DAVID BALL FROM MONTANA.
Finding that Joe could be depended
upon, Mr. Mallison put him in charge of all of the
boats at the hotel, so that our hero had almost as
much work ashore as on the lake.
During the week following, the events
just narrated, many visitors left the hotel and others
came in. Among those to go were Felix Gussing
and the two young ladies. The dude bid our hero
a cordial good-bye, for he now knew Joe quite well.
“Good-bye, Mr. Gussing,”
said Joe. “I hope we meet again.”
“Perhaps we shall, although
I generally go to a different place each summer.”
“Well, I don’t expect to stay in Riverside
all my life.”
“I see. If you make a move, I hope you
do well,” returned Felix.
On the day after the dude left, a
man came to the hotel who, somehow, looked familiar
to our hero. He came dressed in a light overcoat
and a slouch hat, and carried a valise and a suit
case.
“I’ve seen him before,
but where?” Joe asked himself not once but several
times.
The man registered as David Ball,
and put down his address as Butte, Montana. He
said he was a mining expert, but added that he was
sick and the doctors had ordered him to come East
for a rest.
“’ve heard of Riverside
being a nice place,” said he, “so I came
on right after striking Pittsburg.”
“We shall do all we can to make
your stay a pleasant one,” said the hotel proprietor,
politely.
“All I want is a nice sunny
room, where I can get fresh air and take it easy,”
said the man.
He was willing to pay a good price,
and so obtained one of the best rooms in the house,
one overlooking the river and the lake. He ate
one meal in the dining room, but after that he had
his meals sent to his apartment.
“Is he sick?” asked Joe, after watching
the man one day.
“He certainly doesn’t seem to be well,”
answered Andrew Mallison.
“It runs in my mind that I have
seen him before, but I can’t place him,”
went on our hero.
“You must be mistaken, Joe.
I questioned him and he says this is his first trip
to the East, although he has frequently visited St.
Louis and Chicago.”
On the following day the man called
for a physician and Doctor Gardner was sent for.
“I’ve got pains here,”
said the man from the West, and pointed to his chest.
“Do you think I am getting consumption?”
The Riverside physician made a careful
examination and then said the man had probably strained
himself.
“Reckon I did,” was the
ready answer. “I was in the mine and a big
rock came down on me. I had to hold it up for
ten minutes before anybody came to my aid. I
thought I was a dead one sure.”
“I will give you some medicine
and a liniment,” said the doctor. “Perhaps
you’ll feel better after a good rest.”
And then he left.
That afternoon Joe had to go up into
the hotel for something and passed the room of the
new boarder. He saw the man standing by the window,
gazing out on the water.
“I’m dead certain I’ve
seen him before,” mused our hero. “It
is queer I can’t think where.”
Doctor Gardner wanted to be taken
across the lake and Joe himself did the job.
As he was rowing he asked about the man who had signed
the hotel register as David Ball from Montana.
“Is he very sick, doctor?”
“No, I can’t say that
he is,” was the physician’s answer.
“He looks to be as healthy as you or I.”
“It’s queer he keeps to his room.”
“Perhaps something happened
out at his mine to unsettle his nerves. He told
me of some sort of an accident.”
“Is he a miner?”
“He is a mine owner, so Mr.
Mallison told me, but he never heard of the man before.”
The stranger received several letters
the next day and then a telegram. Shortly after
that he took to his bed.
“I am feeling worse,”
said he to the bell boy who answered his ring.
“I want you to send for that doctor again.
Ask him to call about noon.”
“Yes, sir,” answered the
boy, and Doctor Gardner was sent for without delay.
He came and made another examination and left some
medicine.
“I’ll take the medicine
regularly,” said the stranger, who was in bed.
But when the doctor had left he quietly poured half
of the contents of the bottle into the wash bowl,
where it speedily drained from sight!
“Don’t catch me drinking
such rot,” he muttered to himself. “I’d
rather have some good liquor any day,” and he
took a long pull from a black bottle he had in his
valise.
About noon a carriage drove up to
the hotel and two men alighted.
One led the way into the hotel and
asked to see the register.
“I’d like to see Mr. David Ball,”
said he to the clerk.
“Mr. Ball is sick.”
“So I have heard and that is why I wish to see
him.”
“I’ll send up your card.”
“I don’t happen to have
a card. Tell him Mr. Anderson is here, from Philadelphia,
with a friend of his.”
