THE MYSTERIOUS ROBBERY.
At the end of a month Jefferson Pettigrew
said: “I’ve been looking over the
books, Rodney, and I find the business is better than
I expected. How much did I agree to pay you?”
“A hundred and fifty dollars
a month, but if you think that it is too much——”
“Too much? Why I am going
to advance you to two hundred and fifty.”
“You can’t be in earnest, Mr. Pettigrew?”
“I am entirely so.”
“That is at the rate of three thousand dollars
a year!”
“Yes, but you are earning it.”
“You know I am only a boy.”
“That doesn’t make any
difference as long as you understand your business.”
“I am very grateful to you,
Mr. Pettigrew. My, I can save two hundred dollars
a month.”
“Do so, and I will find you a paying investment
for the money.”
“What would Jasper say to my luck?” thought
Rodney.
Three months passed without any incident
worth recording. One afternoon a tall man wearing
a high hat and a Prince Albert coat with a paste diamond
of large size in his shirt bosom entered the public
room of the Miners’ Rest and walking up to the
bar prepared to register his name. As he stood
with his pen in his hand Rodney recognized him not
without amazement.
It was Louis Wheeler—the railroad thief,
whom he had last seen in New
York.
As for Wheeler he had not taken any
notice of the young clerk, not suspecting that it
was an old acquaintance who was familiar with his
real character.
“Have you just arrived in Montana, Mr. Wheeler?”
asked Rodney quietly.
As Rodney had not had an opportunity
to examine his signature in the register Wheeler looked
up in quiet surprise.
“Do you know me?” he asked.
“Yes; don’t you know me?”
“I’ll be blowed if it isn’t the
kid,” ejaculated Wheeler.
“As I run this hotel, I don’t care to
be called a kid.”
“All right Mr.——”
“Ropes.”
“Mr. Ropes, you are the most extraordinary boy
I ever met.”
“Am I?”
“Who would have thought of your turning up as
a Montana landlord.”
“I wouldn’t have thought
of it myself four months ago. But what brings
you out here?”
“Business,” answered Wheeler in an important
tone.
“Are you going to become a miner?”
“I may buy a mine if I find one to suit me.”
“I am glad you seem to be prospering.”
“Can you give me a good room?”
“Yes, but I must ask a week’s advance
payment.”
“How much?”
“Twenty five dollars.”
“All right. Here’s the money.”
Louis Wheeler pulled out a well filled
wallet and handed over two ten dollar bills and a
five.
“Is that satisfactory?” he asked.
“Quite so. You seem better
provided with money than when I saw you last.”
“True. I was then in temporary
difficulty. But I made a good turn in stocks
and I am on my feet again.”
Rodney did not believe a word of this,
but as long as Wheeler was able to pay his board he
had no good excuse for refusing him accommodation.
“That rascal here!” exclaimed
Jefferson, when Rodney informed him of Wheeler’s
arrival. “Well, thats beat all! What
has brought him out here?”
“Business, he says.”
“It may be the same kind of
business that he had with me. He will bear watching.”
“I agree with you, Mr. Pettigrew.”
Louis Wheeler laid himself out to
be social and agreeable, and made himself quite popular
with the other boarders at the hotel. As Jefferson
and Rodney said nothing about him, he was taken at
his own valuation, and it was reported that he was
a heavy capitalist from Chicago who had come to Montana
to buy a mine. This theory received confirmation
both from his speech and actions.
On the following day he went about
in Oreville and examined the mines. He expressed
his opinion freely in regard to what he saw, and priced
one that was for sale at fifty thousand dollars.
“I like this mine,” he
said, “but I don’t know enough about it
to make an offer. If it comes up to my expectations
I will try it.”
“He must have been robbing a
bank,” observed Jefferson Pettigrew.
Nothing could exceed the cool assurance
with which Wheeler greeted Jefferson and recalled
their meeting in New York.
“You misjudged me then, Mr.
Pettigrew,” he said. “I believe upon
my soul you looked upon me as an adventurer—a
confidence man.”
