STARTLING REVELATIONS
“Oh, Tom! And so you
are really ready to start on that perilous trip!”
exclaimed Mary Nestor, a little later that same evening,
when Tom called at Mary’s house in his speedy
electric runabout, a car in which he had once made
a sensational ride.
“Perilous? I don’t
know why you call it that!” exclaimed the young
inventor.
“Didn’t you tell me you
were stuck in a mud bank away down under the river
and had hard work to get loose?” asked the young
lady, as she made a place for Tom on the sofa beside
her.
“Oh, that! Why, that wasn’t anything!”
he declared.
“It would have been if you hadn’t come
up.”
“Ah, but we did come up, Mary.”
“Suppose you get in a similar
position when you find the wreck of the Pandora?
You won’t get up so easily, will you?”
“No. But there aren’t
any mud banks in that part of the Atlantic, so I can’t
be stuck in one,” answered Tom.
For some time Tom Swift and Mary talked
of mutual friends and happenings in which they were
both interested. Mr. and Mrs. Nestor stepped
into the room for a minute, to wish the young inventor
good luck on his voyage, and when they had gone out,
promising to see Tom before he left for the night,
the latter remarked to Mary:
“Did your uncle ever find the
oil-well papers and get his affairs straightened out?”
“No,” was the answer,
“he never did. And we feel very sorry for
him. Just think, he had a fortune in his grasp,
and now it is slipping away.”
“Just what happened?”
asked Tom, hoping there might be some way in which
he could aid Mary’s uncle. Of course, Tom
wanted to help Mary, and this was one of the ways.
“Well, I don’t exactly
understand it all,” she replied. “Father
says I’ll never have a head for business.
But as nearly as I can tell, my uncle, Barton Keith,
went into partnership with a man to prospect for oil
in Texas. My uncle has been in that business
before, and he was very successful. He supplied
the working knowledge about oil wells, I believe,
and the other man put up the money. My uncle
was to have a half share in whatever oil wells he
located, and his partner supplied the cash for putting
down the pipe, or whatever is done.”
“I believe putting down a pipe
is the proper term,” said Tom.
“Well, anyhow,” went on
Mary, “my uncle spent many weary months prospecting
in Texas. In fact, he made himself ill, being
out in all sorts of weather, looking after the drilling.
At last they struck oil, as I believe they call it.
They drilled down until they brought in what my uncle
called a ‘gusher,’ and there was a chance
of him and his partner getting rich.”
“Why didn’t he?”
asked Tom. “A gusher, I believe, is one
of the best sort of oil wells. Why didn’t
your uncle clean up a fortune, to use a slang term?”
“Because he lost the papers
showing that he had a right to half the oil well,”
answered Mary. “At least my uncle thinks
he lost them, but he was so ill, directly after the
well proved a success, that he says he isn’t
sure what happened. At any rate, his partner
claims everything and my uncle can do nothing.
He has been hoping he might find the papers somewhere,
or that something would happen to prove the rights
of his claim.”
“And nothing has?” inquired Tom.
“Not yet. My father and
mother have been trying to help him, and dad engaged
a lawyer, but he says nothing can be done unless my
uncle recovers the partnership and other papers.
As it stands now, it is my uncle’s word against
the word of his partner, and both are equally good
in a court of law. But if Uncle Barton could
find the documents everything would come out all right.
He could claim his half of the oil well then.”
“Is it still producing?” Tom questioned.
“Yes, better than ever.
But that’s all the good it does my uncle.
He is ill, discouraged, and despondent. All his
fortune was eaten up in prospecting, and he depended
on the gusher to make him rich again. And now,
because of a rascally partner, he may be doomed to
die a poor man. Of course we will always help
him, but you know what it is to be dependent on relatives.”
“I can imagine,” conceded
Tom. “It is tough luck! I wish I could
help, and perhaps I can after I get back from this
trip.”
“The only way you or any one
could help, would be to get back my uncle’s
missing papers,” said Mary. “And as
he himself isn’t sure what became of them, it
seem hopeless.”
“It does,” Tom agreed. “But
wait until I get back.”
“I wish you weren’t going,” sighed
Mary.
“So do I—more than
a little,” was Tom’s remark. “I’m
sorry I ever let Mr. Damon persuade me to go into
this deal with Dixwell Hardley!”
Mary sat bolt upright on the couch.
“What name did you say?” she cried.
“Dixwell Hardley,” repeated
Tom. “That’s he name of the man who
claims to know where the wreck of the Pandora lies.
He says she has two millions or more in gold on board,
and I’m to get half.”
“Well!” exclaimed Mary,
with spirit, “if you don’t get any bigger
share out of the wreck than my uncle got out of the
oil well, you won’t be doing so very nicely,
Tom.”
“What do you mean?” asked
the young inventor. “What has the oil well
to do with recovering gold from the wreck?”
“A good deal, I should say,”
answered the girl, “seeing that the same man
is mixed up in both.”
“What same man?”
“Dixwell Hardley!”
“Is he the man who cheated your uncle?”
cried Tom.
“I won’t say that he cheated
him,” said Mary. “But Dixwell Hardley
is the man who furnished the money when my uncle went
into partnership with him to locate oil wells in Texas.
The oil wells were located, Mr. Hardley got his share,
and my uncle got nothing. And just because he
can’t prove there was a legal partnership!
I hope you won’t have the same experience with
Mr. Hardley, Tom.”
“Whew!” whistled the young
inventor. “This is news to me! I can
say one thing, though. Mr. Hardley doesn’t
take a dollar out of that wreck unless I get one to
match it. I think I hold the best cards on this
deal. But, Mary, are you sure it’s the same
man?”
“Pretty sure. Wait, I’ll
call my father and make certain,” she answered,
and as she went from the room to summon Mr. Nestor,
Tom felt a vague sense of uneasiness.