Captain Weston’s Advent
“Bless my water ballast, but
that certainly is a fine boat!” cried Mr. Damon,
when he had been shown over the new craft. “I
think I shall feel even safer in that than in the Red
Cloud.”
“Oh, don’t go back on
the airship!” exclaimed Mr Sharp. “I
was counting on taking you on another trip.”
“Well, maybe after we get back
from under the ocean,” agreed Mr. Damon.
“I particularly like the cabin arrangements
of the Advance. I think I shall enjoy myself.”
He would be hard to please who could
not take pleasure from a trip in the submarine.
The cabin was particularly fine, and the sleeping
arrangements were good.
More supplies could be carried than
was possible on the airship, and there was more room
in which to cook and serve food. Mr. Damon was
fond of good living, and the kitchen pleased him as
much as anything else.
Early the next morning Tom set out
for Atlantis, to meet Captain Weston at the hotel.
The young inventor inquired of the clerk whether the
seafaring man had arrived, and was told that he had
come the previous evening.
“Is he in his room?” asked Tom.
“No,” answered the clerk
with a peculiar grin. “He’s an odd
character. Wouldn’t go to bed last night
until we had every window in his room open, though
it was blowing quite hard, and likely to storm.
The captain said he was used to plenty of fresh air.
Well, I guess he got it, all right.”
“Where is he now?” asked
the youth, wondering what sort of an individual he
was to meet.
“Oh, he was up before sunrise,
so some of the scrubwomen told me. They met him
coming from his room, and he went right down to the
beach with a big telescope he always carries with
him. He hasn’t come back yet. Probably
he’s down on the sand.”
“Hasn’t he had breakfast?”
“No. He left word he didn’t
want to eat until about four bells, whatever time
that is.”
“It’s ten o’clock,”
replied Tom, who had been studying up on sea terms
lately. “Eight bells is eight o’clock
in the morning, or four in the afternoon or eight
at night, according to the time of day. Then
there’s one bell for every half hour, so four
bells this morning would be ten o’clock in this
watch, I suppose.”
“Oh, that’s the way it
goes, eh?” asked the clerk. “I never
could get it through my head. What is twelve o’clock
noon?”
“That’s eight bells, too;
so is twelve o’clock midnight. Eight bells
is as high as they go on a ship. But I guess
I’ll go down and see if I can meet the captain.
It will soon be ten o’clock, or four bells,
and he must be hungry for breakfast. By the way,
is that Mr. Berg still here?”
“No; he went away early this
morning. He and Captain Weston seemed to strike
up quite an acquaintance, the night clerk told me.
They sat and smoked together until long after midnight,
or eight bells,” and the clerk smiled as he
glanced down at the big diamond ring on his little
finger.
“They did?” fairly exploded
Tom, for he had visions of what the wily Mr. Berg
might worm out of the simple captain.
“Yes. Why, isn’t
the captain a proper man to make friends with?”
and the clerk looked at Tom curiously.
“Oh, yes, of course,”
was the hasty answer. “I guess I’ll
go and see if I can find him—the captain,
I mean.”
Tom hardly knew what to think.
He wished his father, or Mr. Sharp, had thought to
warn Captain Weston against talking of the wreck.
It might be too late now.
The young inventor hurried to the
beach, which was not far from the hotel. He saw
a solitary figure pacing up and down, and from the
fact that the man stopped, every now and then, and
gazed seaward through a large telescope, the lad concluded
it was the captain for whom he was in search.
He approached, his footsteps making no sound on the
sand. The man was still gazing through the glass.
“Captain Weston?” spoke Tom.
Without a show of haste, though the
voice must have startled him, the captain turned.
Slowly he lowered the telescope, and then he replied
softly:
“That’s my name. Who are you, if
I may ask?”
Tom was struck, more than by anything
else, by the gentle voice of the seaman. He had
prepared himself, from the description of Mr. Sharp,
to meet a gruff, bewhiskered individual, with a voice
like a crosscut saw, and a rolling gait. Instead
he saw a man of medium size, with a smooth face, merry
blue eyes, and the softest voice and gentlest manner
imaginable. Tom was very much disappointed.
He had looked for a regular sea-dog, and he met a
landsman, as he said afterward. But it was not
long before our hero changed his mind regarding Captain
Weston.
“I’m Tom Swift,”
the owner of that name said, “and I have been
sent to show you the way to where our ship is ready
to launch.” The young inventor refrained
from mentioning submarine, as it was the wish of Mr
Sharp to disclose this feature of the voyage to the
sailor himself.
“Ha, I thought as much,”
resumed the captain quietly. “It’s
a fine day, if I may be permitted to say so,”
and he seemed to hesitate, as if there was some doubt
whether or not he might make that observation.
“It certainly is,” agreed
the lad. Then, with a smile he added: “It
is nearly eight bells.”
