A MYSTERIOUS CONVERSATION.
The old hunting lodge where the two
boys had sought shelter was a rambling affair, consisting
of a square building built of logs, and half a dozen
wings, running to the rear and to one side. There
were also two piazzas, and a shed, where wood had
been kept for winter use.
“In another year or two this
old lodge will fall down,” remarked Ned, as
he gazed around him.
“It must have been a nice place
in its day,” returned Joe. “What a
pity to let it run down in this fashion.”
“The rain is coming around on
this side now, Joe; let us shift to the other.”
The hermit’s boy was willing,
and watching their chance, between the downpours,
they ran around to another portion of the old lodge.
“It certainly is a little better
here,” observed Joe, as he dashed the water
from his cap.
A minute later the rumbling of the
thunder ceased for the time being, and they heard
a murmur of voices coming from one of the rooms of
the lodge.
“Why, somebody must be here!”
ejaculated Ned. “Who can it be?”
“Two men, by their voices,”
answered the hermit’s boy. “Wait till
I take a look at them?”
“Why not go in?” questioned the rich youth,
carelessly.
“They may not be persons that
we would care to meet, Ned. You know there are
some undesirable characters about the lake.”
“That’s true.”
Not far off was a narrow window, the
panes of glass of which had long since been broken
out. Moving toward this, Joe peered into the apartment
beyond.
Close to an old fireplace, in which
a few sticks of half-green timber were burning, sat
two men. Both were well dressed, and Joe rightfully
surmised that they were from the city. Each wore
a hunting outfit and had a gun, but neither had any
game.
“We came on a wild-goose chase,”
grumbled one, as he stirred the fire. “Got
nothing but a soaking for our pains.”
“Never mind, Malone,”
returned the other, who was evidently the better educated
of the two. “As we had to make ourselves
scarce in the city this was as good a place to come
to as any.”
“Don’t you think they’ll look for
us here?”
“Why should they? We were
sharp enough not to leave any trail behind—at
least, I was.”
“Reckon I was just as sharp, Caven.”
“You had to be—otherwise
you would have been nabbed.” Gaff Caven
chuckled to himself. “We outwitted them
nicely, I must say. We deserve credit.”
“I’ve spent more than
half of what I got out of the deal,” went on
Pat Malone, for such was the full name of one of the
speakers.
“I’ve spent more than
that. But never mind, my boy, fortune will favor
us again in the near future.”
A crash of thunder drowned out the
conversation following, and Joe hurried back to where
he had left Ned.
“Well, have you found out who
they are?” demanded the rich youth, impatiently.
“No, Ned, but I am sure of one thing.”
“What is that?”
“They are two bad men.”
“What makes you think that?”
“They said something about having
to get out of the city, and one spoke about being
nabbed. Evidently they went away to avoid arrest.”
At this announcement Ned Talmadge whistled softly
to himself.
“Phew! What shall we do
about it?” he asked, with a look of concern on
his usually passive face.
Joe shrugged his shoulders.
“I don’t know what to do.”
“Let us listen to what they
have to say. Maybe we’ll strike some clew
to what they have been doing.”
“Would that be fair—to play the eaves-dropper?”
“Certainly—if they
are evildoers. Anybody who has done wrong ought
to be locked up for it,” went on Ned boldly.
With caution the two boys made their
way to the narrow window, and Ned looked in as Joe
had done. The backs of the two men were still
towards the opening, so the lads were not discovered.
“What is this new game?”
they heard the man called Malone ask, after a peal
of thunder had rolled away among the mountains.
“It’s the old game of
a sick miner with some valuable stocks to sell,”
answered Gaff Caven.
“Have you got the stocks?”
“To be sure—one thousand
shares of the Blue Bell Mine, of Montana, said to
be worth exactly fifty thousand dollars.”
“Phew! You’re flying high, Gaff!”
laughed Pat Malone.
“And why not, so long as I sell the stocks?”
“What did they cost you?”
“Well, they didn’t cost
me fifty thousand dollars,” and Gaff Caven closed
one eye suggestively.
“You bet they didn’t!