The message was sent to the sick man’s
room, and word came down that he would see the visitors
in a few minutes.
“He says he is pretty sick and
he can’t talk business very long,” said
the bell boy.
“We won’t bother him very
much,” answered the man who had given his name
as Anderson.
Joe happened to be close by during
this conversation and he looked the man called Anderson
over with care.
“I’ve seen that man, too!”
he declared to himself. “But where?
I declare he is as much of a mystery as the sick one!”
Our hero’s curiosity was now
aroused to the highest pitch, and when the two men
walked up to David Ball’s room he followed to
the very doorway.
“Come in,” came from the
room, and a deep groan followed. On the bed lay
the man from Montana, wrapped in several blankets and
with a look of anguish on his features.
“Feeling pretty bad, eh?”
said Anderson, as he stalked in. “I am
downright sorry for you.”
“I’m afraid I am going
to die,” groaned the man in bed. “The
doctor says I am in bad shape. He wants me to
take a trip to Europe, or somewhere else.”
“This is Mr. Maurice Vane,”
went on Anderson. “We won’t trouble
you any more than is necessary, Mr. Ball.”
“I am sorry to disturb you,”
said Maurice Vane. He was a kindly looking gentleman.
“Perhaps we had better defer this business until
some other time.”
“Oh, no, one time is as bad
as another,” came with another groan from the
bed. “Besides, I admit I need money badly.
If it wasn’t for that—“.
The man in bed began to cough. “Say, shut
the door,” he went on, to the first man who
had come in.
The door was closed, and for the time
being Joe heard no more of the conversation.
It must be admitted that our hero
was perplexed, and with good reason. He felt
certain that the man in bed was shamming, that he was
hardly sick at all. If so, what was his game?
“Something is surely wrong somewhere,”
he reasoned. “I wish I could get to the
bottom of it.”
The room next to the one occupied
by David Ball was empty and he slipped into this.
The room contained a closet, and on the other side
was another closet, opening into the room the men
were in. The partition between was of boards,
and as the other door stood wide open, Joe, by placing
his head to the boards, could hear fairly well.
“You have the stock?” he heard Maurice
Vane ask.
“Yes, in my valise. Hand
me the bag and I’ll show you,” answered
the man in bed. “Oh, how weak I feel!”
he sighed.
There was a silence and then the rustling of papers.
“And what is your bottom price for these?”
went on Maurice Vane.
“Thirty thousand dollars.”
“I told Mr. Vane you might possibly
take twenty-five thousand,” came from the man
called Anderson.
“They ought to be worth face
value—fifty thousand dollars,” said
the man in bed.
A talk in a lower tone followed, and
then more rustling of papers.
“I will call to-morrow with
the cash,” said Maurice Vane, as he prepared
to leave. “In the meantime, you promise
to keep these shares for me?”
“I’ll keep them until
noon. I’ve got another offer,” said
the man in bed.
“We’ll be back,”
put in the man called Anderson. “So don’t
you sell to anybody else.”
Then the two visitors left and went
downstairs. Five minutes later they were driving
away in the direction of the railroad station.
“This certainly beats anything
I ever met before,” said Joe, to himself as
he watched them go. “I’ll wager all
I am worth that I’ve met that Anderson before,
and that he is a bad man. I do wish I could get
at the bottom of what is going on.”
In the evening he had occasion to
go upstairs in the hotel once more. To his surprise
he saw Mr. David Ball sitting in a rocking-chair, calmly
smoking a cigar and reading a paper.
“He isn’t as sick as he
was this morning,” he mused. “In fact,
I don’t think he is sick at all.”
He wished to be on hand the following
morning, when the strangers came back, but an errand
took him up the lake. He had to stop at several
places, and did not start on the return until four
in the afternoon.
On his way back Joe went ashore close
to where the old lodge was located, and something,
he could not tell what, made him run over and take
a look at the spot that had proved a shelter for Ned
and himself during the heavy storm. How many
things had occurred since that fatal day!
As our hero looked into one of the
rooms he remembered the strange men he had seen there—the
fellows who had talked about mining stocks. Then,
of a sudden, a revelation came to him, like a thunderbolt
out of a clear sky.
“I’ve got it! I’ve
got it!” he cried. “Mr. David Ball
is that fellow who called himself Malone, and Anderson
is the man named Caven! They are both imposters!”