CHAPTER XIV.

  THE GLASS SPHERES.

  Tremors shook the one-eyed sailor. The satchel quivered in his hands.Pryne was filled with consternation, and showed it as plainly as didBunce. The full meaning of the situation had not dawned on Goldsteinas yet, but the light was slowly breaking. Grattan alone, of all thoseconfronting Matt, seemed in full possession of his wits.

  "Don't throw that, don't throw that!" stuttered Bunce. "Avast, I say!"

  "Where'd he get the thing?" demanded Pryne.

  "Clever lad!" murmured Grattan. "You must have taken that out of thebox during the disturbance caused by Goldstein. I saw you by the table,but I didn't think that was your game. Well, what are you intending todo? You have one of the balls and I have three. I don't know that Igrasp your intentions."

  "If these glass balls are broken," answered Matt steadily, "it meansthat all of us, every person in this room, will be stretched out on thefloor, unconscious and helpless. Those outside will escape the effectsof the narcotic, or whatever it is contained in the spheres. Those whoare at the door happen to be my friends. They will wait a space; then,after the fumes have cleared out of the room, they will come in, makeprisoners of you, Bunce and Pryne, save Goldstein's money for him, andrecover the Eye of Buddha."

  "Let me understand this fully," continued Grattan. "How do you knowthose outside are your friends?"

  "Listen," said Matt. "McGlory!" he called.

  "On deck, pard!" came the answer of the cowboy. "You're in a nice rowof stumps, I must say. Who's in there with you?"

  "Grattan, Bunce, Goldstein, and Pryne."

  "What's the layout?"

  "I'm on a bench at one side of the room with one of the glass balls.Grattan stands opposite me with three more. If I throw the ball I'mholding, then I want you fellows to wait until it's safe to come in."

  "Speak to me about that!"

  Grattan was thoughtful.

  "How did those fellows manage to find their way here?" he asked.

  "Pryne had a sack of ground feed in the back of the wagon. I slashed itwith my knife and we left a plain trail."

  "Jumpin' Mariar!" breathed Pryne.

  "You've hit it off nicely, Pryne!" scowled Grattan. "Annabelle oughtto be proud of you for that. Bunce isn't the only fool I've beentied up with, this time." He turned again to the king of the motorboys. "You're deeper than I imagined, but you're a point shy in yourreasoning, son. You'll not get the Eye of Buddha by proceeding in thatfashion. I was dealing generously with you when I offered to trade theruby for Goldstein's money."

  "You have no right to rob Goldstein," said Matt. "I couldn't help youwithout being equally guilty."

  "Goot boy!" applauded Goldstein. "That's der truth."

  "This diamond merchant," argued Grattan, "is only a 'fence' for stolenproperty. He came out here to cheat me, cheat Tsan Ti, cheat the law.We're simply beating him at his own game."

  "Two wrongs never made a right," answered Matt.

  "You talk foolishly. But, even though you carry out your plan, I sayagain _you will not get the Eye of Buddha_. That is safely hidden whereit will never be found. Besides--look at Bunce."

  Matt had been giving his full attention to Grattan. He now swerved hiseyes toward the sailor and found a revolver leveled in his direction.

  "Here's Scoldin' Sairy starin' ye in the face," said Bunce. "Don'ttease us no more or she'll speak."

  "The moment that ball leaves your hand, Motor Matt," declared Grattan,"Bunce will fire. The rest of us will be left merely unconscious on thefloor, but you--well, you're clever enough to imagine what will happento _you_. Are you willing to talk sense? I promise to leave the Eye ofBuddha with Goldstein in exchange for his satchel of money, but we mustbe allowed to escape with the satchel."

  "I'll not help you rob Goldstein," answered Matt.

  "Ye'd rather be sent to Davy Jones' locker, I suppose?" put in Bunce."That's where ye'll go, as quick an' sure as though ye was wrapped incanvas and thrown over the side with a hundred-pound shot at yer pins."

  Goldstein, palpitating between hope and despair, watched and listenedto this crossfire of threat and defiance wherein the fate of his moneywas at stake. A half-crazy light arose in his eyes and he seemedmeditating some desperate move.

  Grattan lifted his voice.