More than likely they didn’t cost you fifty
dollars.”
“What, such elegantly engraved stocks as those?”
“Pooh! I can buy a bushel-basket
full of worthless stocks for a dollar,” came
from Pat Malone. “But that isn’t here
nor there. I go into the deal if you give me
my fair share of the earnings.”
“I’ll give you one-third,
Pat, and that’s a fair share, I think.”
“Why not make it half?”
“Because I’ll do the most
of the work. It’s no easy matter to find
a victim.” And Gaff Caven laughed broadly.
He had a good-appearing face, but his eyes were small
and not to be trusted.
“All right, I’ll go in
for a third then. But how soon is the excitement
to begin?”
“Oh, in a week or so. I’ve
got the advertisements in the papers already.”
“Not in New York?”
“No, it’s Philadelphia
this time. Perhaps I’ll land one of our
Quaker friends.”
“Don’t be so sure.
The Quakers may be slow but they generally know what
they are doing.”
More thunder interrupted the conversation
at this point, and when it was resumed the two men
talked in such low tones that only an occasional word
could be caught by the two boys.
“They surely must be rascals,”
remarked Ned, in a whisper. “I’m half
of a mind to have them locked up.”
“That’s easier said than
done,” answered Joe. “Besides, we
haven’t any positive proofs against them.”
The wind was now rising, and it soon
blew so furiously that the two boys were forced to
seek the shelter of the woodshed, since they did not
deem it wise to enter the lodge so long as the two
men were inside. They waited in the shed for
fully half an hour, when, as suddenly as it had begun,
the storm let up and the sun began to peep forth from
between the scattering clouds.
“Now we can go home if we wish,”
said Joe. “But for my part, I’d like
to stay and see what those men do, and where they
go to.”
“Yes, let us stay by all means,” answered
the rich youth.
They waited a few minutes longer and
then Ned suggested that they look into the window
of the lodge once more. The hermit’s boy
was willing, and they approached the larger building
with caution.
Much to their astonishment the two
strangers had disappeared.
“Hullo! what do you make of
that?” cried Ned, in amazement.
“Perhaps they are in one of
the other rooms,” suggested Joe.
At the risk of being caught, they
entered the lodge and looked into one room after another.
Every apartment was vacant, and they now saw that
the fire in the fireplace had been stamped out.
“They must have left while we
were in the woodshed,” said Ned.
“Maybe they are out on the lake,”
answered the hermit’s boy, and he ran down to
the water’s edge, followed by his companion.
But though they looked in every direction, not a craft
of any kind was to be seen.
“Joe, they didn’t take
to the water, consequently they must have left by
one of the mountain paths.”
“That is true, and if they did
they’ll have no nice time in getting through.
All the bushes are sopping wet, and the mud is very
slippery in places.”
They walked to the rear of the lodge
and soon found the footprints of the two strangers.
They led through the bushes and were lost at a small
brook that ran into the lake.
“There is no use of our trying
to follow this any further,” said Joe.
“You’ll get your clothing covered with
water and mud.”
“I don’t intend to follow,”
answered Ned. “Just the same, I should like
to know more about those fellows.”
“I wish I had seen their faces.”
“Yes, it’s a pity we didn’t
get a better look at them. But I’d know
their voices.”
By the time they gave up the hunt
the sun was shining brightly. Both walked to
where the boat had been left, and Joe turned the craft
over so that the water might run out. Then he
mopped off the seats as best he could.
Ned wanted to go directly home, and
he and Joe rowed the craft in the direction of Riverside.
As they passed along the lake shore the hermit’s
boy noted that several trees had been struck by lightning.
“I’m glad the lightning
didn’t strike the lodge while we were there,”
said he.
“It was certainly a severe storm
while it lasted, Joe. By the way, shall I say
anything about those two men?”
“Perhaps it won’t do any harm to tell
your father, Ned.”
“Very well, I’ll do it.”
Soon Riverside was reached, and having
paid for the fish and the outing, Ned Talmadge walked
in the direction of his residence. Joe shoved
off from the tiny dock and struck out for his home.
He did not dream of the calamity that awaited him
there.