CHAPTER XI.

  ABOARD THE STEAM YACHT.

  "I don't know," said Matt, "whether this is the thing for us to do, ornot, Joe. Tsan Ti's letter asked us to stay in the Catskills."

  "Oh, bother the old heathen!" returned the cowboy. "He won't show uphere for quite a spell. Anyhow, if he does arrive to-morrow morning,before we do, he can wait for us, can't he?"

  "He's paying us for our time."

  "What if he is, pard? The old boy won't find any fault if we take thislittle run down the river. There's a point, too, that you don't seem tohave thought of."

  "What is it?"

  "Why, Grattan has quit trailing Tsan Ti and gone to trailing you. Bytaking this trip down the river we may be able to throw Grattan off thetrack."

  "That's so," answered Matt, struck with the idea.

  "If the tinhorn is laying any more of his plans," chuckled the cowboy,"we'll fool him."

  "I'll leave word with the clerk," said Matt, "to tell Tsan Ti wherewe've gone, and when we'll return; then, if he _does_ happen to gethere before we do, he'll know we're intending to come back and meethim."

  "That's the talk!"

  Matt immediately went into the hotel and stepped to the clerk's desk.

  "Are you acquainted with Mr. Pardo?" he asked.

  "Never saw him before," answered the clerk. "He came in here,introduced himself, and said he was looking for Motor Matt. I knew youwere on the porch, so I volunteered to take him out and introduce you.Looks like a fine gentleman. Interview satisfactory?"

  "Yes. He has a power yacht at the landing, and wants an engineer to gether to New York for him. I've taken the job, and Joe and I will be awayall night and not get back until sometime to-morrow forenoon. If anyone calls and asks for me, you need not tell them where I have gone,but just let them know when I expect to return."

  "I'll do it, Matt. Didn't know you had an engineer's license?"

  "He's got everything," put in McGlory, "that goes with running a motor."

  The boys had no preparations to make, and as there were two hours to bepassed before supper they concluded to run down to the dock and take alook at the _Iris_. There was no difficulty at all in locating her, andthe sight of her trim and graceful lines made Matt eager to have a lookat her interior plan. There was no one about her decks, however, whomhe and McGlory could hail, and he hesitated to go aboard and arouse anyone who might chance to be in the cabin.

  The cowboy, who was a wretched sailor, quite unaccountably was anenthusiast about boats, and his doting eyes sparkled as they traveledover the _Iris_.

  She had a very high freeboard forward, and this, with her perfectlines, gave her an easy entrance and a guarantee that she would notpound or ship seas in any sort of weather. There was no midship bridge,or forward pilot house, but the boat was steered and the enginecontrolled from a big and roomy after deck.

  "She's a fair daisy!" declared the cowboy, "as spick and span as afreshly coined four-bit piece. Sufferin' bones, but I'd like to own aboat like that!"

  "You'd find such a craft an expensive luxury, Joe," said Matt. "If youdid much cruising, it would keep you poor just buying gasoline. Let'sgo back up the hill. We can't see inside the boat, and it don't takelong to get a pretty fair idea of the outside."

  Returning to the hotel, the boys idled away the time until the suppercall sounded. The meal over, there were still some two hours of waitingbefore they were due aboard the _Iris_.

  McGlory suggested another visit to the theatre for a second look at the"Buddha's Eye" pictures. Matt, thinking that as good a way as any forpassing the time, acquiesced, and they were soon at the moving-pictureplace.

  There was standing room only--which proved how much of a hit the rubyrobbery had made. The hit, of course, was entirely because of Matt'sadventures while recovering the gem for Tsan Ti. If those attending theshow had known that Motor Matt was also present, and that he had thevery Eye of Buddha in his pocket, there would have followed a furore ofno small proportions.

  But the king of the motor boys, often in direct opposition to his bestinterests, was reserved and diffident.

  "Gee!" exclaimed the cowboy, as he and Matt left the theatre andwandered along the street, "if those people back there had only knownwho you were, and what you had in your pocket, there'd have beensomething of a stir."

  "I don't like that kind of a stir," said Matt.

  "That's you! Say, pard, you're altogether too modest and retiring. Ifyou wanted to splurge a little, you could make yourself talked aboutfrom one end of the country to the other."

  "I'll leave that to those who like it. It's the quiet chap, who plugsalong and does things without blowing his own horn who makes thebiggest hit in the end."

  "I don't know but that's right, too."

  They dropped in at another show, promenaded the street, and finallydiscovered that it was nearly eight-thirty. Turning their steps towardthe water front, they presently reached the wharf alongside the _Iris_.

