CHAPTER XXII

  NED AND PEPPER-POT

  “There are three passengers, sir, and one sailor, for whom we areunable to account.”

  The chief officer was thus reporting to Captain Munson of the transport_Sherman_, and Ned, standing near, disheartened and with his mind tornby cruel worries, overheard.

  “Who are the missing ones?” asked the captain.

  “Two soldiers, Bob Baker and Jerry Hopkins; Professor Uriah Snodgrass;and Beno Judd, a first-class seaman. They can not be found, they arenot among the injured, nor are their bodies among the dead. I have putthem down as missing, sir.”

  “Quite right. Unfortunate, but quite right. Have the boats been able topick up any one?”

  “No, sir.”

  “Well, there is not much use, I believe, in keeping them out longerin this fog. Some of them may get lost. Call them back, but stationlookouts with orders to report at once anything that looks likefloating wreckage to which a person might cling. If this fog would onlylift we might have a chance of picking them up, if they, by any chance,are still alive. Have a sufficient number of lookouts stationed, Mr.Bangs.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  Ned felt sick at heart. It was all over, then--the happy companionshipof years--he thought. Never again would he see his beloved comrades,Jerry and Bob, comrades with whom he had passed the gates of deathin many a battle. Professor Snodgrass, also--that dear but eccentricindividual--he, too, was gone.

  “Isn’t there anything we can do?” asked Ned of the captain.

  “I’m sorry to say I don’t see what else can be done,” was thesympathetic answer, for the commander of the ship knew something of thelove and friendship existing between the lad who was left and those whowere gone. “You know how the accident happened, my lad, and we havesearched all over in this vicinity. It would be risking other lives tosearch farther, for it is easy for a small boat to be lost in a fog. Ifit should lift I would order them out again. I am sorry.”

  Ned turned away, his heart heavy. To whom could he go for solace? Hehad many friends and acquaintances among his fellow soldiers, and theofficers were fond of him and his chums. But Ned did not feel liketalking to any of them just now. He wanted to be alone. But solitudewas difficult to come at on the crowded ship.

  Idly he made his way back to the scene of the accident. The break inthe bulwarks and rail had been temporarily mended, and a curious crowdwas gathered about the hole torn in the side of the _Sherman_. Ned didnot want to stay there.

  He looked out into the mist. The wet particles clung to his face liketiny tears, and he had much ado to keep back his sobs as he thought ofthose who had so lately been with him.

  “If only the fog would lift!” murmured Ned, as he turned away from thebroken place with a shiver.

  But the white curtain of vapor still swirled about the troopship,seemingly moved more by the mysterious ocean currents than by any wind.It was still a dead calm, and though the fog may have lifted over someparts of the ocean area that it had covered, in the vicinity of thetransport it was still heavy and impenetrable.

  “It seems to shut me in like a prison!” murmured Ned.

  Night was coming on, and it seemed to settle down earlier than itneeded to, caused by the murkiness of the air. The first call to thesupper mess was sounded, but Ned did not respond. He had no appetitefor food. There would be time enough later to eat, if he felt sodisposed.

  “Poor Chunky!” he mused. “I’d never poke fun at him again about hisappetite if he were here now.”

  Ned choked back a sob and turned to go toward the bow of the ship.

  The deck along which he was then progressing was more deserted thenthan it had been for some time, for many of the soldiers were downbelow, eating. And as Ned made his way along he saw, coming toward him,a figure that caused him a start, it was so like that of ProfessorSnodgrass. But he knew in an instant who it was.

  “_Le cochon!_” he murmured.

  Hardly knowing why he did it, Ned stepped beneath an overhanging partof the deck, and so was partially hidden. The man who so resembledProfessor Snodgrass--the man who had acted so violently in therestaurant--walked toward the place where the derelict had crashed intothe _Sherman_ and stood looking at the damaged place. Ned, from hisvantage place, could observe and hear.

  “So this is the place, is it!” murmured _le cochon_, or the pepper-pot,as Ned sometimes thought of him. “Well, well! I am sorry for him--forall of them. I shall have to redouble my efforts now!”

  Ned started. What did the words mean? What was the mystery connectedwith this strange man who seemed to be under guard at times, andfree to rove about at others? What association had he with ProfessorSnodgrass, and why was he so vindictive toward that little scientist?And, now that the professor was gone, why had this man come to gloatover the place of his disappearance?

  All these thoughts rushed through Ned’s mind, which was in a tumult.And then, as the little man spoke, another idea obtruded itself.

  What did he mean when he said:

  “I shall have to redouble my efforts now!”

  To Ned, obsessed as he was with a feeling of enmity against this man,the words had but one meaning.

  “He means to go on with his deadly work!” mused the lad. “He wasresponsible for the damage to the ship in the first place--he causedher to be disabled and held up in the fog. If it wasn’t for that we’dbe on our way now, and the derelict wouldn’t have crashed into us.

  “This man is responsible for that, though he may not have known aboutthe derelict. He is responsible for the death of Bob, Jerry andProfessor Snodgrass. And now he talks of redoubling his efforts! I knowwhat that means! He’s a German spy and he’s going to try to sink thewhole shipload of us. He must have gotten away from his guards. I’mgoing to tell the captain!”

  Ned stepped from his place of concealment and was about to hurry tosummon some of the ship’s officers when the little man caught sight ofhim. To Ned it seemed that the pepper-pot was startled and alarmed. Hestared at Ned and stammered:

  “Oh, you--you are here, are you?”

  “Very much so!” was the indignant answer. “But you won’t be here longto go on with your dirty work. I know all about you! I know----”

  Like a flash, and taking the youth by surprise, the little man rushedat Ned and in a moment had him in a grip that rendered the ladhelpless. Both wrists were held in a muscular vise that spoke volumesfor the athletic training of _le cochon_.

  “Be quiet!” The man fairly hissed the words into Ned’s ears. “Don’t sayanother word!” and he began to drag Ned along.

 
Clarence Young's Novels
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»The Motor Boys After a Fortune; or, The Hut on Snake Islandby Clarence Young
»Ned, Bob and Jerry at Boxwood Hall; Or, The Motor Boys as Freshmenby Clarence Young
»The Motor Boys on the Wing; Or, Seeking the Airship Treasureby Clarence Young
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