“Ha!” exclaimed the captain,
also smiling, but even his manner of saying “Ha!”
was less demonstrative than that of most persons.
“I believe I am getting hungry, if I may be
allowed the remark,” and again he seemed asking
Tom’s pardon for mentioning the fact.
“Perhaps you will come back
to the cabin and have a little breakfast with me,”
he went on. “I don’t know what sort
of a galley or cook they have aboard the Beach Hotel,
but it can’t be much worse than some I’ve
tackled.”
“No, thank you,” answered
the youth. “I’ve had my breakfast.
But I’ll wait for you, and then I’d like
to get back. Dad and Mr. Sharp are anxious to
meet you.”
“And I am anxious to meet them,
if you don’t mind me mentioning it,” was
the reply, as the captain once more put the spyglass
to his eye and took an observation. “Not
many sails in sight this morning,” he added.
“But the weather is fine, and we ought to get
off in good shape to hunt for the treasure about which
Mr. Sharp wrote me. I believe we are going after
treasure,” he said; “that is, if you don’t
mind talking about it.”
“Not in the least,” replied
Tom quickly, thinking this a good opportunity for
broaching a subject that was worrying him. “Did
you meet a Mr. Berg here last night, Captain Weston?”
he went on.
“Yes. Mr. Berg and I had
quite a talk. He is a well-informed man.”
“Did he mention the sunken treasure?”
asked the lad, eager to find out if his suspicions
were true.
“Yes, he did, if you’ll
excuse me putting it so plainly,” answered the
seaman, as if Tom might be offended at so direct a
reply. But the young inventor was soon to learn
that this was only an odd habit with the seaman.
“Did he want to know where the
wreck of the Boldero was located?” continued
the lad. “That is, did he try to discover
if you knew anything about it?”
“Yes,” said Mr. Weston,
“he did. He pumped me, if you are acquainted
with that term, and are not offended by it. You
see, when I arrived here I made inquiries as to where
your father’s place was located. Mr. Berg
overheard me, and introduced himself as agent for
a shipbuilding concern. He was very friendly,
and when he said he knew you and your parent, I thought
he was all right.”
Tom’s heart sank. His worst
fears were to be realized, he thought.
“Yes, he and I talked considerable,
if I may be permitted to say so,” went on the
captain. “He seemed to know about the wreck
of the Boldero, and that she had three hundred thousand
dollars in gold aboard. The only thing he didn’t
know was where the wreck was located. He knew
it was off Uruguay somewhere, but just where he couldn’t
say. So he asked me if I knew, since he must
have concluded that I was going with you on the gold-hunting
expedition.”
“And you do know, don’t
you?” asked Tom eagerly.
“Well, I have it pretty accurately
charted out, if you will allow me that expression,”
was the calm answer. “I took pains to look
it up at the request of Mr. Sharp.”
“And he wanted to worm that
information out of you?” inquired the youth
excitedly.
“Yes, I’m afraid he did.”
“Did you give him the location?”
“Well,” remarked the captain,
as he took another observation before closing up the
telescope, “you see, while we were talking,
I happened to drop a copy of a map I’d made,
showing the location of the wreck. Mr. Berg picked
it up to hand to me, and he looked at it.”
“Oh!” cried Tom.
“Then he knows just where the treasure is, and
he may get to it ahead of us. It’s too bad.”
“Yes,” continued the seaman
calmly, “Mr. Berg picked up that map, and he
looked very closely at the latitude and longitude
I had marked as the location of the wreck.”
“Then he won’t have any
trouble finding it,” murmured our hero.
“Eh? What’s that?”
asked the captain, “if I may be permitted to
request you to repeat what you said.”
“I say he won’t have any
trouble locating the sunken Boldero,” repeated
Tom.
“Oh, but I think he will, if
he depends on that map,” was the unexpected
reply. “You see,” explained Mr. Weston,
“I’m not so simple as I look. I sensed
what Mr. Berg was after, the minute he began to talk
to me. So I fixed up a little game on him.
The map which I dropped on purpose, not accidentally,
where he would see it, did have the location of the
wreck marked. Only it didn’t happen to be
the right location. It was about five hundred
miles out of the way, and I rather guess if Mr. Berg
and his friends go there for treasure they’ll
find considerable depth of water and quite a lonesome
spot. Oh, no, I’m not as easy as I look,
if you don’t mind me mentioning that fact; and
when a scoundrel sets out to get the best of me, I
generally try to turn the tables on him. I’ve
seen such men as Mr. Berg before. I’m afraid,
I’m very much afraid, the sight he had of the
fake map I made won’t do him much good.
Well, I declare, it’s past four bells.
Let’s go to breakfast, if you don’t mind
me asking you,” and with that the captain started
off up the beach, Tom following, his ideas all a whirl
at the unlooked-for outcome of the interview.