  The craft had her "running" lights in position. There was a white lightin the bow, visible from straight ahead and for ten points on eitherside, a green light to starboard and a red light to port, each screenedso that it could be seen from dead ahead to two points aft of the beam,and a high white light aft and directly over the keel, showing allaround the horizon.

  But, notwithstanding all these lights on deck, there were none visiblethrough the cabin ports.

  "I wonder if Mr. Pardo has got here?" said Matt.

  "What's the odds, Matt?" returned McGlory. "It's eight-thirty, andwe're due."

  They got aboard, gaining the after deck. The elevated white lightcast a dim glow over polished mahogany and glittering brasswork, andMatt bent down to examine the bulkhead controls. A door opened inthe bulkhead, on the right of the steering wheel, and a man showedshadowily in the dark.

  "Is that Motor Matt?" he called.

  "Yes," was the reply.

  The man clambered up two or three steps, knocking his shins andswearing because of the darkness.

  "You're expected," said he. "Go down into the saloon--a stateroom isthe first thing you come to, and the saloon is beyond that."

  "Why don't you light up?" asked Matt.

  "Mr. Pardo has a headache, and the light bothers him. Go on down--he'swaiting for you."

  Matt led the way, and McGlory followed. They left the door open, and afaint radiance followed them, but they were in unfamiliar surroundings,and had to grope their way along.

  "Is that you, Motor Matt?" called a voice, which they recognized asPardo's.

  "Yes," Matt answered.

  "Come on in here. I'm not feeling very well to-night, and the lighthurts my eyes. You can guide yourself by the sound of my voice, can'tyou?"

  "We'll get there, all right."

  "Is your friend with you?"

  "Yes. I never travel without him."

  The next moment Matt gained the open door in another bulkhead. Beforehe could pass through it, two sinewy arms went around him from behindand a hand was clapped over his lips. He struggled, but he was caughtas in a vise, and his efforts to free himself were useless. From nearat hand, too, he heard sounds which indicated that McGlory, also, hadbeen seized.

  "Got them?" came the voice of Pardo.

  "Yes, sir," answered the man who was holding Matt, "but they'refightin' like a pair o' young demons."

  "Then throw them down on the side seats and hold pillows over theirheads. We'll get under way at once."

  Matt felt himself borne down on a cushioned bench. The hand was jerkedfrom his lips, and the half-formed cry that escaped him was smotheredin the pillow that was immediately pushed over his head.

  A bell jingled, and steps could be heard on the deck above, movingswiftly.

  "All right!" came a muffled voice.

  Matt, half suffocated, could hear no more. He was fighting fiercely forhis breath.

  Presently he was conscious that the _Iris_ was moving, and, as he laygasping and helpless under the strong hands of his c
aptor, there camefaintly to his ears the hum of a motor and the lapping of waves againstthe hull.

  How long he was held down on the seat, half smothered by the pillow, hedid not know. It seemed hours, but was probably no more than so manyminutes.

  Then, suddenly, the pillow was jerked away, and he lifted himselfon his elbow, a glare of light in his eyes. For a moment or two thedazzling light blinded him. When his eyes became somewhat used to it,he discovered a man standing near him, his flannel shirt parted at thethroat and his bronzed arms bare to the elbows. The man held a dirk inone hand and a piece of rope in the other.

  From this frowning figure, Matt's gaze shifted across the narrowaisle to a cushioned bench opposite. McGlory was there, and there waslikewise a ruffian keeping watch of him.

  "What--what does this mean?" demanded Matt.

  "You'll find out, quick enough. Are you goin' to make any trouble? Ifyou are, say so, now, and you'll save yourself a knife in the ribs."

  "I want to know about this!" declared Matt.

  "Then get up and go into the saloon."

  "You, too," said the man who had charge of McGlory. "Foller yer mateinter the saloon, an' if either o' ye let out a yell ye'll never knowwhat struck you."

  Matt, fearing the worst, swung his feet down from the upholstered seatand started forward. McGlory, who appeared to be in a trance, followedhim mechanically.

  The door of the saloon was open, and Matt passed through it, andstopped. McGlory crowded in beside him.

  The saloon was the full width of the boat, with seats on each side,and a table at one end. The small room was flooded with light, andthree figures were seen in an angle formed by one of the seats whereit partly crossed the forward bulkhead. The fixed table stood in theangle, and the three figures were leaning upon it.

  One of the men was Grattan, another was Bunce, and the third wasPardo. In front of Grattan, on the table top, lay two objects. One wasa revolver, and the other the small box in which the ruby had beenexpressed to Matt from New York.

  All three of the men were smiling.

  "Speak to me about this!" muttered McGlory. "Nabbed! Nabbed as slick asyou please! And I never guessed a thing. Oh, sufferin' easy marks!"

 
Stanley R. Matthews's Novels