’t know,”
said George. “That’s just one of his
notions, I guess.”
It was not long, however, before both
boys were excitedly aware that Sam’s forebodings
had been based upon a knowledge greater than that
possessed by any of the Go Ahead boys.