  "Hello, out there! We've got Motor Matt under the point of a revolver,and if you don't retreat from the vicinity of this hut, there'll beshooting."

  "Is that so, pard!" came wildly from McGlory.

  "Stay where you are," cried Matt. "They won't shoot--they don't dare."

  "Bunce," began Grattan, "you'd better----"

  Grattan had no time to finish. With a wild yell of fury Goldstein flunghimself at Grattan and seized the buckthorn cane, jerking it away andwhirling it about his head.

  "The buckthorn!" shouted Bunce, in more of a panic than the Jew'smanoeuvre seemed to call for; "he's got the buckthorn cane!"

  Grattan let go of his temper for the first time, and whirled and leapedat Goldstein. The Jew struck at him viciously, the blow falling shortand knocking the box of glass balls out of his hand and upon the floor.

  "Mask! mask!" bellowed Grattan.

  The box flew open as it fell and Matt caught a glimpse of broken glassfragments flying out of it, and of something white lifted to the facesof Grattan and Bunce. All was turmoil in the room. Grattan rushedat Goldstein and tried to recover the cane. Matt flung at him theball--the last conscious act the king of the motor boys could remember.

  The pungent odor arose to his nostrils, choking him, blinding his eyesand robbing him of his strength. He crashed down from the bench, andthen a mighty hand seemed to sweep over him and drop a black pall ofsilence.

  Motor Matt opened his eyes. He was lying out in the sun, the bareboughs of the maples over him, and McGlory kneeling at his side.

  "You had a rough time of it, old pard," said McGlory, "but you didn'tstop a bullet--and that's some satisfaction."

  Matt groped around in his mind to pick up the trend of events. Suddenlyall the details flashed through his brain.

  "What became of Grattan and Bunce?" he asked, sitting up.

  "They smashed through a boarded-up window, pard," replied McGlory.

  "And got away?"

  "Like a couple of streaks. They used our motor cycles."

  "Why don't you follow them?"

  "Follow them? What's the good? That happened an hour ago. The Purlingconstable rushed back to the village to do some telephoning, and it'sbarely possible the two tinhorns will be corralled. I wouldn't bank onit, though. Luck hasn't been coming that way for us since we struck theCatskills."

  "An hour ago!" muttered Matt, rubbing his forehead. "It seems as thoughall this excitement had only just happened."

  "That's the way those dope balls act. I was afraid of 'em. And itwasn't so blooming pleasant for us fellows to stand out here whileall that ruction was going on in the house. When One Eye and his palcrashed through the window--or maybe it wasn't a window but a hole inthe wall that was just patched up with boards--we all took after 'em.Out close to the road they jumped on a couple of motor cycles--ours, bythe looks of them--and were off a-smoking. When they came out of thecabin they had white things over their faces----"

  "Masks," said Matt. "They had them handy. But for that you'd have foundthem in the cabin along with Goldstein and me. By the way, where _is_Goldstein?"

  "We left him in the house. We weren't in so much of a hurry to bringhim to his senses as we were you."

  "And Pryne--what's become of him?"

  "Stretched out beside the diamond buyer."

  "Did you find the Eye of Buddha?"

  "That's a dream, Matt. No, we didn't find it. All we found was asatchel of money--the satchel Goldstein had with him at the store inPurling."

  "There were six of you--five with the constable. Where are the otherfour?"

  "The constable miscalled the number," laughed McGlory, "so his talkwould have a bigger effect. There were only
four of us all told. Yousee, we left the driver of the car in Purling to look after Bunce whenhe showed up there. And he was here, all the time! Sufferin' surprises!Say, I was sure stumped when I heard the Hottentot was in that cabin."

  "There were three besides you," went on Matt, persisting in his attemptto get the matter of numbers straight in his mind, "and the constablehas gone to Purling. Where are the other two?"

  "Here they come," and McGlory pointed to a couple of Chinamen, who atthat moment emerged from the hut.

  Matt stared and rubbed his eyes.

  "Am I still under the influence of those glass balls?" he muttered, "oris that really Tsan Ti coming this way?"

  "It's the mandarin, fast enough," chuckled McGlory, "and the chinkthat's with him is Sam Wing."

  Observing that Matt had recovered his senses, Tsan Ti hastened forward.

 
Stanley R. Matthews's Novels