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"It isn't that. It's a--well, it's a government matter."
Cap'n Mike smacked his thigh with a calloused hand. "I should 'a'
known! All right, Rick. I'll do it. Then maybe I can get my congressman to tell me what I've done."
Rick made a great swing around Whiteside, pointing out the houseboat to Cap'n Mike as he pa.s.sed North Cove, and landed off Pirate's Field.
Scotty was waiting.
After greeting the old seaman, Scotty said, "The girls are watching from the attic. When do we get started?"
"As soon as Cap'n Mike is fixed up."
Cap'n Mike was pretty self-sufficient and required little attention. A cup of hot coffee, a jug of fresh water, a little bait and a rowboat, and he was on his way. Fortunately, the Spindrift boat landing was not in sight of North Cove. Cap'n Mike sculled slowly along the sh.o.r.e. He would emerge at the cove, surprising the houseboaters.
Rick checked on the girls. They were engaged in making themselves comfortable on an old bed they had dragged in front of the window from which North Cove could be seen. He borrowed the gla.s.ses and looked at the houseboat, then handed them back, satisfied. They could see everything that went on.
Barby had her plastic set in place. Rick checked, and found that she had forgotten to turn it on. He grinned at her embarra.s.sment.
"I'll call you from downstairs, and again when we get set on the mainland. Good luck."
The girls echoed the wish.
Cap'n Mike was fishing, allowing the rowboat to drift slowly in the direction of the cove. Rick watched awhile, and was satisfied. If anyone could put it over, Cap'n Mike could.
"Now," he asked Scotty, "how do we get to Whiteside without attracting attention?"
Scotty scratched his head. "I don't know. Unless you want to walk. We could cross the tidal flats and hike to town."
Rick vetoed that. "Too far and too slow. The barber would have time to cut twenty heads of hair before we got there."
"How about asking Jerry to come for us?"
"You've got it! He could come down the wood road and pick us up right behind the island. He knows the way." Rick went into the library and called the _Morning Record_ number. Duke Barrows answered. Rick explained that they had to get to Whiteside by the back way, without volunteering why. Duke hesitated, then agreed to send Jerry.
Rick smiled as he hung up. "Duke will get a story out of this somehow," he said. "He's so curious he could burst a seam. Come on.
Jerry will get started right away."
Just before nine o'clock the boys and Jerry arrived at the newspaper office. Jerry was about to burst with curiosity, but he wasn't going to let it get the better of him. He hadn't asked a single question all the way from the wood road back of Whiteside into town.
Duke Barrows was apparently taking the same tack. He looked up as the boys entered, grunted, then continued working on the following day's editorial.
"Something just occurred to me," Rick said, after greeting the editor.
"Isn't this pretty early for you and Jerry to be at work? I thought a morning paper didn't open for business until afternoon."
"We never sleep," Duke said, without interrupting his work. "What do you think this is, _The New York Times_?"
"Never occurred to me," Rick said politely. "Although the quality of the paper is about the same."
The editor looked at Jerry. "When he talks like that, he wants something. What is it?"
"Search me. I don't know what these two want, and I don't know when they got deaf. Notice they're both wearing hearing aids?"
Duke hadn't. The boys grinned at his look of astonishment.
"What we'd like," Scotty said, "if you care to co-operate, is to have someone take a look at the barbershop. We want to know if the new barber is on the job."
Duke sharpened his pencil with loving care, using a penknife. "I won't ask why you can't take a look yourselves," he said finally. "It's pretty obvious."
"Not to me," Jerry objected.
"It should be. They don't want the barber to get a look at them, because he saw them in Washington. They don't want him to know they're interested, or that they know he's in town."
Rick started to ask how Duke had known that much, then realized that the editor had simply drawn the correct conclusion from the few words that had been said before. Again Rick gained a clear insight into how a little information can be built up into a lot. No wonder Steve and his people had so much trouble protecting official secrets.
Duke put his pencil down and rose. "It happens that I need a haircut.
Stand by." At the door he paused. "Anything else you want to know?"
"We want to know about his ma.s.sage machine," Rick said urgently. "Find out all you can, Duke. Please? Particularly if it has any electrical connections besides the wall plug."
Duke studied them thoughtfully for a long moment, then turned and left.
Jerry watched his boss leave. "He's kinder to you two than I would be," he stated. "He didn't ask a single question, even about the hearing aids."
Rick considered. There was nothing secret about the Megabuck network, except that he and Barby would use it for a mind-reading act. Jerry was trustworthy; he wouldn't give the act away.
"Promise you'll keep it to yourself," Rick asked, and at ferry's excited nod he took the tiny receiver from his ear and handed it to Jerry.
The reporter held it to his own ear, moving closer to Rick because the cord was just long enough to reach from ear to inner pocket.
Rick said, "Barby, say h.e.l.lo to Jerry."
Apparently Barby did, because Jerry gave a surprised start.
"Can I talk to her?" Jerry asked.
Barby answered the question herself. The microphone, built right into the little unit, was very sensitive and Rick's thin jacket did not m.u.f.fle it very much.
"I'm fine," Jerry said.
Rick grinned.
Scotty could hear both sides of the conversation through his own set.
Now he broke in. "Any sign of activity yet?"
"Cap'n Mike is fishing right near the houseboat. I can see the people on the houseboat, but they're just having breakfast on the rear deck.
Where are you?"
"In the newspaper office. Duke has gone to check on the barber."
Rick held out his hand and Jerry gave him the earpiece, grinning.