“You are not far from the truth,
Mr. Wheeler,” answered Jefferson bluntly.
“Well, I forgive you. Our
acquaintance was brief and you judged from superficial
impressions.”
“Perhaps so, Mr. Wheeler.
Have you ever been West before?”
“No.”
“When you came to Oreville had you any idea
that I was here?”
“No; if I had probably I should
not have struck the town, as I knew that you didn’t
have a favorable opinion of me.”
“I can’t make out much
of that fellow, Rodney,” said Jefferson.
“I can’t understand his object in coming
here.”
“He says he wants to buy a mine.”
“That’s all a pretext.
He hasn’t money enough to buy a mine or a tenth
part of it.”
“He seems to have money.”
“Yes; he may have a few hundred
dollars, but mark my words, he hasn’t the slightest
intention of buying a mine.”
“He has some object in view.”
“No doubt! What it is is what I want to
find out.”
There was another way in which Louis
Wheeler made himself popular among the miners of Oreville.
He had a violin with him, and in the evening he seated
himself on the veranda and played popular tunes.
He had only a smattering in the way
of musical training, but the airs he played took better
than classical music would have done. Even Jefferson
Pettigrew enjoyed listening to “Home, Sweet Home”
and “The Last Rose of Summer,” while the
miners were captivated by merry dance tunes, which
served to enliven them after a long day’s work
at the mines.
One day there was a sensation.
A man named John O’Donnell came down stairs
from his room looking pale and agitated.
“Boys,” he said, “I have been robbed.”
Instantly all eyes were turned upon him.
“Of what have you been robbed, O’Donnell?”
asked Jefferson.
“Of two hundred dollars in gold.
I was going to send it home to my wife in Connecticut
next week.”
“When did you miss it?”
“Just now.”
“Where did you keep it?”
“In a box under my bed.”
“When do you think it was taken?”
“Last night.”
“What makes you think so?”
“I am a sound sleeper, and last
night you know was very dark. I awoke with a
start, and seemed to hear footsteps. I looked
towards the door, and saw a form gliding from the
room.”
“Why didn’t you jump out of bed and seize
the intruder whoever he was?”
“Because I was not sure but
it was all a dream. I think now it was some thief
who had just robbed me.”
“I think so too. Could you make out anything
of his appearance?”
“I could only see the outlines
of his figure. He was a tall man. He must
have taken the money from under my bed.”
“Did any one know that you had money concealed
there?”
“I don’t think I ever mentioned it.”
“It seems we have a thief among
us,” said Jefferson, and almost unconsciously
his glance rested on Louis Wheeler who was seated near
John O’Donnell, “what do you think, Mr.
Wheeler?”
“I think you are right, Mr. Pettigrew.”
“Have you any suggestion to
make?” asked Jefferson. “Have you
by chance lost anything?”
“Not that I am aware of.”
“Is there any one else here who has been robbed?”
No one spoke.
“You asked me if I had any suggestions
to make, Mr. Pettigrew,” said Louis Wheeler
after a pause. “I have.
“Our worthy friend Mr. O’Donnell
has met with a serious loss. I move that we who
are his friends make it up to him. Here is my
contribution,” and he laid a five dollar bill
on the table.
It was a happy suggestion and proved
popular. Every one present came forward, and
tendered his contributions including Jefferson, who
put down twenty five dollars.
Mr. Wheeler gathered up the notes
and gold and sweeping them to his hat went forward
and tendered them to John O’Donnell.
“Take this money, Mr. O’Donnell,”
he said. “It is the free will offering
of your friends. I am sure I may say for them,
as for myself, that it gives us all pleasure to help
a comrade in trouble.”
Louis Wheeler could have done nothing
that would have so lifted him in the estimation of
the miners.
“And now,” he said, “as
our friend is out of his trouble I will play you a
few tunes on my violin, and will end the day happily.”
“I can’t make out that
fellow, Rodney,” said Jefferson when they were
alone. “I believe he is the thief, but he
has an immense amount of nerve.”